The Base: Savory Muffin Formula
This is a flexible base batter that you can customize.
Makes 12 standard muffins
Dry ingredients:
- 2 cups (250 g) all-purpose flour
- 2 tsp baking powder
- ½ tsp baking soda
- ½–¾ tsp salt (go lower if using salty cheese/bacon)
- Optional: ¼ tsp black pepper, pinch of chili flakes, 1 tsp dried herbs
Wet ingredients:
- 2 large eggs
- 1 cup (240 ml) buttermilk or kefir (or milk + 1 tbsp lemon juice, rested 10 min)
- ⅓ cup (80 ml) neutral oil or melted butter
- ½ cup (60 g) grated cheese (cheddar, gouda, etc.) – stirred into the wet or folded in at the end
Basic method:
- Preheat oven to 190°C / 375°F. Line a muffin tin or grease it well.
- In a large bowl, whisk together all the dry ingredients.
- In a separate bowl, whisk eggs, buttermilk, and oil/butter. Stir in the cheese.
- Pour wet into dry and fold gently until just combined. The batter should be thick but spoonable.
- Fold in your chosen add-ins (see below).
- Fill muffin cups about ¾ full.
- Bake 18–22 minutes, until golden and a toothpick comes out clean. Cool slightly before removing.
The magic rule: don’t overmix. Lumpy batter = tender muffin. Overworked batter = rubbery texture.
Savory Muffin Flavor Combos
You can treat the base as a “platform” and deploy different flavor packs.
1. Cheddar, Herb & Spring Onion
Simple, classic, and great with soup.
- 1 extra ½ cup (60 g) sharp cheddar, grated
- 3 tbsp chopped chives or spring onion
- 1 tsp dried thyme or mixed herbs
Sprinkle a little extra cheese on top of each muffin before baking for a crispy cap.
2. Mediterranean Feta & Olive Muffins
Ideal for lunch boxes and snacks.
- Replace half the base cheese with crumbled feta
- ⅓ cup (50 g) chopped black olives (patted dry)
- ½ cup (70 g) chopped roasted red pepper or sun-dried tomatoes (drained)
- 1 tsp dried oregano
Go light on added salt—feta and olives bring plenty.
3. Breakfast Muffins: Ham (or Mushroom) & Cheese
More interesting than toast, just as fast.
- ½ cup (70 g) finely diced ham or cooked bacon
- For vegetarian: sautéed mushrooms instead
- ½ cup (60 g) extra cheese
- Optional: ¼ tsp smoked paprika
These reheat nicely in the microwave or air fryer. They also freeze well—cool completely, freeze on a tray, then bag. Reheat from frozen 20–30 seconds in the microwave or a few minutes in the oven.
Mini Pies: Two Smart Shortcuts
You can make traditional pastry from scratch, but there are two very efficient paths:
- Rough Puff or Shortcrust – classic, flaky or crumbly.
- Cheat Sheet: store-bought puff pastry or pie dough – ideal when time is tight.
Basic Savory Pie Dough (Shortcrust)
Enough for about 10–12 mini pies (muffin-tin size).
- 1½ cups (190 g) flour
- ½ tsp salt
- 125 g cold butter, cubed
- 4–6 tbsp ice-cold water
Pulse flour, salt, and butter in a food processor until it looks like coarse crumbs. Add water 1 tbsp at a time until the dough just comes together. Flatten into a disk, wrap, and chill 30 minutes before rolling.
Roll out to about 3 mm thickness, cut circles slightly larger than your muffin cups, and press them in to make little shells.
Mini Pie Filling Framework
Think like this:
- Protein: chicken, beef, cheese, beans, lentils
- Veg: onions, mushrooms, spinach, peas, carrots, etc.
- Binder: a light creamy sauce, egg mixture, or thick gravy
- Flavor: herbs, spices, cheese, mustard, etc.
Filling should be thick, not runny, so it doesn’t soak the crust.
1. Chicken & Mushroom Mini Pies
Comfort food in two bites.
Filling (enough for 10–12 pies):
- 1 tbsp butter
- 1 small onion, finely diced
- 150 g mushrooms, sliced
- 1 cup cooked chicken, shredded or diced
- 1 tbsp flour
- ½ cup chicken stock
- ¼ cup cream or milk
- ½ tsp salt, black pepper to taste
- ½ tsp dried thyme
Method:
- Sauté onion in butter until soft. Add mushrooms and cook until they release and reabsorb their liquid.
- Stir in flour and cook 1 minute.
- Slowly add stock and cream, stirring until thick and glossy.
- Add chicken, thyme, salt, and pepper. Cool slightly before filling pastry cases.
Fill pastry shells, top with a smaller pastry circle (or leave open), crimp edges, brush with egg wash, and bake at 190°C / 375°F for 20–25 minutes until golden.
2. Spinach & Feta Mini Pies (Spanakopita Vibes)
Vegetarian and very freezer-friendly.
Filling:
- 200 g frozen spinach, thawed and squeezed very dry
- 150 g feta, crumbled
- 1 small onion or 2 spring onions, finely chopped
- 1 egg
- 1 tbsp olive oil
- ½ tsp dried dill or mixed herbs
- Black pepper
Mix everything together; taste before adding salt—feta is salty. Use shortcrust or layers of buttered phyllo in muffin cups. Bake 18–22 minutes until edges are golden.
3. Beef & Caramelized Onion Mini Pies
Richer, great as a “main + salad” situation.
Filling:
- 200 g ground beef
- 2 onions, thinly sliced
- 1 tbsp oil
- 1 tbsp tomato paste
- ½ tsp Worcestershire sauce or soy sauce
- Salt, pepper
- Optional: ¼ cup grated cheese
- Slowly cook onions in oil over low heat until deep golden and sweet (15–20 minutes).
- Add beef, cook until browned.
- Stir in tomato paste and Worcestershire, cook 2–3 minutes.
- Season, cool slightly, then fill pies. Sprinkle cheese on top before baking, if you like.
Baking, Cooling, and Storing
- Savory muffins:
- Cool 10 minutes in the pan, then move to a rack.
- Keep in an airtight container in the fridge up to 3 days.
- Freeze up to 2 months, wrapped well.
- Mini pies:
- Let them set 10–15 minutes so the filling firms up.
- Store in the fridge up to 3 days; reheat in the oven so the crust re-crisps.
- To freeze: cool completely, freeze on a tray, then bag. Reheat from frozen at 180°C / 350°F for 15–20 minutes.
These little bakes give you a flexible “snack infrastructure”: breakfast on the go, backup lunch for the office, or a quick platter when guests materialize.
