Easy Homemade English Muffins {Whole Grain Option – No Mixer Needed!}
No stand mixer needed for these easy homemade English muffins! They are simple, yummy, and can easily be made with whole grains!
Homemade English muffins are ridiculously delicious. And if you’re asking yourself why you would ever want to make them at home, let me give you two reasons:
1) they taste even better than the store bought ones
and also,
2) rock star status points And trust me, you will feel like a rock star after making these super easy homemade English muffins.

You don’t even need a mixer. The dough is mixed by hand, in one bowl, in under 15 minutes. And if you need even further convincing, I’m going to show you what we do with them for one of our favorite, go-to, easy weeknight dinners.
Whole Grain English Muffins
These English muffins work great with whole wheat flour.
I highly recommend using a white wheat variety (soft or hard) or kamut or einkhorn. I have the best results with any of those when using them in breads and other baked goods.
The texture of these homemade English muffins is soft and light and tender. They even have the signature airy holes inside thanks to the wet batter.
The reason English muffins exist
In my humble opinion, that reason is egg, ham and cheese sandwiches.
It’s the best combination on an English muffin since the beginning of time. And we eat them several times a month for quick dinners, especially when we’re on the go. (No, definitely not always with homemade English muffins.)
I assemble the sandwiches ahead of time, wrap them in foil, keep them warm until we go, and then throw them at the kids in the car or at practices, lessons or games.
How to make homemade english muffins
Let’s walk through this process together! I know making English muffins at home might seem intimidating, but it’s actually not hard at all. Promise.
Sometimes a visual just helps. I’ve got you. Let’s do this.
In a large bowl, stir together the warm buttermilk (or milk) and butter. The buttermilk gives a light, but not overpowering, tanginess to the English muffins. Delicious.
Add the salt, sugar, and yeast.
The recipe calls for instant yeast. So there’s no need to proof it before using. I’ve given a couple pointers below in the recipe if you want to sub in active dry yeast.
Add the flour. I’m using half whole wheat flour and half all-purpose flour.
Bread flour should work really well, too. And you can definitely use 100% all-purpose flour OR try using 100% whole wheat flour. Both should work like a dream as long as the soft dough isn’t overfloured.
Measure with a light hand. My method: fluff the flour, scoop in the cup, level with a straight edge.
Is it a batter or is it a dough?
The batter/dough for these homemade English muffins is very, very soft. Much wetter than a “normal” bread dough.
Don’t panic! I’m going to show you how to make this work.
Leave the dough right in the same bowl, cover and let it rise until noticeably puffy and pretty much doubled in size.
Now for the fun part
We’re going to scoop out mounds of the soft dough onto parchment- lined baking sheets that have been liberally dusted with cornmeal.
I use my large #20 cookie scoop for the job. It doesn’t have to be exact. I just get a heaping scoop of dough (about 6 tablespoons/2.5 ounces) and plop it on the prepared baking sheets.
If you don’t have a cookie scoop, you can use two lightly greased spoons to scoop and scrape the batter onto the baking sheet.
The mounds of dough are going to look messy. And a little scary. And you might be questioning the reality of them actually turning into a real, live English muffin. Just stick with me!
I’ve never led you astray, and I don’t plan to now.
Lightly grease your hands, and gently grab one of the scraggly dough blobs. Flip it cornmeal side up in your hands and press the rough edges in and around, kind of tucking the jagged dough toward the bottom until you have a somewhat smooth puffy disc shape. If there are some seams on the bottom of the dough, thats ok!
Place it back on the baking tray (adding more cornmeal if needed so it doesn’t stick while rising).
Cover the cute and slightly reformed dough blobs and let them rise until puffy. They won’t necessarily double, but you’ll be able to tell they have some significant puff to them.
Griddle and Oven Bake
Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F. (You’ll use it in a sec.)
Also preheat a griddle to 325-350 degrees F or use a skillet on the stove on medium-low or medium heat.
Grab each puffy English muffin gently (so they don’t deflate) and place them on the hot griddle.
They will bake for about 4-5 minutes per side. If they are burning or getting overly browned, adjust the heat.
I prefer cooking them partially on the griddle (so they are lightly browned on both sides but still a little doughy in the center) and then transferring them to the oven to finish cooking.
You can cook them start to finish on the griddle if that’s your preference. Just take care not to cook them too long as griddle- or skillet-cooking can dry them out.
A few minutes in the preheated oven and your precious (and rather pretty) English muffins are done!
It’s preferable to wait for them to cool before slicing and toasting, but I would be a total hypocrite if I insisted that was mandatory.
Usually as soon as these babies exit the oven, they are flying from hand to hand in a wild hot potato dance as one of the kids starts slicing them open and throwing them in the toaster. Or back on the griddle to toast that way.
adjust the size
You can easily make these smaller or larger! Per this recipe, they are just slightly smaller than most store bought English muffins. I’m definitely not opposed to ginormous, big-as-your-face English muffins. I say, go for it.
Pro tip
I’ve also heard that if you want to get the signature nooks and crannies that just scream “I’m an English muffin,” you should use a fork to split them in half instead of cutting them in half with a knife.
Letting them cool also helps with that, too.
We are too impatient for either option, so if you experiment, let me know the results!
The perfect breakfast (or dinner) sandwich
As much as it’s hard to resist a toasted, buttered, slathered with jam English muffin, our family lives for the breakfast sandwich option. (But we eat it for dinner.)
Sometimes we scramble the eggs. Sometimes we fry them. There are nights they remain meatless (which means mom needs to go to the grocery store) and other nights when the options are ham, bacon, OR sausage. Lucky kids.
It’s not rocket science. But it sure is delicious.
If you’ve ever thought about making English muffins at home, this is the recipe to start with! I can’t wait for all the homemade English muffin reports to start flying in. Rock stars!!
One Year Ago: Super Easy S’Mores Chocolate Pie {or Tart}
Two Years Ago: Incredible Fluffy Overnight Buttermilk Pancakes
Three Years Ago: Chinese Cashew Chicken {30-Minute Meal}
Four Years Ago: Double Chocolate Quick Bread
Five Years Ago: Healthier Banana Bread Chocolate Chip Oat Snack Bars
Six Years Ago: Family Style Shrimp Scampi {20-Minute Meal}
Seven Years Ago: Chocolate Tres Leches Cake
Eight Years Ago: Split Pea Soup with Barley and Ham {Slow Cooker}
Easy Homemade English Muffins
Ingredients
- 1 ¾ cups warm milk or buttermilk (see note), see note
- 3 tablespoons salted butter, melted
- 1 ½ teaspoons salt
- 2 tablespoons granulated sugar
- 1 tablespoon instant yeast
- 1 ¾ cups (249 g) all-purpose flour
- 1 ¾ cups (249 g) whole wheat flour (see note)
- ½ cup (85 g) cornmeal
Instructions
- In a large bowl, mix together the buttermilk, butter, salt, sugar, and yeast.
- Stir in the flour and mix until well-combined and no dry streaks remain. The batter will be very soft – you can kind of lift it up in a doughy ribbon with a spatula.
- Cover and let the batter rise in a warm place until puffy and doubled, 1-2 hours.
- Line two half sheet pans with parchment paper and liberally sprinkle cornmeal over the parchment paper. This will prevent the English muffin dough from sticking.
- Using a large cookie scoop or two greased spoons, scoop out about 6 tablespoons/2.5 ounces of batter and place in mounds on the prepared baking sheets. *You can make the English muffins larger or smaller depending on preference.* They’ll look a little messy at this point; that’s ok.
- Lightly grease your hands and take each mound of batter and flip it over in your hands so it is cornmeal-side up. Gently shape the dough into a mostly smooth round disc and set it back on the baking sheet (sprinkle more cornmeal on the parchment paper, if needed). Space the muffins several inches apart to leave room for rising.
- Cover the baking sheets and let the muffins rise until noticeably puffy, about an hour.
- Preheat the oven to 375 degres F.
- Preheat a griddle to about 325-350 degrees (can also us a skillet on the stove over medium-low or medium heat). Gently pick up the puffy English muffins so they don’t totally deflate, and place them on the hot griddle.
- Cook for about 4-5 minutes per side. Adjust the heat if the English muffins are burning or overly browning. They’ll finish cooking all the way through in the oven.
- Transfer the English muffins to a clean (no cornmeal) parchment lined baking sheet and bake for 5-7 minutes until no longer doughy in the center.
- Let cool completely (if you can!) before splitting, toasting, and eating.
Notes
Recommended Products
Recipe Source: from Mel’s Kitchen Cafe (combined recipes from Joy of Cooking, King Arthur Flour, and my much-loved English Muffin Bread recipe)
Help! So this is unfortunately not regarding this recipe as I was searching for a sourdough english muffin and ended up on King Arthur website, but based off your experience…I made the dough yesterday, let it sit refrigerated overnight, was feeling pretty awesome this morning as i cut the dough into rounds to rise again on cookie sheets and then something compelled me to taste the dough as I suddenly couldn’t remember putting in any salt. I missed the last two ingredients in the recipe! 1 Tbs salt and 4 Tbs melted butter! I’m so bummed. What would you do? Scrap the whole thing or somehow try to ball it all up and incorporate salt and melted butter and try rising it again? I feel like that would be a disaster. Better cut my loses and try again…
Hey Ruth – I’ve done that before (left out the salt – urgh!) and especially for doughs like this, unfortunately, it’s best to start over.
Made them yesterday and had to add a little more flour…..rock star again…also made your fluffy pancakes…they were awesome!!!!….I added blueberries…over the top good…..thanks
Hi Mell…..this time the dough really was sticking to my fingers. No matter what I tried they became a mess…should I have added more flour ?……still tasted good
Hi Douglas, if it’s too sticky to the point of being a disaster to work with, it sounds like another 1/2 cup of flour or will help!
Thanks Mel…will make again Monday…and will use buttermilk this time
Curious—have you ever added some sourdough starter to these? I know you’ve mentioned that you like adding starter to some of your bread recipes, so I’m wondering how it would work with English muffins.
I haven’t but I bet it would work great!
I’m wondering instead of first using the pan on stove and then baking, would they turn out ok if I just put them in a muffin ring mold and directly into oven. Would be easier I would think but don’t know how they would turn out. Any ideas. Thanks.
You could definitely try that! They may not get as brown on either side as they do if cooking them on a griddle first.
After having made this recipe twice as written (fantastic in its own right) I changed it up and used the dough recipe for your English muffin bread. Out of that dough I made two loaves of bread and the other half of the dough I made into English muffins using the technique in this recipe (I got 16 total). The results were great and out of a few hours of baking we have enough bread for sandwiches and English muffins for breakfasts (and to use as hamburger buns for dinner tonight) for the rest of the week!
So I made these once and they were amazing. Made them a second time and the flavor was great but they were flat – rise was great in the bowl though. They were super airy. Any guess about where I went wrong? Maybe too long a rise?
Hmmm, if I had to guess, I’d say they over rose somewhere along the way and flattened out.
2nd time making them and it is the bomb!!!!awesome..thank you
Yay! Thank you!
I’ve made these a few times and I love them! They do hold together really well for sandwiches. Also they’re fun to make! And freeze well.
I have to confess though that the second time I made them I didn’t read the recipe carefully and left out half the flour! I kept thinking something was wrong. They were pretty thin… Around midnight it occurred to me to check the recipe again (I know, duh) and sure enough.
They still tasted great though!
Thanks Mel.
Have been wanting to make and due to staying at home finally am – but seems my dough after mixing looks nothing like yours! Is runny not a glib like yours. I added little more flower and am hoping will come together, is rising now. Any advise as to what could have gone wrong?? I love all your recipes!
Hi Teresa – I’m not sure – how did they turn out?
Yippee! This is a super delicious and very forgiving recipe! I’m out of white wheat flour AAAND buttermilk, so I used about a cup of red wheat flour (made up the difference with AP), used hot water and a couple scoops of unflavored whey powder that was hanging around, plus about a tablespoon of vinegar to fake the buttermilk. Use what you’ve got- this recipe can handle it! They are yummy and soooo much easier than other English muffin recipes I’ve tried- finishing them in the oven is genius. I also made mine bigger using a greased 1/2 c measure and they needed about 10 minutes in the oven. Happy Breakfast-For-Dinner to Us! Thanks for another winner, Mel!
Thanks so much for the comment, Rebecca! Way to go on just using what you have on hand!
Yummy!!!! Great recipe and the step by step directions make them easy to follow and ensure a successful outcome! Thank you Mel!! Question, if you wanted to substitute honey for the sugar, what measurement would you suggest?
If you wanted to substitute honey for the sugar, what measurement would you suggest?
I’d probably use the same amount
Curious—have you ever added some sourdough starter to these? I know you’ve mentioned that you like adding starter to some of your bread recipes, so I’m wondering how it would work with English muffins.
The English muffins were amazing!! It makes me always want to make homemade instead of buying them at the store!! Have you ever tried to add in raisins or craisins?
I haven’t but that should work really well!
We put 1 cup of Craisins in it and they were great!
Hi Mel!
Can I make half a batch with this recipe?
Will they still turn out?
Yes, you definitely can!
These are so easy to make and so delicious! I have made them everyday for the past four days for my family. Thanks for another delicious recipe and always helping me be a ‘Rock Star’ in the kitchen.
You’re amazing, Lachelle!
These were tasty. Great way to spend an afternoon staying at home. Thanks.
Thanks, Stephanie!
Thank you Thank you…made the English muffins today and they were the BOMB!!!!……
Thanks, Douglas!
I am not a baker – haven’t made anything from yeast since high school…some odd 50 years or so ago. Your easy to follow recipe resulted in five star English muffins. I don’t have a griddle, so used a cast iron skillet ( adjusting the heat – I could see how a griddle set at a certain temperature would result it more even cooking, but nonetheless it worked with the cast iron). I used medium ground corn meal and would use finer meal next time! I think I will try all white flour next time. Thanks Mel!
I loved reading this – thank you so much, Janet!
I love the scoop idea for evenly divided dough, genius!
These were amazing! Thank you Mel. Your recipes never disappoint. You are so so appreciated.
Thank you so much, Cyndi!
These look amazing! I’m wondering if anyone has tried to refrigerate the dough overnight or even refrigerate the formed dough blobs while they puff up before baking and then griddle in the morning? Excited to try these!
I haven’t tried that, but I’m guessing it could work really well!
Wonderful! I made these yesterday using the white WW flour and all purpose flour combo. Your directions are spot on and were easy to follow. In the future, I’ll have a hard time justifying buying English muffins in the store when these are SO good and so easy to make. Thank you!
Thanks, Mary Ann!
These are perfect and delicious. Heaps better than the whole wheat ones I usually buy, plus fun to make! Thanks Mel! Also: do you use Bavarian buttermilk? Inquiring minds would like to know.
Hi Ellen! I don’t use Bavarian buttermilk (should I??)
I am not an expert on dough, nor buttermilk. But in my limited experiences, I have had less than stellar results using Bavarian style buttermilk. It made both my buttermilk pancakes and my buttermilk biscuits a lot less fluffy than expected.
I noticed it looked a lot more like milk; not very thick. It did not seem to affect the taste, I don’t think.
I know it’s good when my son closes his eyes when taking a bite, and he did just that while tasting them. They are soooo good, and so easy to do. Thank you for another delicious recipe.. it’s a keeper!
Haha, love that visual! Glad these were a hit!
Tried them (with fresh yeast and no proofing) and they were delicious! Thank you so much for sharing this recipe – I couldn’t find one that would turn up good for me and yours, as always, is simply perfect! ♡
Thanks so much, Alex!
Thank you, Mel, for adding the “Pro Tip” about opening an English muffin with a fork to maximize the nooks and crannies! To me, this is the only way to cut open these delicious muffins. If you plan to toast these and eat them buttered with jam or honey (or just buttered) you will not regret the extra few seconds it takes to pierce around edges with a fork and gently pull the two halves apart. All the little rough peaks of the bread that get toasted to golden perfection make them a delight to bite into!
I made these yesterday…so easy, thanks to your step-by-step directions, and so delicious. No one could believe that I had made them! Thanks for another delicious recipe!
Thanks so much for letting me know, Jill!
I like your recipes, but it’s ridiculous how many ads and videos I have to scroll through to get to the actual recipe.
Yes!! It’s so annoying and obnoxious. I always jump to recipe because of all the ads. It’s getting worse.
Hi Nathan and Lizza – thanks for the feedback on the ads. I can totally understand where you are coming from. Ads and video ads, in particular, can be annoying! I am very, very careful about the ads on my site, and although it may seem like there are a lot, I have my ad settings below the industry recommendations and standards (and far below what most of my blogger counterparts run – which means I’m making the choice to earn less $$ for better user experience).
The ads shouldn’t be getting worse as I haven’t increased ad settings in several years (I just took off an extra video ad this week, actually).
Regardless, I can understand how ads can be bothersome – it’s for this reason I include the jump to recipe button for those that don’t want to scroll. The ads are definitely a necessary evil on my blog; they are the main source of my income as I work full-time on my blog. I wouldn’t be able to provide the quality content and attention I strive for without the compensation the ads provide. It’s a balance for sure and one I take seriously. Thanks for your patience and understanding!
Thanks Mel for keeping the ad content down. Yours is the only food blog I don’t get frustrated with in regards to ads. Jump to recipe feature is very helpful. Plus your recipes are the best so why go anywhere else!
Thanks, Kelli. 🙂
These are cooling on my counter right now (except for the two that I may have already eaten). So, so good!
Thanks, Eva! Glad you made them and loved them!
I was on a trip when you posted this recipe and couldn’t wait to try it. Made them today, very very good! And so easy. I’ve been making English muffins for years, and though I loved the taste, I could never get those “nukes and crannies’. Your recipe does the trick! I got 13 muffins, ~2.5 oz each and they were perfect size. Thank you!
I’m so happy to hear this, Olya! Thanks for taking the time to let me know!
Can I use almond milk in this recipe? We deal with dairy allergies in our family. Or is there a better non dairy milk option you might suggest?
I haven’t tried these with non-dairy milk but I think almond milk would be a good try!
I do feel like a rockstar this morning! So fun to make!
Yay! Thanks, Abigail!
I’m so proud of myself. I can’t believe how well these turned out. They are easy. I followed the instructions exactly. Browning them on the griddle makes them perfectly crisp and finishing them in the oven makes them soft inside. This one’s a keeper!
Thanks, cute Tami! I’m happy you tried them (and not surprised at all that you rocked it!)
Oh I’ve always wondered how easy it would be to make English muffins at home. I’m definitely trying this this weekend!
When you griddle cook them, do you grease the griddle/pan at all, or keep it dry?
I don’t grease it at all – but my griddle does have a nonstick surface.
It had never crossed my mind to MAKE English muffins (even though I bake all of our other breads!). These were easy and delicious. I learned a need a new griddle that doesn’t lose heat after 10 minutes, but otherwise, so easy! Thank you yet again!
Side note: I greased a 1/4 cup and just scooped and dumped the dough using that and it worked great and made 12 perfect size muffins!
Thanks, Shannon!
Thank you so much! I look forward to trying this recipe. I love getting emails with your favorites.
Could this recipe be used to make English muffin bread?
I think so! I also have an English muffin bread recipe here: https://www.melskitchencafe.com/english-muffin-bread/
I wonder if you could make these with sourdough starter? We’ve been using our sourdough starter for everything lately and loving it. Might have to give it a try!
Oooh, I’d love to hear back on how that goes for you. Would be a great way to use starter I am discarding.
I made these today with a scant cup of starter fed yesterday and then maybe a half cup of unbleached white flour. Maybe a little more. I just added flour until it reached the right consistency and otherwise followed the recipe and they turned out great! Nice texture and sourdough taste. Easy recipe. Will make again!
That’s fantastic! Makes me want to revive my long-neglected starter.
Thanks for updating! I always love things to do with my discard!
Yum! Definitely worth a try!
Off topic from yummy English muffins—–but—is Darcey’s whole wheat bread recipe still your main, go-to whole wheat bread recipe? Or have you switched to different favorite recipe?
I tend to switch between a couple recipes. Darcy’s recipe is still one I make often, as well as the quinoa whole wheat bread recipe and sometimes I use the white sandwich bread recipe and substitute whole wheat flour. One of those three is usually what I make each week.
Oh my gosh. I’ve always wanted to make English muffins but thought I needed a mold or something complicated that would need to be washed and stored. I’m totally making these ASAP!
Oh my goodness! These look incredible and I’m a HUGE english muffin fan! Totally trying these out over the weekend!
Your muffins are gorgeous!!! I can’t wait to try your recipe!!?
You read my mind! I’ve been looking for an english muffin recipes this week! I haven’t been sold on any I’ve seen, but yours look perfect! And totally doable. So excited to try it. Thanks, Mel!
I have used a recipe from Alton Brown for years making English muffins. He suggests using a greased canning jar band . I spray them with non-stick spray and put them on my skillet and let them warm up, then I scoop the batter/dough into the bands and let them cook…flip and remove the bands, and repeat. I love his recipe and have added whole wheat flour too. I am excited to try yours now!!
https://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/alton-brown/english-muffins-recipe-1953408
Love toasted English muffins with raspberry jam! Thank you! But, is it a #20 cookie scoop or a #60? I’m not familiar with the scoops but #60 does sound large! .
Hi Laila – actually you are right, it is the #20. Sorry for the typo! A #60 scoop is actually really tiny!
I love the busy night on the go dinner idea. I can always use more of those. I am sad that I just told someone that one thing I loved about your website was that it didn’t pop up with watch the latest video adds when I went to look up a recipe. And now it does, might just be the motivation I need to print off my favorites and make a binder.
Don’t worry, Rose! That feature is just temporary. I hate it, too. I enabled it in order to test out a few other essential things for the next few days.
Hey Rose, FYI, that scrolling automated video should be gone now! I only had it up for a few days to test out a couple other issues. Thanks!
I’ve made english muffins once before, and they were delicious but not worth the inordinate amount of time I spent preparing them. I’m excited to try this version! Thank you!
How long would these keep for? I would like to have them on hand for school mornings.
You can freeze cooked English muffins, and when you need them, just pop them in the microwave for a minute or so, slice and toast. Without a freezer they will be fine for two-three days. I make English muffins pretty often, different recipe, of course.
Hi Amanda – they keep for a couple days at room temperature (closed tight in a bag), but they can also be frozen with great results!
My youngest son and I both love English Muffins. I can’t wait to try these. Thanks for sharing!!
~swoon~
I recently tried a different English muffin recipe (first time making), and they tasted great, but didn’t have the nooks and crannies and that recipe used only the griddle to “bake” them, which resulted in a couple of my muffins being well-browned, but still a bit doughy inside. I’ll gladly try your recipe to see if I fare better!
The kids are home from school having a “snow day”…I think this is the perfect way to spend some of our free time
First time making these, and they flopped a little. Is the dough supposed to actually be a batter? Mine turned out super sloppy, and the 2nd rise was more of a spread. I will try them again, because they are so dang good, just curious on the dough.
The dough should be thicker than batter but softer than traditional bread dough. Try adding a bit more flour, that should help.