Carrot zucchini spice muffins bake up tender, fragrant, and evenly spiced, with a crumb that stays moist for days without turning heavy. The carrot brings sweetness and color, the zucchini keeps the texture soft, and the mix of cinnamon, ginger, cloves, and nutmeg gives each bite that warm bakery smell that fills the kitchen before the timer even goes off.
What makes this version work is the balance. The zucchini needs to be squeezed dry so the muffins don’t turn gummy, but the carrots stay in for structure and little pockets of sweetness. Brown sugar and molasses add depth the way plain white sugar never quite can, and the oil keeps the crumb tender instead of dry and cakey.
Below, I’ve included the one prep detail that matters most for getting the texture right, plus a few easy swaps if you want to adjust the sweetness or make these fit what you have on hand.
The muffins came out fluffy with those little green zucchini flecks still showing, and the molasses gave them a deeper spice flavor than my usual carrot muffins. My kids ate two each before they cooled.
Save these carrot zucchini spice muffins for a soft, warmly spiced breakfast you can bake in under 40 minutes.
The Zucchini Must Be Dry, Not Just Grated
The biggest mistake with muffins like these is treating zucchini like a passive add-in. It isn’t. Grated zucchini carries a surprising amount of water, and if that moisture goes straight into the batter, the muffins bake up dense and slightly wet in the middle instead of light and springy.
Squeeze the zucchini until it looks wrung out and fluffy, almost like damp confetti. That one extra minute changes the crumb more than any spice tweak ever will. The carrots don’t need that treatment because they’re there for texture and sweetness, not bulk moisture.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in These Muffins

- All-purpose flour — Gives the muffins enough structure to hold the shredded vegetables without turning heavy. Whole wheat flour works in part, but if you swap in too much, the crumb gets tighter.
- Brown sugar — Brings moisture and a deeper flavor than white sugar. Packed brown sugar matters here because the molasses notes play well with the spice blend.
- Molasses or honey — Molasses gives the strongest warm spice flavor and a darker color. Honey works if that’s what you have, but the muffins will taste lighter and a little less bakery-style.
- Vegetable oil — Keeps the crumb soft even after the muffins cool. Melted butter adds flavor, but it also sets firmer, so the muffins won’t stay as tender on day two.
- Carrots and zucchini — Carrots add sweetness and visible texture; zucchini melts into the crumb after baking and helps the muffins stay moist. Grate both finely for the best distribution, and squeeze only the zucchini.
Building the Batter Without Losing the Tender Crumb
Mix the Dry Spices First
Whisk the flour, leaveners, salt, and spices together until the color looks even throughout the bowl. That keeps the cinnamon, ginger, cloves, and nutmeg from clumping in one bite and gives you a more balanced spice flavor. If the spices aren’t mixed well now, the first few muffins can taste much stronger than the rest.
Combine the Wet Ingredients Until They Look Glossy
Beat the eggs with the brown sugar, oil, molasses, and vanilla until the mixture loosens and looks smooth, not separated. You’re not whipping air into it; you’re dissolving the sugar enough that it blends cleanly into the flour later. If the molasses seems stubborn, keep stirring for a few extra seconds before moving on.
Stop Mixing as Soon as the Flour Disappears
Once the wet and dry ingredients come together, switch to a light hand. A few streaks of flour are better than overmixing, which tightens the crumb and makes the muffins tough. Fold in the carrots and zucchini last so they stay evenly distributed without turning the batter gummy.
Bake Until the Tops Spring Back
Fill the muffin cups about three-quarters full and bake until the tops are deep golden and a toothpick comes out clean. The center should feel set but still soft when lightly pressed. If you wait for them to look fully dry in the oven, they’ll cross over into overbaked and lose that tender middle.
How to Adapt These Muffins for Different Kitchens
Honey Instead of Molasses
Use the same amount of honey in place of molasses for a lighter, softer sweetness. You’ll lose some of the deep, dark spice flavor, but the muffins will still bake up moist and fragrant. If your honey is very thin, don’t add extra liquid elsewhere.
Gluten-Free Version
Swap the all-purpose flour for a 1:1 gluten-free baking blend that includes xanthan gum. The texture will be a little more delicate, but the muffins should still rise well and stay moist. Don’t use almond flour alone here; it won’t support the shredded vegetables the same way.
Make Them Less Sweet
Reduce the brown sugar by 2 tablespoons if you want a breakfast muffin that leans more savory-spiced than dessert-like. The muffins will still be tender because the oil and vegetables carry the moisture. Go lower than that and the spice flavor starts tasting sharp instead of rounded.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container for up to 5 days. They stay moist, but the crumb firms up a bit after chilling.
- Freezer: These freeze well. Wrap each muffin individually, then store in a freezer bag for up to 2 months.
- Reheating: Warm a muffin in the microwave for 15 to 20 seconds or in a 300°F oven for about 8 minutes. Don’t overheat them or the crumb turns dry at the edges before the center is warm.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Carrot Zucchini Spice Muffins
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Preheat the oven to 375°F and line a 12-cup muffin tin with liners. Set out the tin so the batter can go in right after mixing.
- Whisk all-purpose flour, baking soda, baking powder, cinnamon, ground ginger, cloves, nutmeg, and salt in a large bowl. Whisk until the spices and leaveners are evenly distributed.
- Beat eggs, brown sugar, vegetable oil, molasses or honey, and vanilla extract in a separate bowl until combined. Beat just until smooth and cohesive.
- Stir the wet mixture into the dry mixture until just combined. Stop as soon as no dry streaks remain to keep the crumb tender.
- Fold in grated carrots and zucchini, ensuring they’re dispersed throughout the batter. Fold gently so you keep visible shreds in the crumb.
- Divide batter evenly among the muffin cups, filling each about 3/4 full. Aim for even tops so they finish baking at the same time.
- Bake for 20–22 minutes until a toothpick comes out clean and the tops are deep golden. Let the aroma be your cue, then cool in the pan for 5 minutes.
- Transfer muffins to a wire rack after 5 minutes in the pan. Cool until they’re warm, or to room temperature for clean slicing.