Introducing my new favourite peach recipe – Peach Crumble Muffins! A soft buttery crumb littered with juicy pops of peach, and a crunchy, crumbly pecan topping, these are amazing made with ripe peaches, but honestly so good with canned peaches too!
For more peach recipes, browse the Peach Recipe Collection. 🍑

Peach Crumble Muffins
I’ve been chasing my perfect Master Muffin Batter for years, but I’ve never quite nailed it. My criteria is demanding – pantry staples only, no creaming butter (muffins should be hand-mixed! *she says, passionately*), a proper tall dome, and it has to stay fresh for 2 days.
Eight batches into making this, thinking it would be a cinch using this batter or this batter (I was wrong) I finally realised I probably won’t ever land on one single master recipe. Different add-ins need different things – juicy fruit needs more structure, heavy mix-ins need lift, delicate flavours need a softer crumb. One batter can’t do it all.
So, this “easy to invent” muffin is purpose built for juicy peaches, to make the flavour shine with a sprinkle of crunchy crumb for extra pizzaz!


What you need to make Peach Crumble Muffins
If peaches are out of season, don’t worry! This recipe works perfectly with canned peaches. Also, see my useful tips below for how to ripen peaches, and a nifty tip if you cut the peach open only to find it rock-hard unripe inside (macerate it!).
1. Peaches – ripe but firm
We use a good amount of peaches here, 2 large or 3 medium. Most inside the muffin and some on top (if you put too much inside the muffin, you get too many wet-raw muffin batter patches, better to put extra on the surface). I use yellow peaches for colour only, so feel free to use white!

Use ripe but firm peaches. If they are overripe (ie squishy on the surface) it is difficult to cut and will turn a bit mushy once baked.
Canned peaches works perfectly here as a substitute if they are out of season (the season for good peaches is notoriously short here in Australia). See recipe card for directions (you’ll need a large 825g / 29oz can, preferably in juice rather than sugary syrup).
Other stone fruit – Yes, yes, yes! Anything ripe and juicy. 🙂 Nectarines, apricots, plums, cherries. For mangoes, I’d use my Mango Muffin recipe (it is mango-forward). See below recipe card for other fruit muffin recipes I have (and which to use for which fruit).
tips for UNRIPE PEACHES
Unripe whole peaches – Ripen in a brown paper bag with a red apple, folded closed, on the counter. Check daily. Works for slightly underripe peaches, not as well for really unripe rock-hard ones.
Unripe chopped peaches – If you start chopping only to find it’s unripe inside, toss chopped pieces with 2 teaspoons of white sugar, then set aside for 10 minutes to macerate (soften and sweeten). Drain, then use as per recipe (you can use the juice in the batter – count it as part of the yogurt).
2. muffin batter

Flour – Just regular plain flour (all-purpose flour). Don’t substitute for wholemeal flour (whole-wheat) – it is much more absorbent so it will make the muffin dry.
Self raising flour (ie flour with baking powder built it) – It is best to use flour plus baking soda or baking powder because it makes softer muffins, but if you only have self-raising flour, you can use that instead. However, expect the muffins not to dome quite as well.
Baking soda (bi-carbonate soda) – About 3x stronger than baking powder which we need in these muffins which are considerably weighed down with a lot of peaches and a good pile of crumbly topping! However, if you only have baking powder, it will work – use 3 teaspoons – but expect the muffin to rise marginally less.
Yogurt – Any plain, unsweetened, full-fat yogurt. I use Greek-style which is my fridge staple. Yogurt is a bit of a bakers’ secret, known for making soft cakes. Here, it helps make the batter thicker to keep the peach bits suspended plus the acidity gives the baking soda a kick start for a lovely muffin dome. Non-dairy yogurt like coconut yogurt should work as well, as long as it has gone through a similar fermentation process like regular yogurt so it is a bit acidic.
Unsalted butter – Melted, then slightly cooled.
Sugar – I use white sugar here because I want a white muffin crumb. You can switch for brown if you prefer.
An egg – Just one egg is all we need to hold the muffin crumb together. Using only one is another reason that this muffin crumb stays fresh for days – because the more eggs you use, the drier the crumb gets (because of the egg whites). Make sure it’s at room temperature, and that it’s a large egg (labelled as such on the carton, ~55g / 2 oz each in shell) – definition and explanation here.
Cinnamon powder – Because peaches and cinnamon are a perfect match!
Vanilla extract – A hint for flavouring the batter. Extract is better than vanilla essence (which is imitation). I wouldn’t use vanilla pod – feels wasted to use in a muffin.
Salt – Just a pinch, to bring out the flavours in everything else. Standard practice in sweet baking these days!
3. CRUMBLY PECAN TOPPING
I tried this with a plain crumbly topping (streusel). But then I added pecans, and there was no going back. Here’s all you need:

Pecans – Toasted in the oven for 5 minutes (it’s so worth it, really brings out the pecan flavour), then finely chopped. Non-nut substitute: oats! It’s what I tried first, using my Apple Crumble topping. But pecan trumped it, flavour-wise. 🙂
Flour – Just regular plain / all-purpose flour.
Brown sugar – Rather than white sugar, for lovely caramely tones in the topping.
Unsalted butter – This is what makes the mixture clump a bit. Plus, well, you know. Buttery goodness!
Salt – I actually really like being able to taste a bit of salt in the crumbly topping. Not enough take make it salty though. 🙂

How to make Peach Crumble Muffins
There’s 3 parts to this recipe: chopping the peaches, making the crumbly topping (very easy 4 ingredient mix job) then the batter. It’s straight forward, but please ensure your fridge ingredients are at room temperature so they combine properly (egg, yogurt – and the peaches!).
1. CHOP PEACHES
Treat it like an avocado – cut the peach in half by slicing around the natural seam, all the way to the stone. Twist the halves apart, remove the stone, then dice! Make sure to chop them fairly small as large pieces will sink, and also take up too much “space” in the muffin crumb (more small pieces in each muffin works better, I found).

2. CRUMBLY TOPPING
Mix the chopped pecans, flour, sugar and salt in a bowl. Add butter and mix with a fork – it will resemble wet sand. It will clump and adhere to the muffin as it bakes.

3. muffin batter
I have a firm view that muffin batters should be able to be hand mixed. (It is ok, however, to require an electric mixer for cupcakes! Perfectly logical in my world.)

Whisk Dry and Wet ingredients in separate bowls. (Tip: Whisk the dry first then the wet so you don’t need to wash the whisk in between).
Combine – Make a well in the centre of the Dry ingredient bowl and pour the wet in. Mix just until the flour is almost incorporated (~ 14 stirs). The batter will still be lumpy and you will still see some flour – this is right!
💡The goal with muffin batter is to make it with the minimum stirs possible once the wet and dry ingredients are combined, as the less you stir, the softer the muffins. So these mixing steps are designed to do just that. Excessive stirring = hard muffins = 😭.

Add peaches – Pour the 1 1/4 cups of chopped peaches into the batter.
Minimum mixes – Then gently mix through, just until you can no longer see flour and the peaches are dispersed (~ 8 to 10 stirs).
4. assemble and bake
Work quickly here – now is not the time to call your bestie for a long gasbag! Try to get the muffins in the oven within 5 minutes. Once the baking soda is activated (when it mixes with yogurt), it loses power quickly, and slow hands mean flat muffins.

Fill – Divide the batter between the muffin tin holes, use it all! There should be enough to fill it to the top of the muffin tin holes, a bit below the rim of the paper liner I’ve used (pictured above, sticks out a few millimetres above the muffin tin). I use an ice cream scoop with a lever – handy for this purpose! Because the batter is thick, it stays in a bit of a mound using the scooper which is fine – it gets flattened in the next step.
Top the batter with a few pieces of diced peaches, pressing them in lightly. Then spoon a mound of crumble on each. Use it all and pile it high! The crumble clumps and sets in the oven.

Bake for 23 minutes at 200°C / 390°F (180°C fan-forced), or until a toothpick inserted into the centre comes out clean. It might take up to 25 minutes, depending on your oven. (PS America – I know 390°F is an odd temperature, if you’re oven only goes up in 25°F increments, do 400°F for 10 minutes then 375°F for the remaining 13 minutes.)
Rest the muffins for 10 minutes in the muffin tin to cool a little and “set” (muffins are quite fragile when hot). They are now ready to be devoured – or, if you are not going to eat all 12 immediately, put the rest on a cooling rack to finish cooling.

These Peach Muffins keep really well. They will still be fresh 3 days later – I can’t get on board recipes that are “best eaten on the day”. Because I know these warm, fruity, buttery muffins will be irresistible to you, but can you eat twelve in one sitting??! 😂 (I shouldn’t laugh. My heart is pulling me towards the muffins but my jeans are weighing on my conscience).
The one caveat I do have is that the crumbly topping is not as crisp as it is on the day it is made. I thought that would bother me but it didn’t. You still get texture from the pecans. And if you really want to refresh it, just pop the muffin under the broiler (oven-grill) for a 2 to 3 minutes to crisp up the top again.
Hope you enjoy! – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
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Peach Crumble Muffins
Ingredients
Peaches (2 large, 3 medium):
- 1 1/4 cups peaches , ripe but firm, skin on, cut into small 1.25cm / 1/2″ pieces (Note 1)
- 3/4 cup Extra chopped peaches – for topping
Wet batter ingredients:
- 100 g (7 tbsp) unsalted butter, melted, cooled
- 2/3 cup caster sugar / superfine sugar (granulated/regular white sugar ok too)
- 1/2 cup plain unsweetened yogurt , at room temperature (Note 2)
- 1 large egg , at room temperature (~55g/2oz shell-on weight)
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
Dry muffin ingredients:
- 1 1/2 cups plain flour / all-purpose flour (260g)
- 1 tsp baking soda (bi-carbonate soda) (Note 3)
- 1/2 tsp cinnamon powder
- 1/8 tsp cooking salt / kosher salt
Crumbly topping:
- 1/3 cup plain flour / all-purpose flour
- 1/3 cup (tightly packed) brown sugar
- 1/2 cup pecans (sub rolled oats for nut-free)
- 1/2 tsp cinnamon powder
- 1/8 tsp cooking salt / kosher salt
- 30g (2 tbsp) unsalted butter , melted
Instructions
ABBREVIATED RECIPE
- Mix Crumble ingredients. Whisk Dry and Wet ingredients in separate bowls, mix together, stir in peaches. Fill muffin tin, top with extra peaches, top with Crumble. Bake 200°C / 390°F (180°C fan) 23 – 25 minutes.
FULL RECIPE
- Preheat oven to 180°C / 350°F (160°C fan-forced).
- Toast pecans – Spread the pecans on a tray and place in the oven for 5 minutes. Remove, cool slightly then finely chop.
- Turn oven up to 200°C / 390°F (180°C fan-forced). Line a 12 hole standard muffin tin with paper liners.
- Crumbly topping – Mix the flour, sugar, salt and chopped pecans using a fork in a small bowl. Add butter and mix until it resembles wet sand. Set aside.
- Muffin batter – Whisk the Dry ingredients in a large bowl. Whisk the Wet ingredients in a separate bowl. Pour the Wet into the Dry ingredients bowl then mix with a rubber spatula until the flour is almost incorporated – about 14 stirs, the batter will be lumpy.
- Add peaches – Add the 1 1/2 cups peach pieces, then mix just until you can no longer see flour and the peaches are dispersed. Minimum stirs is key here, for soft muffins!
- Fill muffin tin – Working quickly (Note 4), divide the batter between the holes, filling to the top – a lever ice cream scoop is super useful here! Lightly press the Extra peaches on top of each muffin, then spoon the Crumble on – just pile it on top and use it all!
- Bake 23 – 25 minutes (check first at 23 minutes), until a toothpick comes out clean. Leave in the muffin tin for 10 minutes then transfer to fully cool on a rack – or eat!
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
In memory of Dozer
Dozer came home yesterday. On one hand, it felt like a bit of closure, having him back home. But it was also a hard day.
In amongst the sadness though, I had to laugh when I opened it up and picked up the velvet bag inside. It was so much heavier than I expected! 😆 And then I thought, of course it is. He was a big boy. Big dog, big presence, apparently big box too. ❤️

Dear Dozer,
You know that for years I’ve been saying that my phone is listening to me. Why else would it keep serving up ads for extra-slimming jeans and gel masks that will shave 10 years off my face?
Now, my phone is torturing me with photo memories of you. (I say “torture” because seeing photos of you still makes me weep). So today was an album of photos from this day – 27 February – over the years. And unsurprisingly the album was 99% you. Nice little flashback of the life we shared – here’s a selection:
27 February 2013 – Here you are, only 10 months old!! That time I shaved you in an attempt to control your shedding. (Sorry! 😂)

27 February 2016 – This is you at 3 years old. Already owning the beach!!

27 February 2019 – So apparently, this was a hair day. For both of us! 😂 Remember how you used to come with me to the hairdresser when we lived in the northern beaches???

27 February 2021 – When we got the gardens done when we lived in Mona Vale!! Ah yes, I remember this day was closely followed by an emergency vet visit to get your stomach pumped when you munched your way through a garden bed of blood and bone. YUCK!!

27 February 2022 – Doing something extraordinary – wiping eye snot off your snout?? (You always were a high performer).

27 February 2023 – That time we found out we made the New York Times best seller list!

27 February 2024 – At a photo shoot for Tonight! This was for the big double page photo of the Sweets chapter you were in. ❤️

27 February 2025 – And this day last year. A rare day I don’t have a photo of you, but weirdly I have photos of what is clearly your toys! 😂

Oh but wait, here’s one from the next day, a brilliant in focus shot. I don’t know why I’m playing with you in what looks like a city meeting outfit. 😂 But we were sure having fun! ❤️

I hope someone up in the big sky kitchen is making these peach muffins for you and sneaking you extra crumb topping when no one’s looking because the crunchy bits were always your favourite..
I miss you so much, every single day.
Love – your mum x
I was fine until i saw your bracelet xxx love from me and mine to you
Just bought my can of peaches and going to make the Dozer Peach Muffins today! They look amazing. I hope that Dozer gets the whole muffin and not just the crumbs…surely that’s the upside to being in the big sky? I know my Dave will be getting one too up there x
I was so excited to see you had posted a new recipe but I also experienced a pang of sadness because I knew there wouldn’t be a new post of Dozer. Instead I was delighted to see your walk down memory lane. If it’s not too emotionally taxing to post memories, I would love to keep seeing them. Sending you a big hug and thank you for sharing!!
Hi Nagi,
Those muffins look so good! I am adding peaches to my grocery list so I can make them soon.
Thank you for sharing Dozer with us for all these years, and continuing to do so now! Loved seeing (for the 2nd time!) these pics. I have been following you for a very long time. I remember when you first posted the salon pic and I was so jealous that I couldn’t take my (then) girl Jetta with me when I went to the hair salon! Now I see it and wish I could take my boy Otis everywhere including the salon.
I found you because of your super crispy chicken wings, but I stayed because of Dozer!! Absolutely loved when you added the “Dozer button” because you knew we were all scrolling down to see Dozer before reading the recipes. 🤭 Don’t ever worry about overdoing it because we all love to see and hear about Dozer, too. No need to stop now.
Hugs to you.
I just loved your photo collage. We have two beautiful dogs and I started doing the same thing, gathering all my favourite pics of them (actually they’re all favourites). Our babies are getting old so very soon we’re going to go through the same sadness you’ve just had. Nagi, I know how much you loved Dozer and how much you miss him. It’s like a part of you has been cut off. Thank you for sharing your photos and love.
kindest thoughts and wishes, Marilyn
Hi Nagi, I do so love receiving your wonderful recipes BUT my finger always goes to the Dozer dot. I try and look with the tears poring down my cheeks.Unconditional love ❤️
Yes Nagi, it does take a bit longer than where you are right now. I have been blessed to have 5 fur babies over the course of my years that have crossed the rainbow bridge . I find that now it’s a pang, not painful sorrow, and immediately into smiles and laughter of the joy and love they gave to me. We now have 2 8 1/2 year old boxers…. Trying my very best to cherish every single moment of every single day.🐾🐾
Please know that you and Dozer have brightened many lives that you will never realize.
Sympathies and thank you Nagi!
❤️🩹🐾🐾
Oh, Nagi, how I enjoyed a step back with Dozer 2/27. Thank you for sharing.!
I’m so glad you liked it too! I was worried I was over-sharing 😊 Then I realised the possible over sharing part was probably showing a pic of his box 😆 – N x
Dear Nagi,
Just another comment on your sweetest boy Dozer. Thank you for all the laughs I have gotten over the years of him. Take care of yourself.
Thank you for the lovely message Marca. It’s getting easier every day. I want to remember the good times without getting upset. I feel like sharing the memories here is helping. I like having people to share the Dozer memories with! – N x
Thank You for sharing… He’s only a thought away.
Thank you V! I am actually finding it very therapeutic to have a place to share photos of memories of him. I like talking about him and remembering him, and I feel like my family and friends can only take so much! 😆 – N x
Thank you Nagi, I always go straight to the Dozer tab first. So glad that he is home. Thank you for sharing the memories, he is so loved by all, wiping away tears once again, love the blurry photo of you playing with him ❤️
Jomine, knowing you go straight to the Dozer tab first really touches me. Having him home does bring a strange kind of comfort. I’m so glad you loved that blurry photo, it captures us exactly as we were. Thank you for loving him with me. – N x
What sweet memories! Something about the playful less focused shot really touches me,
Awww, thanks Sandra! I love hearing that, because actually I do consciously avoid using blurry photos on the website 🙂 – N x
I love so much reading about Dozer’s life with you; I just wish I could stop crying. I’ve followed you and Dozer for a long time, and it’s made me feel as if I know you both personally. Thank you for sharing Dozer with all of us!
Sending over a huge hug Carole. I’m sorry you’re upset too, but I’m really touched that you’re sharing the pain. I promise I am much better now, it is getting easier every day. Sharing all those photos of him in this post actually really helped. I like remembering him as he was, the fun, the cute, the cheeky, and being able to share him with you and other readers brings me comfort. GIANT HUG – N xx
Peaches are my fave so thank you! My heart sends comfort to yours. I am so sad.
Joyce, if peaches are your fave then these muffins have your name on them.🍑 Thank you for the comfort you’re sending, it truly means a lot. – N x
Thank you for living those memories. Stay brave.
Hank, thank you. Some days brave feels easier than others, but the memories are worth holding onto – and somehow sharing them is bringing me comfort. ❤️ – N x
I’m sorry…I have no words. I miss the duet. 🥲❤️ Love your cookbooks!
Mary, “the duet” is exactly what it was. I miss it too. I’m so glad you love our cookbooks! Dozer would be so happy to hear that. ❤️ – N x
Nagi, I’m laughing and crying at the same time! I’m glad Dozer is home with you, where he belongs. The peach muffins look delicious! I’m sure Dozer would definitely approve!
Barb, that’s exactly how it feels here too, laughing and crying all at once.😊 Having him home does feel right. And yes, he absolutely would have approved of peach muffins! Thank you for being here. – N x
I only came across your website a few years ago … and it feels like home and I know why… and not only because I love peaches … I started with no knead bread. I didn’t see Dozer as a baby so I wept when I saw baby Dozer’s pics filled me with all feels… happy and sad… waiting for winter to be over (Toronto) to buy fresh peaches
Denyse, starting with the no knead bread means you’ve been here for a while, that makes me smile. I’m so glad it feels like home to you. Baby Dozer brings all the feels for me too. I hope winter passes quickly and you get those beautiful fresh Toronto peaches soon! – N x
I can’t wait to try. Think I’ll wait for our peach season. Loved your memory photos of Dozer 🐾❤️🐾. Dozer was such a Good Boy! Miss him too 🐾
Linda, waiting for peach season will make them even sweeter. I’m so glad you loved the memory photos. He really was such a Good Boy. Thank you for missing him with me. – N x
Nagi I couldn’t stop the tears (again) reading this and seeing your Dozer photos. Thankyou for continuing to write about your beautiful boy and posting photos when you give us a new recipe, please keep it up. Dozer was so loved by all of us who enjoy your recipes, posts and cookbooks.
Jenny, I’m sorry it brought the tears again. Writing about him and sharing the photos helps me, even when it hurts a little. I promise I’ll keep including him, he’s too much a part of this not to. It means so much that he was so loved 🥰 – N x