Blueberry Cornbread with Honey Butter – My Recipe Reviews (2024)

by sblades 13 Comments

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Blueberry Cornbread with Honey Butter. Oh my gosh. The Cook's Country show on PBS a month or so ago highlighted this recipe and it looked amazing.

I wrote down the ingredients and instructions real fast (rewinding quite a few times) and decided to try it when fresh blueberries came out.

Well, I couldn't wait for fresh blueberries and picked up some frozen Maine blueberries to make this recipe. (If you're using frozen blueberries, put them in the batter straight from the freezer so they don't turn your batter purple-gray.)

Still under house arrest, er, I mean government stay-at-home mandates, it's a perfect time to make this lightly sweet, blueberry-filled cornbread.

There's quite a bit of flour in this recipe and Cook's Country says that's to make the cornbread a little more cakey and to help keep the blueberries from dropping to the bottom of the pan. It definitely works.

I only used two bowls - one for the dry ingredients and one for the wet. Whisk them together, pour it in the prepared 9-inch pan and bake it for 40 minutes. So easy for such an incredible result.

This Blueberry Cornbread with Honey Butter is bursting with 2 cups of delicious blueberries. The texture of the cornbread is a combination corn mealy/cakey and it rises beautifully.

Don't forget the wonderful honey butter! Softened butter swirled with honey, a touch of salt and a pinch of cayenne. It makes this cornbread almost decadent.

You'll love this recipe and can have it for breakfast, lunch, dinner, or dessert. It's really the best cornbread I've ever made and I'll be making it again and again. Baby Girl Honey agrees that it looks very tasty - she's such a big help while I'm trying to take photos.

You might also like this Sweet Cornbread from an previous post of mine!

Blueberry Cornbread with Honey Butter – My Recipe Reviews (5)

Blueberry Cornbread with Honey Butter

Yield: 12

Prep Time: 10 minutes

Cook Time: 40 minutes

Total Time: 50 minutes

Delicious, amazing blueberry cornbread bursting with blueberries and served with a lightly spicy honey butter.

Ingredients

  • 1 ½ C all-purpose flour
  • 1 C yellow corn meal (plus 1 ½ for dusting pan)
  • ¾ C sugar (plus 1 tablespoon for sprinkling on top of batter)
  • 2 teaspoon baking powder
  • ¾ teaspoon salt
  • 12 tablespoon melted butter, cooled
  • 1 C cold milk
  • 2 large eggs
  • 2 C blueberries (if frozen, don't thaw first)
  • For the honey butter:
  • 4 tablespoon butter, softened
  • 2 tablespoon honey
  • ¼ teaspoon salt
  • generous pinch of cayenne (to taste)

Instructions

  1. Spray a 9-inch square or round cake pan. Dust with about 1 ½ tablespoon yellow cornmeal. Preheat oven to 375°.
  2. In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, corn meal, sugar, baking powder, and salt.
  3. In a smaller bowl, whisk together the melted butter, milk, and eggs. Pour the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients and whisk until just combined - there may be small lumps and that's OK. Finish by folding with a large spoon to make sure all is incorporated from the bottom of the bowl.
  4. Fold the 2 cups of blueberries into the batter, pour it into the prepared pan and lightly smooth down the top of the batter. Finish off the top by sprinkling 1 tablespoon of sugar over the batter.
  5. Bake for 40-45 minutes (mine was perfect at 40 minutes) until toothpick comes out clean. It will be very lightly brown on top. Let cool in the pan for 20 minutes. Run a paring knife around the edges of the pan and turn out onto a rack. Cool for an additional 20 minutes until completely cooled. Use a serrated knife to cut pieces.
  6. To make the honey butter, mix together the butter, honey, salt and cayenne until totally blended. Serve with cooled cornbread.

Notes

I just realized the original recipe calls for a 9-inch round cake pan and I used a square pan - either one will work.

Don't over mix so the cornbread won't be tough

I used salted butter, but the original recipe calls for unsalted. Salted works fine.

Tip from a reader: Toss frozen blueberries briefly to keep them from bleeding (and from me - always add them to the batter frozen). I also always toss my fresh blueberries in flour before adding to the batter to keep them from dropping to the bottom of the pan.

Nutrition Information:

Yield: 12Serving Size: 1 piece
Amount Per Serving:Calories: 331Total Fat: 17gSaturated Fat: 10gTrans Fat: 1gUnsaturated Fat: 6gCholesterol: 73mgSodium: 424mgCarbohydrates: 41gFiber: 2gSugar: 19gProtein: 5g

Nutrition Values are Approximate

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Comments

  1. Blueberry Cornbread with Honey Butter – My Recipe Reviews (6)Debbie

    Your blue berry cornbread looks delicious, I have it in the oven right now, can’t wait to taste it

    Reply

  2. Blueberry Cornbread with Honey Butter – My Recipe Reviews (8)Marie

    Hi Susan, thank you for posting this delicious recipe. I just saw the re-run of the episode from Cook's Country on Create TV. I ran to my computer to save this recipe
    and there it was ! 😉

    Reply

    • Blueberry Cornbread with Honey Butter – My Recipe Reviews (9)sblades

      You're welcome, Marie. That's exactly where I got the recipe from ..... scribbled it down, rewound, scribbled again till I got it right!

      Reply

      • Blueberry Cornbread with Honey Butter – My Recipe Reviews (10)linda

        I saw this on Cook's Country this week. Your recipe looks the same. Glad I found yours because I was unable to get it from the tv show without buying a subscription.

        Reply

  3. Blueberry Cornbread with Honey Butter – My Recipe Reviews (11)jill baker

    what main dish can you serve with this delicious cornbread?

    Reply

    • Blueberry Cornbread with Honey Butter – My Recipe Reviews (12)sblades

      Glad you asked, Jill 🙂 I love it for breakfast, warmed up with butter, but it's great with savory things like spicy chili or a thick soup. It goes well with any kind of big entree salad. We've had it along with homemade cheese enchiladas, too!

      Reply

  4. Blueberry Cornbread with Honey Butter – My Recipe Reviews (13)Sandy

    Could I make half receipe

    Reply

    • Blueberry Cornbread with Honey Butter – My Recipe Reviews (14)sblades

      Yes, Sandy, you can half it pretty easily, but make sure and use a smaller pan - maybe a 6" round pan. Decrease baking time to 20 to 30 minutes, checking at 20 minutes for doneness.

      Reply

  5. Blueberry Cornbread with Honey Butter – My Recipe Reviews (15)Natalie

    Amazing! This recipe is a keeper. The cayenne in the butter adds the perfect final touch. Mmm delicious! Thank you.

    Reply

    • Blueberry Cornbread with Honey Butter – My Recipe Reviews (16)sblades

      So glad you like it, too! This is one of our favorites. Thanks for commenting! 🙂

      Reply

  6. Blueberry Cornbread with Honey Butter – My Recipe Reviews (17)sblades

    Oh, thanks for reminding me about the blueberries. With fresh ones, I usually toss them in corn starch or flour so they don't float to the bottom. I'll add that instruction so the blue of the blueberries and yellow of the cake don't create a green cake! (Might be good for St. Patricks Day, though 🙂 ? ) Hope you like it - we love this one!

    Reply

  7. Blueberry Cornbread with Honey Butter – My Recipe Reviews (18)T. Sanborn

    I couldn’t wait to make this. It looks so delicious!
    Unfortunately my frozen blueberries turned my batter slightly blue. I read the directions on this before starting. One trick I’ve used in the past, quickly put your blueberries in flour and remove. The flour coated blueberries usually don’t turn your batter blue. My cornbread is in the oven now. Anxious to try it🙂

    Reply

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Blueberry Cornbread with Honey Butter – My Recipe Reviews (2024)

FAQs

Is butter better than oil for cornbread? ›

While oil can make cakes and quick breads luxuriously tender, I find the cornbread lacks flavor if butter isn't present. Because butter doesn't make the bread as moist as oil does, I pair it with buttermilk. Buttermilk: Buttermilk makes cakes, muffins, and breads extra moist.

What is the difference between Yankee cornbread and Southern cornbread? ›

The thing that distinguishes Southern cornbread from, say Yankee cornbread, or any other cornbread one is likely to eat outside of the southern states, is that it is savory, not sweet, and it is made mostly with cornmeal.

Why you should use butter instead of oil? ›

At room temperature, butter has a melt-in-your mouth feeling and more robust flavor profile. Liquid oil products are always liquid at room temperature and even when refrigerated, so they give the palate a sensation of moisture when you bite into something made with oil.

Why do Southerners not put sugar in cornbread? ›

The most common theory is a change in cornmeal itself. Until early in the 20th century, Southern cornmeal was made with sweeter white corn and it was water-ground. When industrial milling came along, that changed. The steel-roller mills used yellow corn that was harvested before it was ripe, so it had less sugar.

Is medium or fine cornmeal better for cornbread? ›

As for the best cornmeal for cornbread, either fine- or medium-grind cornmeal is a great choice. Medium-grind cornmeal will bring slightly more texture and grittiness to the batter, which you may or may not want (it's up to you!). You can use fine or medium cornmeal in these extra corny muffins.

What is cornbread called in the South? ›

It is commonly called "cornbread" in the Southern United States and is not known by a different name in this region. Cornbread is a simple bread that is made by mixing cornmeal, flour, salt, baking powder, and milk to form a batter, which is then baked in the oven.

Is it better to bake with butter or oil? ›

Butter is considered a solid fat because it is solid at room temperature and oil is considered a liquid fat because it's liquid at room temperature. Because of this, you can't rely on oil to provide any leavening help in baked goods, which can result in a denser texture.

Can I use butter instead of oil for boxed cornbread? ›

If your cornbread mix uses oil as a fat, substitute an equal amount of melted butter or bacon grease for the oil. Both ingredients will add extra flavor and richness to your cornbread.

What can I use instead of oil in cornbread? ›

Melted, unsalted butter is the perfect substitute for oil, and can even add a richer flavor to baked recipes. Swap in butter for oil in a 1:1 ratio, melting butter in the microwave or on the stovetop. Vegan butter or ghee can also work in this instance.

What happens if you don't put oil in cornbread? ›

Other than greasing the pan, I have left the oil completely out of my cornbread recipe for years. Doing that doesn't seem to make any difference at all in flavor or texture, and it's a lot less calories. You'd probably notice the change if you were used to using bacon fat, but I haven't eaten that tasty mix in decades.

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