Healthy Carrot Muffins

Healthy carrot muffins made with whole wheat flour, coconut oil and maple syrup! They taste amazing, too. These muffins make a great, quick breakfast!

519 Reviews

1338Comments

Jump to recipe

Healthy carrot muffins that taste amazing! These are made with whole wheat flour and sweetened with maple syrup!

My dog Cookie always comes running when I pull out the vegetable peeler. I swear, she can hear it slice through the air before it even touches a carrot. Then she starts jumping up and down for carrot scraps. She can be very demanding. I’ve created an entitled little carrot beast, and I’m not sorry in the slightest.

Cookie loved the development process for this carrot muffin recipe. It took me five tries to get them just right, so she got a lot of carrot scraps in the process. They’re based on one of my cookbook recipes (so good!!!).

carrot muffin spices

These hearty muffins are packed with grated carrots, walnuts and raisins. They have lots of texture, yet they’re still light and fluffy.

Thanks to the nuts and whole grains, these muffins make a good grab-and-go breakfast! They also freeze and defrost well. I just microwave individual muffins for 30 to 60 seconds, until they’re gently warmed throughout.

Watch How to Make Carrot Muffins

grated carrots

What makes these carrot muffins healthy?

Granted, “healthy” is a subjective term, but here are a few reasons why I consider these muffins to be more nutritionally redeeming than most:

  • Unlike standard carrot muffins made with refined all-purpose flour, these are made with white whole wheat flour. That means they’re made entirely with whole grains, but you can’t taste them because white whole wheat flour has such a mild flavor.
  • Protein-rich Greek yogurt replaces sour cream.
  • Coconut oil or olive oil replace butter (olive oil is composed of more monounsaturated fat, and is considered to be more heart-healthy)
  • Real maple syrup replaces refined sugar, so these muffins are naturally sweetened.
  • Combined, you end up with hearty muffins that taste like carrot cake. You can eat carrot cake for breakfast with these babies!

These muffins are easily adapted to vegan and gluten-free diets, too! See my recipe notes for details.

healthy carrot muffin ingredients

Please let me know how these muffins turn out for you in the comments! I’m always so eager for your feedback.

Craving more wholesome muffins? Here are a few more favorite muffin recipes on Cookie and Kate:

If you’re baking for a special occasion, you’ll love my carrot cake with cream cheese frosting (it’s also naturally sweetened and made with whole wheat flour).

carrot muffin batter

Healthy carrot muffins made with whole wheat flour, coconut oil and maple syrup

These fluffy whole wheat carrot muffins taste like carrot cake! #healthy

Whole grain, naturally sweetened carrot muffins CAN be delicious!

Print
Save this recipe!
Get this recipe sent to your inbox, plus get new recipes from C+K every week!
Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.

Healthy Carrot Muffins

  • Author: Cookie and Kate
  • Prep Time: 15 mins
  • Cook Time: 13 mins
  • Total Time: 28 minutes
  • Yield: 12 muffins 1x

5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star 4.7 from 519 reviews

Print

Healthy carrot muffins made with whole wheat flour, coconut oil and maple syrup! They taste fantastic, too, of course. These muffins make a great, quick breakfast! Recipe yields 12 muffins.

Ingredients

Scale
  • 1 ¾ cups white whole wheat flour or regular whole wheat flour
  • 1 ½ teaspoons baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • ½ teaspoon baking soda
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • ½ teaspoon ground ginger
  • ¼ teaspoon ground nutmeg
  • 2 cups peeled and grated carrots* (from ¾ pound carrots—about 3 large or up to 6 small/medium)
  • ½ cup roughly chopped walnuts
  • ½ cup raisins (I like golden raisins), tossed in 1 teaspoon flour
  • ⅓ cup melted coconut oil or extra-virgin olive oil**
  • ½ cup maple syrup or honey
  • 2 eggs, preferably at room temperature
  • 1 cup plain Greek yogurt***
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1 tablespoon turbinado sugar (also called raw sugar), for sprinkling on top

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 425 degrees Fahrenheit. If necessary, grease all 12 cups on your muffin tin with butter or non-stick cooking spray (my pan is non-stick and doesn’t require any grease).
  2. In a large mixing bowl, combine the flour, baking powder, cinnamon, baking soda, salt, ginger and nutmeg. Blend well with a whisk. In a separate, small bowl, toss the raisins with 1 teaspoon flour so they don’t stick together. Add the grated carrots, chopped walnuts and floured raisins to the other ingredients and stir to combine.
  3. In a medium mixing bowl, combine the oil and maple syrup and beat together with a whisk. Add the eggs and beat well, then add the yogurt and vanilla and mix well. (If the coconut oil solidifies in contact with cold ingredients, gently warm the mixture in the microwave in 30 second bursts.)
  4. Pour the wet ingredients into the dry and mix with a big spoon, just until combined (a few lumps are ok). Divide the batter evenly between the 12 muffin cups. Sprinkle the tops of the muffins with turbinado sugar. Bake muffins for 13 to 16 minutes, or until the muffins are golden on top and a toothpick inserted into a muffin comes out clean.
  5. Place the muffin tin on a cooling rack to cool. If you have leftover muffins, store them, covered, at room temperature for two days, or in the refrigerator for up to 4 days. Freeze leftover muffins for up to 3 months.

Notes

*Carrot grating tips: You can grate the carrots by hand, or for an easier option, use the grating attachment on your food processor.

**A note on oils: I love coconut oil here. I used unrefined coconut oil and can hardly taste it in the final product. Olive oil will lend an herbal note to the muffins, if you’re into that. Vegetable oil has a neutral flavor, but the average vegetable/canola oil is highly processed, so I recommend using cold-pressed sunflower oil or grapeseed oil if possible.

***Note on Greek yogurt: I’ve used a variety of fat percentages and the muffins have always turned out well. Higher fat yogurt will yield a somewhat more rich muffin. You can also substitute plain (not Greek) yogurt, but your muffins might not rise quite as high.

Make it vegan: You can replace the eggs with flax “eggs.” Replace the yogurt with a smaller amount of vegan buttermilk—just mix ⅔ cup non-dairy milk with 2 teaspoons vinegar. Let it rest for 5 minutes before adding it to the other liquid ingredients. Or, use 1 cup vegan yogurt.

Make it dairy free: See buttermilk option above.

Make it egg free: Substitute flax eggs for the regular eggs.
Make it gluten free: Substitute an all-purpose gluten-free flour blend for the whole wheat flour. Bob’s Red Mill makes a GF blend that works well.

Make it nut free: Skip the walnuts!

Make it lower in fat: I would argue that this bread contains a healthy amount of fat, but you can replace the oil with applesauce if you’re following a low-fat diet.

Nutrition

The information shown is an estimate provided by an online nutrition calculator. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice. See our full nutrition disclosure here.

 

HELLO, MY NAME IS

Kathryne Taylor

I'm a vegetable enthusiast, dog lover, mother and bestselling cookbook author. I've been sharing recipes here since 2010, and I'm always cooking something new in my Kansas City kitchen. Cook with me!

Leave a comment

Your comments make my day. Thank you! If you have a question, please skim the comments section—you might find an immediate answer there.
If you made the recipe, please choose a star rating, too.

Recipe rating 5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star

Comments

  1. Michelle says:

    425 is is particularly high, my go to temp for muffins is 390 for 5 mins and 350 for 13-15mins, but never cook longer than 20mins. Made these exactly per the ingredients with substitution of honey/maple syrup with brown sugar at half the quantity- prefer significantly less sweetness (I’m Australian & we tend to use less sweetness in muffins). They worked out great! I’ve made a lot of your recipes and haven’t had a flop ever… just a thought, because grated ingredients create so much variability, when there isn’t explicit instructions to squeeze out moisture, or nil video for the final consistency, suggest it means there will be various rates of success






  2. Kate Daniel says:

    I adhered to the recipe but ended up with too soft middles and burnt bottoms. I wouldn’t usually comment but I’m pretty disappointed and hope that I can save someone else from running into this problem by sharing my experience.






    1. Kate says:

      Hi Kate, I’m sorry to hear that. Where did you place your racks in your oven? Sounds like they were close to a heat source to burn on the bottom.

  3. Laura says:

    These are fantastic. Almost taste like a donut!






  4. Monica says:

    Everything was great except my kids mentioned that they were not sweet enough (I made it omitting the walnuts and raisins). Is there a way to substitute some of the maple syrup with yellow or turbinado sugar? Would just like them a tad sweeter, otherwise perfect!