Topics Covered in This Premiere Pro Tutorial:
Advanced Music Editing Techniques, Professional Audio Level Management, Strategic Shot Selection and Organization
Exercise Preview

Exercise Overview
In this comprehensive exercise series, you'll master the creation of a professional how-to video for a banana muffins recipe, following the proven format popularized by BuzzFeed's Tasty videos and similar content that dominates social media platforms in 2026. This format remains one of the most engaging and shareable video styles for culinary content.
You'll develop essential skills including advanced footage acceleration techniques, sophisticated text graphics integration, and optimized export settings for maximum compatibility across YouTube, TikTok, Instagram Reels, and other modern social media platforms. This exercise specifically focuses on professional audio editing workflows and strategic shot selection—two critical skills that separate amateur content from professional-grade productions.
Project Specifications
Previewing the Final Video
Before diving into the technical work, let's examine the finished product to understand our creative objectives. Ensure your audio system is properly configured—either speakers at appropriate volume or headphones connected—as audio quality assessment is crucial to this exercise.
On the Desktop, navigate to Class Files > Premiere Pro Class > Banana Muffins > Finished Movie and double–click Muffins-Recipe.mp4.
Study the video carefully, watching multiple times to analyze these key production elements:
- The accelerated cooking process creates urgency and maintains viewer engagement—a technique essential for social media retention rates.
- Each ingredient introduction is clearly visible, following the visual hierarchy principles that make recipe videos successful.
- The consistent overhead camera angle maintains visual continuity while showcasing the cooking process optimally.
- Text overlays provide essential recipe information without cluttering the visual composition—we'll implement this in later exercises.
- Notice the strategic camera angle variations around 00:39, where secondary and tertiary angles add visual interest before returning to the primary overhead shot for the conclusion.
Key Elements to Notice
Creates engaging, fast-paced content similar to viral recipe videos
Provides consistent perspective for ingredient visibility
Essential for accessibility and viewer comprehension
Adds visual interest and shows different preparation stages
Getting Started
Now we'll establish our project foundation with proper settings that ensure professional output quality and streamlined workflow efficiency.
In Premiere Pro, go to File > Close All Projects to establish a clean workspace.
Go to File > New > Project.
In the New Project window, next to Name, type yourname-Muffins-music.
To the right of Location, click Browse.
Navigate to Desktop > Class Files > Premiere Pro Class > Banana Muffins and click Choose (Mac) or Select Folder (Windows).
When done, click OK.
Let's configure project-specific preferences that optimize our workflow. Go into the Premiere Pro (Mac) or Edit (Windows) menu and choose Preferences > Timeline.
Set Video Transition Default Duration to 1.00 Seconds. This provides smooth transitions without being overly dramatic.
Set Audio Transition Default Duration to 1.00 Seconds. Consistent timing across video and audio transitions maintains professional polish.
Set Still Image Default Duration to 3.00 Seconds. This duration works well for social media pacing expectations.
On the bottom right, click OK.
Ensure optimal workspace configuration by going to Window > Workspaces > Editing.
Go to Window > Workspaces > Reset to Saved Layout to standardize our interface—this eliminates variables that could affect your learning experience.
Go to File > New > Sequence.
On the left, under Sequence Presets, expand into Digital SLR > 1080p and click DSLR 1080p24 so that it's highlighted. Note we're using p24 for its cinematic quality—this frame rate provides the film-like motion blur that enhances the professional appearance of food videos.
At the bottom of the window, next to Sequence Name, type Muffins-edit.
Click OK.
In the Sequence menu, ensure Selection Follows Playhead is unchecked. This prevents unintended clip selections during playback.
Project Setup Process
Create New Project
Set up project with proper naming convention and file location in the Banana Muffins folder
Configure Timeline Preferences
Set video and audio transition defaults to 1 second, still image duration to 3 seconds
Create DSLR Sequence
Use 1080p24 preset specifically for DSLR footage, ensuring proper frame rate matching
Disable Selection Follows Playhead
Prevents unwanted clip selection during timeline navigation and editing
Editing Music
Professional audio editing separates amateur content from broadcast-quality productions. We'll employ advanced techniques including back-timing and seamless looping to create the perfect soundtrack duration.
- To import our background music, maintain Premiere Pro active and switch to your Desktop file browser.
- Navigate to Class Files > Premiere Pro Class > Banana Muffins > Capture.
- Drag the music folder directly onto the Project panel in Premiere Pro. This imports the entire folder structure, maintaining organization.
- In Premiere's Project panel, expand the music folder to reveal its contents.
- Drag Morning_Stroll.mp3 to the Timeline, placing it precisely on track A1.
Scale the Timeline view to display the complete audio file duration for proper visual reference.
Examining the waveform reveals our audio file extends approximately 90 seconds—significantly longer than our target 54-second duration. Rather than simply truncating the audio, we'll employ a professional back-timing technique to preserve the song's natural conclusion.
In the Timeline's timecode field (top left), type 5400 to position the playhead at our target endpoint.
Drag the clip's right edge to align with the playhead at 54:00, creating our initial rough cut.
Let's evaluate the fade potential. Position the playhead around 49:00 and press Spacebar to audition the ending. The abrupt cutoff confirms a simple fade won't provide professional results.
Fortunately, this track features a natural musical conclusion that we can leverage. In the Project panel, double–click the audio file to load it into the Source Monitor.
Preview the original ending starting around 1;28;00. This natural conclusion provides the professional finish we need.
Now we'll implement back-timing—a professional technique for incorporating natural endings within specific duration constraints. The song's final note reverb concludes at approximately 1;33;05. Position your playhead there.
Since we need exactly 54 seconds but the natural ending occurs at 1;33, we'll extract the final 10 seconds and blend it with our main audio track. With the playhead at 1;33;05, press O to set the out point.
- For our 10-second conclusion segment, move the playhead to 1;23;04.
Press I to establish the in point, creating our ending segment selection.
Drag from the Drag Audio Only icon
to track A2, aligning the ending precisely with the A1 track's conclusion.
Expand both A1 and A2 track heights for enhanced waveform visibility—visual alignment is crucial for professional results.
Press the plus (+) key to zoom into the Timeline for detailed waveform analysis. Proper alignment requires precision at the sample level.
Audition both tracks together starting around 46:00. The timing mismatch is immediately apparent—this is normal and expected.
To isolate our ending segment for precise alignment, click the Mute Track button
next to A1.The ending phrase appears truncated. Extend the clip's beginning by dragging its left edge to reveal more of the musical phrase.
Identify the waveform valley around 43:15—this represents a natural musical pause ideal for our edit point.
Position the playhead at this valley and drag the clip's left edge to snap to the playhead.
Use waveform patterns to achieve perfect alignment. You'll need to nudge the A2 clip backward several frames. Disable snapping
temporarily for micro-adjustments, then re-enable it.Unmute track A1 by clicking its Mute Track button
.Audition both tracks simultaneously to verify synchronization.
Our testing indicates optimal alignment occurs with the second track starting at 43:12. Adjust accordingly if needed.
With synchronization achieved, consolidate the tracks by dragging the A2 clip up to A1.
CTRL–click (Mac) or Right–click (Windows) on the seam between clips and select Apply Default Transitions. This creates a seamless blend.
Position the playhead before the transition and audition the blend. The result should be completely seamless—a hallmark of professional audio editing.
Remove any extraneous frames remaining at the timeline's end. Zoom in for precision and Delete the excess audio as shown:

Extend the final audio clip to conclude precisely at 54:00. Your professional soundtrack is now complete.
When you need a specific song ending but must fit exact duration requirements, use back-timing: identify the perfect ending point, then work backwards to create seamless transitions with the main track.
Audio Editing Workflow
Import and Trim Main Track
Drag Morning_Stroll.mp3 to A1, trim to 54 seconds duration
Extract Perfect Ending
Use Source Monitor to identify ideal ending at 1:33:05, create 10-second segment
Sync and Blend Tracks
Align ending segment on A2, use waveform analysis for perfect synchronization
Apply Crossfade Transition
Merge tracks with default transition for seamless audio blend
Adjusting Audio Levels
Proper audio levels are non-negotiable for professional content. We'll optimize our levels for broadcast standards while ensuring compatibility across all playback systems.
Before proceeding to video editing, let's verify our audio meets professional standards. Play the entire sequence while monitoring the Audio Meter on the Timeline's right side.
Notice peaks between 0 and –6 decibels. For professional broadcast and streaming standards, we target peak levels no higher than –9 decibels, maintaining headroom while ensuring consistent volume across platforms.
Switch to the specialized Audio workspace by clicking Audio at Premiere's top. This workspace provides enhanced tools for audio-centric work.
For optimal level monitoring, drag the Audio Meters panel to the Essential Sound panel area on the far right if it's not already positioned there.
For universal volume adjustment across both audio clips, navigate to the Audio Track Mixer (second tab in the middle panel).
In the A1 column, adjust the volume slider to –10. This provides appropriate headroom while maintaining clear, audible levels. You can drag the slider or click the blue numerical value to input the exact number.
Go to File > Save to preserve your audio work.
We'll utilize a separate project file for video integration, so go to File > Close Project.
Optimal Audio Level Ranges
Keep audio levels between -9 and -12 decibels for optimal quality. Levels above -6 dB can cause distortion and may not meet broadcast standards for various platforms.
Selecting & Organizing Clips
Strategic shot selection transforms raw footage into compelling narrative. We'll identify the most effective angles and moments to create engaging visual storytelling that maintains viewer attention throughout the entire sequence.
Let's open our pre-configured starter project. Go to File > Open Project.
Navigate to Class Files > Premiere Pro Class > Banana Muffins and open BananaMuffins-start.prproj.
Immediately save your working copy: go to File > Save As.
- Save this project as yourname-BananaMuffins within the Banana Muffins folder.
Return to the Editing workspace by clicking the workspace tab at Premiere's top.
Examine the Project panel's organized structure:
- The footage sequence containing raw material
- A Titles sequence for text overlays
- A video folder with sequentially numbered clips, maintaining the original shooting order for logical organization
Double–click the footage sequence to load it into the Timeline.
Notice the preliminary editing work: strategic cuts have been made, and selected shots are elevated to the V2 track, clearly distinguishing our chosen material from unused footage.
Verify that both Snapping
and Linked Selection
are activated (highlighted in blue). These settings ensure precise editing behavior and maintain audio-video synchronization.We'll complete the shot selection process with several additional strategic cuts. Position the playhead at 15:04.
Select the Razor tool
for precise cutting.Click at the playhead position to create the cut.
Navigate to 23:16 for the next cut point.
Professional tip: On keyboards with numeric keypads, you can jump directly to timecode positions by typing the numbers—ensure no clips are selected first to avoid accidentally moving them instead of the playhead.
Execute the cut using the Razor tool
.Continue with cuts at 30:20.
Add another cut at 3:52:07.
Complete the cutting phase with a final cut at 4:54:10.
- Return to the Selection tool
for clip manipulation. - Now we'll identify and elevate our selected shots. Return the playhead to 15:04.
- Optimize your Timeline view using the minus (–) key to zoom out or plus (+) key to zoom in as needed.
Locate the clip beginning at 15:04 and elevate it to track V2. This segment provides excellent ingredient visibility and represents our first usable shot.
Note: The original production audio has been removed from the first clip, as we'll be using our carefully crafted music track instead. We'll remove audio from the remaining clips shortly.
We'll skip the next segment but select the substantial clip beginning at 30:20 for its excellent process documentation.
Navigation tip: Use Up Arrow and Down Arrow keys to move between edit points on active tracks efficiently.
Elevate the 30:20 clip to track V2.
The subsequent segment (beginning at 3:52:07) also provides valuable visual information, so elevate this clip to V2 as well.
Excellent work—you've successfully isolated four high-quality shots that will form the foundation of our professional cooking video.
Execute File > Save and maintain this project in an open state for the subsequent exercise.
Clip Selection and Organization
Strategic Cut Points
Make precise cuts at 15:04, 23:16, 30:20, 3:52:07, and 4:54:10 using Razor tool
Promote Selected Clips
Move chosen segments to V2 track for easy identification and organization
Remove Unwanted Audio
Delete original camera audio from clips to prevent interference with music track
Verify Track Settings
Ensure Snapping and Linked Selection are enabled for proper editing behavior
Use Up Arrow and Down Arrow keys to quickly navigate between cuts on active tracks. This speeds up the selection process significantly when working with multiple clips.