Wednesday 23 December 2009

Sacrifice of a muffin














We couldn't resist borrowing this beagle puppy called Muffin to pose with our own little beauty. Model 1 - 8 weeks old. Model 2 - 8 minutes old.

Of course, we had to sacrifice the muffin, and help was on hand in the snowy garden (the evidence is in the snow on the lower chops...).













We are taking a break through Boxing Day but for orders from 27th and over the turn of the year, please contact MagogMuffins@gmail.com

Meanwhile, a happy festive season from MagogMuffins and friends.

Wednesday 9 December 2009

Whats on the menu?

Congratulations to Theo Bosanquet who e-mailed MagogMuffins@gmail.com with his winning suggestion of "Midwinter Muffin" - which has now joined "Cranberry & Orange" in our Christmas boxes. Midwinter Muffin (anything but bleak) contrasts spice & lemon imbued nuggets of Granny Smith apples against the sweet essence of mince pies. We also enjoyed the suggestions from "movewithease" and Chris Thorpe in the comments below and hope they enjoy the muffin samples winging their way to them via Royal Mail.

Theo shared his prize with the team at the Whatsonstage.com office and fed back to us this review....

"The muffins were an utter, unadulterated delight. A definite 5 stars from the Whatsonstage.com team"


Wednesday 2 December 2009

Magog Muffins on the Move












Warm greetings to all those who have asked where you can find Magog Muffins. Well, they are on the move and coming to you.

Our snazzy new web site will be coming online in January, and will be more interactive for orders and payments. In the interim, through the festive season we are offering the following for delivery by post in the U.K:

Postal packs (anywhere in the U.K) Full of seasonal goodness, these feature our two Christmas specials along with some of our best regular offerings. The Magog Muffins team, full of seasonal goodwill, are also offering special prices, including postage and packing, of £10 for a 4 muffin pack, £15 for an 8 muffin pack or £30 for a large box of 20 muffins. Packs will be posted first class, and we can include your message on a handwritten Christmas card with the 20 muffin packs at no extra charge.





4 pack - £10




8 pack - £15




20 pack - £30




Please contact us directly by e-mail with any questions at MagogMuffins@gmail.com

We look forward to hearing from you and satisfying your muffin desires!

(For those in the Cambridge area, in January we will also be running a promotion at our neighbouring Gog Magog Hills Farm Shop and Delicatessen, and may be at the Saturday Farmers Fayres - more on this early in 2010).

Monday 30 November 2009

Ms December - Orange & Cranberry

Ms December is our Christmas offering. The surprising goodness of cranberries embelished with a touch of orange and distant hint of spice. A flavour combination that is suggestive of traditional Panetone, but with our own twist.

Now it's your turn:

We would like another special for the Christmas season that would complement this one in our festive packs. What flavour combination would you suggest? The one we pick receives the first of our mega-boxes of 20 muffins-by-post, including your winning selection.


You can post your ideas as comments below, or e-mail to MagogMuffins@gmail.com

We look forward to hearing from you - come on creatives!

Tuesday 24 November 2009

Travel bag - Kenya












When Magog Muffin has to travel, the sturdy Gog Magog Hills Farm Shop bag goes too, swapping its usual cargo of local goodies for laptop, files and the odd refugee item from an overstuffed suitcase. Thus it sometimes finds itself on the horns of a dilemma or hanging about at the equator.

Magog Muffin does not expend carbon easily, but when it is unavoidable adds on as much value as she can. So an overnight in Nairobi with family came up with some Kenya varieties of savoury muffins (of which more anon). Meanwhile, "safari mzuri" or words to that effect.

Sunday 22 November 2009

Muffin doin' ...







After the TV bunfight on Friday Magog Muffins are doing a one-off special for Children in Need. We are offering a mid-week muffin pack on Wednesday 25th November with all proceeds to Pudsey. Packs of 15 midi-muffins will be mixed flavours but will include a few of our special Pudsey recipe "Spot the Bear". This is a particularly health conscious fruity mixture with apricot (low fat sweetness), a sprinkling of sour cherry (apparently good for circulation) and a smidgeon of goji berries (good for everything else!).

Contact MagogMuffins@gmail.com by Tuesday mid-day for delivery (sorry but we can only offer this in the local Cambridge area) on Wednesday morning. (Watch out also for more specials - and a competition - over the festive season).

Thursday 19 November 2009

Princely fare is fair for forests














Respect to HRH Prince Charles. Not only is he busy using his 'pulling power' to save the rainforests but he is making sure his guests do their bit. Only sustainably-sourced palm oil in the Sainsbury's biscuits (clearly clear out of Duchy Originals), according to the notices in little silver card holders beside the plates. Good.

Have to hand it to HRH Organic champion - the food was delicious. Several guests, stand up do, but not a cold, miniscule, over-worked canope in sight. Just delectable, piping-hot individual cottage pies followed by warm apple crumble and cream. It was, I admit, an up-market crumble scattered over finely chopped spiced apple chunks, rather than the usual squadgy-sitting-in-the-oven-sunday-lunch version. Magog Muffins approved.

Thursday 5 November 2009

Mr November - dark chocolate chunk
































Well, we just felt it was chocolate time. Apparently today is the grumpiest day of the year, for which chocolate was invented. Of course, it has to be fairly-traded dark chocolate with not a smidgeon of added palm oil. We chop our own choc so the chips are more like chunks. Introducing then, our choice for Mr. November - your very own Dark Chocolate Chunk.

(posted today to warm up @BugJemm and other chilled out tea-drinking twitterers)

Saturday 24 October 2009

Magog Traditions

This colourful 16th Century parchment apparently depicts Alexander (with a bit of help!) building a wall against Gog and Magog. Variously giants or tyrants, Gog and Magog appear in numerous texts and mythologies.

For us, they are the names attached to the local "hills" (I know, I know, mere pimples on the landscape for real mountain people, but all that the flatlands of East Anglia have to offer...). We are, however, attaching a new tradition to the Magog name, one of ethical good taste, and we are guarding it jealously.

But here's some more food for thought. Could these same hills be the real site of Troy and gazed upon by fair Helen of Troy?
Iman Wilkens in the book "Where Troy once stood" argues that Troy was located on the Gog Magog Downs here in Cambridgeshire. Hmmmm.

Thursday 22 October 2009

Mobile Muffins














It is a chilly, grey Monday morning. You struggle in to work and contemplate the week ahead. Maybe a coffee will help .... and there beside the kettle is a lovely surprise basket of Magog Muffins.

If you would like to spring a treat like this on your friends or colleagues contact us at MagogMuffins@googlemail.com and we'll see what we can do. With postal strikes upon us we are considering trialling direct delivery in Cambridge on Monday mornings.

And on the subject of mobile muffins - many, many thanks to the lovely lady who found one of our mobile phones in pieces on the path while out walking her dog today, then took the trouble to put it together and phone us. Hope you enjoy your muffins.

Friday 16 October 2009

Red muffin day











How many muffins is enough?

Testing mixed packs of a 'baker's dozen' as relief for office overload.
So far so stress-relieving!

Thursday 15 October 2009

Two minutes to midnight feast


At Magog Muffins we signed up to Blog Action Day - bloggers around the world drawing attention to climate change as the world tries to decide what we need to do about it. We have timed this at two minutes to midnight on blog action day, as the climate clock is ticking and we are, metaphorically speaking, already at two minutes to midnight.

Our contribution is muffins with a low carbon footprint. Eggs produced within a few hundred yards of our kitchen. Flour grown and ground in our county. Butter from cows grazed in the county. Apples, carrots and whatever else is in season grown and picked from our own garden or those of friends. And where we can't source them locally our ingredients are organic and fairly traded. So enjoy your midnight muffin feast - guilt-free.

Monday 12 October 2009

Cappuccino caressssssssssssssssss












Oh boy, are we pleased with this one. Not absolutely neccessary to combine with a creamy cappuccino, but it does make the perfect complement. A warm burst of coffee muffin, topped with a smidgeon of fragile frosting and sprinkled with a few slivers of dark chocolate.

We are confident of course in the credentials of the chocolate - dark, fairly traded and not a hint of palm oil. Confidence in the coffee was a touch more troubling - until we discovered the Coffee and Conservation blog which keeps us up to date on everything our ethical sensibilities need to know. A taster (from the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center, First Sustainable Coffee Congress overview paper - imagine, a whole conference on sustainable coffee!):

"Sustainable coffee is produced on a farm with high biological diversity and low chemical inputs. It conserves resources, protects the environment, produces efficiently, competes commercially and enhances the quality of life for farmers and society as a whole."

So, guilt free pleasure is possible..... but don't get too comfortable on your caffeine cloud. Checkout how much caffeine would be 'enough' (For Magog Muffin Maestro it came out at 111.10 cups of brewed coffee taken all at once. Hmmmm, safe for now.... maybe the cappuccino muffins soften the impact anyway).

Oh, and watch out for our 'beverage beauties' planned for November.... a pack of Lemon Tea, Hot Chocolate (with traces of chilli) and Cappuccino to chase away the winter blues......


Saturday 10 October 2009

Muffin Poetry Award for Palm oil free campaigner




















The forest on the left in the north of Sumatra Island is storing carbon and other ecosystem services, providing habitat for orang utans and other creatures, as well as livelihoods for people living nearby. The palm oil plantation on the right has knocked out this biodiversity, destroyed the ecoystem services and slewed the local economy.

Haiku competition panel have awarded the Muffin prize to twitterer @kusasi for his ethical content - congratulations Neil (and his palm-oil-free website)

paper overflows
sweet sponge chocolate or fruit
palm oil free goodness


Runner up is the double Haiku offered by twitterer @miametro (and her lovely photography)

you should take flavour
suggestions - PB&J
definitely yum!

or maybe perhaps
a bit more traditional
cherry almond, NOM.


Magog Muffins is struggling slightly with the concept of peanut butter and jelly flavour........ but thinking of trying this for a Fourth of July offering or in celebration of Barak Obama's Nobel Peace Prize. All flavour suggestions very welcome here in our ecokitchen - please use comment form (or tell us on twitter @MagogMuffins). If we take any up we will gladly send you a sample from the first batch out of the oven.

And that guest judge? He declined to be named this time around, but might reveal himself if we run another competition next National Poetry Day (perhaps combine with a tweet up eat up?)

Thursday 8 October 2009

Muffin haiku

National Poetry Day Haiku:






Luscious summer muse
I yearn for your sensation
sweetly on my lips.






Go on then - only 17 syllables - send us your
muffin-inspired haikus.


Free muffin for the best, as selected by Magog Muffins
plus a specialist guest judge (to be announced).

Happy National Poetry Day UK from Magog Muffins.

Wednesday 7 October 2009

Ms October - Apricot & Almond


As autumnal breezes brushed away the hazy, lazy heat of the Provencal summer, Ms. October packed her bags and headed home. Ground almonds and squadgy apricots, topped with a toasted flake or two, help keep the spirit of summer alive and the encroaching winter at bay. Available to taste this week at Gog Magog Hills - together with the even hotter Stem Ginger, currently under consideration for the Ms. November title.

Sunday 4 October 2009

Nice buns? Skinny muffins? Chain stores head to head.

Goes against the grain to buy a store muffin in this household but we thought we should pit our Davids against the Goliaths and have done some selective sleuthing.











First up - "Nice Buns" (sic) 'Toffee and Banana'.

Looks: 5/5 If you like obvious & puffy.
Topping: 1/5 Toppings looked better on other varieties.
Texture:
2/5 Soft, bit dry. Crust cracks like dried mud on rugby boots.
Taste: 1/5 1st bite a surge of toffee; second bite toffee. Not a lot of banana.
Aftertaste: 0/5 Rather chemical. Think they must use artificial flavouring.










Next up - classic Starbucks 'Banana & Nut'

Looks: 4/5 Pretty much like a muffin should, but veering towards mushroom.
Topping: 1/5 A few indeterminate nuts & one slice hard, sugary dried banana.
Texture: 4/5 Lovely, crumbly, moist.
Taste: 3/5 What nuts are these?
Aftertaste: 2/5 Just a touch too much raising agent.

Web search yielded little on the composition of the 'Nice Buns', but we were anyway unconvinced. A mouthwatering display for tired drivers on the motorway, and a real sweet rush at first taste, but after that soft cardboard would give them a run for their money. (Next time will yield to son and try the chocolate varieties in case they are better and will report back).

The Starbucks mega-muffins are worth a go though. Their web site argues that they have recently responded to public pressure and gone all natural and ethical with flavourings (although we might challenge what they mean by natural and also on embedded palm oil). In the interests of research we have tried some other flavours; the breakfast muffin is all topping, but tasty; the skinny ginger looked drab but was delicious. There is a sting in the tail though - to its credit, the company provides a detailed table of nutritional content. 'Skinny muffins' are substantively lower in fat but still in the hundreds for calories and what they lose in fat they make up in sugars. One classic muffin is over 500 cals - buyer beware.