Showing posts with label birthday cupcakes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label birthday cupcakes. Show all posts

Sunday, 11 May 2014

Monster cupcakes (apple and cinnamon)

Purple and green monster cupcakes
The monsters! 
These apple and cinnamon cupcakes were actually made back in February - before I used the same recipe to make the Sheep Cupcakes for my friend’s hen weekend – I just haven’t gotten around to writing them up!  These cupcakes were made for a visit to see my sister, brother-in-law and 18-month-old nephew. I wanted to make something fun and remembered having pinned monster cupcakes to my Cupcake Inspiration board on Pinterest.

I experimented with different piping nozzles for the buttercream – making spiky monsters with a small round nozzle, hairy monsters using a grass effect nozzle, and wiggly wormy-like monsters with a medium round nozzle. I chose purple and green buttercream to contrast, but you could make any colour monsters!

To decorate the cupcakes, I made circles out of white fondant icing for the eyes and mouths out of black fondant icing. I have this small cutter set, which has lots of basic shapes and is very useful! Making the teeth and sticking them on was quite fiddly – as they are tiny pieces of fondant – but worth the effort! The easiest way to make tiny triangles is to cut out stars using a star cutter, and the cut the triangles off each star. The tongues were made from fizzy belt sweets, cut with a pair of kitchen sweets and then inserted through the mouths – again a bit fiddly! The hair/antennae were simply made from strawberry pencil sweets, cut into short lengths. You could experiment with various different sweets for different hair-types / antennae.

If you wanted to make these cupcakes as a fun activity with kids, you could use white chocolate buttons for the eyes, teeth / lip / fang sweets for the mouths and various different types of sweets for the hair!

These cakes tasted fantastic, but the cake / icing didn’t really go with the strong taste of the sweets on top! If I were to make monster cupcakes again, I’d probably go for a simple vanilla cupcake, or a strawberry cupcake to go with the sweets!

Cinnamon cupcakes with apple puree and maple syrup buttercream 
(makes 12 cupcakes and 4-6 mini cupcakes)
Green monster cupcake sticking out his multi-coloured tongue!
Ingredients
  1. 110g butter, at room temperature
  2. 225g golden castor sugar
  3. 2 large eggs
  4. 150g self-raising flour, sifted
  5. 125g plain flour, sifted
  6. 120ml semi-skimmed milk
  7. 2 tsp cinnamon
  8. 1 tsp vanilla extract
  9. 2 large / 3 small Bramley apples
  10. ½ - 1 tblsp soft brown sugar

Buttercream:
  1. 115g butter, at room temperature
  2. 500g icing sugar, sifted
  3. 2 tblsp maple syrup
  4. 2 tblsp milk
  5. Food colouring

To decorate
  1. Sweets (I used fizzy belt sweets and strawberry cables)
  2. White fondant icing
  3. Black fondant icing
  4. Black writing icing (optional)
  5. Red food colour pen (optional)

For the eyes and mouths (this can all be done in advance):
  1. Roll out a small amount of white fondant icing.
  2. Use various circle cutters to cut out different sized eyes.
  3. Use a star-shaped cutter to cut out several stars and then use a knife to cut these stars into small triangles for teeth.
  4. Cut out small rectangles for additional teeth.
  5. Roll out a small amount of black fondant icing.
  6. Use an oval cutter to cut out mouths and shape as desired.
  7. Use a paint brush dipped in a tiny amount of water to attach the teeth to the mouths.
  8. Use scissors to cut tongue shapes from the belt sweets.
  9. Cut small slits in the mouths and then push tongues through these.
  10. Use black writing icing or a black food colour pen to add pupils to the eyes.

For the cakes:
  1. Peel and chop the Bramley apples.
  2. Place the chopped apples in a saucepan with two tablespoons of water and half a tablespoon of soft brown sugar.
  3. Cook over a low heat until softened and mostly pureed ( a few small lumps is fine).
  4. Taste and add extra brown sugar as required.
  5. Place to one side to cool.
  6. Preheat oven to 160C.
  7. Line a 12 hole muffin tin with cupcake cases.
  8. In a large mixing bowl, cream the butter and sugar until light and fluffy (this will take at least 5 minutes with an electric hand /stand mixer – don’t rush this stage).
  9. Add the eggs, one at a time, mixing for a few minutes after each addition. It should result in a lovely light mousse-like mixture.
  10. Combine the two flours and the cinnamon in a separate bowl.
  11. Combine the milk and vanilla extract in a jug.
  12. Add one third of the flour mixture to the creamed mixture and stir gently to combine.
  13. Pour in one third of the milk mixture and stir gently.
  14. Continue to add flours and then milk mixture alternately, stirring gently after each addition, until all have been added.
  15. Spoon mixture into the cupcake cases, filling to about 2/3 full.
  16. Bake in the oven for about 30 minutes until lightly golden brown. The cakes will spring back lightly when touched, if cooked.
  17. Remove from the oven and leave to cool in tin for about 10 minutes, before carefully placing on a wire rack to finish cooling.

While the cakes are in the oven, make up the buttercream:
  1. In a large mixing bowl, beat the butter, maple syrup and half of the icing sugar until smooth.
  2. Add the rest of the icing sugar and beat until smooth and creamy.
  3. Add milk (if needed to bring the buttercream to a piping consistency) and beat again.
  4. Put buttercream into a piping bag with a nozzle adaptor.

Once cakes are cooked and cooled: 
    Purple monster cupcake sticking out his multi-coloured tongue!
  1. Use a tea spoon to cut a cone out from the centre of the cakes.
  2. Cut the top disk off each cone and retain.
  3. Fill the hole in each cake with a teaspoon of pureed apple and then replace a cake disk onto each cake to seal the hole.
  4. Pipe the butter cream onto the cakes using various nozzles.
  5. Add eyes, mouths and hair / antennae.  



Sunday, 16 March 2014

Rainbow cupcakes

Lemon and passion fruit cupcakes topped with a piped blue butter cream rose swirl, piped clouds and a rainbow belt sweet

Birthday time again – and my turn to make cakes for the Friday cake meeting at work. I decided to use up one of the small Christmas cakes that I had left over from Christmas (still well preserved in a mixture of sloe gin / cherry brandy / plum liqueur!) and make a couple of complementary cakes. As there is a coeliac amongst my colleagues, I made the very delicious gluten-free carrot, coconut and pistachio cake that I last made in October again.

Cupcakes are generally seen as one of my specialities and I hadn’t made any for a while, so I decided that I would make some lemon cupcakes, filled with passion fruit curd (as I had some in the fridge!) and topped with lemon buttercream.

Given the never-ending rain that we have all had recently, I was inspired by some rainbow-themed cupcakes that I had seen on Pinterest. When it came to decorating the cakes, I tried just smoothing the buttercream on with a pallet knife but my pallet knife skills are not the best and it looked a bit scruffy to me. I decided to go with my ever-reliable  Wilton 2D nozzle and pipe roses. The clouds were piped with a small round nozzle. The rainbows themselves were fizzy multi-coloured belt sweets – cut in half and then stuck down into the clouds.

Lemon and passion fruit cupcakes topped with a piped blue butter cream rose swirl, piped clouds and a rainbow belt sweet
These cupcakes always taste fantastic – I just love the tangy passion fruit curd combined with the zingy lemon cake and buttercream. When they were first complete, I wasn’t that happy with the finished look but the next morning, I did feel a bit more confident about them – and everyone at work loved them!  If I were to do them again (maybe with a bit more time), I’d love to add little pots of gold to these! 

Saturday, 19 October 2013

Chai latte cupcakes


Chai latte cupcakes piped with violet, pink and cream vanilla buttercream flowers


I’ve recently found Pinterest and have been enjoying flicking through lots of cupcake pictures in search of inspiration. I’d been asked to make cakes for a colleague’s birthday - I’m known for my cupcakes but I wanted to have a go at something a bit more unusual than the standard lemon / orange / red velvet. The idea of chai latte cupcakes caught my interest and so I flicked through a few webpages in search of recipes. There weren’t many UK recipes around and so I decided to make it up, basing it on a Earl Grey recipe in my ever-reliable Cupcakes from the Primrose Bakery book.



I followed the recipe, substituting Earl Grey teabags for chai teabags but also adding in a teaspoon of cinnamon, two-thirds of a teaspoon of cardamom, quarter of a teaspoon of cloves and half a teaspoon of nutmeg. I think this was too much spice! The cakes were very strongly scented and spiced! I was planning to top the cupcakes with a cinnamon buttercream, but as they were rather highly spiced anyway, I decided to balance the flavour a little by topping with a simple vanilla buttercream.



These cupcakes really split opinion – some people loved them (the birthday girl’s husband thought they were the best cakes ever!), while others really weren’t sure. This could be purely down to the chai tea flavour, which is fairly controversial anyway! I love spice but even for me, I found the spicing a bit much. In the recipe below, I have suggested less spice than I used, as this is what I will try next time – the choice is up to you!



I was planning to decorate with something a bit more intricate but I ran out of time (having also made the amazing carrot, pistachio and coconut cake, and mini lemon layer cakes on this day!), so I went for simple piped flowers. To keep it simple, I piped the cream roses first. Then, I added pink food colour to the remaining buttercream and piped the pink flowers. Finally, I added violet food colour to the remaining buttercream and piped the violet flowers. I left the cupcakes for about an hour to allow the buttercream to set and then gave them a quick spray with pearl lustre spray, which gives a fab shiny finish.



People are always amazed by rose swirls on cakes and cupcakes but they are really not that difficult to do. This is a good photo tutorial and there are lots of film clips on YouTube. To be honest, the main things are getting the consistency of the buttercream right, a Wilton 2D piping nozzle, steady pressure on the icing bag and lots of practice! The other flowers were piped very simply with a Wilton 1M piping nozzle – just lots of little stars piped one by one around and on top of each other.


Chai latte cupcakes (single batch of 12 cupcakes)


Ingredients


  1. 175ml semi-skimmed milk, at room temperature
  2. 4 Chai tea bags
  3. 110g butter, at room temperature
  4. 225g golden castor sugar
  5. 2 large eggs
  6. 125g self-raising flour, sifted
  7. 120g plain flour, sifted
  8. ½ tsp cinnamon
  9. ½ tsp mixed spice
  10. ¼ tsp cardamon


Buttercream:


  1. 110g butter, at room temperature
  2. 60ml semi-skimmed milk, at room temperature
  3. 1 tsp vanilla extract
  4. 500g icing sugar, sifted
  5. Food colouring (preferably a paste rather than a liquid)

Method
  1. Heat 125ml milk in a saucepan over a medium heat until it just begins to boil.
  2. Remove from the heat and add the tea bags.
  3. Cover with clingfilm and leave to infuse for about 30 minutes.
  4. Discard the tea bags and add the extra 50ml of milk.   
  5. Preheat oven to 160C/350F/GM4.
  6. Line a 12 hole muffin tin with cupcake cases.
  7. In a large mixing bowl, cream the butter and sugar until light and fluffy (this will take at least 5 minutes with an electric hand mixer – don’t rush this stage).
  8. Add the eggs, one at a time, mixing for a few minutes after each addition. Add a level tablespoon of the plain flour with each egg. It should result in a lovely light mousse-like mixture.
  9. Combine the rest of the plain flour with the self-raising flour and all of the spices in a separate bowl.
  10. Add one third of the flours to the creamed mixture and stir gently to combine.
  11. Pour in one third of the infused milk and stir gently.
  12. Continue to add flours and then milk mixture alternately, stirring gently after each addition, until all have been added.
  13. Spoon mixture into the cupcake cases, filling to about 2/3 full.
  14. Bake in the oven for about 30 minutes until lightly golden brown. The cakes will spring back lightly when touched, if cooked.
  15. Remove from the oven and leave to cool in tin for about 10 minutes, before carefully placing on a wire rack to finish cooling.



While the cakes are in the oven, make up the buttercream:

  1. In a large mixing bowl, beat the butter, milk, vanilla extract and half of the icing sugar until smooth.
  2. Add the rest of the icing sugar and beat until smooth and creamy.

Saturday, 16 March 2013

Lemon and passion fruit cupcakes



6 lemon and passion fruit cupcakes decorated in a pink, white and blue colour scheme
As I was headed back home to Guernsey (affectionately known as the Rock) for the week and it was one of my oldest friend’s birthdays, I felt that I should make some cupcakes to take with me.  During a visit to our local garden centre (I know, I’m sooo middle-aged!), I found a delicious-sounding jar of passion fruit curd. I absolutely love passion fruit and so decided to give it a try.  I wasn’t sure about adding curd into a standard cupcake recipe and so decided to use it as a filling in lemon cupcakes. I followed my standard lemon cupcake recipe, simply replacing the lemon curd with the passion fruit curd.  If I had also found some fresh passion fruit, I’d have strained the juice to make passion fruit buttercream, but, as I didn’t, I stuck with lemon buttercream.

This curd is delicious and worked brilliantly with the lemon cupcakes – they even got my dad’s seal of approval!
 
Lemon and passionfruit cupcake decorated with embossed fondant icing
I wanted to create some fairly bright and modern cupcakes and so decided on a fairly bright pink, blue and white colour scheme.  I also wanted to use my “Live, Laugh, Love” embosser (from this set) and so started with these. The flower-covered cakes were a nice, simple design to do and I decided to do the last two cupcakes with a patchwork covering (for instructions on how to do the patchwork decoration – see this blogpost).   


The photos aren’t that good this time as they were taken rather hurriedly while waiting for the taxi to arrive to take me to the airport! But overall, I was fairly pleased with how these cakes turned out. They did get a little squashed on the plane journey over to Guernsey but they just about survived in a respectable condition!

Saturday, 2 March 2013

Honey and lemon cupcakes

Honey and lemon cupcake topped with honey and lemon buttercream and a fondant bee

Having made Hummingbird cupcakes for the netball girls to celebrate my birthday, next step was to decide on cakes to take to work. I decided to take my actual birthday as leave, so decided to take cakes in the following Monday – which gave me the weekend to prepare! As there are quite a few people to cater for, I decided to chuck together another Sticky Ginger Cake, as I’ve made it before for work and it has gone down really well. Next, I felt that it was expected that I produce cupcakes of some kind, so decided to have another go at the Honey and Lemon cupcakes that I made recently. Finally, I decided to make some simple lemon finger biscuits – will write these up in the next blog post. 


The honey and lemon cupcakes were inspired by Martha Kearney on Great British Bake Off for Comic Relief and last time I made them, I had a go at copying her Beehive style decoration. Although they tasted delicious, I wasn’t that satisfied with the overall appearance and they were very fiddly to decorate so I decided to have go with a slightly different design for the cupcakes this time. 


I was mainly happy with the overall design of these cupcakes this time – although I’m not sure the actual beehives looked quite right. I started by swirling the buttercream onto the cupcake with a large round nozzle (mine is from this set). If I were to do again, I may try using the same nozzle but instead of simple piping a swirl, building dots of icing one on top of another – this may create a better beehive. I then coloured the buttercream with green colour paste and used one of these piping nozzles (although I got mine in a set like this one from Lakeland - incredibly useful!) to pipe on the grass. 

Finally, I decorated the cupcakes with bees and flowers made from ready-to-roll icing.

The bees are actually quite fiddly to make but worth the effort:
  1. Start by rolling a small cone shape of yellow ready-to-roll icing. 
  2. Roll out black ready-to-roll icing on a surface lightly dusted with icing sugar - it will need to be very thin. 
  3. Cut into very thin strips. 
  4. Dip a clean paintbrush in water and lightly run over your yellow cone. 
  5. Stick two strips of the black icing onto the cone to create your bee's stripes. 
  6. Use a sharp knife to make two small incisions on the back of your bee. 
  7. Find two similarly sized pieces of sliced almond and dip one tip of each piece in water.
  8. Insert the dampened tips into the incisions created in the bee - this will be your bee's wings. 
  9. Use a black food colouring pen to add eyes.  




Friday, 1 March 2013

Hummingbird Cupcakes (banana, pineapple and pecan)

 Hummingbird cupcake with caramelised pecans


So, seeing as it was my birthday, I figured I had better make cakes for the netball girls. Netball was on Saturday morning – I had Friday off but was planning to be out all day, so cakes had to be made on Thursday evening after work. This meant two things – I needed to make something that would last well for a couple of days and that wouldn’t take too much time and effort.  I already had some ginger cake made at the weekend but wanted to take a second option. I had a flick through my recipe file and found the recipe for Hummingbird Cupcakes.  This is another recipe from the Sara Stanley cupcake course that I did at the Bertinet Kitchen (see also my Red Velvet recipe) and I love this recipe. I hadn’t made these for ages and they’re fairly easy to make, don’t need a lot of fussy decoration and they last really well, so decision made!

Tins of crushed pineapple aren’t always that easy to find – so, if needed, just use a normal can of pineapple and whizz the pineapple up in a food processor or mini chopper.  I chucked the pineapple and banana in a food processor and quickly blitzed them up together, and this worked really well.

The original Sara Stanley Hummingbird recipe topped the cupcakes with a vanilla cream cheese frosting – this is delicious and complements the cake flavours beautifully. However, the problem with cream cheese frosting is that it should be kept in the fridge – which isn’t great for the cakes themselves. As I was planning to keep the cakes for a couple of days, I wanted to do something different. As I had the pineapple juice leftover from the tinned pineapple, I decided to have a go at making pineapple buttercream. I reduced the pineapple juice down to approx. 60ml by microwaving it for 30 seconds at a time until suitably reduced. I then added this to my normal buttercream recipe in place of milk. It tasted great and really worked well with these cakes.

You may find that you need to make extra caramelised pecans – they’re delicious!

Hummingbird Cupcakes

Mini Hummingbird cupcake with caramelised pecan

Ingredients

  1. 1 large egg
  2. 1 egg yolk
  3. 230g caster sugar
  4. 110g corn/grapeseed/sunflower oil
  5. 1 tsp vanilla extract
  6. 125g low fat yoghurt
  7. 100g mashed banana (1 medium banana)
  8. 100g drained tinned pineapple, crushed
  9. 160gg plain flour
  10. Pinch of salt
  11. ¼ tsp cinnamon
  12. ¼ tsp bicarbonate of soda
  13. Pinch of baking powder
  14. 60g chopped pecans

For the pineapple buttercream

  1. Leftover pineapple juice from the tin of pineapple
  2. 110g butter at room temperature
  3. 500g icing sugar 

For the caramelised pecans

  1. 30g butter
  2. 30g light brown sugar
  3. 60g pecans

Method

  1. Pre-heat the oven to 165C. Place 12 large cupcake cases into a bun tin and about 8 mini cupcake cases into a mini bun tin.
  2. Whisk egg, yolk and sugar until pale and fluffy.
  3. Stream in oil and vanilla, whilst continuing to whisk.
  4. Add yoghurt, banana and pineapple and mix.
  5. Sieve the flour into a separate bowl, add all the remaining dry ingredients and stir together.
  6. Add the dry ingredients to the wet and stir gently until combined.
  7. Fill the large cupcakes to two-thirds full and then use the remaining mixture to two-thirds fill the mini cupcake cases.
  8. Bake until the cakes are golden and spring back when lightly touched. The mini cupcakes will take 15-25 minutes to bake and the larger cupcakes 20-30 minutes.
  9. When baked, remove from oven and allow to cool in the tin for 5 minutes. Remove from the tins and allow to cool fully on a wire cooling rack. 

For the buttercream

  1. Pour the pineapple juice into a microwaveable bowl and microwave for 30 seconds at a time until reduced to 60ml. Allow to cool.
  2. In a large mixing bowl, beat the butter, reduced, cooled pineapple juice and half the icing sugar until smooth.
  3. Gradually add the rest of the icing sugar and beat again until smooth and creamy.

For the caramelised pecans

  1. Melt the butter in a small frying pan, over a low heat.
  2. Add the sugar and pecans and stir for about 3 minutes until caramelised.