Mom's Best Recipes
Recipe

Ultimate Banana Nut Muffins

Rustic, homestyle banana nut muffins with tall tops, crisp edges, and a cozy cinnamon aroma. Pantry-friendly, low-fuss, and basically designed for your coffee mug.

Author By Matt Campbell
4.8
A close-up photograph of rustic banana nut muffins with golden domed tops on a wooden cutting board, with chopped walnuts scattered nearby

These are the banana nut muffins I make when I have bananas that look a little too dramatic for the fruit bowl but are absolutely perfect for baking. They come out rustic and homestyle in the best way: tall, golden tops, a tender crumb that stays moist for days, and crunchy toasted nuts in every bite.

My vibe in the kitchen is relaxed and slightly chaotic, so this recipe is built for real life. No fancy ingredients, no weird steps, and no stress. Just a dependable method that gives you bakery-style results without turning your sink into a crime scene.

A real photograph of ripe bananas with brown speckles resting on a kitchen counter next to a mixing bowl

Why It Works

  • Big banana flavor from very ripe bananas and a touch of brown sugar for that caramel note.
  • Tender, not gummy because we mix gently and keep the batter thick.
  • Crisp edges and tall tops thanks to a hot oven start and letting the batter rest briefly.
  • Nutty crunch from lightly toasting the walnuts or pecans first, which makes them taste like themselves, but louder.
  • Flexible with easy swaps for nuts, spices, and mix-ins without wrecking the texture.

Pairs Well With

Storage Tips

Room temperature: Let muffins cool completely, then store in an airtight container for up to 3 days. Pro tip: line the container with a paper towel and add another paper towel on top to catch condensation so the tops stay a little crisper.

Refrigerator: You can refrigerate for up to 5 days, but the fridge can dry baked goods. If you go this route, warm muffins for 10 to 15 seconds in the microwave before eating.

Freezer: Freeze muffins individually wrapped, then place in a freezer bag for up to 2 months. Thaw at room temp or microwave from frozen in 20 to 30 second bursts until just warm.

Best reheat: Split and toast in a toaster oven at 325°F for 5 to 7 minutes. The edges get crispy again, which is honestly the dream.

Common Questions

How ripe should the bananas be?

Very ripe. You want lots of brown spots or bananas that are basically one step away from banana bread. The riper they are, the sweeter and more fragrant your muffins will be.

Can I use frozen bananas?

Yes. Thaw completely, then drain off excess liquid before mashing. Frozen bananas can be extra watery, and too much liquid can make muffins dense.

Why did my muffins turn out tough?

Usually it is overmixing. Once the flour goes in, mix just until you stop seeing dry streaks. Lumps are good here. They bake out.

Can I make these without nuts?

Absolutely. Leave them out or swap in chocolate chips, raisins, or shredded coconut. If you add chocolate chips, I like semi-sweet and a small pinch of flaky salt on top.

How do I get tall muffin tops?

Three things help: (1) fill the muffin cups about 3/4 full, (2) start the oven hotter for the first few minutes, then reduce, and (3) let the batter rest 10 minutes so the flour hydrates.

Can I make these as mini muffins?

Yes. Bake at 400°F for 3 minutes, then reduce to 350°F and bake 8 to 10 minutes more. Start checking early since minis move fast.

I started making banana nut muffins when I realized I was treating overripe bananas like a guilty secret. Now I treat them like a plan. These muffins are my go-to when I want something that feels homemade in a real way, not the perfectly styled kind. The tops get all craggy and golden, the kitchen smells like cinnamon and toasted nuts, and there is always that one muffin I “test” while standing at the counter. For quality control, obviously.