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Zero-Oil Gut-Friendly Gluten-Free Muffins
HIGH PROTEIN ZERO OIL GLUTEN-FREE GUT-FRIENDLY VEGAN-ADAPTABLE

HIGH-PROTEIN GUT-FRIENDLY GLUTEN-FREE MUFFINS
(ZERO OIL)

Protein

5.5G

Fiber

~5G

Calories

~113

Prep Time

15M

Bake Time

27M

5.5g protein per muffin—nearly doubled from the original—thanks to banana-flavored pea protein powder. Zero added oil (tigernut flour's natural fat handles that). Combined with chia seeds and psyllium husk for a prebiotic fiber boost, plus a dome trick baking method for perfect tops and an overnight resistant starch protocol. At ~110-115 calories with ~5g fiber, these pack serious nutrition into a grab-and-go format. Easily adaptable for vegan diets with flax eggs.

Ingredients

Makes 10-12 muffins

Dry Ingredients

85g tigernut flour
55g banana-flavored pea protein powder
30g pumpkin seed flour Preferably partially defatted
21g ground chia seeds
8g psyllium husk powder
8g (≈ 2 tsp) baking powder
2.5g (≈ ½ tsp) baking soda
2.5g (≈ 1 tsp) cinnamon
1.5–2g (≈ ¼ tsp) fine salt

Wet Ingredients

50g whole egg (1 medium)
90g egg whites From ~3 large eggs
150g unsweetened almond yogurt
80g mashed ripe banana
120g unsweetened applesauce Replaces ALL oil — zero added oil needed
42g allulose or monk fruit/allulose blend
5g vanilla extract
5g apple cider vinegar

Optional Add-Ins (Pick One)

½ cup fresh or frozen blueberries
½ cup grated zucchini, squeezed dry
⅓ cup finely grated carrots
1 Tbsp raw cacao powder (replace 1 Tbsp tigernut flour)
Handful of pumpkin seeds on top before baking Magnesium + zinc boost

Step-by-Step Instructions

1

Preheat and Prep

Preheat the oven to 425°F (220°C). Line a 12-cup muffin tin with paper liners or use silicone cups for easy release.

2

Bloom the Binders

Stir ground chia seeds and psyllium husk powder with ½ cup warm water in a small bowl. Rest for 5 minutes until a thick gel forms. This gel replaces gluten's binding role and adds prebiotic fiber.

3

Mix the Dry Base

In a large bowl, whisk together tigernut flour, pea protein powder, white rice flour, baking powder, baking soda, cinnamon, and sea salt. Break up any protein powder clumps.

4

Combine Wet Ingredients

In a separate bowl, whisk eggs (or flax eggs for vegan), mashed banana, applesauce, honey (or maple syrup), and vanilla extract until smooth.

5

Fold and Fill

Pour the wet mixture and chia gel into the dry ingredients. Stir gently for ~15 strokes—avoid overmixing. If batter is too stiff, add water 1 Tbsp at a time. Fold in optional add-ins if using. Fill each muffin cup ⅔ to ¾ full.

6

🏔️ The Dome Trick

Bake at 425°F for 5 minutes (this creates beautiful domed tops), then reduce to 350°F (175°C) and bake for 17-22 more minutes until golden and a toothpick comes out clean. Cool completely on a wire rack (~30 min).

💡 Why the dome trick? Protein powder makes GF batter denser, which often yields flat tops. The initial blast of high heat sets the exterior quickly, forcing the batter to rise up instead of spreading out.

🧬 Resistant Starch Step

The Overnight Resistant Starch Protocol

7

Refrigerate Overnight

Place cooled muffins in the fridge for 12-24 hours at 4°C (39°F). During this time, amylose chains re-crystallize into RS3 resistant starch—a type of prebiotic fiber that feeds beneficial gut bacteria.

8

Reheat and Enjoy

Reheat at 300°F for 8-10 minutes, or microwave 20-30 seconds. RS3 survives reheating—the resistant starch is locked in permanently after retrogradation.

💡 Why this works: When starch cools, amylose molecules reassemble into tight crystalline structures that resist digestion in the small intestine. They pass to the colon where they're fermented by beneficial bacteria, producing butyrate—a short-chain fatty acid critical for gut lining health.

⚡ Protein Upgrade

Why Pea Protein?

Bakes Better Than Most Powders

Pea protein has a neutral baking profile—it doesn't get rubbery or chalky like whey or casein. It holds moisture and creates a tender crumb, making it ideal for gluten-free muffins.

The 20-25% Sweet Spot

Replacing 20-25% of the flour weight with protein powder maximizes protein without destroying texture. More than that and muffins turn out dense and dry. This ratio (45g protein powder to 115g total flour) hits ~28%.

Banana Flavor + Cinnamon = 🤌

Banana-flavored pea protein complements the cinnamon and real banana in the batter. The flavors reinforce each other instead of competing, so the protein powder blends seamlessly into each muffin.

Extra Leavening Compensates

Baking powder is bumped from 1½ to 2 tsp because protein powder absorbs liquid and makes batter denser. The extra leavening + dome trick = perfect rise every time.

🔬 Why Zero Oil Works

Tigernut Flour = Built-In Fat

Tigernut flour is ~25% fat (mostly oleic acid, the same healthy fat in olive oil). One cup delivers ~28g of built-in fat—providing all the tenderness added oil would normally provide.

RS5 From Natural Fat

Tigernut's natural fat still forms RS5 amylose-lipid complexes during cooling. The resistant starch benefits without a single drop of added oil.

4 Moisture Sources

Banana + applesauce + chia gel + eggs = four moisture sources that make added oil completely redundant. Applesauce pectin provides structure while adding gut-friendly soluble fiber.

RS3 Is 100% Temperature-Driven

Retrogradation (RS3 formation) is driven entirely by cooling temperature—zero fat needed. The starch re-crystallizes into prebiotic fiber regardless of oil content.

💡 The Bottom Line

Most GF muffin recipes add oil on autopilot. But with tigernut flour's 28g of natural fat per cup, added oil is pure redundancy. Removing it saves significant calories per batch while the flour's oleic acid handles tenderness, RS5 formation, and mouthfeel all on its own.

Per Muffin

Nutrition Facts

12 servings per batch

Serving size 1 Muffin
Amount per serving Calories
~113
Total Fat 2g 3%
Total Carbohydrate 16g 6%
Dietary Fiber 4.5-5g 18%
4 types: prebiotic, soluble, insoluble + RS3
Net Carbs ~9g
Iron 1.5mg 8%
Omega-3 (ALA) 0.28g
Protein 5.5g 11%

* The % Daily Value (DV) tells you how much a nutrient in a serving of food contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice. Fiber content includes prebiotic fiber from tigernut flour, soluble fiber from chia/psyllium, and resistant starch (RS3) from the overnight protocol.

🩸

Hidden Iron Boost

Pea protein is 75-100% DV iron per full scoop. Even the small per-muffin portion delivers 1.5mg (8% DV). Eat two and you're at 3mg (17% DV)—more than a serving of spinach. Pair with vitamin C (like blueberries) to boost absorption.

🥣 Head to Head

Two Muffins vs. A Bowl of Oatmeal

Two muffins deliver more than double the protein, double the fiber, and far greater fiber diversity than a bowl of oatmeal — for roughly 75 more calories.

2 Muffins
~225 cal
Oatmeal
~150 cal
Protein 11g 5g
Fiber (diverse types) 9-10g 4g
Iron 3mg (17% DV) 1.9mg (24% DV)
Fiber diversity 4 types
prebiotic · soluble · insoluble · RS3
1 type
beta-glucan
Omega-3 0.56g Trace
Gluten-free ❌ unless GF oats
🧑‍🍳 Pro Tips

Pea Protein Baking Tips

!

Don't Overmix

Protein powder develops a gummy texture when overworked. Stick to ~15 gentle strokes—lumps are fine.

💧

Extra Liquid Is Essential

Pea protein absorbs 2-3x more water than flour. That's why we use ½ cup liquid instead of ⅓. If batter is stiff, add more 1 Tbsp at a time.

🍌

Banana Flavor = Flavor Synergy

Banana-flavored pea protein reinforces the real banana already in the batter. The flavors stack instead of competing, so the powder disappears.

☁️

Lightest Texture of All Plant Proteins

Pea protein yields the lightest, fluffiest crumb of any plant protein in baking—noticeably better than hemp, soy, or rice protein.

📦 Storage Cheat Sheet

DAYS 1-3

Refrigerator. RS3 forms and strengthens. Best texture and gut benefits.

DAYS 4+

Freezer. RS3 survives freezing completely. Wrap individually for easy grab-and-go.

REHEAT FROZEN

350°F for 12-15 minutes from frozen. Or microwave 45-60 seconds. RS3 stays intact.