on Wednesday, November 7, 2012

When Caroline announced that this month's AlphaBakes letter is 'J', I struggled to think of J related bakes apart from jam. I thought last month's 'N' was quite challenging (check out the amazing entries here) but I think J is even harder than N! Caroline has already posted homemade Jaffa cakes using the same recipe I bookmarked so I thought I'd try something different and came up with Jasmine green Tea cupcakes.  I used the hummingbird bakery earl grey cupcakes recipe but substituted earl grey for jasmine green tea. I also added 1 teabag of leaves to the batter for extra flavour.  The result was subtle but delicious. You can't really taste the tea at first especially if you eat it with the frosting but if you let the cake sit for a while in your mouth then you can definitely taste the tea. 

I made these cupcakes for my last day at work (yes I know I recently left my old job and started this one but this job was only for 1 month. I have a new permanent job next year - more details to follow). I wanted to make them special so I decided to try out different piping techniques. I baked 75 cupcakes that evening - 1 batch of jasmine green tea, 1 batch of lemon cupcakes, 1 batch of chocolate cupcakes and my Polka Dot Pudsey Cupcakes. It took me hours and hours to bake and decorate but it was worth it :) I really wanted to try piping a chrysanthemum but discovered I didn't have the correct piping tips (guess what's going on my Christmas wish list?) so you may see them here in the future. 

As mentioned, I'm entering these to AlphaBakes hosted this month by Caroline from Caroline Makes and co hosted by myself on alternate months. The theme is J for Jasmine Green Tea. 





I'm also entering these to Tea Time Treats hosted by Karen from Lavender and Lovage and Kate from What Kate Baked.  They are celebrating their first birthday so the theme is cake. I think these flower cupcakes would be perfect for a birthday celebration! 





 


 Mix the butter, sugar, flour, baking powder and salt in an electric mixer until it resembles fine breadcrumbs

 add tea leaves to the batter 

 I love the little specks of tea leaves 

 ready to be frosted 

 I'm not sure what flower this is but I experimented with a petal piping tip 

 The completed collection - I think they look good together :) 

Jasmine Green Tea Cupcakes
Makes 14 cupcakes

4 Jasmine Green Tea teabags
3 tablespoons just-boiled water
80g butter, softened
280g caster sugar
240g plain flour
1 tablespoon baking powder
¼ tsp salt
200ml milk
2 large eggs
  • Brew a strong cup of tea by placing 3 teabags in 3 tablespoons of just boiled water for at least 30 minutes. 
  • Preheat the oven to 190C.
  • Mix the butter, sugar, flour, baking powder and salt in an electric mixer until it resembles fine breadcrumbs. 
  • Whisk the eggs and milk together then add in the brewed tea, squeezing every last drop from the teabags. 
  • Pour the milk mixture into the dry ingredients slowly and continue mixing until smooth. 
  • Cut open 1 teabag and add leaves to the batter (optional).
  • Don't worry if the batter looks liquid - it will still turn into beautiful cakes! 
  • Fill cupcake cases 2/3 full.
  • Bake for 18 - 20 minutes or until well risen and a skewer inserted into the centre comes out clean.
  • Allow to cool for a few minutes before transferring to a wire rack to cool completely. 

I made swiss meringue buttercream again for the frosting (recipe at bottom of link) - I made 2 recipes of this and 1 recipe of vanilla buttercream to frost all 75 cupcakes. 
on Sunday, November 4, 2012


Recently I was asked by a friend to make a birthday cake for her colleague. She knows I've been wanting to make a cupcake bouquet for months so even though it's for a guy, I was given the go ahead for a cupcake bouquet and reassurances that he would love it. I researched a few recipes and decided on a sunflower bouquet as I love sunflowers and I think they appeal to  both men and women. 

This project took longer than I expected so will have to plan ahead next time. I made this over 2 evenings - baked all the cakes the first evening then decorated on the second evening. It's the first time I've tried swiss meringue buttercream and I wonder why I've waited so long!! It's absolutely amazing!! It has a silky smooth texture and delicious buttery taste without being too sweet (like normal buttercream) and it holds its shape very well when decorating cakes! I used the recipe from my Martha Stewart Cupcake book but there are plenty of recipes online and they are all very similar - egg whites, sugar and butter. 

Unfortunately I was quite ill towards the end of the second evening and as the cake had to be delivered, it was unfinished - there were a few gaps in the bouquet. However, the birthday boy was absolutely delighted and all the cupcakes including the un-iced ones were eaten! 

Happy (Belated) Birthday Yogi! 


 How to make swiss meringue buttercream - heat egg whites and sugar until the sugar has melted. Beat in a stand mixer until peaks form.

 add blobs of soft butter and continue whisking. Don't worry if it looks curdled at this stage - it will be fine! Just keep whisking... mine took about 10 minutes in total. 


 You should end up with a nice, light, creamy frosting

 Oreo cookie, food colouring, red m&m's (for the ladybird), a leaf tip, black writing icing and a piping bag. Plus cupcakes and buttercream. 

 Close up of the piping nozzle required 
 Yellow frosting, green frosting, chocolate cupcakes. 

 start by spreading green icing on the cupcakes. Don't worry if it's a little messy - you will be covering most of the cupcake. 

 Add an oreo cookie on top of each cupcake to form the centre of the sunflower. 

 start piping the sunflower petals with yellow buttercream using the leaf tip. Hold your piping bag at a right angle to the cookie and pull out sharply. My first attempt here looks like wilted petals :( 

 luckily things looked better after a bit of practice. I recommend watching a video on youtube to see how it's done - there are lots of free ones available. 


 I also made some ladybirds using the red M&M's and black writing icing. You could also use a small round nozzle and black icing. 

  They look so good together! 

 I bought a flowerpot from B&Q and got a floral oasis ball from a florist friend - thank you! Wrap the oasis ball in clingfilm otherwise you'll get green everywhere and it's unhygienic on the cakes! 

 Initially I started at the bottom but the pot was about to topple over so I started at the top and worked my way down. I used 3-4 toothpicks for each cupcake. 


 There's a green cupcake in there as I'd run out of sunflower cupcakes! It's suppose to look like leaves anyway :)
Finished off with some green tissue paper, clear cellophane and a ribbon. 

Lessons learnt from this project
1. Always allow more time than you think.
2. Make more cupcakes than you need in case the cakes fall apart - I had difficulty piercing some of the cupcakes with the toothpick and in some cases, the 'sunflower head' fell off which was very frustrating. In the end I used a sharp knife to make holes in the bottom of the cake.
3. Place the decorated cupcakes in the fridge for at least 30 minutes for the frosting to set before putting the bouquet together. It really helps! 
4. Have a wet towel handy as it starts getting messy when you are trying to put the bouquet together.
5. Don't cry when the cakes fall apart. Just eat them and smile :) 
6. Improvise if you have to - perfection is not required! 

If anyone has any tips and advice, please feel free to share. I'd definitely like to try again but I think it wasn't too bad for a first attempt! 

As this is a celebration cake, I'm entering this to Tea Time Treats hosted by Karen from Lavender and Lovage (host this month) and Kate from What Kate Baked. It's Tea Time Treats 1st birthday - congratulations! - so the theme this month is cake, preferably celebration cakes.



Chocolate cupcake recipe - I used the same recipe as for my flowerpot cupcakes as it's a mix all in one and absolutely delicious!

Black Midnight Cupcake
280g plain flour
250g caster sugar
80g cocoa powder
1 1/4 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
1 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon baking powder
1 1/4 cup water
170g butter
2 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Preheat the oven to 180C.
Place all the ingredients for the cupcake into a large mixer bowl and mix on low - medium speed for a few minutes until well mixed.
Remember to scrape down the sides of the bowl.
Scoop into cupcake cases and bake for 18-20 minutes.

Swiss Meringue Buttercream - I used Martha Stewart's recipe which I've converted into metric units

5 egg whites
450g butter, cut into pieces at room temperature
280g caster sugar 
1 teaspoon vanilla extract 
  • Place sugar and egg whites in the heat-proof bowl of an electric mixer. Set bowl over a pan of gently simmering water, and whisk until sugar has dissolved and egg whites are hot to the touch, about 3 minutes. Test by rubbing the mixture between your fingers; it should feel completely smooth.
  • Transfer bowl to mixer stand. Using the whisk attachment, beat on high speed until mixture has cooled completely and formed stiff and glossy peaks, about 10 minutes.
  • Add the butter, one piece at a time, and beat until incorporated after each addition. Don't worry if the buttercream appears curdled after all the butter has been added; it will become smooth again with continued beating. Add vanilla, and beat just until combined.
  • Switch to the paddle attachment, and beat on the lowest speed to eliminate any air pockets, about 5 minutes. If using buttercream within several hours, cover bowl with plastic wrap, and set aside at room temperature in a cool environment. Or transfer to an airtight container, and store in the refrigerator, up to 3 days. Before using, bring buttercream to room temperature, and beat on the lowest speed with the paddle attachment until smooth, about 5 minutes.

on Friday, November 2, 2012


I really enjoyed participating in the Baking Mad Children in Need campaign last year by baking Rainbow Pudsey Cupcakes and Smarties Cookies. When they approached me again this year, I could hardly say no. The brief for this year was to create a unique recipe for Pudsey Bear cupcakes or biscuits.  The team at Baking Mad will pick the most inventive recipe and announce a winner who will be featured on their homepage.

I really liked my rainbow cupcakes last year so had a hard time thinking of another idea. I know this is not terribly original but spots remind me of Pudsey bear so I decided to make Polka Dot cupcakes. It's a basic vanilla cupcake with Polka Dot sprinkles mixed in the batter. 

 You can buy polka dot sprinkles from most supermarket 

 they look so colourful! 


 you can still see the spots... just about 

 and even after they are baked 


 yum! 



I used my now favourite vanilla cupcake recipe - the ultimate vanilla cupcake

For the cakes
125g flour + 1 tablespoon cornflour
1.5 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
113g butter
225g sugar
1.5 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/2 teaspoon vanilla bean paste
1/2 cup sour cream
2 eggs
1 eggs yolk
35g polka dot sprinkles

For the frosting 
250g icing sugar
1 tablespoon milk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
200g butter

10g polka dot sprinkles to decorate


  • Preheat the oven to 180C. 
  • Sift the flours, baking powder and salt into a medium bowl.
  • In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, beat together butter, sugar, vanilla extract and vanilla bean paste until light and fluffy, about 2 minutes.
  • In a measuring jug, whisk together sour cream, eggs and egg yolk until smotth.
  • Pour half of the wet ingredients into the butter-sugar mixture and beat until smooth.
  • Reduce mixer speed to low and stir in half of the flour mixture.
  • Repeat with the remaining dry and wet ingredients. 
  • Add in 35g of polka dot sprinkles and mix well. 
  • Fill cases until 2/3 full. 
  • Bake until golden brown and a toothpick inserted into the centre comes out clean, about 22-25 minutes. 
  • Allow to cool in the pan for 5 minutes before removing to a wire rack to cool completely.
  • To make the frosting, place the icing sugar in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment. 
  • Add milk, vanilla extract and salt and mix on low speed until sugar is evenly moistened. 
  • Add butter and gradually increase the speed from low to medium-high. 
  • Beat until fluffy and light in texture, 3 to 4 minutes.

on Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Apologies for the late round up this month! Where has the time gone? I can't believe it's the end of October already! The clocks have gone back and the days are getting colder but don't despair as I have a delicious line up of "N" related treats for you. So make yourself a hot drink, sit back and enjoy! Remember to check out Caroline's blog  to find out what we are baking with in November. 

First off the mark is Caroline's mum Jacqueline who entered quite a few nut cakes so I'll group them all below in one go. 

 date and walnut cake

 marmalade and walnut cake 

 mixed date, fruit and almond cake 

 coconut and candied peel cake


Next up is Angela from The Charmed Cupcake with Nutella Cupcakes with Vanilla, Peanut Butter and Nutella Cream Cheese Frosting. Yes please!! All my favourite ingredients in one cake :) I can't believe she or her husband are not fans of nutella and peanut butter but I'm sure this cake has changed their minds! 



Next is my mum with her Mixed Nut Mooncake. They were made for the Mid-Autumn Moon Festival and contains walnuts, macadamia nuts, almonds, melon & sesame seeds!


Next is my own entry with a Nigella Nutella Cake. I decorated it with chocolate fingers on the outside and fresh berries on top to balance all the chocolate!


The first of many Nanaimo Bars comes from Suelle from Mainly Baking. She used a recipe from Joy of Baking and says that it's well worth the effort of fiddling about and waiting for each layer to set. I wish I could have a slice!


Another entry from my mum who made a New York Baked Cheesecake. The base is made of homemade digestive biscuits and the filling has honey and chopped caramelized almonds.  The decoration on top is lemon, lime and orange rinds. 


Next is Fiona from Let Them Eat Cake with her Nectarine pie.  She noted that nectarines do not break down as an apple or pear does and would recommend roasting the nectarines next time. Sounds delicious either way! 


Mich from Piece of Cake has been busy baking for AlphaBakes this month. This is her first entry - Walnut Maple Yeasted Coffee Cake.  It has the chewy texture of white bread, is loaded with nuts and then baked and drenched in a sweet and sticky syrup - yum! 


Eira from Cookbooks Galore has sent in a nougat cake which was made as a special birthday cake for her youngest daughter. It does not actually use nougat but has the flavours of nougat in the form of ground almonds, icing sugar and egg whites. 


Katherine from Leeks & Limoni made some mini chocolate cakes with nutella cream.  I love cakes in mini form and the cream which is nutella with mascarpone cream sounds divine! 


Another Nanaimo Bar offering, this time from Laura of Laura Loves Cakes. It's a no bake recipe which was ideal for Laura as she has just moved home. Laura explains that a Nanaimo bar consists of three layers - the bottom layer is made from crushed biscuits, butter, cocoa powder and eggs, these also have walnuts and desiccated coconut. The middle layer is a combination of icing sugar, butter, custard powder and cream, then the whole thing is topped off with a layer of chocolate ganache. The name comes from a small town in Vancouver, Canada which she actually visited!


Another entry from me - a Neapolitan Rose Cake. I love Neapolitan ice cream so came up with this cake which has a vanilla, strawberry and chocolate layer finished off with piped rose buttercream.  The cake was delicious and my favourite layer is the strawberry layer which contains fresh strawberry puree. 

 

Clearly great minds think alike as Emma from Gloverly Cupcakes sent in some Neapolitan Cupcakes. She made this to bring to work as one of her colleagues was going on maternity leave and did not have time to make any baby decorations. Both her cakes and icing are tri-coloured and I'm sure they were much appreciated at work.  



Guess what's next? Nanaimo bars this time sent in by Helene from I Cook with Butter. I love these treats, I don't mind that we've had a few and can't wait to make my own! She used Edd Kimber's recipe and says that they are de.li.cious!! It took a while to make as you have to chill the layers separately but it was well worth the wait. 



Moving from Canada to New York, we have New York Cheesecake Brownies from Sally of PiggyBakes.  She wanted to put a twist on New York Cheesecake and came up with these gorgeous gems. 


Another entry from Mich of Piece of Cake with her No Knead Pizza which contains Spinach Feta & Pine Nuts. It's no knead as the name suggests but does require some advance planning as you need to ferment the dough for 18 hours. 


Another great mind with her Neapolitan Mousse Cake entry is Jean from Papers and Cakes and anything Baked. Nuts were off the menu as her husband has a nut allergy so she came up with this delicious looking Neapolitan Mousse cake for us. 


An unusual N in the form of Newcastle Brown Ale comes from Janine from Cake of the Week who baked a Pineapple Upside Down Loaf Cake with it. She is in her final year at Newcastle University and feels it will probably be her last year in Newcastle so decided to pay tribute to her adoptive city with this bake. The beer flavour comes through sharply but the sugar syrup cuts through it and it tasted better the next day. I'm surprised there was any left! 



Next we have Karen from Lavender and Lovage with her Old Fashioned Granny Loaf which is egg free and fat free! The recipe is from a very old copy of a Be-Ro cookbook that her grandmother used to use as well as her mum and daughter so a true family cookbook! It's a tasty fruit loaf, that was popular during WW2 due to the fact that it is fat-free, egg-free and only uses a scant amount of sugar and mixed fruit, which were rationed or hard to source. It contains walnuts which is the N for AlphaBakes. 



Here's another Nanaimo Bar from Elizabeth's Kitchen.  She grew up in Canada and recalls seeing trays of Nanaimo bars displayed alongside other wonderful cakes and pies in coffee bars and cafes, but only in the more upmarket establishments. She says they were one of her favourite squares and wonders why she's waited so long to try them at home! 


More Nanaimo Bars - this time from my co host Caroline from Caroline Makes. She used Graham Cracker crumbs which she bought in America. She also used Edd Kimber's recipe but had some difficulty slicing into it. Still looks good to me! 


Moving away from Nanaimo Bars and going back to Nutella we have Egg-free Nutella Fudge Brownies by Mel from Sharky Oven Gloves. They are really easy to whip up and she substituted egg with banana  in this recipe as one of her colleagues does not eat eggs. She was irked by the fact that the middles sunk on cooling but may have been due to the lack of eggs in the recipe. Still looks utterly fabulous to me! 


Next is a Nectarine Cake with Cinnamon and Nut Topping by Kit from I-Lost in Austen. She used nectarines harvested from her garden and I have to say it sounds and looks absolutely divine! 


Susie from Fold in the Flour made a decadent chocolate and hazelnut praline tart.  She used ground hazelnuts in the pastry to up the 'nutty' flavour. I love the hazelnut praline border! 


Caroline's sister, Clare has sent in a nutella and nut cake which is a sponge cake with a nutella and walnut topping. 


Welcome to Cal Cakestall who has sent in a double N millionaire shortbread. It has nutella shortbread as the base, and then lots of chopped toasted hazelnuts in the caramel. It looks absolutely divine. Word of caution - don't read the calorie count unless you really want to!


After all the Nutella recipes, we actually have a homemade version from Vinny aptly named Vinny's homemade chocolate hazelnut Nutella. I know Nutella is not all that good so making your own is the perfect solution as you can control what you put into it! Here it's served with eggy pancakes and fresh strawberries - yum! 


Back to normal nutella, Anuja from Simple Baking made Torta Alla Gianduia (Nutella cake) using a Nigella recipe which she adapted to be gluten free. Simple, stunning and delicious! 


A most unusual N, well certainly not one I've heard of before comes from Clare from Under the Blue Gum Tree. She made Naartjie, Cranberry and White Chocolate Muffins.  Naartjie is the Afrikaans word for a tangerine. She initially wanted to make a crustless cardamom and naartjie zest milk tart which sounds intriguing but disaster struck and she came up with these. She's not too sure about the texture but the flavour combination works well together and I particularly like the drizzle and dried fruit peel on top. 


Another unusual N entry is from my co host Caroline from Caroline Makes with her Navajo Fry Bread. She was in Monument Valley earlier this year which is operated by the Navajo Native Americans. She tried some Navajo fry bread made using blue corn and bought a packet mix to try at home. She served them with bacon and a little honey for breakfast... yum!


Continuing with the American theme are some Nutty Pumpkin Blondies by Jen from Blue Kitchen Bakes. She decided to do some late night baking as she had a really frustrating day at uni. It contains fresh pumpkin, white chocolate and mixed nuts. 


Yet another unusual N (well in my book anyway) are these Blackcurrant and Rose Nonnettes by Choclette from Chocolate Log Blog. They are eggless French honey cakes baked with blackcurrant jam and rose syrup. Sounds divine! 


Well that's the end of the emails but I decided to have a quick look at my twitter favourites and spotted 2 more entries. They are both brilliant but tenuous entries - coincidence? ;-) 

Gill from Pigling Bland has sent in a very impressive looking Winter Fraisier (Spiced Plum) which uses Nielsen-Massey vanilla. The créme mousseline is spiced cinnamon and nutmeg, and the traditional strawberries are replaced with port-roasted plums. I think she should have been on the Great British Bake Off! 


Last but not least is Dom from Belleau Kitchen with his carrot and cocoNut cake. It's a classic carrot cake with the addition of dessicated coconut and rolled oats and makes for a lovely elevated carrot cake.


I hope I've not left anyone else out - do remember to email us as it really helps when rounding up the collection! Thanks again to everyone who contributed this month. Head on over to Caroline's blog to see what we are baking with in November.

Addendum 1/11/12

A latecomer to the pack - delicious looking apple and nutmeg scones by Cakes, Crumb and Cooking. Apples take really well to spicing and here they are combined with ricotta cheese, mixed spice and nutmeg. Perfect for the autumnal weather!