Advertisement

Sourdough English Muffins

Published Oct. 16, 2020

Sourdough English Muffins
Ryan Liebe for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Barrett Washburne.
Total Time
1 hour, plus rising and cooling
Rating
4(683)
Comments
Read comments

Bring a little tang to classic English muffins with this naturally leavened dough, which develops deeper flavor thanks to a longer fermentation than most sourdough breads. While most English muffin recipes call for dairy for tenderness, this one gets its texture — and flavor — from the spongy sourdough, and a final steaming to achieve that quintessentially soft exterior. Take your breakfast sandwich or tuna melt game up a notch with these big and fluffy stovetop muffins.

  • or to save this recipe.

  • Subscriber benefit: Give recipes to anyone

    As a subscriber, you have 10 gift recipes to give each month. Anyone can view them - even nonsubscribers. Learn more.

  • Share this recipe

  • Print this recipe


Ingredients

Yield:8 to 10 (4-inch) muffins
  • cup/150 grams sourdough starter
  • cups/300 grams room temperature water (see Tip)
  • 2tablespoons honey
  • 1tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil
  • 4cups/525 grams unbleached all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting
  • teaspoons fine sea salt
  • Polenta or coarse cornmeal, for dusting
  • Neutral oil, for greasing
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (10 servings)

269 calories; 4 grams fat; 0 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 2 grams monounsaturated fat; 1 gram polyunsaturated fat; 51 grams carbohydrates; 2 grams dietary fiber; 4 grams sugars; 7 grams protein; 243 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

Powered by

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    The morning before you want to enjoy your English muffins, prepare your dough: In a large measuring cup or medium bowl, whisk together starter, water, honey and oil.

  2. Step 2

    Select a container or bowl that will hold at least 3 quarts, as this dough will grow 3 to 4 times in size. Add the flour and salt to it, making a well in the center. Pour the liquid mixture into the well and stir with your hands, clawing the mixture and flipping it occasionally until no flour streaks remain, and you are left with a dense, shaggy, wet ball. Scrape the bowl as needed to integrate sneaky flour pockets.

  3. Step 3

    Cover loosely with a lid or inverted plate. Tuck in a warm, draft-free place and allow it to nearly quadruple in volume over the next 8 to 12 hours.

  4. Step 4

    Dust a work surface heavily with flour. Prepare a large baking sheet by coating it with a light dusting of polenta, followed by a dusting of flour.

  5. Step 5

    Deflate the dough by scraping it down in the bowl with a spatula. Transfer the dough to the dusted work surface. (Do not dust the surface of your dough, as you want it to stick to itself.) Using a bowl scraper, bench knife or lightly floured hands, pick up the dough from underneath, stretch and fold it like a business letter: bottom third up to the middle, top third down. Using the bowl scraper, flip your dough onto the prepared baking sheet so the folded side is now the underside.

  6. Step 6

    Lightly flour the top surface of your dough, then grease a rolling pin with neutral oil and roll your dough out to ½-inch thick, using additional oil on the pin if the dough begins to stick.

  7. Step 7

    Press a piece of plastic wrap onto the surface and tuck it around the edges of the dough to prevent it from drying out. Refrigerate the dough for at least 4 hours, or up to overnight for a more pronounced sour flavor.

  8. Step 8

    When ready to cook, heat your largest cast-iron pan over medium-low and lightly grease with neutral oil.

  9. Step 9

    Remove dough from the fridge, peel away plastic, lightly flour the surface of the dough and gently brush the flour to distribute evenly. Using a greased 4-inch ring cutter (or the ring top of a large Mason jar), cut the dough into muffins.

  10. Step 10

    Place as many muffins as you can fit along the edges of your cast-iron pan (avoiding the hot center of the pan), puffy-side up. In between batches, refrigerate any muffins you are not cooking.

  11. Step 11

    Cook undisturbed, for 6 to 8 minutes or until visibly puffed and matte like a very fluffy pancake. Once they are visibly golden on the bottom — you can take a peek — flip them and lightly press so they make full contact with the pan, then continue to cook for an additional 5 to 7 minutes until golden. It helps to give them a gentle 180-degree turn midway through cooking.

  12. Step 12

    Transfer cooked, hot muffins to a large plastic freezer bag or sealed container and seal to steam a bit to finish. (Steaming helps make the outer crust soft and chewy.)

  13. Step 13

    Wipe the pan dry and re-grease lightly as before. Continue cooking, transferring finished muffins to the plastic bag.

  14. Step 14

    When fully cool, about 1 hour, remove muffins and pierce each around the middle with a fork to perforate. When ready to eat, peel muffins apart, toast and slather with butter. Store remaining muffins in a separate bag or resealable container in the refrigerator. These are best enjoyed fresh, but can be refrigerated for 2 to 3 days, then toasted.

Tip
  • If your kitchen is below 68 degrees Fahrenheit, you may mix your dough with warmer water (between 90 degrees and 100 degrees) to ensure that the overall dough temperature stays warmer and active throughout the rising process. Keeping your dough in a warm area such as on top of your stovetop, refrigerator or on a higher, draft-free shelf in your kitchen, can also help.

Private Notes

Leave a Private Comment on this recipe and see it here.

Advertisement

Ratings

4 out of 5
683 user ratings
Your rating

or to rate this recipe.

Have you cooked this?

or to mark this recipe as cooked.

Comments

Cut them square instead of round and there are no scraps

To those of you asking: I believe your sourdough starter should be mature (it reliably rises when you feed it) but un-fed. You are essentially feeding it with the recipe, so that it will create air pockets to naturally leaven the bread. Because of this, you can use your “unfed/hungry” discard for this recipe. Hope this helps! I am going to make them this week!

Maybe this is something that other people realize very quickly, maybe not. Put the olive oil in your measuring spoon first. Then when you measure the honey it slides right out.

Great option for sourdough! Did feed starter night before starting. In morning easily followed recipe and did a few lazy day stretch and folds through the day. In early evening put lightly oiled Saran Wrap on my scale: total weight was 1000 grams so then split into 10, 100 gram portions. Hand shaped into smooth balls with lightly oiled hands and then pressed into a 3.5 inch Mason jar lid. Patted to smooth top. This resulted in a nice shape. Lined a large baking sheet with silpat that I lightly oiled. Place shaped rolls on this and sprinkled both sides liberally with corn meal. Covered well with Saran Wrap and refrigerated overnight. Did not need flour. Did not have cast iron pan but my large heavy pan worked well. Lightly oiled with olive oil spray. Cooked 3/10 heat - 4/10 was too high. Used instant thermometer to temperature of 194. I think this was important since they did not seem to cook uniformly at the same pace. Just put a pot next to cooking pan and place in there steam for a few minutes. Perfect!

I used a half sheet pan and it seemed to be too large an area. I’ll use a quarter sheet next time.

I made these exactly as written and they are so very good, and easy! Used a fully fed starter. The plastic bag for steaming worked fine. Mine turned out a little undercooked, still completely edible. Next time I’ll leave them in the pan a little bit longer.

Private comments are only visible to you.

or to save this recipe.