Jun.
13

Classic Apple Pie


A few weeks ago, DJ had some time to kill as he was waiting on a machine shop to make a part for him. I know nothing about that sort of thing. He found his way over to William Sonoma and did some shopping for me. Among other goodies he picked up a gorgeous, red Emile Henry pie dish. I decided to make a classic apple pie… cuz I know about that sort of thing!!

If you’re into baking, you really must get Dorie Greenspan’s book Baking From My Home To Yours. I can’t say enough good things about it. If I was going to make a classic apple pie, I would look no further than to Dorie for a recipe I knew would be fantastic. Using her book is like having a friend in the kitchen with you, talking you through things each step of the way. It’s not just a book of recipes and pictures… though the recipes and pictures are fantastic… it’s her way of explaining everything and giving you tons of pointers along the way that transforms it from a regular cook book to an amazingly-helpful, must-have, go-buy-it-now cookbook. Really, if you don’t have this book – whadarya waitin for??!?!! :)

Since it was a day I was enjoying some quiet-time, and DJ was headed out, I asked him to pick up some apples… and the picture above shows the glorious ones he brought home for the pie. Granny Smith’s are just lovely in a pie. Tart and sweet at the same time… firm enough to hold their beautiful shape but soft enough to go through with a fork without turning to mush. I could tell DJ was excited about the prospect of homemade apple pie by the beautiful fruit he selected. But in all honesty, the eight he came home with might’ve just been the eight closest in arm’s reach when he got to the display ;-) I love him… but I’m realistic too! LOL

I figured if I was going to make this pie, I’d go all out and make the double crust as well. Having made the Lemon Meringue Tarts, I was confident I could make Dorie’s pie crust. On page 442 of the book Dorie shares her recipe for what she calls “Good For Almost Everything Pie Dough”. It doesn’t look all that tough so I figured I’d be okay. Sure, it calls for a food processor… in fact she says “You’ll need a large-capacity food processor to make a double crust” (notice the second word there? need!!)… but I don’t own one. In fact a food processor might just be the only standard appliance not gracing the counters or cabinets of my kitchen. I’ve just never really found a reason to have one. But trust me… after trying to make Dorie’s pie dough without it, a large-capacity food processor is pretty high on my MUST BUY list. If you’ve got a recommendation please pass it along as I’m now officially in the market for one :)

Side note… As I was writing this post, I had typed up a long paragraph about making the crust. It was detailed… it was witty… it was chock-full of good information… and sadly, it is gone. All because of a technical snafu that really chapped my hide. I walked away in a serious huff… and I came back about an hour later totally convinced I was unable to write that same paragraph again. Sadly I was right. Let’s just consider it a sign from above shall we? Works for me! I’ll try and give you the “Reader’s Digest Condensed Version” and tell you the following: Making the pie crust by hand was “difficult”. That’s a lady-like way of phrasing it and I’ll leave it at that ;-)

The dough recipe calls for 2 1/2 sticks of very cold or frozen butter… 1/3 cup very cold or frozen vegetable shortening… 3 cups of flour… 1/3 cup sugar… 1 1/2 teaspoons salt… and I was doing it by hand. In hindsight (which is 20/20 for a reason) there were signs spelling out BIG MISTAKE in flashing neon red letters that I somehow ignored. The dough came together just fine but I’m sure it was the warmth of my hands working the butter and shortening that interacted with the flour proteins in ways that Dorie didn’t want when she created her masterpiece of a recipe and instructed “you’ll need a large-capacity food processor”. The dough came together fine… or so I thought… and it rolled out just fine… but when it came time to pick it up and get it in the pie dish… let me just say that it put up one helluva fight. Yes indeedy it did. More than once I had to put it back into a ball, refrigerate it again, take it out and try once more… and more than once, the dough proved the victor. But… using brute force, ignorance, sheer will and determination (not to mention some prayers and promises sent up! LOL), I got the bottom crust in the dish and amazingly, later-on was able to get the top crust positioned just fine. It took a bit of patching together where thin spots and holes developed but that just adds to the “rustic” quality of my pie… right? Right? RIIIIIIIGHT ;-) Thanks for being on board with this concept! Both of us appreciate it… both being me and my ego ;-)


So moving on to the filling on page 300 of the book it’s a pretty straightforward recipe. Apples… sugar… lemon zest… quick cooking tapioca (okay so I didn’t have this and subbed flour which worked fine)… spices… and graham cracker crumbs (which I didn’t have since **someone** (read: DJ) finished off the box of graham crackers without adding it to the grocery list… grrrr… but Dorie says you can sub dry bread crumbs so I did). Adding the crumbs as the first layer on the dough, before you spoon in the filling, is to help prevent the crust from being too soggy. Fantastic idea, Dorie! I didn’t really have enough apples to make the pie as tall as I would have liked but that’s okay – lesson learned for next time :) Place a few pats of butter on top of the apple mixture before you put on the top crust… then brush the top crust with milk and I chose to sprinkle on a combination of cinnamon and granulated sugar before I put it in the oven. Gives the crust a little extra flavor ;-) Now I’ll be honest and tell you I’m not one to really eat the edges of the pie crust. Without the filling on it, the edge part just never tastes good. BUT… I gotta tell ya, that was definitely so not the case with this. The whole crust has a delicious flavor… including the edges. And the texture? It’s light and flaky… and croissant-like. I can only imagine how much better it would be if I’d used a food processor when making the dough. Which leads me
to my next point… I need a food processor. I need one. Right? If I’m going to make this pie crust again, I think I owe it to myself to have the right tools for the job… right? Riiiiiight! Again, I’m glad you’re on board with this concept. You guys are THE BEST :)


And if I need a food processor… then you guys need Dorie Greenspan’s book Baking From My Home To Yours. I’m not sure about all the legal in’s-n-out’s of posting recipes from a copyrighted book online in a blog so I didn’t do that here. If you’re a lawyerly-type and want to email and let me know “the right thing to do”, I’d love to hear it. Really, I would. Knowledge… it’s a beautiful thing :) I tried taking pictures of a cut slice and learned something in the process… I’m not good at it. Always important to have a handle on your strengths and weaknesses ;-) The slice-shots stink… and I apologize for that. What can I say besides “whoops… sorry”.


The flavor of this pie is sooooooooooooo good. M’mmmm…. and your whole house will smell delicious when you make this. And you will make this… I’m convinced! Or… okay… if you don’t make this pie, you’ll make another one. One that might be less intimidating… one that uses pie filling…. or one that uses frozen pie crust… but something tells me that after reading this entry your tummy is tellin you something… it’s rumbling and saying “apple pie…. aaaaaaaple piiiiiiiiiie… APPLE PIE!!!”. Independence Day is right around the corner and, well, Dorie DID call this her “All-American, All-Delicious Apple Pie”… maybe she’s tellin you something too ;-)

Have a delicious day!

Jun.
11

Orange Cream Bundt Cake

The other day a friend mentioned a particular kind of cake and the idea just stuck in my head. I searched high and low for a recipe… even one I could use as a jumping off point… but all to no avail. I couldn’t find what I wanted… but that didn’t stop me. I felt like experimenting and sometimes it works out well. The planets must have been aligned nicely because I ended up working out a really great orange cake recipe – and used my bundt cake pan cuz it hadn’t been getting much lovin’ lately.

Em’s Orange Cream Bundt Cake

Ingredients
2 cups all purpose flour
1 1/2 cups granulated sugar
1/2 cup milk
1/2 cup orange juice
1/2 cup vegetable oil
3 eggs
3 tablespoons cream cheese softened
3 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
orange zest

additional for syrup:
1/4 cup orange juice
1/4 cup granulated sugar

additional for glaze:
4 tablespoons powdered sugar
3-5 tablespoons milk


Directions
Preheat oven to 350F
Generously coat a bundt pan with baking spray (I use Baker’s Joy)… be sure to get all the nooks and crannies.

Beat the eggs and to this add the milk, orange juice, vegetable oil and the zest of one orange. Set aside.
In a separate bowl, whisk together the flour, sugar, baking powder and salt.
Add the liquid mixture to the flour mixture and stir until just combined.
Add the cream cheese, one tablespoon at a time, and combine well after each addition.
Once all the cream cheese has been added, continue to mix for 2 minutes.

Pour batter into prepared bundt pan and bake directly on the rack (do NOT bake the bundt pan on a cookie sheet… the air needs to circulate and a cookie sheet will prevent that) in the preheated oven for 40 minutes, or until a knife inserted halfway comes out cleanly.

Cool 5 minutes in pan. While the cake is cooling in pan, make the syrup:

In a saucepan combine 1/4c orange juice and 1/4c granulated sugar. Bring to a slow boil stirring until sugar has dissolved and let simmer until cake has cooled for 5 minutes in the pan then remove from heat.

Invert cake onto cooling rack. Place a sheet of waxed paper under the cooling rack and immediately brush orange juice mixture onto warm cake. Let the cake absorb all of the syrup as it will make the cake moist and full of flavor


To make the glaze, combine powdered sugar and milk… let yourself be the judge as to how much glaze you want. If you want it thinner, add small amounts of milk until you have the consistency and amount you want then pour it over the cake… brush on if desired.

Allow the cake to cool… if you can wait that long {wink} then slice and enjoy :)

Have a delicious day!!


Orange Cream Bundt Cake

An orange cream cake that's sure to please!

See Orange Cream Bundt Cake on Key Ingredient.

Jun.
08

For the past few weeks I’ve been playing around with cream cheese icing. I have tried several recipes that were fabulous in taste, but the texture didn’t set up enough to successfully pipe with a pastry bag. I am proud to say I’ve hit my “Eureka!!” moment and the picture above shows the result. And what better to pair my magnificient cream cheese icing with than my friend Allison’s Amazing Red Velvet cupcakes. This combination is not only rave-worthy, it’s like Lay’s potato chips… betcha can’t eat just one ;-)

I’m totally late to the party – and you’ll quickly realize this as I tell you that only recently have I’ve become quite captivated with the lovliness of cream cheese icing. Now, granted, it’s not a new item for me since I been aware (though not a fan) of cream cheese icing on cinnamon rolls. I tend to like my cinnamon rolls with just a regular sugar glaze but the RPC’s palette is changing! In the past few months I’ve realized that a good cream cheese icing is great on cake! Not just on carrot cake (though it *is* fantastic on carrot cake! LOL) but also on lemon cake and red velvet cake too.

In the past few monthsI’ve come to appreciate Red Velvet cake. I don’t just mean I’ve started to *like* it… oh no… I mean I’ve come to really appreciate it… understand it… and, dare I say LOVE it. That’s a big step for someone who doesn’t get all googly-eyed over chocolate. But from where I stand, Red Velvet is not a red-colored, chocolate cake… it’s a multi-dimensional, complex cake that has just enough cocoa flavor to let you know it’s there :) Oh and it’s red-colored too! LOL

I’ve made a few different red velvet cupcake recipes… and if you check out the reviews I’ve posted of cupcake bakeries you’ll see that I’ve tried *more* than my fair share of bakery-made red velvet cupcakes! Not that any of this makes me a connoisseur but I will say I’ve eaten a LOT of red velvet! LOL LOL LOL! A while back my friend Allison passed on the recipe she uses and I finally got around to making it. It is BY FAR the ABSOLUTE BEST red velvet that I’ve been able to make at home. This cupcake is incredibly moist and full of flavor. I made them this weekend for a pot luck of about 35-40 people and every single person who ate them came and told me how good they are. I had made three different kinds of cupcakes but it was the Red Velvet that got the raves!!! :) :) :)

A little while back I mentioned that I was looking for a cream cheese icing that would stand up like buttercream icing and perform well when piped thru a pastry bag. I even asked you guys to let me know if you had such a recipe… and no one did! I got so many emails letting me know that I’m not the only one who has been wanting such a recipe. Of those who contacted me, every last one of you had given up and resorted to using cream cheese icing as more of a thick, spread-with-spatula coating since it didn’t set up for piping beautiful designs. At best, you were able to do very simple piping with a big round tip but nothing like ribbon edge, scalloped borders, basketweave or rosettes. The cream cheese icing recipe that I’m posting here can do just that! It performs like buttercream but has the definitive twang of cream cheese! It’s not overly sweet which makes it perfect for a variety of uses. If you make it and find it’s not sweet enough for you, try adding more sugar… but you may need to adjust the ratio of the other ingredients because it may alter how well it stands up.

The combination of Allison’s red velvet cupcakes and my cream cheese icing is a real attention-getter. This is something you really *need* to have in your repertoire so bookmark this post… print it out… tuck it away in your recipe box. Whatever method that works for you and however you save your favorites. But either way, make these cupcakes!!!

Allison’s Amazing Red Velvet Cupcakes
adapted from the NY Times Red Velvet Cake recipe
1c cake flour
1/3c cocoa
1/2tsp salt
2/3c vegetable oil
3/4c sugar
1 egg
1oz (2T) red food coloring
1/2tsp vanilla
1/2c buttermilk
1/2tsp baking soda
3/4tsp white vinegar

Directions
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
Line12-cupcake pans with cupcake liners and spray with cooking spray.
Whisk cake flour, cocoa and salt in a bowl.
Place oil and sugar in bowl of an electric mixer and beat at medium speed until well-blended. Beat in eggs one at a time.
With machine on low, very slowly add red food coloring (and water or syrup, if necessary). (Take care: it may splash.)
Add vanilla.
Add flour mixture alternately with buttermilk in two batches. Scrape down bowl and beat just long enough to combine.
Place baking soda in a small dish, stir in vinegar and add to batter with machine running. Beat for 10 seconds.
Divide batter among 12-cupcake pans, filling each about 2/3 full. Bake for 25-30 minutes, until a toothpick inserted comes out clean. (Mine cooked for 27 minutes.)

Note:: The recipe above has been scaled down to 1/3 of the original recipe. The original recipe yields 3 dozen cupcakes: 3½ cups cake flour ½ cup cocoa powder 1½ teaspoons salt 2 cups vegetable oil 2¼ cups white sugar 3 large eggs 6 tablespoons (3 ounces) red food coloring 1½ teaspoons vanilla 1¼ cup buttermilk 2 teaspoons baking soda 2½ teaspoons white vinegar

Em’s Magnificent Cream Cheese Icing
adapted form the 06/98 Epicurious.com Cream Cheese Icing recipe
1 8oz pkg of cream cheese – room temperature, divided in three parts
2 tablespoons unsalted butter – COLD
1 tablespoon shortening
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup powdered sugar

Directions
Beat half the sugar and all of the butter in large bowl until light and fluffy. Add vanilla and combine very well. Add the first third of the cream cheese and combine very well. Add the shortening and combine very well. Add the remaining cream cheese one piece at a time, combining very well after each. Gradually add the remaining sugar and combine thoroughly until light and fluffy.

Jun.
06

Lemon Meringue Tartlets


I’m not sure if I’ve ever mentioned how I love lemon desserts. Okay, okay… you’re right… I have mentioned it a time or two… or ten! LOL!! I’ll never be a chocoholic but a lemon-holic (uhmmm… not a word, huh?)… yeah that I could be :) Freely admitting that I’ve never made a lemon-meringue anything before, being a Daring Baker has expanded my horizons and given me confidence to try new things. Now, just for me (and my ego) ya gotta keep reading after the jump because even I am impressed with how this turned out. And for those of you who don’t like reading and come to this blog only for the pretty pictures, there’s lots more pictures inside…

Last week, DJ had some time to kill and ended up at Williams-Sonoma. Among other things, he came home with this Emile Henry pie dish. Yes, in red! I love it! I love it! I love it!! Of course, I had to make a pie right away… and for such a gorgeous dish, only a lemon meringue pie would do :) But… but… but… he also came home with this set of tartlet pans. Tartlet? Tartlette? I’ve seen it both ways and I dunno which is right! LOL!


Back in January, before I was a member of the Daring Bakers, there was a Lemon Meringue Pie challenge. I saw so many beautiful creations as I perused their blogroll… but it was the tartlets (tarlettes? I still don’t know!) that really caught my attention. I decided to hold off on using the Emile Henry pie pan and instead make Lemon Meringue Tartlets (that’s the spelling I’m sticking with thankyouverymuch! LOL!) that way I could use my cute lil new tartlet pans and share with friends/family. Getting your very own mini-pie is really neat – and when you’re giving them away, the presentation of your own lil mini-pie is totally more impressive than a cut-out slice of pie. Mini. Individual. Your own little pie :) People love this idea… and I love doing it :)


In making lemon meringue tartlets vs. lemon meringue pie, there’s not a whole lot of difference. Just divide up your components and way you go! Divide your crust-dough into appropriate-sized balls, seriously coat your tartlet pans with a generous amount of baking spray (Baker’s Joy is my choice), bake several crusts, fill each one , top each one with meringue and bake a bunch at a time. You still make the same amount of crust… the same amount of filling… and the same amount of meringue. It’s the assembly that’s a bit more time consuming – but remember, the presentation is sooooooooo totally worth it :)

I don’t own a pastry cutter… never had one… never used one. When I bake, I like the feeling of working with my hands (clean hands, yes yes they’re **CLEAN** hands thankyouverymuch! LOL!) because I find it very satisfying. I work the butter and flour together by hand so if you do’t have a pastry cutter don’t feel like you can’t make pie crust. You can! You can! Y-E-S-you-can! Y-E-S-you-can! (uhm… yeah… that was my attempt at cheerleading and since I was never the cheerleader-type, it might have fallen flat… I know, I know… stick with the baking, Em… stiiiiiiiiick with the baking!).

Some might consider this a cheat but I’ll reveal a lil secret here… I like to take some of the meringue, put it in a pastry bag and pipe it all the way around the top of the crust as a makeshift border. Because the tartlets are not all that deep, I find this makes everything MUCH easier once you’ve spooned in the lemon filling and you’re ready to top with the meringue. I tried not doing the border and holy-mother-of-pearl it was just way too much effort for me to get the meringue topping all spread out nice and even-like. Color me lazy but that meringue border saved me a lot of time, effort and hassle :)

Realizing that not everyone will want to make individual lemon meringue tartlets, I’ve provided the recipe for making a regular pie. I didn’t alter the ingredients one bit and it was enough for me to make 10 tartlets… each 3″ in diameter. If you don’t have tartlet pans but want to make the individual pies it’s not difficult at all. Just take your dough, divide it in out, roll in the shape you want, bake them as flat discs, pipe a meringue border, fill with the lemon filling and top with the meringue. See, the tartlet pans are really not absolutely necessary and you CAN make the individual mini-pies without them :) If you’re going to make the tartlets instead of the full pie, be sure to watch your baking times as the smaller size will bake up more quickly. And for sure, keep an eye on them during the final baking which browns the meringue. It might take a little bit of time for the meringue to go from white to beige… but in a flash it goes from beige-to-golden brown-to burnt-black so keep an eye on it… that’s allllll I’m sayin ;-)

I think this is a fantastic recipe… absolutely fantastic! My sister was quick to say it tastes better than the often-chemical-laden ones you buy at the store. She and I grew up on lemon meringue pie so that was a wonderful compliment from her.

Have a delicious day!

Lemon Meringue Pie
(from “Wanda’s Pie in the Sky” by Wanda Beaver)

Lemon Meringue Pie
Makes one 10-inch (25 cm) pie

For the Crust:
3/4 cup (180 mL) cold butter; cut into ½-inch (1.2 cm) pieces
2 cups (475 mL) all-purpose flour
1/4 cup (60 mL) granulated sugar
1/4 tsp (1.2 mL) salt
1/3 cup (80 mL) ice water

For the Filling:
2 cups (475 mL) water
1 cup (240 mL) granulated sugar
1/2 cup (120 mL) cornstarch
5 egg yolks, beaten
1/4 cup (60 mL) butter
3/4 cup (180 mL) fresh lemon juice
1 tbsp (15
mL) lemon zest
1 tsp (5 mL) vanilla extract

For the Meringue:
5 egg whites, room temperature
1/2 tsp (2.5 mL) cream of tartar
1/4 tsp (1.2 mL) salt
1/2 tsp (2.5 mL) vanilla extract
3/4 cup (180 mL) granulated sugar

To Make the Crust:
Make sure all ingredients are as cold as possible. Using a food processor or pastry cutter and a large bowl, combine the butter, flour, sugar and salt.Process or cut in until the mixture resembles coarse meal and begins to clump together. Sprinkle with water, let rest 30 seconds and then either process very briefly or cut in with about 15 strokes of the pastry cutter, just until the dough begins to stick together and come away from the sides of the bowl. Turn onto a lightly floured work surface and press together to form a disk. Wrap in plastic and chill for at least 20 minutes.

Allow the dough to warm slightly to room temperature if it is too hard to roll. On a lightly floured board (or countertop) roll the disk to a thickness of 1/8 inch (.3 cm). Cut a circle about 2 inches (5 cm) larger than the pie plate and transfer the pastry into the plate by folding it in half or by rolling it onto the rolling pin. Turn the pastry under, leaving an edge that hangs over the plate about 1/2 inch (1.2 cm). Flute decoratively. Chill for 30 minutes.

Preheat oven to 350ºF (180ºC). Line the crust with foil and fill with metal pie weights or dried beans. Bake for 20 to 25 minutes. Carefully remove the foil and continue baking for 10 to 15 minutes, until golden. Cool completely before filling.

To Make the Filling:
Bring the water to a boil in a large, heavy saucepan. Remove from the heat and let rest 5 minutes. Whisk the sugar and cornstarch together. Add the mixture gradually to the hot water, whisking until completely incorporated. Return to the heat and cook over medium heat, whisking constantly until the mixture comes to a boil. The mixture will be very thick. Add about 1 cup (240 mL) of the hot mixture to the beaten egg yolks, whisking until smooth. Whisking vigorously, add the warmed yolks to the pot and continue cooking, stirring constantly, until mixture comes to a boil. Remove from the heat and stir in butter until incorporated. Add the lemon juice, zest and vanilla, stirring until combined. Pour into the prepared crust. Cover with plastic wrap to prevent a skin from forming on the surface, and cool to room temperature.

To Make the Meringue:
Preheat the oven to 375ºF (190ºC). Using an electric mixer beat the egg whites with the cream of tartar, salt and vanilla extract until soft peaks form. Add the sugar gradually, beating until it forms stiff, glossy peaks. Pile onto the cooled pie, bringing the meringue all the way over to the edge of the crust to seal it completely. Bake for 15 to 20 minutes, or until golden. Cool on a rack. Serve within 6 hours to avoid a soggy crust.

Jun.
02

Mint Chocolate Cupcakes


Believe it or not, here’s yet another post about chocolate cupcakes. And this won’t be the last since I’m still playing around trying to find “the one” that I’ll add to my bag-o-tricks :) The recipe I used this time is so darn good I like to think I’ve hit my “Eureka!!” moment… but just last night I received another that, of course, I’ll have to try. This one I’m sharing with you today is the closest I’ve come so far to finding “a keeper”. For someone who’s not all that big on chocolate, I’ve sure been baking with it a lot lately!

I’ll freely admit that when I first read this recipe I was skeptical… very very skeptical. A cake recipe with no eggs? No milk? I was really scratching my head as to how this one would turn out. The batter is thin and easily pourable – and that worried me too. But the taste is great! And the texture? Well, I’d by lying if I didn’t say it was the closest to that hard-to-duplicate texture of box cake mix… though the flavor is so much better!

Now I’m not a vegan… far far from it… but since the recipe has no eggs and no milk, does it qualify as vegan-friendly? Someone who knows these things please post a comment and let me know because I’m sincerely interested.

I realize the calendar shows June and St. Patrick’s Day was about 2-3 months ago, but I recently had a hankerin for minty icing. Maybe it was that Mint Chocolate Chip ice cream I posted about here. To make these Mint Chocolate Cupcakes you can either put the mint extract in the batter itself… or put the mint extract in the icing. Maybe go all out and put it in both! But if you go that route, try to use a light hand with the amount of mint because too much can be overpowering for some folks.

Pair it with my favorite buttercream frosting that I posted about here and you’ve got yourself one tasty cupcake. I added a small amount of mint extract to the icing… and a very small amount of Wilton Gel Icing Color in Kelly Green to dress it up a little. I also dusted some with cocoa powder and dotted a few chocolate sprinkles on others. When I gave one of each to a couple in my neighborhood, they playfully teased each other with “well, which one do you want… sure they both have chocolate stuff on top but one has dust and one has chunks… make a choice” hahahaha :)

The recipe, as written, is enough to make a full cake. I halved it and it still made a whole lot of cupcakes… in excess of 2 – 3 dozen petite mini, mini and regular sizes. When trying out a new recipe for the first time I tend to cut it in half or even one- third to see how it works out. I figure if it’s great I can always make more… but if it’s pretty bad, I haven’t wasted a lot of ingredients and gotten stuck with a whole lot of something that just doesn’t taste very good! LOL! When I made this recipe, I was only disappointed in the fact I didn’t make more… it was THAT good. Try it out for yourself… and tell me if you don’t agree :)

Mint Chocolate Cupcakes
adapted from Amazon Chocolate Cake

Ingredients
3 cups flour
2/3 cups Hershey’s Special Dark cocoa powder
2 teaspoons baking soda
2 cups sugar
1 teaspoon salt
2 cups cold water
1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1 teaspoon mint extract
2 tablespoons white vinegar

Directions

Preheat oven to 350F

Sift together flour, cocoa, baking soda, sugar and salt together.

In a separate bowl whisk together the water, vegetable oil, vanilla extract, mint extract and vinegar.

In a large mixing bowl, combine 1/3 of the dry ingredients with 1/2 of the wet ingredients. After the mixture is thoroughly combined, add half of the remaining dry ingredients with the remaining wet ingredients. Combine thoroughly. Lastly add in the remaining dry ingredients. Once the mixture is thoroughly combined, continue to mix for another 2-3 minutes.

Pour into cupcake liners or for a full cake pour into a 9×13 cake pan prepared with baking spray. Tap the pan against the counter to break any air bubbles that exist.

Bake for 20 minutes (cupcakes) or 25-30 minutes (cake) or until a cake tester inserted into the center comes out clean.

Cool in pan for 5 minutes before turning out onto wire rack to cool completely.
Top with my favorite buttercream frosting and ENJOY!!.

 

 

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