“Cupcakes Galore”

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(This week’s recipe came from “Cupcakes Galore!” by Gail Wagman.)

For Halloween, I wanted to bake something that would invoke childhood. Halloween, no matter how old you are, is always about dressing up and candy. And when you’re older, booze. So when I saw the Chocolate Malt Cupcake in Gail Wagman’s cookbook, I knew I had to give it a try.

The recipe started off with an incredibly light cupcake batter that included Ovaltine. (“Be…sure…to…drink…your…Ovaltine? A crummy commercial?”). This batter is so light that it’s scary. It seems more like frosting than batter. Getting it into the cupcake tins was kind of a nightmare:
Chocolate Malt Cupcakes

Chocolate Malt Cupcakes

They baked up fine, if a little fragile. Light cupcakes require a really light hand, which I sometimes don’t have. It’s why I like heartier fare:
Chocolate Malt Cupcakes

The recipe included crushed Whoppers candy in the batter, which I wasn’t a fan of. I feel like the Ovaltine got the malt aspect across just fine. The other weird thing was that the cupcake papers started pulling away from the cupcakes! I think it’s because the batter was so light that it didn’t even stick to the papers. Weird.

The frosting was much easier. And tasty!!! Chocolate malt is actually a pretty good flavor when it’s not on the inside of a Whopper and all crunchy:
Chocolate Malt Frosting

To make these the ultimate in Halloween cupcakes, I had to top them with candy! I picked up some miniature candy bars at the grocery store and topped each cupcake with a candy:
Candy wrappers

Chocolate Malt Cupcakes

These went over very well at work. I carried them around to different offices and forced people to say, “Trick or treat.”

I also made some Pumpkin Spice Cupcakes with Cinnamon Rum Frosting (Danae over at The Busty Baker gave me the recipe for that delicious, delicious frosting) to take to my sister-in-law’s Halloween Party. They were also a success, but I neglected to take photos of the process. This is all I’ve got:
Pumpkin Spice Cupcakes with Cinnamon Rum Frosting

(I ran out of frosting for those last two cupcakes, so they just got some powdered sugar.)

Next up, a Free Form Apple Tart!

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(This week’s recipe came from “Cupcakes Galore!” by Gail Wagman.)

I’m sooo behind! Eek! My job’s kept me really busy (I started daytime hours, so while I have a more normal schedule, it also means I have more time to read, watch TV or play video games rather than update my blog). But fear not, I haven’t missed a week of baking.

A few weeks ago, I made Apple Tarte Tatin Cupcakes. This is another cheater post, as I made these earlier this year to take on TV with me when Carmen Owens and I pimped CupcakeCampColumbus on a morning show. But these cupcakes didn’t really get their due, and I think they’re pretty fantastic, so here they are again!

The cake part of this cupcake is a pretty straightforward brown sugar cake:
Apple Tarte Tartin cupcake batter

The cool part comes with the apples:
Apples for Tarte Tatin cupcakes

The apples are sliced into 16 pieces and then fried in butter in a skillet. Tip: Make sure you get firm apples. I think I got Braeburns or something, but they started falling apart as soon as they hit the pan. I managed to salvage enough for the cupcakes, but it was a pain!
Apples for Tarte Tatin cupcakes

Carmelizing some apples

Once the apples had caramelized with butter and sugar, they were placed on top of the cooled cupcakes:
Tarte Tatin cupcakes with Carmelized Apples

Meanwhile, I whipped up some caramel to drizzle over the apples. This caramel never quite thins out the way I think it should…it stays very thick and starts to harden as soon as it’s removed from the heat. But it tastes amazing:
Caramel

Tarte Tatin cupcakes with Carmelized Apples

Tarte Tatin cupcakes with Carmelized Apples

My coworkers really enjoyed these cupcakes. The general opinion is that these are the best thing I’ve brought in so far.

Next up, Chocolate Malt Cupcakes for Halloween (posted just a few weeks too late!)

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A few weeks ago, right before Easter, the Short North in Columbus hosted an “Easter Begg Hunt” for dogs. People could sign their dogs up and collect Easter eggs from participating shops in the neighborhoods. The eggs contained tiny dog cookies, and some contained key fobs for Three Dog Bakery, which would then be redeemed for prizes for humans.

Scout got quite a nice haul of cookies and one key fob. When I turned it in, I was rewarded with this:
Doggie cookie cutters
Four little doggie cookie cutters and a recipe for dog biscuits from the Cookware Sorcerer!

Sunday was Scout’s sixth birthday, so I decided it was high time that I make her some homemade dog biscuits. These biscuits were not cheap, as the recipe required a couple of things I didn’t already have: Whole Wheat Flour, Powdered Skim Milk and garlic powder. The powdered milk alone set me back $9:
$9 Powdered milk

The recipe was fairly straightforward. Once I had a dough together, I rolled it out and started cutting cookies:
Dog biscuits cut out

I ended up with about 115 cookies from the dog. I started using larger cookie cutters towards the end of the dough just to use it up, because I had already filled two cookie sheets and was close to filling a third:
Dog biscuits waiting to be baked

The recipe called for the cookies to be baked for 50 minutes. Big mistake:
Burnt!

Burnt black!!! These ones got thrown out. The next round was bunch better:
Homemade Dog Biscuits
Homemade Dog Biscuits

I made Scout a little birthday cake by cramming six dog biscuit “candles” into a Frosty Paws Peanut Butter Ice Cream cup:
Scout awaiting her Birthday Ice Cream with Dog Biscuit candles

She seemed to enjoy her cake very much! The other cookies I took in for my co-workers’ pets, who reported that their dogs loved them.

This past Tuesday, I was on TV! Carmen Owens and I appeared on “Good Day Columbus” to promote CupcakeCampColumbus, which is this Saturday! In preparation of the event, Carmen and I were asked to bake as many cupcakes as we could to fill up the island in the kitchen set for the show. Carmen baked a ton and I baked three different flavors. I repeated the Mint Julep Cupcake again because Rob loved it so much. I also baked Lemon Meringue Pie Cupcakes and Tarte Tatin Cupcakes with Carmelized Apples and Caramel Glaze. Both recipes came from “Cupcakes Galore!” by Gail Wagman.

I started with the Lemon Meringue, which began with making lemon curd. This stuff was awesome. I wanted to eat it directly out of the bowl:
Lemon Curd

I then mixed up the ingredients for the cupcakes and baked them according to the directions. When the timer went off, I got this:
WHAT THE ????

WHAT HAPPENED???? I’ve never seen this before in my life. It was kind of amazing. But they were definitely not going to work. I trolled the Internet for a suitable recipe and baked up Round Two:
Lemon Meringue Cupcakes

This time around was much better. As the cupcakes cooled, I whipped up the meringue topping. I cut small cones out of the cupcakes and filled them with the lemon curd. I topped each cupcake with the meringue and put them back in the oven for a couple of minutes to brown up:
Lemon Meringue Cupcakes

Lemon Meringue Cupcake

Beautiful. These are one of the most fantastic things I’ve ever made. I’m planning to bake them again tomorrow night to take to my mom for Mother’s Day. Yummmm.

The Tarte Tatin Cupcakes began with a pretty simple cupcake base. Apples were cut into thin slices and then fried in butter. I arranged three apple slices on the tops of each cupcake and then mixed up a caramel glaze. These were really good and pretty fancy too!
Tarte Tatin Cupcakes with Carmelized Apples and Caramel Glaze

Tarte Tatin Cupcakes with Carmelized Apples and Caramel Glaze

And, for your viewing pleasure, I present our two and a half minute segment on “Good Day Columbus!”

Tomorrow I’m baking for CupcakeCampColumbus! I’ll be making mini Chocolate Covered Hi Hats and my secretive O-H! Cupcakes! I’ll be making the Lemon Meringue Pie Cupcakes again for my mom, but those won’t make the trip to CupcakeCamp!

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(This week’s Carrot Cake recipe came from “The America’s Test Kitchen Family Baking Book” and the Mint Julep Cupcake recipe came from “Cupcakes Galore” by Gail Wagman.)

This week started with a cake and ended with a bonus cupcake. I planned to leisurely bake a Carrot Cake with Cream Cheese Frosting on Wednesday morning, but I ended up spending a good hour of prime baking time picking my dog Scout up from the vet. So I was racing around like crazy trying to get the cake together and frosted before I had to hit the road for work.

The recipe started with a batter that combined a heavenly array of spices: Cinnamon, nutmeg and cloves. Yummmy!
Carrot Cake batter sans carrots

Five medium sized carrots were then shredded. I hadn’t realized how long it takes to shred a carrot on a box grater. After the second carrot I was ready to take a break:
Shredding carrots

The batter was spread into two greased and floured spring form pans and baked. When the timer went off, I nervously pulled the cakes from the oven:
Baked!

Beautiful! And I even managed to extract the layers from the pans without tearing up the bottom, like I usually do:
Carrot Cake layer

While the cake layers cooled, I whipped up a Cream Cheese Frosting, which I could have just eaten straight out of the bowl with a spoon:
Cream Cheese Frosting

The cake layers were supposed to cool for two hours before being frosted, but I had only about an hour and fifteen minutes until I had to be out the door for work. I wanted to take the frosted cake with me to work, so I ended up throwing the layers in the fridge and freezer to try to cool them down. They didn’t cool down as much as they should have, but I got them cool enough that the frosting didn’t just slide right off the cake:
Frosted!

I wrapped the cake up in plastic wrap and hauled it off to work with me. It was an incredibly heavy cake! As suspected, my co-workers tore into it like wolves on a baby rabbit:
Carrot Cake Cross Section

I quite enjoyed my slice:
Slice of carrot cake

This cake was incredibly moist (which may have been because the cake layers were still warm when it was frosted) and very delicious. I’m not the world’s biggest Carrot Cake fan, but I could eat this cake every day. Especially for breakfast. I can only imagine how awesome it will be when I make it in the future and actually let the layers cool down like they should. Yum.

Tomorrow is the Kentucky Derby and my husband and I have been invited to attend a Derby BBQ/Party. The invitation suggested that we could bring side dishes, so how could I not bring a cupcake?

I flip through cookbooks on a regular basis during breaks at my job, and I knew I’d struck gold when I found the Mint Julep Cupcakes with White Chocolate Mint Frosting. Perfect! I set out after work today to acquire the ingredients I would need, including fresh mint leaves, white chocolate chips and Creme de Menthe.

I’ve never worked with, drank or even seen a bottle of Creme de Menthe, so I had no clue where to find it in the grocery store. I checked Google on my iPhone, but it wasn’t really helping me out. I called my husband who suggested that I ask one of the clerks. I knew what the answer would be, but I asked anyway, hoping that maybe someone would be a weird liquor connoisseur. The exchange went a little something like this:

Me: Do you have Creme de Menthe?
Clerk (with blank stare): What’s that?

Just as I had suspected. I drove to a liquor store up the road a bit and asked the guy behind the counter there if they had Creme de Menthe. His response? “What’s that?” Luckily, another employee knew what I was talking about and said that they did not carry it, but another close liquor store might. I called them and they confirmed that they did have it in stock. I made the drive and procured the liquor.

As I was waiting for my credit card to go through, one of the clerks said, “What kind of drink are you making with that?” And I looked at him and said, “Well…it’s actually for a cupcake…”

I’m pretty sure all the old dudes in that store shook their heads sadly at me when they heard that.

The magic liquor:
Creme de Menthe

This recipe started with the White Chocolate Mint Frosting. I started by heating whipping cream and butter until the butter melted. The mixture was removed from the heat and white chocolate chips were added in and melted. Finally, the Creme de Menthe and green food coloring were added, turning this:
Cream and butter
into this:
Green frosting!

The frosting went into the fridge where, in two hours, it was supposed to set up enough to have reached spreading consistency.

The cupcake batter was a fairly straightforward mixture of flour, baking powder, salt, butter, sugar, eggs, mint leaves and my substitute for bourbon: Old Grandad Whiskey:
Old Grandad Whiskey and mint leaves

I didn’t want to buy a whole bottle of bourbon for a half cup, so Rob suggested I just use the Old Grandad Whiskey still left over from our wedding reception six months ago. It seems to have done the trick:
Unfrosted Mint Julep Cupcakes

Once the cupcakes had cooled, I took the frosting from the fridge. It had decidedly not reached spreading consistency. It was way too thin. Luckily, I remembered that I had a can of Betty Crocker white frosting in the cabinet, so I mixed a little of that in. I know it was cheating, but when you’ve got a dynamic cupcake planned for an event, you’ll do what you’ve got to do to make them look good. Once the hybrid frosting was put into a freezer bag, it covered the cupcakes quite nicely. I added some green sugar and a fresh mint leaf:
Frosted Mint Julep Cupcakes

Mint Julep Cupcake with White Chocolate Mint Frosting

Mint Julep Cupcake with White Chocolate Mint Frosting

Mmm mmm! Baked, the whiskey took on a much mellower taste. And the frosting has a nice minty kick. I think these will be a lovely snack for the Derby watchers.

This Sunday is Scout’s sixth birthday, so I’m planning to bake homemade dog biscuits for her! That’s right, a non-human baked good!

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