Morning Glory Muffins Recipe
These Morning Glory Muffins are the kind of thing I throw together when I want breakfast that tastes like fall hugged my toaster. They’re carrot-and-apple-packed, sneaky-vegetable-rich muffins with shredded coconut, raisins, and a little crunch from walnuts — moist, slightly spicy, and totally forgiving. Make them for a crowd, for school lunches, or for the days when you need a little cozy in your hand.
My husband calls them “grown-up cupcakes” and then eats three in a row like he’s not going to work. The kids request them for road trips and pack them into lunchboxes like they’re trading cards. Once I doubled the recipe for a bake sale and hid the last pan behind the trash because I was too protective — true story. They feel like something that’s been in our life for years, even though I tweaked the original recipe until it listened to me.
Why You’ll Love This Morning Glory Muffins Recipe
– They’re a sneak-vegetable victory: carrots and apples keep the crumb ridiculously tender without tasting like a garden.
– Spiced but not scream-your-mouth-off spicy — warm cinnamon and a hint of nutmeg make them cozy.
– A texture party: soft crumb, chewy raisins, shredded coconut, and walnut crunch in every bite.
– Perfect for breakfast, snack, or dessert — and they freeze like champs.

Kitchen Talk
I am messy with muffins. I’ll admit it — I once forgot to fold the wet into the dry and ended up with a rubbery hockey puck that required intense remorse and a follow-up breakfast. The trick is gentle mixing: stop when the dry streaks are basically gone. Also, I swapped in applesauce one week when I was out of oil and it was shockingly good, just denser. If you toast a muffin lightly and smear a little butter, it becomes instant therapy.
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Shopping Tips
– Baking Basics (Flour/Sugar/Leaveners): Use all-purpose flour and check your baking powder/soda dates — old leaveners make sad, flat muffins.
– Fats & Oils: Neutral oil (canola or vegetable) keeps the crumb tender; you can sub melted butter for a richer flavor.
– Eggs: Room-temperature eggs blend more evenly; if you forget, pop them in warm water for a few minutes.
– Nuts & Seeds: Walnuts or pecans are classic here — buy them raw and roughly chop for better texture than pre-chopped.
– Fruit: Look for firm apples (Honeycrisp or Gala work great) and fresh carrots — avoid limp produce for the best bite.
Prep Ahead Ideas
– Grate carrots and apples the night before and keep them in a sealed container in the fridge to save morning time.
– Mix the dry ingredients into a zip-top bag and stash in the pantry; in the morning you just add wet stuff.
– Portion batter into a muffin tin (lined) and keep it in the fridge for up to 24 hours, then bake — great for hosting.
– Store cooled muffins in an airtight container; for longer keeping, freeze them individually wrapped.

Time-Saving Tricks
– Use a box grater for carrots if you’re in a hurry; food processors are even faster but watch the texture.
– Line your muffin tin so you can pop them out quickly and avoid scrubbing.
– Mix wet ingredients in one bowl, dry in another, then combine — minimal dishes, minimal brainpower.
– Don’t overbake: start checking a few minutes early; carryover heat will finish the bake.
Common Mistakes
– Overmixing the batter: I once beat the life out of a batch and they were dense — fold gently and stop when mixed.
– Using bitter or old nuts: they ruin otherwise good muffins; smell them first.
– Packing shredded carrot too tightly when measuring will throw off moisture — lightly spoon into the cup.
– Baking at too low a temperature: you want a quick rise and set, otherwise they spread flat.
What to Serve It With
– Greek yogurt with a drizzle of honey — a creamy, tangy counterpoint.
– A simple green salad if you’re serving these as part of brunch.
– Coffee, obviously. Or a chai latte for that spice echo.
– Sliced cheese on the side for a salty-sweet combo.
Tips & Mistakes
– Use room-temp ingredients when you remember; it helps the batter come together.
– Don’t skip the nuts if you like texture — raisins + coconut alone are almost too soft.
– If batter looks too tight, a tablespoon of milk loosens it without wrecking the muffin.
– Tempers flare when muffins stick: line tins or grease them properly.
Storage Tips
Store cooled muffins in an airtight container at room temperature for 2–3 days; refrigerate if you want them to last longer (they’ll dry slightly but are still fine). Freeze individually wrapped muffins for up to 3 months — thaw at room temp or microwave for 20–30 seconds. Cold muffins aren’t a crime; they’re snackable and slightly firmer, but pop them in the toaster if you want butter-melty bliss.

Variations and Substitutions
– Swap walnuts for pecans or sunflower seeds (for nut-free) — texture changes but it’s still delicious.
– Honey or maple syrup can replace part of the sugar if you want natural sweeteners; reduce liquids slightly.
– Use half whole wheat flour for nuttier flavor, but don’t go 100% or the muffins get too heavy.
– Dried cherries or chopped dates are lovely instead of raisins; orange zest brightens things up.
Frequently Asked Questions

Morning Glory Muffins Recipe
Ingredients
Main Ingredients
- 2.2 cup all-purpose flour
- 0.6 cup granulated sugar
- 0.2 cup light brown sugar, packed
- 2 tsp baking soda
- 0.75 tsp baking powder
- 2 tsp ground cinnamon
- 0.5 tsp ground ginger
- 0.75 tsp fine salt
- 2 cup shredded carrots, lightly packed
- 1 cup shredded tart apple, peeled
- 0.5 cup unsweetened shredded coconut
- 0.5 cup raisins
- 0.5 cup chopped walnuts or pecans
- 0.67 cup crushed pineapple, well drained
- 5.5 oz beaten eggs about 3 large eggs
- 0.6 cup neutral oil (canola or vegetable)
- 2 tsp vanilla extract
- 0.25 cup orange juice
- 1 tsp fresh orange zest
Instructions
Preparation Steps
- Preheat oven to 350°F. Line a 12-cup muffin pan with liners or grease lightly.
- Whisk flour, both sugars, baking soda, baking powder, cinnamon, ginger, and salt in a large bowl.
- In another bowl, whisk beaten eggs, oil, vanilla, orange juice, and zest until smooth.
- Pour wet ingredients into dry. Stir gently until just combined; a few dry streaks are fine.
- Fold in carrots, apple, coconut, raisins, nuts, and pineapple until evenly distributed.
- Rest batter 5 minutes to hydrate, then divide among cups, filling almost to the top.
- Bake 20–24 minutes, until golden and a tester comes out with a few moist crumbs.
- Cool 5 minutes in the pan, then transfer muffins to a rack to finish cooling.
Notes
Featured Comments
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“Super easy and family favorite! My family asked for seconds. Saving this one.”
“Super easy and will make again! My family asked for seconds. Saving this one.”
“Super easy and will make again! My family asked for seconds. Saving this one.”
