by Jenise » Mon Jan 07, 2008 7:59 pm
The Starbucks near my old home in Huntington Beach used to sometimes have banana bran muffins. Typical of my relationship with most sweet foods, if there were no muffins there was nothing else I liked enough to order, but if they had one I wouldn't be able to resist, even if I wasn't particularly hungry. Banana bread's good and bran muffins are good, but the banana bran muffins were stellar. The best of both. Dark brown, sweet but not too sweet, moist but not wet.
So yesterday when I started to throw out some bananas that had gotten too ripe, Bob said, why not make banana bread and before you knew it, I was googling for a Starbucks recipe. Googling didn't produce one, so I made up my own version in which I basically substituted some bran for flour in a basic banana bread recipe for proportions, selecting one that promised moistness and that used baking soda, vs. baking powder, for leavening, which texture I prefer and thought would give me the right color, anyway, and adding spice where the recipe I used had none. And though what I made was delicious, it just wasn't in the same league as the Starbucks muffin. Well, maybe the taste was pretty close, and the moistness was just right, but texturally, my bread was a lot heavier.
Here's my ingredient list:
1 1/2 cup flour
1/2 cup wheat bran
4 smashed bananas plus enough milk to equal 2 cups total
1 tsp baking soda
3/4 cup golden brown sugar
1/2 cup butter
3/4 tsp salt
1 tsp cinnamon
1 pinch allspice
For those of you who bake, some questions: is there anything to know about adding bran? I went light knowing from adding bran to breads that a little shows up more than you think it will, but to equal the Starbucks muffin texture, I'd need to add more. And what about oat bran vs. wheat bran? I am totally unfamiliar with the properties of one vs. the other. I have wheat bran on hand for breads. But is one better than the other for sweet applications (where allergies aren't a consideration, that is)? I note there are a lot of oat bran cereals on the market, but I see none using exclusively wheat bran.
Does anyone have a bran muffin recipe they'd recommend for adaptation? I probably should have started with bran muffins as a baseline recipe instead of banana bread.
My wine shopping and I have never had a problem. Just a perpetual race between the bankruptcy court and Hell.--Rogov