A means Andrew! My little adorable neph Andrew turned 1! And nothing says Andrew like an Alligator! So to match some cute gator-plates, a gator cake was in order. Nothing fancy, but big enough for a crowd - and something kids would like too.
I made my standard chocolate cake, filled with a yummo ganache and then a buttercream frosting airbrushed with my trusty Duff airbrush kit. To make the gator, I considered a 3D "statue" of a gator but I wanted something BIG that matched the paper plates and decorations so I free-handed the picture with a toothpick on fondant and then just "colored" in by using my food colors as paint. So cute, if I do say so myself :) And I do!
To supplement, I added a dozen cupcakes with jimmies - in case the chocolate was too intense for anyone - and because who doesn't like variety! I used an orange buttercream this time....
Showing posts with label cupcakes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cupcakes. Show all posts
Saturday, August 25, 2012
Thursday, August 16, 2012
PacMan Birthday!
If there was an award for the worst blogger of all time, I would probably get it. I’ve been so busy with work after a re-org that my writing has fallen aside a little. Fortunately, I’ve still been baking, reviewing bakeries and keeping it real. I’ve also developed an addiction for Fro-Yo. What is it about self-serve frozen yogurt that gets people going? Not to mention the ability to pour on the jimmies (sprinkles) until you can’t even see the fro-yo beneath only to have the high schooler at the register look at you judgingly? Anywho, let’s talk baking! One of my favorite days of the year is my birthday – if you know me and you’re reading this, you should know that! Nine years ago on my birthday, my adorable sister did the unthinkable to steal my birthday thunder by having a child. My nephew Braden was born and the entire family rejoiced in the hilarity that is having to share a birthday when all you live for is your birthday. Incidentally, when Braden was old enough to understand that we “share” a birthday, he was none too pleased about it either. In the years that followed “the birth” I have come to terms with the fact that a kid’s birthday always takes some sort of precedence. So, as is the case, for many family birthday parties, I am the baker of choice for the cake!
Braden is a huge video game fan. He has all sorts of game devices: a Wii, a Nintendo 3DS , an iPod touch pretty much devoted to game playing. And through all of the amazing graphics and animations that are available for these systems, I was thrilled to find out that he is a huge PacMan fan. I mean, what child of the 80’s didn’t love Pacman? I still recall learning the ‘greater than’ and ‘less than’ signs in elementary school by drawing a little Pac man symbol around them and reasoning that Pacman would eat in the direction of more little dots. Well it turns out that Pac man is now all souped up with some amazing graphics and faster moving ghosts and now he even moves in other directions besides right angles. (How much math did we learn from PacMan?!) So when Braden said he wanted Pac Man for his cake, how could I do anything but a round cake with a chunk cut out?! But any idiot could do that. And this idiot did….. but PacMan is not a one man show. He would have nothing if not for Inky, Winky, Pinky and Clyde – the famed “Ghosts”! so It seemed like the perfect time to break out the air brush machine.
I made a combo of vanilla and chocolate cupcakes – just a standard recipe for each and then covered them with an drape of fondant which I airbrushed to the appropriate bright colors. Then a dollop of white chocolate for the eyes and how CUTE did these turn out! I’m totally in love with them. Without having kids of my own, I rarely get to experience the thrill of having other moms be completely jealous of what you made for your kids’ party. Eat your hearts out moms!
Sunday, April 8, 2012
EASTER! A little cake with a lot of stuff!
I called dibs on making the cake for Easter this year. You'd think that having a baking blog would entitle me to first dibs on all desserts for holidays but no such luck. I'm not the only caker in this family. So I wanted to make something simple and sortof small. I made a pretty simple almond cake - just one layer in a 9X13 pan. And I've been wanting to make sheep cupcakes for a while so I thought it would be cute to have the sheep sortof grazing in a field. So when you wait until the day before Easter to get some supplies, you'll be sorry to find that everyone is making sheep cupcakes and has already snatched up the white miniature marshmallows from your grocery store. Now anyone could just have settled for the multi-color minis but not this baker. I recently saw some sheep for the first time (don't judge - I'm more of a city mouse...er sheep...er baker) and I know for a fact that they are not pink or mint green. So I stood glaring at the empty marshmallow shelf for a while and checked out the other carts in aisle so I could start a marshmallow fist fight. In my day dreaming of throwing down with some granny over one bag of mini-marsh, I had a revelation. Marshmallows don't grow on trees! They are made in factory which means I can totally make them at home. Some phone googling showed me that it's basically just corn syrup, gelatin, sugar and water.
When I got home, I did a full search and settled on the Smitten Kitchen recipe. I halved it and I used merigue powder instead of just egg whites or egg white powder. It worked totally fine but the recipe didn't say how much of it to use so for my half recipe I used about 1/4 cup and a half cup of water to whip up into the stiff peaks. I followed the recipe closely and even busted out my candy thermometer. The only difference was that instead of pouring the marshmallow onto into a 9X13 pan, I used a piping bag to drop little round mini-marshmallows onto a powdered sugar covered pan. The half recipe was way more than enough and my minis set in the fridge after only a few hours.
So then it was just a small task to attach these little guys to cupcakes to make the adorable little sheep. I just used a white buttercream on a vanilla upwrapped cupcake to make them stick.
Then I just popped on a white jordon almond for a head and some tootsie roll feet and pink marshmallow ears.
But sheep on a cake does not make Easter so I covered my original cake with fondant and then busted out a new toy: The Duff Airbrush Machine!
Where else would some sheep hang out except a green field full of flowers? So first step was to spray the cake green.
Next, use leftover fondant and another new toy! The Wilton Gum Paste Flowers Set. The blue flower punches (in FOUR sizes!) from this set are so awesome and easy. Just like a cookie cutter that puts an imprint in the flower and then a little mat comes with it to imprint the other side too. So fun! I busted out over 100 flowers in less than an hour! Then the only thing left to do was paint them. Since my airbrush was set up and looking for some action I took white flowers to purple, pink and orange to make a fun floral collage.

I bordered the cake with a thick bead of purple buttercream and stuck the flowers all around along with some large sprinkle dots. And here it is!
So then it was just a small task to attach these little guys to cupcakes to make the adorable little sheep. I just used a white buttercream on a vanilla upwrapped cupcake to make them stick.
Then I just popped on a white jordon almond for a head and some tootsie roll feet and pink marshmallow ears.
But sheep on a cake does not make Easter so I covered my original cake with fondant and then busted out a new toy: The Duff Airbrush Machine!
Where else would some sheep hang out except a green field full of flowers? So first step was to spray the cake green.
Next, use leftover fondant and another new toy! The Wilton Gum Paste Flowers Set. The blue flower punches (in FOUR sizes!) from this set are so awesome and easy. Just like a cookie cutter that puts an imprint in the flower and then a little mat comes with it to imprint the other side too. So fun! I busted out over 100 flowers in less than an hour! Then the only thing left to do was paint them. Since my airbrush was set up and looking for some action I took white flowers to purple, pink and orange to make a fun floral collage.


Sunday, March 25, 2012
Cupcakery Review: Classy Girl Cupcakes - Milwaukee
This week my adventures took me to the beautiful, sunny Milwaukee! Yes - despite being March, it was really beautiful and really sunny. I got the best weather while I was there - not a drop of rain or even a cloud in the sky which made it easy to find Classy Girl Cupcakes. Located on Cathedral Square in downtown Milwaukee, CGC is an adorable shop that seems to specialize in cheesecake cupcakes although they do have quite a selection of gourmet cupcake flavors as well.
So - cheesecake or regular cupcake? Obviously both! I mean- who knows when I'll get to Milwaukee again. My eye was immediately drawn to a plain looking cupcake whose name was "Caramel Stout". Hmmmm - stout - it must be related to my Irish Stout cupcake! Since clearly it's a cupcake that's party of the beer family, I had to try it. Then onto the cheesecake cupcakes - there were so many. The lovely gal at the counter pointed out a few of their best sellers but my eye was drawn to the Malted Milkshake Cheesecake. They wrapped both of my selections together and gave me a little spoon for the cheesecake treat.
First the Caramel Stout:
The chocolate cupcake is made with Hinterland Luna Stout beer which the CGC website says "has notes of caramel, chocolate and espresso". The Hinterland website says that the Luna Stout is infused with nitrogen which sounds like another famous stout from Ireland (that rhymes with Minnus). If you've read my previous post about my stout cupcake, the Trevor Cupcake Cake, then you know I love beer based cupcakes. The Class Girl version was really really good - the cake part was light but super flavorful which I imagine comes from the beer. I've never had the Hinterland beer but maybe I'll try it in my recipe if I can find it in my area. My only minor complaint was with the frosting - the caramel buttercream was just way too sweet for my taste and it was quite thick and a bit gritty - like the sugar hadn't quite dissolved all the way. I tend to like a fluffier buttercream but overall the combination was good. I wiped off a lot of the frosting though as it overwhelmed the cupcake.
The Malted Milkshake Cheesecake:
The Classy Girl website describes this treat as a milk chocolate cheesecake blended with malt powder. On top is a chocolate buttercream with a malted milk ball. I LOVE me some malt. When I was a kid, I used to drive 6 miles to the ice cream shop that had powdered malt that they would put on top of your ice cream instead of the lame liquid malt that other shops used. (Note....liquid malt=lame) The bottom or crust of the cheesecake was brownie - yum! So I was super psyched to dig into this concoction in hopes of getting a little piece of buttercream, cheesecake and brownie on my mini spoon. Unfortunately, the spoon pushed the buttecream off in one lump. Ok - no harm done except that the buttercream couldn't really be cut with the spoon. So I just took a bite out of that - it was more fudge-like than buttercream but OK. So then onto the cheesecake part - it was good - definitely chocolatey. I didn't love it - it was a ricotta based cheesecake and I'm partial to more of a New York style cheesecake where it's mostly cream cheese- or at least you can't notice the grains of the ricotta like you could in this little cheesecake. But if you like your cheesecake like that, then Classy Girl is the place for you. Well done on the flavor of this cheesecake though - I'm sorry I wasn't partial to the textures.
The shop:
Very cute! And they had cupcake merch - always a good sign of a devoted cupcake fan. The cupcake prices are reasonable and the staff was friendly. Definitely worth a stop if you're in downtown Milwaukee - let me know what other flavors you try!
Sunday, March 18, 2012
Cupcakery Review! Cupcake in Minneapolis!
I was in Minneapolis less than 20 hours. Plenty of time for a 1 hour meeting and 1 hour of finding my way to Cupcake which is definitely worth the trip and completely worth fighting the current construction in their neighborhood. The had at least 24 different cupcake flavors - not counting their Baby Cakes minis.
As this was only a few days before Paddy's Day, they were featuring an Irish Car Bomb Cupcake - you can see my recipe below - theirs was seemingly quite similar although I didn't try it. I had taken a look at their extensive menu before I went. There website is great and shows pictures of each cupcake but lucky for me, their bakers like to experiment! If it's not obvious from my last post, I think the best way to consume booze is in cupcake form. When I saw they had a "Bourbon Butterscotch Chocolate" cupcake, my jaw hit the floor and my mouth started watering. And I'm so thrilled that I did. If there was a Guiness World Record for the fastest cupcake consumption, I would definitely have won with the way I inhaled this completely amazing cupcake. Usually, I try to take only one or two bites of a cupcake (girl can not stay curvey on cupcakes alone!) but I couldn't even stop myself. I'm not even sure I can accurately describe how this cupcake was constructed. The frosting was amazing - I think it was either a whipped cream of some sort or a light swiss merigue - the key was that the frosting was just barely sweet and the bourbon was just enough to scent the cupcake. If I had a bowl of this frosting, I would put my face in it. I hope they keep this one on the menu as it would certainly earn its spot in their top sales category.
A friend I was travelling with ordered a Red Velvet and saved it for her flight home. She later texted me to let me know that it was the best Red Velvet she's ever had. Why these people aren't on Cupcake Wars, or in the Cupcake Hall of Fame (I just invented that!) or on the Ellen Show or some other fame creating device is beyond me.
As a side note, the shop was really cute and the staff quite friendly. They also have a load of cute vintage themed merchandise, much of which was cupcake related. They serve regular food too - sandwiches, soups, salads, etc and looks like it would be a great place for lunch or a light dinner. They have a pretty good selection of freshly baked breads too. A great all-around bakery with a wonderful cupcake slant. Stop by (or immediately fly to) Minneopolis to stop by Cupcake!
Labels:
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Saint Patrick's Day
Friday, March 16, 2012
Irish Stout Cupcake! With whiskey ganache! With Irish Cream frosting! The Trevor Cupcake
I call this one the Trevor Cupcake after my buddy ...Trevor. (I'm not so good with the clever naming system.) Trevor is off the proverbial boat from Ireland - I think he actually took a place to get here when he moved to PA in 2008. He was in the class with me in grad school that inspired me to start baking experiments. So what does Trevor have to do with cupcakes besides eat them? Well, when you think of an Irishman, what comes to mind? Beer? Guiness perhaps? Whiskey? An Irish Cream liquor? Potatoes? Sure - but I'm not down with putting potatoes in a cupcake. So this was one of my first experiments. Since then, I've heard it called and Irish Car Bomb cupcake, An Irish Stoudt Cupcake, or An Irish Party Cupcake. There are a ton of variations with this cupcake but the premise of using traditional Irish booze remains the same. These are great for your Saint Patty's Day celebration! And sometimes there is leftover booze! (If you have too much leftover, you might have forgotten your celabratory nip!) Erin Go Braugh!
Note: I originally found the recipe on Smitten Kitchen but have since adapted it a little based on my own preference. The Smitten Kitchen recipe is also GREAT though!
Note: I originally found the recipe on Smitten Kitchen but have since adapted it a little based on my own preference. The Smitten Kitchen recipe is also GREAT though!
For the cupcakes:
- 1 cup stout
- 1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter
- 3/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
- 2 cups flour
- 2 cups sugar
- 1 1/2 teaspoons baking soda
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 2 large eggs
- 2/3 cup sour cream (full fat is best)
- 1/4 cup buttermilk
- For the filling:
- 8 ounces bittersweet chocolate
- 1/3 cup heavy cream
- 1/3 cup Bailey's Irish Cream
- 2 tablespoons butter, room temperature
- 1 to 2 teaspoons Irish whiskey
- For the frosting
- Note:
If you want lots of frosting on each cake, go ahead and double this recipe
– I did!
- 3 to 4 cups confections' sugar
- 1 stick (1/2 cup) unsalted butter, at room temperature
- 3 to 4 tablespoons Bailey's Irish Cream (or more, to
taste) Since I doubled I used about 3tbsp bailey’s and 3 tbsp heavy cream
since I had that left over
- Splash of vanilla & a splash of rum extract– why
not? I live on the edge.
Get ready:
pre-heat oven to 350°F. Line 24 cupcake cups with liners.
Bring 1
cup stout and 1 cup butter to simmer in heavy large saucepan over medium heat.
Add cocoa powder and whisk until mixture is smooth. Remove from heat. Let cool
a bit. I found that putting the pot into a shallow pan of cold water helped the
cooling process.
In a
separate large bowl, whisk flour, sugar, baking soda, and 3/4 teaspoon salt.
In another
large bowl, using an electric mixer, beat eggs and sour cream in another large
bowl to blend. Add stout-chocolate mixture to egg mixture and beat just until
combined. WARNING! – if you haven’t let the stoudt cool to a luke-warm it will
cook the eggs when you add it here and you don’t want that!
Add the
dry mixture and beat briefly on slow speed. Using a rubber spatula, fold batter
until completely combined.
Divide
batter among cupcake liners, filling them 2/3 to 3/4 of the way. I found that I
had enough batter for EXACTLY 24 cupcakes.
Bake cake until tester inserted into center comes out clean, rotating
them once front to back if your oven bakes unevenly. Cool 17-20 minutes. Cool cupcakes completely.
While your
cupcakes cool, make the filling! Chop
the chocolate into coarse but roughly even pieces, and transfer it to a
heatproof bowl. Heat the cream until it is simmering (but not boiling) and pour
it over the chocolate. Let it sit for about a minute and then stir until
smooth. If this has not sufficiently melted the chocolate, you can put it on a
double-boiler or give it 20 seconds in the microwave to help the chocolate get
sufficiently melty. And honestly – who uses a double-boiler anymore?! WTF?! Add the butter, Irish Cream, and whiskey and
stir until combined. You might need to
stick it back in the microwave 10-15 second if the butter doesn’t melt all the
way. Take a nip of the whiskey – you’ve got a while to go!
Make space
for the filling. The original recipe suggests using an apple corer to cut out a
section from your cooled cupcakes to fill, but lacking one I found that the
cake is sturdy enough that if you gently cut out a circle using a small, sharp
knife, it works just fine. I used a
grapefruit section knife. You want to
cut halfway to 2/3 of the way down.
Fill the
cupcakes. NOTE: I like to do this when
the filling has thickened a little – about 15-30 min in the fridge will help –
stir it every 10 min. You can pipe in
the filling, or if it is still pretty smooth and fluid, you can just spoon it
in. I “piped” it by putting the filling
in a ziplock bag and cutting the corner.
Make the
frosting. In an electric mixer, mix the butter on medium speed until it is very
fluffy. Whip the butter in the bowl of an electric mixer, or with a hand mixer,
for several minutes. You want to get it very light and fluffy. Slowly add the
confectioners' sugar, starting with a few tablespoons at a time of your sugar
until the frosting looks thick enough to spread. At this point, add in the Irish Cream/heavy
cream and vanilla and whip it until combined. Beat in as much or as little of
the remaining confectioners' sugar until the frosting has reached your desired
consistency. Since this is essentially a
basic buttercream, here are my tips for a great buttercream: This is best done on a stand mixer! If your mixer has a glass or metal bowl, fill
the bowl with HOT water from the tap and let sit for a few minutes to warm up
the bowl, drain the water and dry the bowl and immediately add your butter
while the bowl is still warm - this will
help your butter get fluffy faster without having to microwave the butter
first. If you’re spreading the frosting
with a knife you might want it a little thinner. If you’re going to pipe or decorate with a
pastry bag I say go a little thicker. I also
thought about adding some orange zest at this point – I think that would go
well – maybe will give it a shot next time.
Wednesday, March 7, 2012
A Broad Abroad
Sometimes you have to see the good in things that seem like a pain in the ass. For example, sleepless nights at far away hotels and time spent racing through or waiting in airports means a magical treat: Frequent Flyer Miles! YESS!!!! All the work trips are worth it when you finally cash in your miles for a free vacation flight somewhere and this time it was Dublin! So among all the sites: Christ Church, Glasnevin Cemetery, and the Guiness Factory, I managed to suss out the really important details of the local landscape and culture like the best bakery in town.
I researched where to go in advance but was unsuccessful in finding some of the places that Google told me about. I managed to ask the locals who directed me to a shop cleverly named "The Bakery". I usually just look for a cupcake shop but this place seemed too good to pass up. Other reviews claim that it's good for a quick sandwich or soup or snack. But I'm on a mission for cupcakes.
The Bakery is in Temple Bar - a touristy area also frequented by locals for its many shops, restaurants and trendy bars. I found it on one attempt on a Sunday but it was closed - I couldn't find the hours posted on the door so we tried again on Monday. Finally at about 4:10 we popped in and they had quite a few cupcakes left so I got a vanilla. They had some standard flavors, nothing exciting or original so I went with something simple. It was AWESOME! The cake was moist but had a small cell structure. The frosting was good but a kindof unoriginal buttercream although they added some white (and pink) chocolate shavings in the middle which brightened up the frosting texture but didn't add much in the way of flavor. I would have liked a fluffier frosting but that's how buttercream rolls - sometimes it's just too think. Still yummy and I actually ate the whole thing. I'd give The Bakery 3.5 stars out of 5 on my arbitrary scale. It was a solid cupcake with good flavor but they lacked imagination in cupcake types - maybe because they aren't cupcake exclusive? And the buttercream could have been lighter - again -maybe because they make so many other things.
Either way - The Bakery is worth a stop if you're in Dublin! They had all sorts of treats that might hit the spot for you when you're there!
Here's my cupcake experience:
I researched where to go in advance but was unsuccessful in finding some of the places that Google told me about. I managed to ask the locals who directed me to a shop cleverly named "The Bakery". I usually just look for a cupcake shop but this place seemed too good to pass up. Other reviews claim that it's good for a quick sandwich or soup or snack. But I'm on a mission for cupcakes.
The Bakery is in Temple Bar - a touristy area also frequented by locals for its many shops, restaurants and trendy bars. I found it on one attempt on a Sunday but it was closed - I couldn't find the hours posted on the door so we tried again on Monday. Finally at about 4:10 we popped in and they had quite a few cupcakes left so I got a vanilla. They had some standard flavors, nothing exciting or original so I went with something simple. It was AWESOME! The cake was moist but had a small cell structure. The frosting was good but a kindof unoriginal buttercream although they added some white (and pink) chocolate shavings in the middle which brightened up the frosting texture but didn't add much in the way of flavor. I would have liked a fluffier frosting but that's how buttercream rolls - sometimes it's just too think. Still yummy and I actually ate the whole thing. I'd give The Bakery 3.5 stars out of 5 on my arbitrary scale. It was a solid cupcake with good flavor but they lacked imagination in cupcake types - maybe because they aren't cupcake exclusive? And the buttercream could have been lighter - again -maybe because they make so many other things.
Either way - The Bakery is worth a stop if you're in Dublin! They had all sorts of treats that might hit the spot for you when you're there!
Here's my cupcake experience:
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
Cupcakery Review! Indulgence Cupcakery – Haddonfield, NJ
Having no children of my own, I get to politely excuse myself when some unpleasant parenting task is about to happen. If I’m with you when your kid acts up, I can just leave. Tantrum? No thanks, I think I have a wax appointment. Explosive diaper? Oooh – I just had a manicure – sorry! Time for potty training? Apparently for that one I’m totally on board. When my friend dedicated President’s Day weekend to the trials of potty training her 2 year old, I of course volunteered my non-parenting expertise which says for everything child-rearing, rely on bribery. If I know anything about toddlers (which I don’t) I know that they like toys, cartoons and sugar. This philosophy also works with dudes in their twenties but for them you can also add beer.
Anyway, for my potty training adventure, I swung by Indulgence Cupcakery in Haddonfield, NJ to pick up a dozen bribes – err – cupcakes. I got there at about 4pm and they close at 6 so they were already out of a number of flavors. To their credit, they did have a lot of flavors available for the day. I got the following: Smores, Red Velvet, Butterfinger, Cookies and Cream, Peanutbutter Cup, Classic Vanilla, Classic Chocolate, and Black Forrest and one more flavor I can’t seem to recall but I think there was a pretzel in it. I'd guess they had 15 or so flavors of the over 45 they list on their website. Anyway, the place was totally cute and I liked their logo:
Here are the dozen adorable cupcakes. I can’t decide if these are mini – I guess technically they are – they are certainly smaller than a standard cupcake. But with each having a generous dollop of frosting – not to mention additional toppings like nuts, mini chocolate chips, etc. These cupcakes are just the right size – 2 or 3 bites - enough for a sweet treat and it’s gone before you have time to calculate how many more sessions with your trainer this will cost you.
I ate the Smore cupcake.
I suppose it was a “graham” cupcake with chocolate frosting and a marshmallow syrup that penetrated through the frosting and was inside the cupcake too. The cupcake was moist and a bit like a spice cake but I can’t say it had a graham flavor – yummy nonetheless. The frosting was thick and chocolately and topped with the graham cracker crumbs – a nice touch. I’m a fluffy frosting person rather than thick but this was still super good.
One - VERY minor complaint - it took a while for someone to come up front to help me and although she was certainly friendly, she warned me to hold the box very straight because the cupcakes were prone to tipping over. I was nervous the whole way that I'd open my box of 12 cupcakes to find one stuck together frosting/cake mash. Maybe there's a better packaging option out there to prevent top-heavy cuppies from tipping?
And for my potty training pal - he did great! He had the cookies and cream!
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
French Goo. Crème Pâtissière or Pastry Cream (in American)
You ever have something that is so good that you just want to put your face in it? Like no matter how much of it is available – it’s never quite enough? The kind of thing where if you were in polite you would leave a bit on your plate but if you were home alone, you’d actually lick the plate until your nose is sticky. This is my relationship with pastry cream. I’ve mentioned it a few times already and you will definitely hear more about it in the future but I thought I’d outline my relationship with Crème Pâtissière – that’s French because I’m fancy like that. Actually, it’s French because I learned the magic of pastry cream in Paris. Yep – be jealous there for a minute.
When a friend says – hey – come meet me in Paris for the weekend – you go. Those are words to live by people. And when that friend is someone you’ve been bffs with for over 20 years, you know that you’re in for a good time. And sometimes that bff goes above and beyond in planning and finds you a baking class that teaches some traditional French baking techniques in English. Cookn With Class is where I learned the deliciousness that is pastry cream. Below is not the recipe they gave us but this is darn close and not in the metric system which is handy for us Americans.
In the class, we also got hands on experience with croissants and pain au chocolate as well as brioche, boules, and a yummy sweet raisin bread. This was seriously and adventure in flour and butter that would not soon be forgotten. Our teacher, Pino was extremely fun and engaging and offered lots of opportunities to try the techniques. As a bonus, we got to take the many treats with us and we had them for breakfast every day during our trip.
Here are some pics of our sweet treats:
Here are some pics of our sweet treats:
Now onto the Pastry Cream – this seriously is a versatile deliciousness that I would squarely put in the category of “goo”. Technically, I think it might be a custard. A little more sturdy than a pudding, it works great as a filling for cakes, cupcakes, cream puffs and other sweet treats you might fill. Or just fill a bowl and eat it with a spoon. Don’t judge me.
Pastry Cream you'll want to swim in...
1 ¼ cups whole milk
1 vanilla bean
4 egg yolks
¼ cup white sugar
2 tbsp cornstarch
2 tbsp flour – all purpose
Mix together the egg yolks and sugar. Add in the flour and cornstarch until smooth – a whisk works well here.
Heat milk and vanilla bean to just about a boil. Take off heat and add a splash to your egg mixture and whisk. Then add the rest of the milk slowing – whisking the whole time. Note – if you get some cooked egg pieces, you should pour mixture through a strainer. Take out the vanilla bean – CAREFULLY! Split bean down the center lengthwise and scrape out the seeds. Add the seeds to your mix and put the whole thing back into your saucepan and put over medium heat until boiling – WHISKING the entire time! Seriously – be ready to whisk! Once it boils, keep whisking until it thickens. It will get to a pudding-like consistency and it hardens up a bit more in the fridge. Once you get the pudding-like consistency, remove from heat and pour into a clean bowl. Cover with plastic wrap with the wrap pressed onto the surface of the cream to prevent a skin. Cool to room temperature or refrigerate up to 3 or 4 days. Whisk again before using.
Monday, February 20, 2012
1 Amazing Kid and 1 Wimpy Kid
My nephew Braden is amazing. When he was a toddler, he was diagnosed with Pervasive Developmental Disorder which is on the Autism Spectrum. He’s now eight, and my sister has remained unrelenting in finding the tools that will help him function better among typical kids – be it a therapy, a sport, a playgroup, or working with his school counselor and teachers to make sure he gets the help he needs. She’s awesome and Braden is brilliant – he just made the honor roll but as with many autistic children, his social skills are not the same of a typical child. Lots of autistic kids will play by themselves and some are non-communicative at all. We’re lucky with Braden - he talks pretty normally but wouldn’t necessarily go play with other kids. His teacher this year has set up a book club once a week where kids can stay in from recess and talk about a book they are reading to help Braden with his social skills. Right now they are reading Diary of a Wimpy Kid. My lovely sister has been making treats for this event each week. And when I suggested that the Wimpy Kid would make a totally cute and easy cakepop she said that she thought the kids would love it if I made cakepops. So much for suggesting that she do it. So I set to thinking about what I would need. I figured I could use half a jelly bean for his nose and just pipe on his eyes and smile with black frosting but I didn’t think the frosting would work as his hair and indeed – it didn’t.
I finally settled on some black string licorice cut into quarter inch pieces.
I like this one the best:
I showed the best one to Braden only for him to proclaim that he wanted cupcakes. Oy. But by this point I had already baked and crumbled a cake for cakepops. So not to waste the opportunity to cover crumbs with white chocolate I made the cake pops without sticks. I used a toothpick to dunk the balls into the melted chocolate and then another to push it off the first toothpick and onto a parchment lined pan. Before it hardened I stuck half a white jelly bean on the front and three slivers of precut string licorice on the top as hair. When I hardened I used black frosting to pipe on eyes, ears and a smile J Since Braden wanted cupcakes, I decided to use these adorable little Wimpy Kids as toppers. I whipped up a batch of chocolate cupcakes with vanilla buttercream and piped on a generous pile of frosting – I find giving third graders a lot of sugar mid-day is always a good idea when you don’t have any kids. Then I popped the little Wimpy Kid heads right into the center and went from cute cupcakes to adorable overload!
I swear I will never get tired of people saying "Wow!" when they see something I made. Especially kids!
Saturday, February 11, 2012
The Awesomest First Blog Post You've Ever Read
Here it is people - my riveting attempt into the world of blogging. Soon, I'll be rocking your world with a comprehensive overview of sweetshops across America and abroad but for now I thought I'd start with a look at my journey in the magical world of cupcakes. Cupcakes are so 2009. and 2010. and 2011 and 2012 and are hopefully around for a long time. There was a time when cupcakes were just for kids. Even if your mom couldn't create a 3 tier wedding cake, a Halloween costume or barely throw together macaroni and cheese out of a box *I'm looking at you Big Mama!* You knew that when it was your birthday, there would be a box cake mix and a tub of frosting with your name on it slapped together and presented to your class in your honor. It was your day! You could look around at your classmates with pride as they licked Betty's finest frosting off their fingers with crumbs all over their chins and sticking to their math worksheet. It was your day, your moment and your chance to look at these kids smugly and think "yeah - that's right! You had a cupcake today because of me so I don't wanna hear your crap today!" Back in the day, the kids with summer birthdays didn't get this honor. Now I think they celebrate summer birthdays in classrooms all throughout the year. My older siblings' birthdays are in August - I don't think they ever had cupcakes in school. They also didn't have hand-me-downs so we all had our crosses to bear in the Snarky household.
The rise of the cupcake in the last few years brought on a new life to niche bakeries. In a time where big box stores have taken over many industries, bakers have had a resurgence through these niches and the local bakery has made a comeback. Cupcake shops, trucks and carts have put cupcakes on the map. TV shows like Cupcake Wars, Cake Boss and Ace of Cakes took cupcakes and cake decorating and the art of cupcakes from birthday celebrations to serious works of art. Love them or hate them, the celebrity baker has brought this art form to the general public and given many of us courage to try new things in the kitchen in hopes of emulating the magic we see on TV. Cupcakes are now all grown up. Complex flavors, creative fillings and newer methods of decorating have put cupcakes back into our lives and are mainstays at parties, restaurant dessert menus, coffee shops and even weddings. I love the cupcake. It's the perfect dessert. Just the right size and with such variety of frosting and decorating techniques, there are literally millions of ways to make a cupcake. You're limited only by your imagination.
I found cupcakes as my creative outlet during grad school. Balancing a full time job, two-three nights a week at school and a 40-50% travel schedule was putting me in a frazzled state. Cupcakes started as a treat for a finance class but has since turned into a full time hobby. Then graduation came and it seemed like I could make a hobby a business but the gang in my state's legislature prevent me from having a home-based baking business. Since I'm not really looking to leave my real job (*which also has me cavorting with real bakers!) I bake for fun and for friends. Sometimes those friends do fun stuff like get married and let me bake a lil' something for their special events. So I present to you my first wedding cupcakes. They are a mix of a chocolate stout cupcake with whiskey ganache filling, a red velvet, a champagne cupcake with a pastry cream filling and a good old fashioned vanilla cupcake. I'm so lucky to have participated in my friends' wedding this way and I'm thrilled that I've gotten a lot more requests for more events! I can't imagine my life without frosting...mmm....
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