Sourdough discard blueberry muffins are the easiest way to turn a half cup of leftover starter discard into bakery-style muffins with a tall domed top, juicy bursts of blueberry, and a soft, tangy crumb. The discard adds depth and a faint sourdough tang without making the muffins taste sour, and the high-low oven method gives you the kind of dome you usually only get from a coffee shop. If you love sourdough discard recipes, these belong on your breakfast list right next to my sourdough discard pancakes and sourdough discard donuts.

Using sourdough discard in muffins is one of the smartest ways to use your starter, because the discard's acidity reacts with the baking powder for extra tenderness and the natural moisture keeps the crumb soft for days. It is not the leavener (the baking powder does that), it is a flavor and texture ingredient that gives these muffins a quiet little tang you can't get any other way.
If you want a non-discard version, my basic muffin recipe handles blueberries, chocolate chips, and any other mix-in using the same method.
Quick Glance at the Recipe: Sourdough Discard Blueberry Muffins
- Recipe Name: Sourdough Discard Blueberry Muffins
- Why You'll Love It: Bakery-tall domed tops, soft tangy interior, juicy blueberries in every bite. Uses up a half cup of starter discard.
- Time and Difficulty: 10 minutes prep + 25 minutes bake. Beginner-friendly.
- Main Ingredients: All-purpose flour, sugar, baking powder, buttermilk, melted butter, neutral oil, sourdough discard, egg, vanilla, blueberries. Coarse sugar for topping.
- Method: Whisk dry ingredients. Whisk wet ingredients. Fold together with blueberries until just combined. Scoop, sprinkle sugar, bake at 425º F for 5 minutes, then 350º F for about 20 minutes.
- Texture and Flavor: Tall domed top, tender open crumb, sweet vanilla base with a faint sourdough tang. Blueberries burst into pockets of jammy fruit.
- Quick Tip: The 425º F first, then 350º F method is what gives you the dome. Start hot, finish moderate.
Jump to:
- Quick Glance at the Recipe: Sourdough Discard Blueberry Muffins
- What Makes This Sourdough Discard Blueberry Muffin Recipe Different
- Sourdough Discard Blueberry Muffin Ingredients
- Why Sourdough Discard, Buttermilk, And The Oven-Temp Drop Matter (The Science)
- How To Make A Muffin Dome Better
- Sourdough Discard Blueberry Muffin Recipe Step-By-Step
- Same-Day vs Overnight Method
- Standard vs Jumbo Muffins
- Common Sourdough Discard Blueberry Muffin Problems To Avoid
- Make This Sourdough Discard Blueberry Muffin Recipe Your Own
- Make-Ahead, Storage, And Refresh
- Final Thoughts
- Sourdough Discard Blueberry Muffin FAQs
- More Sourdough Discard Recipes To Try
- Leave Me A Review⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
- Recipe
What Makes This Sourdough Discard Blueberry Muffin Recipe Different
Most sourdough discard muffin recipes online give you a fine but forgettable muffin. A few things make this version different from the rest:
The bakery-tall dome. The 425º F to 350º F method is the single biggest difference between a flat homemade muffin and one that looks like it came from a bakery case. Most recipes either bake at one temperature the whole time or hand-wave through this step. I explain exactly why it works in the science section below so you can troubleshoot if your muffins ever come out flat.
Real fruit-suspension technique. Blueberries sink in muffin batter because they are denser than the batter. The fix is tossing them in a Tablespoon of flour before folding them in. Every recipe says this; almost none explains why it works (the flour coating absorbs surface moisture and creates friction with the batter so the berries hang where you put them).
Butter and oil, not just one. Butter gives flavor; oil keeps the crumb moist for days. Recipes that use just butter dry out by day two. Recipes that use just oil taste flat. Doing both is the bakery-style muffin secret.
Optional overnight rest. I've added a same-day OR overnight version so you can mix the batter the night before, scoop in the morning, and have hot muffins on the table in 30 minutes. Overnight rest also gives the discard time to do a little more flavor development.
Both standard and jumbo formulations. The same recipe scoops into either pan, with the bake times worked out for each. Jumbo muffins are my favorite because the extra batter mass keeps the centers extra moist.
Sourdough Discard Blueberry Muffin Ingredients
Nothing fancy here. I always recommend weighing your ingredients with a digital kitchen scale for the most accurate results.

- All-purpose flour. Standard AP. Don't substitute bread flour (too much gluten, tough crumb). Whole wheat works but the muffins will be denser and nuttier (see the variations section for the swap).
- Granulated sugar. Standard white sugar. Sweetens the batter and helps the tops brown into that crispy bakery crust.
- Baking powder. The leavener. Make sure it is fresh. Baking powder dies after about 6 months opened, and tired baking powder is the most common reason muffins don't dome.
- Salt. Balances sweetness and brings the blueberry flavor forward. Use a fine salt so it dissolves into the batter.
- Buttermilk. Adds tang and tenderness. The acid also reacts with baking powder for extra lift. Whole-milk buttermilk gives the best texture. If you don't have any on hand, make a buttermilk substitute with 2 teaspoons of lemon juice or vinegar in ¾ cup of milk, sat for 5 minutes.
- Unsalted butter, melted. Brings the flavor. Cool it for a few minutes after melting so it doesn't shock the egg or curdle the buttermilk.
- Neutral oil. Keeps the crumb soft for 2 to 3 days. Vegetable, canola, or sunflower oil all work. This is the bakery trick: butter plus oil gives you flavor AND staying power.
- Sourdough discard. Half a cup of unfed starter from your fridge or counter. Adds tang, moisture, and depth. You can use slightly more or less and make up the difference with extra buttermilk.
- Egg. One large at room temperature. Cold eggs shock the melted butter and you'll see little fat solids in the batter. Warm a cold egg in warm tap water for 5 minutes if you forgot to set it out.
- Vanilla extract. Real vanilla, not imitation. Just enough to round out the flavor.
- Blueberries. Fresh or frozen. Toss in a Tablespoon of flour before folding into the batter to keep them suspended. If using frozen, do NOT thaw first or your batter will turn purple.
- Coarse sugar for topping (optional). Turbinado sugar or sanding sugar. Adds the sparkly crunchy bakery top. Skip for a softer muffin top.
Why Sourdough Discard, Buttermilk, And The Oven-Temp Drop Matter (The Science)
Three things in this recipe punch above their weight, and understanding them is the difference between OK muffins and great ones.
Sourdough discard's acid + baking powder. Sourdough discard sits between pH 3.5 and 4.5 (about as acidic as orange juice). When that acidic discard hits the baking powder in the batter, the powder reacts more aggressively than it would in a neutral mix. You get extra lift right when the muffins hit the hot oven. Bonus, the acid also weakens the gluten slightly, which is exactly what you want for a tender muffin crumb.
Buttermilk's double job. Buttermilk gives the muffins tang, AND its acid reacts with the baking powder the same way the discard does. Two acidic ingredients in one batter are why these muffins rise so well, even with only baking powder (no baking soda needed).
Why butter plus oil? Butter is about 80% fat and 16% water. Oil is 100% fat. Butter alone tastes great, but the water content means muffins go stale faster. Oil alone keeps them moist for days, but tastes flat. Half and half gives you both: the flavor of butter and the staying power of oil.
How To Make A Muffin Dome Better
This is the part most muffin recipes skip, and it's the reason store-bought muffins look so different from homemade ones. The dome is not magic; it's just oven temperature.
Start at 425° F. When the muffin hits a screaming hot oven, the leaveners (baking powder + acidic discard + acidic buttermilk) all release their gas at once. The batter expands fast, before the flour has had time to set the structure. That rapid expansion is what pushes the top up into a dome instead of letting it spread flat.
Drop to 350º F after 5 minutes. Once the dome is formed, you need to back off. If you stayed at 425º F, the outside would burn before the inside cooked through. Dropping the temperature to 350º F lets the inside finish baking gently while the dome holds its shape.
Why does this only work with cold batter? The contrast between cold batter and a hot oven is what triggers the rapid expansion. If your batter is warm, the leaveners have already started releasing gas and you've lost the spring. Don't let the batter sit too long after mixing; get it into the oven fast.
Why the flour toss keeps blueberries suspended. Blueberries are denser than muffin batter, which is why they sink in unfloured recipes. The flour toss coats the surface of each berry, absorbing the moisture on the skin and giving the batter something to grip. The friction is enough to hold the berries in place while the batter sets around them. This works with frozen berries too, but you have to toss them straight from the freezer, never thawed.
Why frozen berries are actually fine. Frozen blueberries get a bad reputation, but they bake into the same jammy pockets as fresh. The trick is not thawing them. Thawed berries leach purple juice into the batter and turn it gray. Frozen berries (still hard) keep their shape and don't bleed.
Sourdough Discard Blueberry Muffin Recipe Step-By-Step
For exact measurements, see the recipe card below.
Before you start: Set your eggs and buttermilk out for 20 minutes so they're not fridge-cold. Heat your oven to 425º F. Get your muffin pan ready (paper liners or grease the cups).

- In a large bowl, whisk together the dry ingredients: flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt. Set aside.

- In a separate bowl, whisk together the wet ingredients: melted butter (cooled a couple of minutes), oil, sourdough discard, buttermilk, egg, and vanilla. The mixture should look smooth and creamy.

- Toss the blueberries with a Tablespoon of the dry flour mix in a small bowl. This is the suspension trick. Don't skip it.

- Pour the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients. Add the flour-coated blueberries. Fold gently with a spatula until just combined, about 8 to 10 strokes. The batter will look lumpy, and you'll see streaks of dry flour. STOP MIXING.
PRO TIP: Overmixed muffin batter is the #1 cause of dense, tough muffins. Lumpy batter bakes into tender muffins. Smooth batter bakes into hockey pucks. When in doubt, stop mixing earlier.

- Scoop the batter into the muffin pan, filling each cup almost to the top (¾ to ⅞ full). This generous fill is what gives you the tall dome.
Sprinkle the tops with a pinch of coarse sugar if using.

- Bake at 425º F for 5 minutes. Do not open the door.

- Drop the oven temperature to 350º F (no need to remove the muffins) and continue baking for about 20 minutes, until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out with just a few moist crumbs.

- Let the muffins cool in the pan for 5 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack. Cooling in the pan too long traps steam and softens the bottoms.
Same-Day vs Overnight Method
These muffins work two ways. Pick what fits your morning.
Same-day method (35 minutes start to finish). Mix wet, mix dry, fold together with the floured blueberries, scoop, bake. The fastest path to muffins.
Overnight method (5 minutes of prep at night, 25 minutes of bake in the morning). Mix the WET ingredients in a bowl and cover. Mix the DRY ingredients in a separate bowl and leave on the counter. Toss the blueberries in flour in a third bowl and refrigerate. In the morning, combine everything, scoop, bake. The overnight rest lets the discard's flavor develop a little more depth.
Why I don't recommend mixing the full batter the night before. Once the leaveners hit the acidic ingredients, the clock is ticking. Mix the night before and the baking powder will have spent itself by morning, you'll get pancakes instead of muffins. Keep wet and dry separate until you bake.
Standard vs Jumbo Muffins
Same batter, two yields. Pick your pan.
Standard muffins (12-cup pan). Fill cups ¾ to ⅞ full. Bake at 425º F for 5 minutes, then 350º F for about 20 minutes. Yields 12 muffins.
Jumbo muffins (6-cup pan). Fill cups almost to the top. Bake at 425º F for 5 minutes, then 350º F for about 25 to 28 minutes. The extra batter mass needs more time to cook through. Yields 6 jumbo muffins. My favorite because the bigger center stays extra moist.
Mini muffins (24-cup pan). Fill cups ⅔ full. Bake at 425º F for 5 minutes, then 350º F for about 10 to 12 minutes. Yields about 24 minis. The dome is less dramatic at this size, that's normal.
Common Sourdough Discard Blueberry Muffin Problems To Avoid
- Muffins didn't dome. Most common cause: oven wasn't fully preheated to 425º F before the muffins went in. Use an oven thermometer (most home ovens run cool). Second cause: tired baking powder. Open container, check the date, replace if older than 6 months.
- Sunken middle. The muffin rose, then collapsed. Two possible causes: overmixed batter (gluten developed, then deflated), or the muffins came out too early. The toothpick test should come out with a few moist crumbs, not wet batter.
- Blueberries sank to the bottom. The flour toss got skipped, or the berries were wet/thawed when added. Fresh berries blot dry before tossing. Frozen berries straight from the freezer.
- Muffins are dense and heavy. Overmixed batter is the usual cause. The minute the flour streaks disappear, stop mixing. Lumpy batter is correct.
- Tops burnt before the centers cooked. Oven is running hot, OR you stayed at 425º F too long. Drop to 350º F after exactly 5 minutes, and check at 18 minutes if your oven runs hot.
- Muffins stuck to the liner. Either the liners were cheap (use unbleached parchment or silicone), or the muffins were eaten while warm (waiting 10 minutes makes them release cleanly).
- Batter turned purple. Frozen blueberries were thawed before adding. Toss frozen berries straight from the freezer in flour; the cold keeps them from leaching color.
- Crumb is gummy. Underbaked. Test with a toothpick in the center of the largest muffin, not the smallest, and expect just a few moist crumbs (not wet streaks).
Make This Sourdough Discard Blueberry Muffin Recipe Your Own
- Jumbo bakery-style. Use a 6-cup jumbo pan and bake 25 to 28 minutes at 350º F after the initial 5 minutes at 425º F. My personal favorite.
- Streusel topping. Skip the coarse sugar and crumb on a streusel made from ¼ cup brown sugar, ¼ cup flour, 2 Tablespoons cold butter, and a pinch of cinnamon, worked together with your fingers. Sprinkle on top of the batter before baking.
- Lemon-blueberry. Add 1 Tablespoon of fresh lemon zest to the dry ingredients. Skip the vanilla and use 1 teaspoon of lemon extract instead. Bright, fresh, summer.
- Whole wheat swap (healthier). Replace half the all-purpose with white whole wheat flour (1 cup AP + ½ cup white whole wheat). Adds fiber and a nuttier flavor. Don't go 100% whole wheat or the muffins will be dense.
- Vegan version. Replace the egg with a flax egg (1 Tablespoon ground flax + 3 Tablespoons water, sat 5 minutes). Replace butter with melted coconut oil or vegan butter. Replace buttermilk with ¾ cup almond milk + 2 teaspoons lemon juice (sat 5 minutes). Same method, same bake time.
- Active starter swap (for true sourdough blueberry muffins). Use ½ cup of active, recently-fed sourdough starter instead of discard. Muffins will have a touch more rise (the active yeast adds extra lift on top of the baking powder) and a milder tang. The discard version is the everyday default because it uses up what would otherwise be waste.
- Frozen vs fresh berries. Use either. Frozen straight from the freezer (no thawing), tossed in flour. Fresh, blotted dry, tossed in flour.
- Other berries. Raspberries, blackberries, and chopped strawberries all work. Cranberries work too but add an extra Tablespoon of sugar to balance the tartness.
- Crumb topping vs sugar crystals. Sugar crystals give you the bakery sparkle and gentle crunch. Streusel gives you a richer, more substantial top. Both are good, pick by mood.
- Lower sugar version. Drop the sugar to ¾ cup (from 1 cup) for a less sweet muffin. The blueberries bring enough natural sweetness that you can get away with this.
Got an active starter instead of discard? Try my lemon blueberry sourdough focaccia, which turns the same fruit combo into a sweet brunch bread.

Make-Ahead, Storage, And Refresh
Muffins are best the day they're made, but they store well for several days with the right setup.
- Counter, room temperature. Sealed container with a paper towel underneath (absorbs steam), up to 3 days. The paper towel is the trick, otherwise the bottoms get soggy.
- Refrigerated. Sealed container, up to 5 days. Refresh in a 300º F oven for 5 minutes to bring back the texture.
- Frozen. Flash-freeze on a sheet pan for 1 hour, then bag in a freezer-safe bag. Up to 3 months. Thaw at room temperature for 30 minutes, OR microwave for 20 seconds for a hot muffin in the morning.
- Make-ahead overnight. See the same-day vs overnight section above. Wet and dry separate, fold and bake in the morning.
- Sourdough discard. Cover and refrigerate up to 1 week before using for this recipe.
Final Thoughts
These muffins are the kind of weekend morning baking that fills the house with the smell of warm blueberries and brown sugar, takes 35 minutes start to finish, and gives you a reason to keep your sourdough starter alive even on weeks you don't bake bread. The dome on top of these muffins makes them feel special even when nothing else in your morning is. EASY!
If you love these and want the rest of the cluster, see my sourdough discard pancakes for the weekday breakfast version, sourdough discard donuts for the weekend special, sourdough pikelets for the 5-minute small bite, and sourdough discard crackers for the savory snack.
If you want the science behind why discard makes these muffins so tender plus storage and freezing protocols, see my full discard recipes hub.
Sourdough Discard Blueberry Muffin FAQs
Yes. Use the same ½ cup of active, recently-fed starter in place of the discard. The muffins will have a touch more rise (the active yeast adds extra lift on top of the baking powder) and a slightly milder tang. The discard version is the everyday default because it uses up what would otherwise be waste.
The two most common causes are: (1) the oven wasn't fully preheated to 425º F when the muffins went in, or (2) the baking powder is tired (older than 6 months opened). Use an oven thermometer to check your actual temperature, and replace your baking powder if you're not sure how old it is.
You skipped the flour toss, or the blueberries were wet (thawed frozen berries, or fresh berries that weren't blotted dry). Toss the berries with a Tablespoon of flour from the dry mix before folding into the batter. The flour coating creates friction with the batter that keeps the berries suspended.
Yes. Use them straight from the freezer; do NOT thaw first. Toss the frozen berries in flour and fold them into the batter immediately. Thawed berries leach purple juice and turn the batter gray.
Buttermilk gives the best texture and tang, but you can substitute. Mix ¾ cup of regular milk with 2 teaspoons of lemon juice or white vinegar, let it sit for 5 minutes, and use as buttermilk. Plain yogurt or kefir thinned slightly with water also works.
Sort of. Don't combine everything the night before; the baking powder will spend itself by morning, and you'll get flat muffins. DO mix the wet ingredients in one bowl and the dry ingredients in a separate bowl, both covered, and combine in the morning before baking. The discard's flavor also develops a little more during the overnight rest.
Use a 6-cup jumbo muffin pan. Fill cups almost to the top. Bake at 425º F for 5 minutes, then drop to 350º F and bake for 25 to 28 minutes. The extra batter mass needs more time. Yields 6 jumbo muffins.
Yes. Replace the butter with melted coconut oil or vegan butter. Replace the buttermilk with ¾ cup of dairy-free milk + 2 teaspoons of lemon juice (sat 5 minutes). For fully vegan, also replace the egg with a flax egg (1 Tablespoon ground flax + 3 Tablespoons water, sat 5 minutes).
In a sealed container at room temperature with a paper towel underneath, up to 3 days. Refrigerated, up to 5 days. Frozen, up to 3 months. Refresh stale muffins in a 300º F oven for 5 minutes.
More Sourdough Discard Recipes To Try
Leave Me A Review
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If you tried this Sourdough Discard Blueberry Muffin Recipe or any other recipe on my blog, please leave a 🌟 star rating and let me know how it goes in the comments. I love hearing from you!
Recipe

Ingredients
- 1 ½ cups all purpose flour
- 1 cup granulated sugar
- 2 teaspoons baking powder
- 1 teaspoon salt
- ¾ cup buttermilk
- ¼ cup unsalted butter melted
- ¼ cup oil
- ½ cup sourdough discard
- 1 large egg room temperature
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1 ½ cups blueberries
- 1 Tablespoon flour to toss the blueberries in
- sugar crystals optional
Instructions
- Heat oven to 425º F. Line a 12-cup standard muffin pan (or a 6-cup jumbo pan) with paper liners.
- In a large bowl, whisk together flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt.
- In a separate bowl, whisk together the buttermilk, melted butter (cooled), oil, sourdough discard, egg, and vanilla until smooth.
- Toss the blueberries with the reserved Tablespoon of flour in a small bowl.
- Pour the wet ingredients into the dry. Add the floured blueberries. Fold gently with a spatula 8 to 10 strokes until just combined. Batter will be lumpy. Do NOT overmix.
- Scoop into the prepared muffin pan, filling cups ¾ to ⅞ full (standard) or almost to the top (jumbo).
- Sprinkle the tops with coarse sugar if using.
- Bake at 425º F for 5 minutes. Do not open the oven.
- Drop the temperature to 350º F and bake for about 20 minutes (standard) or 25 to 28 minutes (jumbo), until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out with just a few moist crumbs.
- Cool in the pan for 5 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack.
Notes
- Dairy-free Option: Swap the butter for melted coconut oil or vegan butter, and use a dairy-free milk alternative (like almond, oat, or soy milk) with a splash of lemon juice instead of buttermilk.
- Storage Instructions: Keep cooled muffins in an airtight container at room temperature for 2-3 days. For longer storage, freeze them for up to 2 months and thaw at room temp or warm briefly in the oven.











