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Home Muffin Recipes

Mini cinnamon muffins

By Nagi Maehashi
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Published15 Aug '25 Updated16 Aug '25
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I swear, these Mini Cinnamon Muffins taste just like doughnuts! Except, well, you know. They’re baked, not deep fried. 🙂 And the inside is plusher and more buttery. I challenge you to stop at one!

Mini cinnamon muffins

Mini cinnamon muffins

These mini cinnamon muffins are an easy, bake-now treat made with pantry staples – butter, sugar, flour, eggs, and cinnamon. No store runs for buttermilk, no overpriced out-of-season blueberries, no frustration because someone’s raided the chocolate chips!

I made them mini rather than regular muffin size for extra cute factor (think – popping in your mouth) and you’ll love how plush the crumb is. Noticeably softer and more delicate than regular muffins.

Honestly, these little bites of joy taste just like mini cinnamon doughnuts and will vanish by the handful! Make them for breakfast, lunchboxes, afternoon tea… or simply when you need a bit of mini muffin happiness. Which is – always, no?😃

Mini cinnamon muffins

Proof of extra plush soft crumb

Here’s a close up of the inside. Notice how the crumb looks more like soft Vanilla Cupcakes – tighter with smaller holes – rather than regular muffins which tend to have larger more irregular holes and are not quite as soft inside. This extra plush crumb is borrowed from Madeleines, the little French butter cakes. Apparently the French know a thing or two about baking….?. 😉

Mini cinnamon muffins
Mini cinnamon muffins

Ingredients in Mini Cinnamon Muffins

Here’s what you need to make these. Tell me you have everything you need! 🙂

  • Flour – Just plain / all-purpose flour. Wholemeal flour can be used but will make the crumb less soft and it will probably puff up a bit more because the batter will be a bit thicker.

  • Caster sugar (superfine sugar) – Used in two ways: some goes into the batter, and the rest for coating the mini muffins. While regular granulated sugar can be substituted in the batter, you’ll need the finer caster sugar for the coating so it sticks (the regular sugar grains are too large).

  • Baking powder – The leavening agent that makes these mini muffins rise. You can substitute the flour plus baking powder with self raising flour, but the crumb won’t be as soft and it won’t rise as much, simply because the built in baking powder is not as fresh.

    Check – If your baking powder has been hiding in your cupboard unused for months, check it’s still active!

  • Eggs – Large eggs – which are sold in cartons labelled “large eggs”, 600 – 660g for a dozen (21-23 oz) or 50 – 55g each in shell (~2oz). Don’t need to be pedantic about exact size in this recipe, just don’t use say, giant ostrich eggs. 🙂 If you’ve only got mega eggs, use the conversion here to figure out how much to use in this recipe.

    Best at room temperature but will still work if they’re fridge cold in this recipe (give it an extra vigorous whisk with the sugar before adding everything else).

  • Unsalted butter – For beautiful buttery flavour! I rarely use butter as the dominant oil in muffins as they tend to dry the crumb out. But for these muffins, it doesn’t – thanks to the different order in which the ingredients are mixed into the batter. The French are so clever!

    I almost always used unsalted butter so I can control the amount of salt in recipes, bearing in mind that the amount of salt in salted butter varies from brand to brand.

  • Oil (tiny amount) – Any neutral flavoured oil (vegetable, canola, grapeseed). Just 2 teaspoons improves the shelf life of these muffins. The general rule of thumb with fat in baked goods is – butter adds flavour, oil keeps things moist – because oil stays liquid at room temperature.

  • Milk – This is to loosen the batter a little bit, rather than using more oil (too greasy, weighs it down).

  • Vanilla – Extract rather than artificial essence, which is imitation so doesn’t taste as good.

  • Salt – Standard baking practice these days, to bring out the flavours.

  • Oil spray – For easy greasing of the many little holes of mini muffin tins. If you don’t have oil spray, brush with plain oil. I know it’s tempting to use butter, but it’s not as good for ensuring it doesn’t get stuck – as I found out myself first hand – because butter is ~15% water.

Mini cinnamon muffins
Mini cinnamon muffins

How to make Mini Cinnamon Muffins

Note to experienced bakers: the batter is looser than regular muffin batters, and the order in which ingredients are added isn’t typical for Western muffins because, as mentioned above, this recipe borrows from French Madeleines. And that is why they are softer and more plush inside compared to regular muffins!

  1. Wet – Whisk the egg and sugar vigorously using a handheld whisk for 20 seconds until it becomes pale yellow. Then add the oil, vanilla, milk and whisk to incorporate.

  2. Dry – Whisk the dry ingredients in a medium bowl (flour, baking powder and salt) then gently whisk into the egg mixture in two batches (ie add half, whisk, add rest, whisk).

  1. Add butter last – Lastly, gently whisk in the butter until it’s incorporated.

  2. Batter thickness – You have a smooth, fairly loose batter than can be poured rather than scooped like in a mound like ice cream into the muffin tin. When you fill the muffin tin, the surface should level out.

    Is yours a little thicker? That’s ok! It will still work, your muffins will mound a bit more, it’s not a big deal. Thicker batters can happen because your eggs or milk were not at room temperature (cold liquids make stiffer batters).

  1. Fill – Grease the muffin tin with oil spray generously. Doing it immediately prior helps the muffins release easily – don’t do this ahead and don’t grease with butter (it’s ~15% water!). Fill the holes 3/4 full. If you do too much, they will overflow and will not rise as much as they could. If you have a little leftover batter, use a paper liner in a regular muffin tin and bake it on the floor of the oven (this way it won’t get in the way of the heat circulation of the mini muffin tin.

  2. Bake for 12 minutes at 180°C/350°F (160°C fan-forced) until the mini muffins on the outer edge have golden tops, the ones in the middle are pale golden and a toothpick inserted into the centre comes out clean, no raw batter.

  1. Bang out – Leave in the muffin tin for 2 minutes, then invert and bang out the mini muffins. They’re too fragile to pick out one by one.

  2. Coat in cinnamon sugar – As soon as they’re cool enough to handle, toss the muffins in cinnamon sugar to coat all over. The sugar clings best to the tops while hot, but it sticks to the sides and base just as well whether warm or cooled. If you are having trouble getting the sugar to stick to the top, brush lightly with melted butter.

Mini cinnamon muffins

Pile the Mini Cinnamon Muffins into bowls and serve right away. They’re at their absolute best warm, but still taste wonderful for a couple of hours after baking, even without reheating.

For the next day – and the one after – I can’t stress enough how much better they are lightly warmed! Just 20 seconds in the microwave makes them extra soft and brings out their gorgeous buttery flavour.

And once again, impossible to stop popping in your mouth, one by one, until – gasp, shock, horror – who ate all the Cinnamon Muffs??!!! – Nagi x

Mini cinnamon muffins FAQ

I’m afraid I haven’t tried but I don’t think they will be as soft inside!

3 to 4 days in an airtight container, coated in the sugar – it sticks well and doesn’t sweat off. However, I strongly recommend warming them up lightly! It makes them so soft again, like they’re freshly made. 🙂

Pretty straight forward actually. I have wanted to add a simple plain muffin recipe to my repertoire, one where you don’t have to go to the shops for, say, buttermilk which is a common ingredient in muffins as it makes them soft and improves shelf life (muffins are notorious for being quite stale even on day 2).

So I decided to make a simple cinnamon muffin. Made regular size ones then mini ones, and the mini ones were just irresistible!! The whole popping-in-mouth thing was the clincher, and also I like that they are smaller so you get a higher cinnamon-sugar-to-cake ratio.

As for the batter – I have been meaning to see what else I could make using the Madeleines batter. I love it because Madeleines are softer and more buttery than regular muffins, I’d go as far to say they are as soft as my Vanilla Cupcakes – but with a fraction of the work. For one, Madeleines are entirely hand whisked. And there’s just less steps to make the batter.

Close up of freshly made Madeleines dusted with icing sugar

The batter for Madeleines, however, needs to be rested preferably overnight. So I tweaked the batter to remove that step but still achieve the same texture inside, and also I fiddled with the baking powder ratio because I didn’t want the Madeleines hump, I wanted a sweet dome. 🙂

Surprisingly straightforward, even version 1 was pretty good, but the batter quantity was way out (way too much), and I wasn’t impressed with the shelf life – dried out more than acceptable on Day 2. So I fiddled with ratios again, and was pretty happy with Version 2.

After this, I tried iterations with less sugar, less butter, more oil (thinking it would improve shelf life – didn’t, weighed the batter down). All up, I probably made it 8 times? On the low end for a baking recipe, to be honest, plus it’s fast to make. 🙂


Watch how to make it

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Mini cinnamon muffins

Mini Cinnamon Muffins

Author: Nagi
Prep: 20 minutes mins
Cook: 12 minutes mins
Sweet Baking
Western
5 from 39 votes
Servings24 mini muffins
Tap or hover to scale
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Recipe video above. These are way too easy to keep popping in your mouth. They taste like cinnamon doughnuts! Except, baked, not fried 🙂 And the inside is more plush and buttery because the recipe is based on French Madeleines. How did I never do that before – it's too good and too easy not to adapt for other recipes!
I make these mini because the batter works best for small little cakes – and also, so cute! But you can totally use a regular muffin tin, see Note 3.

Ingredients

  • 3/4 cup plain flour / all-purpose flour (Note 1)
  • 1 1/4 tsp baking powder (make sure yours is still active!)
  • 1/8 tsp cooking salt / kosher salt
  • 2 large eggs , at room temperature (55-60g/2oz each)
  • 1/2 cup caster sugar / superfine sugar (Note 2)
  • 2 tsp oil (canola, veg or other neutral oil)
  • 2 tbsp milk , full fat best but low fat ok
  • 2 tsp vanilla extract
  • 75g (5 tbsp) unsalted butter , melted and cooled but still warm
  • Canola oil spray , or other neutral oil spray (Note 1)

Cinnamon sugar:

  • 2 tbsp caster sugar / superfine sugar (Note 2)
  • 3/4 tsp cinnamon powder
Prevent screen from sleeping

Instructions

ABBREVIATED:

  • Whisk flour, baking powder and salt. In a separate bowl, whisk eggs and sugar vigorously, then oil, milk and vanilla. Add flour in 2 batches, then butter. Spray mini muffin tin, fill 3/4 full, bake 12 min at 180°C/350°F (160°C fan), bang out then toss in cinnamon sugar.

FULL RECIPE:

  • Preheat oven to 180°C/350°F (160°C fan-forced). (Don't grease the muffin tin yet)
  • Cinnamon Sugar – Mix the ingredients in a small bowl and set aside.
  • Dry ingredients – Whisk the flour, baking powder and salt in a small bowl.
  • Wet ingredients – In a separate medium bowl, whisk the eggs and sugar vigorously for 20 seconds until pale yellow. Add oil, milk and vanilla and whisk again.
  • Finish batter – Add half the flour, gently whisk in, then whisk in the remaining flour. Gently whisk in the butter until incorporated. Set aside while you prepare the muffin tin.
  • Spray and bake – Generously spray a 24 hole mini muffin tin with oil. (Note 3) Fill each 3/4 full with batter (don't be greedy and overfill, they will not rise as they should!). A small cookie scoop with lever is handy, or a jug or piping bag.
  • Bake 12 minutes. Cool for 2 minutes then invert and assertively bang the pan edge on a work surface to knock the muffins out of the tin. (Don't try to pry out, they will break)
  • Toss in cinnamon sugar while warm (sticks better) then serve immediately!

Recipe Notes:

1. Flour – Self raising flour can be used in place of the plain flour and baking powder, it should rise just as well though the crumb probably won’t be quite as soft. Wholemeal flour is not recommended, and I haven’t tried with GF flour.
2. Sugar – You can use regular sugar in the batter but for the coating, it needs to be caster sugar / superfine sugar so it is fine enough to stick to the muffins.
3. Muffin tin size – If you don’t have a mini muffin tin, divide the batter between 12 regular muffin tin holes (14-15 min bake) to make flatter-than-usual muffin “discs”. Not only do you get a better cinnamon-sugar-to-cake ratio, the batter is not suitable for making full size muffins (doesn’t rise as much as I’d like).
LEFTOVERS will keep for 3 days, At their prime freshly made, if they cool down just rewarm in microwave for 20 seconds because they are sooooo good when warm! (That’s for whole bowl of them, if it’s just one, it only takes 5 sec). Freezable 3 months.
Nutrition per mini muffin, assuming half the cinnamon sugar is used.

Nutrition Information:

Calories: 65cal (3%)Carbohydrates: 8g (3%)Protein: 1g (2%)Fat: 3g (5%)Saturated Fat: 2g (13%)Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.3gMonounsaturated Fat: 1gTrans Fat: 0.1gCholesterol: 21mg (7%)Sodium: 18mg (1%)Potassium: 34mg (1%)Fiber: 0.1gSugar: 5g (6%)Vitamin A: 100IU (2%)Vitamin C: 0.003mgCalcium: 15mg (2%)Iron: 0.3mg (2%)
Keywords: cinnamon muffins, mini muffins
Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

Life of Dozer

Mr Dozer has had a rough week. 😢 We’ve had a fair few visits to the vet – four in five days (!) – to try to figure out what was wrong with him. He was extremely weak, barely able to walk, and showing signs of extreme nausea but was not bringing anything up, and the rear end was business as usual. He was hit with frequent “gulping” episodes, and he’d look at me with panicked “help me” eyes.

The vet was a bit stumped, so he was subjected to a series of tests, from bloods to X-rays to ultrasounds to try to figure it out, with some worrying possibilities mentioned.

Then all of a sudden on Day 5 it transformed into acute gastro. We are talking, explosive. We are talking – battening down the hatches to prepare the house for the inevitable storm that is Dozer going through mega-gastro. Waterproof floor coverings “everywhere”, cordoning off “Dozer-proof” areas. Rubber gloves. Carpet cleaner. Industrial laundry liquid. Baby wipes galore. Freaking out if Dozer parks himself anywhere in the house not protected.

Even – adult nappies. 😂 I had a thought that I could cut a tail hole. It didn’t work. 😂 It wouldn’t stay on, and he was so unhappy during the fitting sessions when I was deep in the design phase, I decided he’d been through enough and scrapped it.

IF YOU KNEW WHAT I HAD DEALT WITH AT 11 PM, 1 AM AND 3 AM YOU WOULD NOT MOCK ME FOR TRYING THIS!!

BTW, there are actually such things as dog nappies apparently, but I needed an immediate solution!

Anyway, he is home, minus a good chunk of fur on his rear end and belly, and based on where things are at there’s a few days to go yet. But it’s a relief to know what the problem is, and he’s definitely not in as much discomfort has he was a few days ago!

I am also pleased to report that through all of this, he didn’t lose his appetite at all. Even when he was so weak he couldn’t stand long enough to eat all the food in his bowl, his legs shaking and near collapse, relying on me to hold him up, when his nausea was at his worst and he was barely sleeping because of the constant gulping – he ate his way through the entire ordeal.

Atta boy. 🥰

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Hi, I'm Nagi!

I believe you can make great food with everyday ingredients even if you’re short on time and cost conscious. You just need to cook clever and get creative!

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200 Comments

  1. Kay Campbell says

    August 21, 2025 at 2:04 pm

    I have just made these. So easy, so quick and soooo tasty. Just the right bite size and wonderful with a fresh, hot cup of coffee. Yummo !!

    Reply
  2. Deb says

    August 21, 2025 at 11:41 am

    5 stars
    Poor Dozer. My little baby suffered the same thing last year and she was on intravenous liquids for two days. She’s only a little 6 kg cavoodle so it really knocked her about. Good as gold now Made these muffins to take to Mum who is in hospital with pneumonia, at 94? That’s a bit scary. These are perfect as she likes to share her goodies around. Bless her.
    Hope dozer is doing well now. ❤️❤️

    Reply
  3. Karen T says

    August 20, 2025 at 10:53 pm

    I had two different episodes like that with my doggo. NOT fun at all. I also felt incredibly sorry for him. He failed to eat or drink much on a couple of the days. They never definitively diagnosed what caused my dogs sickness. Hopefully, Dozer recovers fully. You never said what it was, but I understand what you went through…we purchased doggie diapers….but mostly just walked him at all hours of the day and night…that is no fun for anyone.

    Can’t wait to make the muffins!!!!!

    Reply
  4. Alicia says

    August 20, 2025 at 8:56 pm

    5 stars
    This is an excellent receipe! I made with GF flour and nuttlex and it worked perfectly. Super easy, delicious and they taste great a day later too (they didn’t last longer than that!)

    Reply
  5. Dede says

    August 20, 2025 at 8:10 pm

    5 stars
    Just made these, easy & delish, I was lucky to get one.

    Reply
  6. Fiona Morris says

    August 20, 2025 at 7:37 pm

    Hi Nagi. As always your recipes are fantastic. What makes you the best is that you explain scientifically about certain ingredients etc. I made these muffins and I made sure I checked how old the baking powder was! Yes I bought a new pack. I was happily putting the ingredients in bowl when shock horror I didnt have cinnamon, too late to stop so as I like ginger I used that instead. They were delicious and next week I will get some cinnamon into the spice cupboard! Thanks Nagi and the team and big cuddles to Dozer and hope he is feeling better. Cheers Fiona

    Reply
  7. Claudia says

    August 20, 2025 at 5:22 pm

    5 stars
    Excellent mini muffins…very tasty and easy to make

    Reply
  8. Tracey says

    August 20, 2025 at 4:42 pm

    Nagi, I love these mini muffins absolutely delicious and so moist, will be making these again..

    Reply
  9. Venetta Baxter says

    August 20, 2025 at 4:26 pm

    So glad to hear Dozer has pulled through.Just made these mini donuts so easy and way too good .Thank you

    Reply
  10. Vicki Hvidston says

    August 20, 2025 at 11:45 am

    I can’t wait to try another terrific Nagi recipe, and this is it! I hope I don’t drool in the batter (if it even makes it to the oven).
    Sending get-well wishes and prayers to Dozer from MT, USA. We’ve been through the diaper/nappy thing before with 1 dog and 1 cat. Our cat did great with the premie diapers (yeah, had to cut a hole for the tail).. We were not so lucky with our Welsh Brittany spaniel and ended up buying doggie diapers online. Sigh….

    Reply
  11. Sam says

    August 20, 2025 at 9:23 am

    Poor Dozer, sorry to hear you have been unwell buddy boy 🙁 Fingers crossed for a swift and full recovery 🥰 Sending hugs and ear scritches (and my dog sends…butt sniffs, haha)

    Reply
  12. Kate says

    August 20, 2025 at 6:55 am

    I was going to make this recipe but lost my appetite after reading the dog story with explosive gastro, pics of a nappy and raw dog butt on the same page!

    Reply
    • Karen T says

      August 20, 2025 at 10:47 pm

      I understand, but the feeling will pass as the thought of the smell of the muffins will override.

      Reply
  13. Conny says

    August 20, 2025 at 6:20 am

    5 stars
    I made these with a GF 1-to-1 flour, and plant based milk (that’s all I had). They were beautifully soft and tender, even the next day. The kids loved them!

    Reply
  14. Nejdet Yilmaz says

    August 19, 2025 at 8:45 pm

    5 stars
    I made these as a last minute quick option and they worked out divine. But because I’m a complete NUMPTY, I didn’t pay attention and used baking soda instead of powder. They puffed up beautifully even without an acidic ingredient but have that signature slightly bitter aftertaste soda gives.

    I am going to remake these with baking powder next time and am sure will be perfect. Don’t be me – pay attention to Nagi.

    Reply
  15. Sharon says

    August 19, 2025 at 9:54 am

    10 out 1o! These are a winner!

    Reply
  16. Magda says

    August 19, 2025 at 8:22 am

    5 stars
    Easy to make and delicious.

    Reply
  17. Sheri says

    August 19, 2025 at 7:09 am

    Aww, poor baby Dozer!!! I know how helpless I felt when my dog was ill. Best wishes for his complete fast recovery!
    xxxxx

    Reply
  18. nateoz says

    August 19, 2025 at 4:19 am

    Sorry to hear about Dozer! Hope he recovers soon. <3 Quick question on this cinnamon muffin – can I use a donut pan instead?

    Reply
  19. Tiana says

    August 18, 2025 at 8:34 pm

    5 stars
    Super easy and very delicious

    Reply
  20. Val says

    August 18, 2025 at 7:10 pm

    Just re reading the recipe and saws the news about Dozer being so ill. Sending lots of love and best wishes Dozer and Nagi. Get well darling boy, we love you! ❤️❤️

    Reply
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I believe you can make great food with everyday ingredients even if you’re short on time and cost conscious. You just need to cook clever and get creative! Read More

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