Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Homemade English Muffins

Okay, so some of you may be wondering why I would go through all the hassle of making my own English muffins when I can buy them at the store. First, these are NOT a hassle to make, they are very easy. Second, I am trying to eat more natural foods and "clean" up my diet as well as my husbands. I've been looking at the foods that we most often eat and I have been trying to make them myself from "scratch" to avoid extra fillers and chemicals. Half of you probably think I am crazy right now and I already know I will be receiving a phone call from my best friend to tell me as much. :-)  I have been reading a  ton of the food labels in my house over the past month and I am truly shocked by all the ingredients in my food that I put into my body that I cannot even attempt to pronounce. I have decided that I want to know what's in my food, where it comes from, and be able to pronounce without saying words that are 6+ syllables.  I noticed that my husband and I eat a lot of bread. He eats English muffins every morning for breakfast and I often eat them for lunch. My husband eats a lot of sandwiches. Bread is a huge component to our diet and I'm sure if you evaluated your diet as well, you would notice that you ate a lot of bread. Many store bought breads contain high-fructose corn syrup. In my Meijer brand wheat sandwich bread I found high fructose corn syrup, "natural flavor" (whatever that is), sodium stearoyl lactylateon, ethoxylated mono-diglycerides, calcium propionate, and monoglycerides. Yikes! Maybe all this will cause no harm to by body, but who knows? You know how easy it is for me to whip up a loaf of bread in my bread mixer, certainly easier than driving to Meijer, finding a parking spot, dodging traffic to safely walk in, find the bread, wait in a check-out line, pay, dodge parking lot traffic again to find my car to drive home. I'm not saying I want to be this perfect eater with all these homemade foods because some weeks that is impossible. I'm trying to slowly make changes to our diet so that we can eat foods that are natural. I have decided to start with bread products and they are a huge part of our daily diet. It really is not very time consuming once you have the routine down after a couple times of making yeast products.

I made a recipe for English muffins last week that I thought were pretty good but I was not completely satisfied with the end result. I found the recipe on Pinterest which was linked with the Food Network. It was also messy and a lot of work. I kept searching and found this recipe that I am going to share with you today on Tasty Kitchen. I tried it last night and I made a few adjustments so the recipe would work for me. Totally sold on it! So easy. They look exactly like the ones you buy at the store except they are free of preservatives and fillers! The recipe made 20 English muffins. My English muffins from last week stored great in a airtight container for nine days now (there is one left).

  • 1 cup milk
  • 2 Tablespoons Sugar
  • 1 Tablespoon Yeast
  • 1 cup warm water
  • 1/4 cup butter, melted
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 6 cups flour (you may need more or less)
  • cooking oil (I used canola oil).
  • Additional tools: electric skillet, wax paper, rolling pin, circle cookie cutter.
  1. Warm the milk in the microwave for one minute (lukewarm). Stir in the sugar.
  2. In the mixing bowl you plan to use put the water and yeast. Stir a bit and then let set so the yeast can dissolve.
  3. Pour milk into the yeast mixture. Also add the melted butter, salt, and about 4 cups of flour. Beat until smooth. (I used my kitchenaid with the dough attachment)
  4. Continue to add flour by small amounts until you are able to form a soft ball of dough that does not stick to your finger when touched.
  5. Place dough into a greased bowl. Cover with a clean dish towel and let rise for one hour.
  6. Punch down and put dough on a floured surface.
  7. Roll dough with rolling pin until it is about 1/2 inch thick.
  8. Cut out dough with cookie cutter or biscuit cutter. (I had a fun idea last nigh when I was making these. I think for Valentine's day I will make heart shaped English muffins. You can make these any shape you want).
  9. As you cut the muffins out, place them on wax paper. If you are concerned about sticking, just sprinkle a little flour or cornmeal on the paper. I did not have any problems with sticking.
  10. Cover and let the muffins rise for 30 minutes
  11. Heat your electric skillet. If you have a skillet with temperatures, set the heat to 300 degrees. If you have a low-high skillet, set heat between low-medium heat.
  12. Pour a small amount of cooking oil and swirl skillet to coat. (I used a pastry brush to coat the entire surface with oil.) You want enough oil in the bottom as this causes the nice brown color to form.
  13. Place muffins on the skillet for about 8 minutes on each side. I just checked them often. Once each side is browned feel the sides. They will feel soft. I just broke my first one open to see if it was done (and it was so I slathered some strawberry jam on it and ate it right then). That way you can gauge if your other ones are done or not.
  14. I let mine cool on a paper towel so that some of the oil was also absorbed
So, there you have it! Your own homemade English muffins! My husband LOVES these, says they are better than the store bought muffins anyday!

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