
I’ve been on a bit of a gluten free kick lately, partially because it’s starting to go well.  Once I started using gluten free flours in recipes where gluten isn’t necessary (breads need SOMETHING more) like cookies and such, it became a lot easier to wrap my head around the use of these things.  I actually made these several days ago, but I’m just now getting around to sharing it with you.  I give you, gluten free blueberry peanut butter and jelly muffins 
  
What you need:
.5 cup peanut flour
1 cup quinoa flour
¾ c sugar
½ t salt
1 t vanilla
1/3 cup butter, melted
1 egg
½ cup milk
2 T baking soda
1 cup blue berries
Strawberry Jelly
½ c brown sugar
¼ c butter, softened to room temp
1/3 cup ground flax
1/3 cup quinoa flour
1 ½ t cinnamon 

Starts with the wet ingredients in a large bowl: melted butter, eggs, sugar, vanilla, milk. Cream that together.


Add the flours, salt, baking powder and mix until combined.

After this, fold in the bluberries until evenly distributed.

I used a silicone muffin pan, lightly oiled.

Fill half full with batter, then add a dollop of jelly in the center of each.

Cover the jelly in batter until it comes to the edge of the cup. Prepare the strusel with the ¼ cup butter, 1/3 cup flour, cinnamon and flax until crumbly, distribute across the muffins.

They should look like this, bake for about a half hour at 300 degrees Fahrenheit.


They’re finished when an inserted toothpick comes out clean. I let them cool before removing them from the pan to keep them together, remember theres a molten core of jelly in there.

I tried making something similar several years ago with bad success. I thought the idea of a peanut butter and jelly muffin was an awesome one, but what I came out with was SO heavy and hard to eat. This was a lot better and it had to do with the peanut flour. The gluten free aspect makes it a lot more digestible for most people as well.

These are a pretty simple one and I figure just about any gluten free flours would substitute reasonably well here. I’ve found that I just buy a few types and substitute for flour in varying ratios with flavor in mind. Quinoa is known to have a slightly bitter flavor unless lightly roasted, but that takes a long time to do. For that reason I usually cut quinoa flour with something else to cut that flavor.

Check out some other recent posts of mine!
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Thanks for following and supporting, until next time!