Chocolate cheesecake muffins
Every recipe has a story. Readers will know that I volunteer weekly at Smartworks (pre-Corona virus hiatus any way). I bring baked goods every Wednesday for the staff, the clients and my fellow volunteers. We have a Wednesday team that does ‘wardrobe’. We have the pleasure of sorting, sizing, hanging and steaming the many wonderful donations from private donors and corporate partners.
Occasionally, I ask the Smartworks team for baking ‘requests’. And one of the Wednesday team, the lovely Daryl, asked for chocolate cheesecake muffins. Never made them before so perused blogs and internet recipe sites. They are an American thing (Daryl, like me, is an American in the UK) but I was looking for a recipe that used weight and metric measurements. Follow Daryl on Instagram here. I can convert from volume to weight but American recipes can call for ingredients that I don’t like to use and tend to be too sweet. I found a recipe here on Allrecipes.co.uk that served as a good base although I tweaked the sugar and the prep instructions a bit.
And thus a classic recipe was added to my repertoire. These muffins are vote winners and relationship builders any place you take them. A couple of bonuses – can be whipped together in a hour or so. And I get to use the 24 cup muffin tin I brought home from America. The recipe makes 18 to 24 nice sized muffins; you could halve it or you could make 12 big ones and then some mini ones. Adjust the baking temperature and time down if you decide to make small ones.
A few tips: first use Philadelphia cream cheese if you can find it. I don’t know what they put in that stuff but it gives the best texture. It also works with Waitrose basic cream cheese and really expensive organic stuff but Philly is easiest to work with. Second, if you’re a regular reader you know my views on chocolate. Use the best quality cocoa powder and chocolate chips you can afford. it makes a difference. Finally, I use a piping bag to fill the muffin tins. Once you get the hang of it – it’s a time saver and it keeps your tin tidy.
Everyone say ‘thank you Daryl’ now and move on to the recipe.
Recipe
Ingredients
Cream cheese filling
- 225g cream cheese
- 1 egg
- 50 grams caster (granulated) sugar
- 1/8 teaspoon salt
Chocolate batter
- 200 grams plain flour
- 175 grams caster sugar
- 60 grams unsweetened cocoa powder
- 1 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda (baking soda)
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 250ml water
- 75ml vegetable oil
- 1 tablespoon plain vinegar (distilled malt or white vinegar)
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
170 grams dark chocolate chips.
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 180C (160C fan). Prep your muffin tins (makes 18 to 24) I use paper liners in my muffin tins and give them a quick spray of coconut oil. You can go without the spray oil but I would not do these in an unlined tin even if you grease and flour.
- Beat together the ingredients for the cream cheese filling. Put to one side.
- Sift together the dry ingredients for the chocolate batter: flour, sugar, cocoa powder, bicarbonate of soda, salt.
- Combine the water, vegetable oil, vinegar and vanilla extract. Mix into the dry ingredients. The batter will appear very thin.
- Fill a piping bag with the chocolate batter and carefully pipe each muffin tin about one third full. There’s usually too much batter for one bag so use a second one or clip the first one closed with a binder clip (you know those annoying black clips that we used for paper documents). See this video of me filling the tins. I’m working on doing better videos – with narration for one. Bear with me.
- Fill another piping bag with the cream cheese filling. Pipe a couple of tablespoons on the top of each chocolate batter base. I do one squeeze of the bag all the way around and then circle back to those that look less full.
- We haven’t forgotten the chocolate bits. Drop 6 or so in the cream cheese filling of each muffin tin. I know this seems fiddly and it’s fine if one or two end up in the chocolate part but it’s the best way to evenly distribute them
- Put your tin or tins in the oven for 30 minutes, then test for doneness.
- Remove from the oven and let the muffins cool in the tins for 5 minutes, then remove. If you let them cool completely in the muffin tins the edges can harden.
Enjoy! Thanking you for subscribing, for reading the blog and for baking the recipes. It’s a labour of love – I have no hope of monetisation but it’s fun for me. Please send requests, comments, etc.
Happy Baking.
5 thoughts on “Chocolate cheesecake muffins”
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Impressive 24 muffin tin. Where did you get that ring thing to hold your piping bag upright? These look very very good.
24 cup muffin tin was acquired in Walmart during our visit in May’19. The piping bag gadget was an Amazon thing. I remember it seeming expensive (maybe $20) but I think it came from Germany. Absolutely worth it.
Those look wonderful! Like you, I lower the sugar on all my American recipes now. Great habit. I love the tin. I need a new piping bag. Maybe I can find one when I shop for my outboard motor?
I don‘t suppose you could find a great recipe for bran muffins with dates, could you? My grandmother made them and I loved them!
I use disposable piping bags. They come in rolls of 100. And you just fling them away instead of spending hours trying to clean them. I think there’s a recipe in my King Arthur cookbook that might suit on the bran muffins. Watch this space.
Thanks!