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Cranberry Pumpkin Crumble Muffins – Lexi’s Clean


These Gluten Free Pumpkin Oatmeal Muffins are the real deal. They are made with oat flour, packed with cranberries and topped with the best oat crumble. They are easy to make, so delicious and make a great on-the-go breakfast or holiday brunch muffin.

Pumpkin oatmeal muffins with streuselPumpkin Oatmeal Muffins

These Healthy Pumpkin Oatmeal Muffins just so happen to be gluten free and are the perfect seasonal muffin made with pumpkin and dried cranberries. These muffins may be healthy, but they taste like the REAL DEAL. They’re soft, moist and oh-so-delicious. They are the perfect fall breakfast or holiday brunch muffin that everyone will love. Plus, they’re nut-free! That means they are safe for those with allergies, or to send to school with your kids. Keep a batch in the freezer and pop in the lunch box in the morning and these healthy oat muffins will be ready to go by the time lunch time hits. Who’s ready to make them?

A gluten free pumpkin muffin with a bite taken out of itIngredients for Pumpkin Oat Muffins

  • Pumpkin Puree
  • Oats and Oat Flour
  • Sweetened Dried Cranberries (look for the ones that are sweetened with apple juice)
  • Eggs
  • Coconut sugar
  • Oil (we use avocado oil for the healthy fats)
  • 3/4 cup pumpkin puree
  • Milk of choice  (we used almond milk)
  • Coconut Flour
  • Baking Soda and Baking Powder
  • Butter or Coconut Oil
  • Cinnamon
  • Salt

Pumpkin oatmeal muffin batterWhy We Soak the Cranberries

This recipe calls for sweetened dried cranberries. Look for the ones at the store that are sweetened with apple juice, if you can, to keep these refined-sugar free. In the recipe, we call for soaking the cranberries briefly in hot water. This is done because typically dried cranberries can be pretty tough, and when we baked them up they felt out of place in the soft muffin. Soaking them in water while you get the rest of the batter ready allows them to soften and plump up, which makes them a great texture for the muffin. 

What kind of oat flour is best to use?

As we’ve said in previous oat flour recipes, we recommend you buy premade oat flour. It isn’t expensive and it is easy to purchase in most stores. However, if you want to make your own oat flour, you certainly can. We just recommend you try to get it as fine as possible.

How do you measure oat flour

If you have an electronic kitchen scale at home, it’s best to use it here to measure oat flour. Oat flour can be tricky to measure as it can be easily compacted, even straight from the bag. The same goes for coconut flour because such a small difference in measuring it can impact a recipe because it is an absorbent flour. So we’ve included the weight in grams here. Any electronic kitchen scale can switch between grams and ounces, and grams are more precise so we’re offering that. If you don’t have a scale: lightly packing the oat flour into the cup measurement gets you as close to the correct measurement as possible. For coconut flour, scoop it in the tablespoon and then level it off.

Oat crumble topping in a bowl

How to store Pumpkin Oatmeal Muffins

We’ve tested storing these at room temperature covered loosely, in an air tight container and in the freezer. They all work! But we prefer to keep these at room temperature covered (in a non-air tight way) for two days at most. The muffins get more moist as the days go on, especially in an airtight container, which can make them feel dense.

So if you want to keep them the freshest, you can store in the freezer. If you are packing these for lunches for kids, or a snack for yourself, you can take them from the freezer the morning of and place in a container. In an hour or two the muffins are defrosted and ready to eat.

Muffin tin filled with pumpkin oat muffins

If you like this healthy pumpkin recipe, check out these others:

If you like this muffin recipe, check out these others:

Ingredients

For Pumpkin Muffins

Streusel:

Directions

  1. Preheat oven to 350ºF and line a 12 cup muffin tin with silicone or parchment paper liners.
  2. Place cranberries in a heat proof bowl and pour enough hot water over them to cover. Let soften while you make the muffin batter.
  3. In a large bowl add eggs, coconut sugar, oil, pumpkin puree, and milk and whisk together to combine.
  4. Add oat flour, coconut flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt and cinnamon and mix with a spatula until smooth.
  5. Drain cranberries and fold into the batter.
  6. Make the streusel: Combine oat flour, coconut sugar, butter and salt in a bowl and mix together.
  7. Fill each muffin cup ¾ full. Top each muffin with about 1 heaping tablespoon of the streusel.
  8. Bake in the middle rack for 18-20 minutes, or until the muffins spring back when touched.

Recipe Notes

  1. You can substitute any oil you typically use. We regularly use avocado oil, but any other neutral tasting oil will work here. 

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