Oct.
17

Guinness Chocolate Cupcakes

 

These may look like ordinary chocolate cupcakes with chocolate frosting… but oh my friends trust me, they are not.  They are not ordinary at all.  These cupcakes are incredibly moist.  These cupcakes are incredibly rich in chocolate flavor.  And these cupcakes made me VERY popular with my co-workers… the “belle of the work-a-day ball” one might say. Perhaps it’s because these cupcakes have a secret ingredient… something you might not even know is there…. something not typically considered standard cupcake fare.  What is this secret ingredient? Guinness Extra Stout.  Beer?  Yes, beer.  And if you’ve never made these cupcakes, well, let me just say right here for the record that you should.  I paired them with a chocolate cream cheese frosting instead of an uber-sweet buttercream… and notice that I didn’t slather on goo-gobs of it.  Why, you ask?  Because I wanted the flavor of the cake to be the star of this show and not take a back seat to anything.  N-E-thing. Ordinary chocolate cupcakes?  Oh hardly!  They’re extraordinary…. even to avowed beer-hating, non-chocolate-lover like me.  

I took this photo two different ways… focusing on the cupcakes in the foreground (above) and focusing on the beer in the background (below).  I like them both and I can’t choose which one I like best.  I’ve agonized for a ridiculously long time about which picture to put in this post.  I obsessed over it which is silly.  So the final decision is to include both of them :P

 

My friend Brandi is married to a great guy named Andy.  Andy loves Guinness.  Loves it.  If they lived closer, and not half way across the country, I’m betting Andy would love these cupcakes.  I’ve been wanting to make them for months now – in fact I bought the bottle of Guinness a little while back and it’s been sitting in my fridge ever since.  The other night I had planned to make something totally different and the Hubs was in the fridge and said to me “are you EVER going to make those Guinness cupcakes you’ve been talking about?”.   I figured it was time to make the Guinness cupcakes… if for no other reason that I could use that reclaimed space in the chiller ;-)   Fridge space is always at a premium around here and if you’re a baker or food blogger then you know what I’m talkin’bout! LOL

The flavor of these cupcakes is chocolate… but different.  And when they’re baking in the oven, the aroma is chocolate… but different.  I can’t describe it.  The scent is not yeasty…. and the scent is not sweet-chocolatey.  It’s something different.  Initially I had no intention of even trying these since I abhor everything, ev-REE-thing about beer and I’m not a huge fan of chocolate. But the Hubs raved about these cupcakes… raved about them. RAVED.  I saved a few at home and took the rest to work. My colleagues raved about these cupcakes… raved about them.  RAVED.  After lunch I caved in and finally tried one.  The first bite made me think “well these don’t suck as bad as I expected”… the second bite made the think “hmmm… these are pretty good”…. the third bite had me thinking “these really ARE good!”.  They are… and you should make them :)



Guinness Chocolate Cupcakes

adapted from RecipeZaar

Ingredients

4 ounces unsalted butter
10 ounces dark brown sugar
2 medium eggs, beaten
6 ounces plain flour
1/4 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
7 fluid ounces Guinness stout 
2 ounces cocoa powder


Method

Prepare 18 muffin tins with paper liners
Preheat oven to 350 F
Cream butter and sugar together
Beat in the eggs
Sift flour, baking powder and baking soda into a separate bowl and set aside
Stir Guinness into cocoa and set aside
Alternately mix in 1/3 of the dry ingredients and 1/2 of the chocolate mixture into the mixing bowl… starting and ending with the dry ingredients.
Pour batter into prepared cups about 2/3 full
Bake for 18-20 minutes

Chocolate Cream Cheese Frosting

8oz Cream Cheese
3/4 cup Powdered Sugar
2 tablespoons cocoa powder
 

These are really good… and I bet they’ll help you have a delicious day!

 

Oct.
11

Angel food Cupcakes

I’m not a real fan of angel food cake.  I won’t go so far as to say I dislike it but I’ll state for the record that I’m not a real fan.  It is rather popular though… and it’s definitely something DH just goes ga-ga over.  Go figure.  For his most recent big “milestone” birthday he specifically asked for an angel food cake with chocolate frosting.  He just really likes it.  So the other night I whipped up a few angel food cupcakes and he was very very happy :)  They turned out a lot better than I had expected and while I still won’t say I’m a fan, I will say these really are quite good!

These are pretty darn easy to make, especially if you have a stand- or hand mixer.  I don’t even want to think about the effort required to whip egg whites into peaks by hand – wow – just too much for for me!   And with just a few ingredients to pull together, these are nice to try out.  They’re light… they’re fluffy… and not spongy/chewy like I find most angel food cake to be. And topped with some of this wonderful buttercreme (recipe found here) I’d certainly eat them again :)

 

Angel food Cupcakes

 Yields 8 standard size cupcakes

Ingredients
1/4 cup cake flour
7 tablespoons vanilla sugar  - divided use
2 egg whites
1/4 tsp cream of tartar
1/4 tsp vanilla extract
Pinch of salt


Method

Preheat the oven to 325F
Line a muffin pan with 8 cupcake liners

In a small bowl, whisk the flour and 1 tablespoon of the sugar.  Set aside.

In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the whisk attachment, and using high speed, whip the egg whites, cream of tartar, and salt until peaks form – you want them stiffer than soft peaks but don’t go so far as to have stiff peaks.  Reduce the speed to medium and slowly add 1 tablespoon of the sugar at a time until all remaining 6 tablespoons have been added then continue to beat for 1 minute. Add the vanilla extract and combine. With the mixer on low speed, add small amounts of the flour mixture into the egg whites, beating after each addition to incorporate all of it.

Spoon the batter into the unlined muffin cups. These will rise to form domes.

Bake for about 20-25 minutes until the tops are golden and spring back when lightly touched (if an indentation remains, they are not done)

Remove from oven and cool on wire racks. 

If you like angel food cake, you’ll really like these.  I think they’d be great as the cake part of a fantabulous strawberry shortcake… not that I’ve got that on the brain or anything ;-)

Have a delicious day!

Oct.
03

Cherry Almond Cupcakes


I made these cupcakes a few weeks back. They’re extremely tasty… especially if you’re a fan of almond since the cherry adds a nice variation. I never quite got around to posting them perhaps because I thought the pictures really didn’t turn out well. They’re not hideous, but they’re not “good”. I was reading another baking/food blog the other day and she posted something she didn’t feel was gorgeously photographed but shared it anyway because the recipe was worth it. Well, that sums up my feelings today… the photography isn’t stellar but the cupcakes are so tasty that I simply have to share!

Cherry Almond Cupcakes

Ingredients
2 cups flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
3/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 cup unsalted butter at room temperature
1 cup + 2 tablespoons sugar
2 eggs, at room temperature
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/2 teaspoon almond extract
1/2 cup milk
20 fresh cherries, pitted and halved (divided use)

optional crushed almonds for garnish and melted chocolate for decorating

Directions
Preheat oven to 300F
Line 18 muffin tins with paper liners
Set aside 18 cherry halves

Sift together the flour, baking powder and salt and set aside
In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with paddle attachment, combine butter and sugar and beat until fluffy (about 2 minutes). Add eggs and extracts, beating well after each addition. Add one-third of the dry ingredients, then half the milk; repeat and mix until well combined. Add in the remaining cherries that were not set aside and mix only until cherries are well distributed. Spoon batter into prepared muffin tins about 3/4 full. Bake for 15 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Cool in tins for 10 minutes, then remove and let cool completely on a wire rack before frosting.

For the frosting make a half-batch of the buttercreme icing recipe found here and mix in a few fresh cherries (about a half-dozen to a dozen depending on personal preference), pitted and chopped very small (almost to the point of being mashed).

Once the cupcakes have been frosted, garnish each with a half-cherry, some crushed almonds and a drizzle of melted chocolate.

Enjoy!

 

Aug.
29


If you are a fan of cookbooks and haven’t checked out the list of what’s on my shelf (located in the right-hand sidebar) you might want to take a peek. I love cookbooks and this year have added more than I think previously ever even looked at! LOL! One of my latest additions is Baking At Home With The Culinary Institute of America… and slowly but surely it’s becoming absolutely one of my favorites.

I was at Barnes & Noble one evening and had already picked up two or three other cooking/baking books when this one caught my eye. It’s “coffee-table book” size and has gorgeous photos (oooooh ya know how good food photos just get me all drooly! LOL). A couple of the really nice things are the fact that it’s a great mix of instructional/technique-based and recipes… and … it lays flat when you open it (a really great feature for when you’re laying it on a work surface or standing it up in a book holder)

In the book there’s this beautiful photo of a finished cake. It’s simple. It’s elegant. It’s stunning. I had to make it. Had to. But I’m not all into making full sized layer cakes, especially when it comes to an untested recipe… my preference is cupcakes. So the recipe for the Yellow Butter Cake was halved and the result was without a doubt the most amazing “plain” cake I’ve ever tasted. Ever. Ever in my whole life. And I’m not some teeny-bopper here. And I’ve consumed vast quantities MORE than my fair share of cake over the years! LOL. So believing this Yellow Butter Cake is the best “plain” cake I’ve ever tasted is saying a lot. A whole lot! It was so good that I consumed half a dozen cupcakes without frosting! Okay okay… they were 5 mini cupcakes and 1 regular sized so please don’t think I ate six big ol honkin cupcakes! LOL But… I COULD HAVE! hahahah

After proclaiming these cupcakes to be “amazingly perfect” I thought they should be the cornerstone of something special…. hmmmm…. but what? Well, In checking out Tastespotting the other day someone had posted Napoleon Cupcakes and they looked so pretty. Among my favorite pastries/desserts is the classic Napoleon. Decadent amounts of delicious pastry cream between layers of delicate phyllo topped with a vanilla glaze and those cute little chocolate designs. It’s my idea of a heavenly food product! I just knew my “amazingly perfect yellow butter cake” cupcakes would be perfect for this! I’d previously made the pastry cream from this fantastic CIA book and knew it was a definite winner that would complement the butter cake nicely. For “frosting” I used some melted (and thinned) vanilla coating that I use for making peppermint bark. And the cute little lines are just some melted chocolate :) The cake and pastry cream are made ahead of time and cooled before “assembly” takes place.

Really, you can use any recipe you like for pastry cream – tons are available to you. Heck, use vanilla pudding if ya like!! You can also use any cake recipe you like for the cupcakes. Have a favorite poured fondant or vanilla coating? Go for it. I’m sharing this recipe for the cake because I personally find it to be a knockout that I think everyone should have in their baking repertoire. After the cupcakes are baked and cooled… and the pastry cream is made and chilled… just load a pastry bag fitted with your choice of tip and poke it into the cupcake and fill it with the cream. If you fill the cupcake with an excessive amount of cream, it will start to back up out of the top of the cupcake… uhm… not that this happened to me or anything ;-) After your vanilla glaze is melted and at the consistency you wish, just take ahold of the cupcake and dip it in upside down. Let some of it drip off into the bowl before turning it right side up… otherwise it will just dribble down the sides of your cupcake wrapper. Once the top is “set” (and I stuck them in the freezer so they’d set more quickly… I’m impatient! LOL) take your melted chocolate and pipe three lines of it on each cupcake… drag a toothpick thru a total of three times. The first time in one direction, next in the opposite direction, and the third one in the same direction as the first one. That creates the signature “napoleon brackets” :)

Yellow Butter Cake
Baking at Home with The Culinary Institute of America
makes two 8″ layers

Ingredients
3 ½ c cake flour
2 c sugar
1 Tbsp baking powder
½ tsp salt
1 c (2 sticks) butter, unsalted, diced, at room temperature
1 c whole or low-fat milk (divided use)
4 large eggs
2 large egg whites
2 tsp vanilla extract

Method
Preheat the oven to 350F. Coat two 8” cake pans lightly with cooking spray

Sift the flour, sugar, baking powder and salt into the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the whisk attachment or a large mixing bowl. Add the butter and ½ cup of the milk. Mix on medium speed until smooth, about 4 minutes, scraping down the bowl with a rubber spatula as needed.

In a separate bowl, blend the eggs, egg whites, the remaining ½ cup milk and the vanilla extract. Add to the batter in 3 additions, mixing for 2 minutes on medium speed after each addition. Scrape down the bowl between additions.

Divide the batter evenly between the two pans. Bake until the layers spring back when touched lightly in the center, 35-40 minutes.

Remove the layers from the oven and cool completely in their pans on wire racks. Release the sides and bottom of the layers from the pans with a narrow metal spatula or a table knife before unmolding and finishing with fillings and icings.

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Okay so if Napoleon Cupcakes don’t float your boat, at least make the cake. Really. It’s the best “plain” cake I’ve ever had. It’s a holiday weekend so that means you’ve got plenty of extra time on your hands. Go ahead… make the butter cake. You’ll be glad you did.

Have a delicious day :)

Aug.
11

Coconut Pineapple Cupcakes

Ever since I went to Hawaii in March, I’ve been on a serious pineapple & coconut kick. DH has always always ALWAYS loved pineapple while I’ve thought it to be “fine”. But something happened on vacation and I been eating pineapple like it was goin-out-of-style. Since that time we’ve consumed no less than 3 whole pineapples each week. I’ve found lots of ways to incorporate pineapple in some way in our meals and in my baking… and this coconut cupcake with pineapple cream cheese frosting is simply out of this world!

Recently, my baking buddy Jamie over at My Baking Addiction posted what she believed to be the best cupcakes she’d ever tasted. Well, that’s quite a statement coming from another baker… so of course I had to try these out for myself. She made certain adjustments and then I made certain adjustments but the basic recipe is Ina Garten’s coconut cupcakes. I used no almond extract at all… just coconut extract in the cake batter and fresh pineapple juice (along with freshly cut pineapple pieces) in the icing. The fresh fruit definitely impacts the “set” on the icing… even though it’s still pretty thick, that comes from the fruit chunks, it’s certainly not for piping. But that’s okay, not every icing needs to be piped :) This one would be fantastic as a layer cake filling – in fact I’ll probably try that at some point!


I sent Jamie an email earlier today telling her just how addictive these cupcakes are. They’re fantastic… just fantastic. And personally I think it was all in the pineapple ;-)

Have a delicious day!

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