Showing posts with label frosting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label frosting. Show all posts

04 November, 2011

Cannoli Cupcakes



Last month, I made a cake and cupcake tower for a friend's bridal shower. The detailed post of the cake is here. I was asked to make 48 cupcakes, half would be my standard chocolate recipe (here) and the other half would be cannoli cupcakes. I've never made cannoli cupcakes, I've never even made cannolis so I was a little nervous. I mean, I love a good cannoli but cannoli cream on top of a cupcake? I just didn't know if that would work or be appetizing if it did.  I was very very wrong.

The internet is full of cannoli cupcake recipes. So apparently, this is a flavor of cupcake that the rest of the world is familiar with and that I inexplicably totally missed. After much research, I decided that there wasn't a recipe that I loved from start to finish so I adapted a bunch and made my own.

I liked the idea of having the cannoli cream as filling for the cupcake instead of as icing. I just couldn't see a dollop of cannoli cream sitting sweetly on top of a cupcake without moving. And with the richness of the cream on the inside, I thought that simple, fresh, ordinary, slightly-sweetened whipped cream would be the best icing.

For the cake, I adapted my favorite white cake from King Arthur Flour. Here it goes:

Cake:
2 cups sugar
3 1/4 cups flour
2 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
3/4 cup butter
1 1/4 cups milk
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
4 large eggs

Preheat the oven to 350°F.
In a stand mixer, combine sugar, flour, baking powder, and salt. Add butter and beat at low speed until the mixture looks sandy.  Add milk and vanilla. Mix for about a minute, scraping down the sides of the bowl after to make sure it’s all incorporated.

Add eggs one at a time with the mixer running on low speed. Continue scraping down the sides of the bowl too.

After last egg, add mini chocolate chips and beat for about 30 seconds.



Fill each cupcake liner with 1/4 cup batter and bake for 20 - 25 minutes.

When cupcakes have completely cooled, hollow out the center. I used this nifty little $3 tool from Bed Bath and beyond



but it can be done with a spoon too. Fill each cupcake with Cannoli Cream (recipe below)




Cannoli Cream:

16 oz tub of Ricotta
1 cup powdered sugar
2 tsp vanilla
3/4 mini chocolate chips








Top each cupcake with whipped cream so that the hole is covered.

Whipped Cream

1 pint heavy cream
3 tbsp powdered sugar
1 tsp vanilla

Sprinkle each cupcake with mini chocolate chips.

If you are going to eat these within a couple of hours, keep them in a container in a cooled place. If any longer, I recommend refrigeration.

20 February, 2011

Guinness Cupcakes with Bailey's Irish (Whipped) Cream Frosting



 Okay, enough healthy stuff! With this recipe, I have reached cupcake utopia! These were amazing. The cupcake itself has Guinness in the batter and though it doesn't taste alcoholic-y, it does taste deliciously different. The cake itself is also extremely moist. The addition of whipped cream frosting with bailey's in it just takes the whole thing to another dimension. This recipe would probably make a great cake too but we are partial to cupcakes at this house, as you all know. I hope that if you make them, you find them as delicious as we did.

Guinness Cupcakes

1 1/2 cups Guinness stout
1/2 cup olive oil
1/2 cup whole milk
1 tbsp vanilla extract
3 eggs
3/4 cup sour cream
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
3/4 cup Hershey's Special Dark Cocoa
2 cups sugar
1 1/2 tsp baking soda

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  In the mixing bowl of your stand mixer (or a bowl with a hand mixer), combine the Guinness, olive oil, milk and vanilla. Beat in each egg, one at a time and then mix in the sour cream.
In another bowl, combine the flour, cocoa, sugar and baking soda, mixing well.  With the stand mixer on, slowly add the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients, being sure that everything is well mixed.

Line your cupcake pan with cupcake liners of your choice. Carefully add batter to a large ziploc bag or pastry bag. Snip end of ziploc bag. Squeeze enough batter into each cupcake liner so its 3/4 full.

Bake at 350 for 20-25 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center of a cupcake comes out mostly clean. Cool completely before frosting. And when I say completely, I mean COMPLETELY unless you'd like to be cleaning up melted whipped cream frosting from off every surface in your kitchen. It will happen, I've been there.

Bailey's Irish (Whipped) Cream Frosting

2 cups heavy whipping cream
2/3 cup granulated sugar
3 tbsp Bailey's Irish Cream

In the bowl of your stand mixer, add the whipping cream and sugar. Beat into oblivion, until soft peaks form when you pull the beater out of the cream. Add bailey's and beat until thoroughly distributed. Store, covered, in refrigerator until ready to use.

When cupcakes are cool, put frosting into a pastry bag with a large star tip and pipe onto each cupcake. Or you could just dollop it onto each cupcake for a more homemade rustic look.  Enjoy.




28 September, 2010

Cupcakes and misadventures

 

This weekend was truly a weekend of misadventures! We had a going away party for very very dear friends and I decided to be quite ambitious and make 2 dozen cupcakes and the 6 inch cake that I saw on the Not So Humble Pie blog (because I aspire to be at her caliber of cooking one day).  I planned ahead the recipes: the usual Chocolate Cupcakes (recipe here) and for the 6 inch layer cake, red velvet with cream cheese frosting and of course the fondant.

The chocolate cupcakes came out perfect as usual. I needed a new frosting since my buttercream tends to melt at the slightest temperature above 60 degrees. So I made this new recipe I got from a friend that includes shortening to prevent the 'Wicked Witch of the West in Water' syndrome that my recipe has. After making it, well, it tasted good but I really felt like it needed something.



Buttercream Icing (that doesn't melt into oblivion)

1 cup shortening
1 cup butter, softened
7 cups powdered sugar
2 tsp vanilla
4 oz raspberry jam (optional)

Combine all ingredients and mix well with an electric mixer. Tint to desired colour.
I tinted the icing a really pretty shade of raspberry pink and it just looked like it should taste raspberry pink too. So I dumped half a jar of raspberry jam into the frosting and voila! just enough raspberry-ness. I love when stuff like that happens.


 When the chocolate cupcakes were frosted and looked lovely, I moved onto the cake.
Again, the cake batter was remarkably easy to make. I used a recipe from an old issue of Cook's Illustrated magazine for both the cake batter and the frosting.

Red Velvet Cake
(adapted from Cook's Illustrated)

2 1/4 cups flour
1 1/2 tsp baking soda
1/8 tsp salt
1 cup buttermilk
1 tbsp white vinegar
1 tsp vanilla extract
2 large eggs
2 tbsp cocoa powder
2 tbsp red food colouring
1 1/2 sticks unsalted butter, room temperature
1 1/2 cups sugar

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Grease and flour desired cake pans.

 
Whisk flour, baking soda and salt in  a bowl. In another bowl, whisk together buttermilk, vinegar, vanilla and eggs. In a small bowl, whisk together cocoa powder and food colouring.

With an electric mixer, beat butter and sugar until fluffy. Add a third of the flour mixture. Beat until incorporated. Add half of buttermilk mixture and beat until combined. Repeat with half of flour mixture and buttermilk mixture and then the rest of the flour mixture, beating well after each addition. Add cocoa mixture and beat until everything is well combined. Scrape into prepared pans and bake for 25 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into center comes out clean.


Cool the cakes in pans for 10 minutes then carefully turn onto a rack to cool completely.

Beautiful, rich colour!


While my little cakes were baking, I made the frosting.

Cream Cheese Frosting
(adapted from Cook's Illustrated)

2 sticks unsalted butter, softened
4 cups confectioner's sugar
16 oz cream cheese, softened and cut into 8 pieces
1 1/2 tsp vanilla
1/8 tsp salt

In an electric mixer, combine butter and sugar and beat until fluffy. Add cream cheese and beat until well combined. Beat in vanilla and salt. 

I ended up with WAY too much! Even after I frosted the whole cake, layers and all, I still had a ton leftover. So.... I made more cupcakes. Before I get to that though, I'll keep going with the adorable little cake. It is so cute.

I split each cake in half with a knife, spread each half with cream cheese frosting and started layering. I applied a crumb coat of frosting to the entire cake, which turned out to be way to thick, but whatever, and then moved onto the fondant. A friend recommended that instead of making the fondant myself (an easy but time-consuming process),  I should buy the 'Duff's' fondant sold at Michael's Crafts Store. It's actually very tasty as opposed to the usual revolting tasting stuff that you can buy; I'd recommend it.

I was too busy assembling the cake to remember to take photos of assembling the cake, sorry.
Here, I hit my first snag. Due to the tiny-ness of my kitchen, I don't have ample counter space to roll out enough fondant to cover the cake. Due to the fact that I had been cooking all afternoon and my kitchen does not contain a window, it was very hot which makes fondant a bit sticky and overly soft. After much trial and error, I finally ended up rolling out the fondant on an unrimmed cookie sheet sprayed with oil and, holding my breath, lifted it off the cookie sheet and draped on the cake.



Oh they make it look so easy on TV. It's not, they lie. First, the fondant ripped in a number of places. Second, I used too much frosting for my crumb coat, which I said before, so the frosting was oozing a bit out the sides. Third and possibly because of second, the cake was not the smooth perfection it should have been. It was too late though. So I covered all the ripped sections with cute little flowers made of different coloured fondant and called it a day. Well, not exactly. I still made vanilla cupcakes that night.


I love the colour of this batter! It's so gorgeous.


I've been meaning to try out a few vanilla recipes and what a better time than 9 pm with the kitchen a sheer disaster. Yeah, why not. So here is where my second misadventure started. First, let me say the one should never, ever put two types of flour right next to each other unless they are easily distinguishable. Bread flour is not the same as all purpose flour despite looking EXACTLY the same. I ended up using two cups of bread flour and one cup of all-purpose flour in a recipe that actually calls for 3 cups of cake flour!

 
By the time, I realized my mistake it was too late so I baked them anyway. It turned out okay though. Mike said that they tasted like sugar cookies instead of cupcake but that's not bad, right? To lighten the density of the cupcakes, I used my filler tip to fill each cupcake with a dollop of strawberry jam.


Then I tinted the frosting a pretty purple and piped it onto each cupcake to cover the hole. With some sprinkles and a fondant heart, cute and perfect looking. I did whip the frosting into oblivion while trying to tint it the correct shade of purple so it was very light and fluffy, not a bad thing at all. Between the jam and the light frosting, they managed to balance the density of the cupcake, so that oops did manage to work itself out.


Vanilla Cupcakes

3 cups flour, all-purpose (or 2 of bread flour and 1 of all-purpose if you want the sugar cookie taste)
2 cups sugar
1 cup butter, room temperature
3 eggs
1 1/2 tsp vanilla
1 1/2 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
1 cup buttermilk

Preheat oven to 350.

In a bowl, combine flour, sugar, baking powder and salt.

Beat sugar and butter in a mixer until fluffy. Add eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition. Add vanilla. Alternate adding flour mixture and buttermilk to sugar mixture, beating well after each addition.

Bake for 20 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center of a cupcake comes out clean.

And then comes the party, the third and final catastrophic misadventure...the chocolate cupcakes tipped in their carrier and the frosting fell off.




I ended up having to re-frost them with just a butter knife and cover them in sprinkles because there wasn't time to worry about re-piping the frosting into pretty shapes. I almost cried; it was terrible. Everybody thought they tasted good which is the point I suppose, but still...

 
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