The Cupcake Addict's Cupcake Collection The Cupcake Addict's Cupcake Collection

eating cupcakes since the late 60's
    • Category: Mrs Shuck's Creations

      • Waldorf Salad Success

        Posted at 5:08 pm by MLea
        Jul 4th

        Waldorf Salad probably isn’t a traditional July 4th delicacy, but it was on my menu today…for cupcakes.

        Naked cupcakes

        I made it as far as the above photo last week.  I tweaked the batter a bit since I wasn’t going to be able to put celery in the icing.  Instead of 3 cups of apples, I used just 2 and 1/2 cups of chopped apples.  I measured out 1/2 cup of chopped celery and blended it in the food processor with the walnuts.  I didn’t want to end up with HUGE chunks of celery since I don’t like the taste.

        I used the same icing as before, except I omitted the celery juice.

        After piping on the mascarpone icing, I sprinkled the cakes with celery seed.   (I probably should have put it into the mixer, but I didn’t want leftover celery icing.)  I finished the garnish with a red grape.

        Finished Waldorf Salad Cupcakes

        i think these turned out pretty tasty…considering…It’s quite a mouthful, but it’s a nice combination to get the grape with the icing and cake.

        Posted in Mrs Shuck's Creations | Tagged apple, celery, grape, Waldorf Salad, walnuts
      • There is baking today!

        Posted at 8:25 pm by MLea
        Jun 30th

        It only took a few months to get it together enough to finish W.

        W was originally going to be “Whoppers”.  (The candy, not the hamburger.)  I have malted milk powder in the house.  I have chocolate in the house.  At various times, I have had a box or 2 of Whoppers in the house in preparation.   I didn’t do Whoppers for 2 reasons:  First,  the flavor profile is pretty simple.  I’m not saying that I’m beyond simple by any means.  (Wait for X!)  I just thought it would be boring.  Second, I could figure out how to give the cupcake that crunch without just putting a malt ball on as garnish.  I wasn’t sure if they’d stay crunch if baked inside and didn’t know if the icing would make them soggy if I crunched them up.  So, I scratched “Whopper” and decided on something that I’d never eat:  Waldorf Salad.

        Waldorf Salad has 5 ingredients: Apples, grapes, celery, walnuts and mayo.  I dislike 40% of these ingredients.  I’ll let you guess which ones.  I could give you details about the origination of this salad, but I’d just be plagiarizing Wikipedia, so if you’re that interested, click here.

        Waldorf Salad, stolen from Wikipedia

        So I started off by making a simple apple cake.  I combined blended together 2 eggs and 1 and 1/2 cups sugar.   In another bowl, I combined 3 cups flour, 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder and a little salt.   I wanted to include some mayonnaise in the cake recipe since Waldorf salad is traditionally dressed with mayo.  I didn’t have any and forgot it at the store, so I sort of made my own.  So…I found a recipe online for mayo which contained 1 cup oil, 1 egg yolk, 1 tablespoonful lemon juice and 1 tablespoonful vinegar.  I didn’t see the value in whisking all this into an emulsion, so I dumped them together, then used 1 cup of the mixture instead of the oil.   I added this and the flour mixture alternately to the eggs and sugar, then folded in 3 cups of diced apple and a handful of chopped walnuts.  I thought about adding celery instead of some of the apple, but had intended to make a celery mascarpone icing.

        I scooped batter into mini muffin pans and baked them at 350 degrees for around 15 minutes.

        While the cakes were cooling, I juiced a little celery.  I added this slowly to a whipped mixture of 1/2 cup whipping cream, around 1 cup of powdered sugar and 8 ounces of mascarpone cheese.  Unfortunately, I think there was an enzymatic reaction between the celery and the dairy:  curdling resulted.  It wasn’t attractive.  I thought at first that I had just put too much juice and had watered down the cheese too much.  After adding another 8 ounces of cheese, I decided that it was unfixable.

        Today’s cupcakes were more like muffins.  Tasty, but naked without the icing.

        I’ll try again soon.  I think I may try using celery seed to flavor the mascarpone icing…

         

        Posted in Mrs Shuck's Creations
      • V is for Vanilla Coke

        Posted at 9:01 pm by MLea
        Feb 9th

        Mr Shuck actually suggested today’s letter.   For those Pepsi® fans, I am an Atlanta girl.  I could not in good conscience make a Pepsi cake.  A lot of people don’t seem to like Vanilla Coke® based on the reaction I had when telling people at work what to expect for the next letter.  Back when I was consuming 6 Diet Coke’s a day, I LOVED Diet Vanilla Coke.  Fortunately, I am off of soda almost completely now.   While I was researching, I discovered the Coca Cola website has a recipe posted for Coca Cola cake.  However, it has a little cocoa in it and also marshmallows.  I didn’t want the chocolate taste and can’t have the marshmallows so I passed on that one.  I found a recipe for root beer cake and used that instead.   The recipe called for root beer extract, so I substituted cola syrup instead.   Since I work in a pharmacy, I had easy access.  (Cola syrup is used for nausea.)

        I combined

        • 1 cup Coca Cola (the Mexican one, since it contains sugar, not corn syrup)
        • 1 tsp apple cider vinegar

        and let them sit for a few minutes, then I added

        • 3/4 cup sugar
        • 1/3 cup vegetable oil
        • 2 teaspoonfuls cola syrup
        • 1/2 teaspoonful vanilla extract

        In another bowl, I combined

        • 1 & 1/3 cup flour
        • 3/4 teaspoonful baking soda
        • 1/2 teaspoonful baking powder

        I mixed the wet and dry ingredients, filled my lined mini cupcake pans 3/4 full and baked at 350 for around 12 minutes.  (Until the tops were no longer dry.)  I let them cool in the pans for 10 minutes, then moved them to a rack.

        I had originally intended to make an Italian Meringue Butter cream, but then decided it was too dense.  I wanted something fluffy like the foam on top of a really cold soda, so I decided on just an Italian Meringue (no butter).  I was hoping to make a 1/2 batch of icing, so I didn’t end up with a bucketful leftover, but I normally use 5 egg whites and didn’t want to figure out the math involved in 2/5 or 3/5 of a recipe.  (I have a bucketful left over.)  To make the meringue, I combined 1 cup of sugar with about 1/4 cup of the remaining Coca Cola (instead of water.)  I brought this to a boil.  When it reached about 220 degrees, I started whipping the egg whites, adding 1/4 cup of sugar after the soft peak stage.  When the eggs were at medium peak and the syrup was up to 240 degrees (soft ball), I started pouring the syrup into the whites and whipped until firm peaks were formed and the meringue had cooled.   I added a little cola syrup and probably 1 tablespoonful of vanilla paste while the eggs were whipping.

        I piped the icing onto the cakes using a flat tip as I was hoping for a relatively flat icing.  (Liquids don’t mound up.)  I garnished with a gummy cola bottle which I hope is tasty.  (More gelatin, so I don’t eat them.)

        I think these turned out nice.  They don’t really taste like anything in particular…but then Coca Cola is carbonated caramel color…. The cake is moist and light and the icing is foamy.  Mr Shuck says it reminds him of Coke foam.

         

         

         

        Posted in Mrs Shuck's Creations | Tagged vanilla coke
      • U is for Union Square Cocktail

        Posted at 8:29 pm by MLea
        Jan 30th

        “U” probably won’t be as difficult as some other letters remaining: V and X primarily.  (If anyone out there knows of any dessert, candy bar, or any other dish that starts with either of these letters, please leave me a comment!)

        My original thought was U-No bar, but then I discovered that they don’t taste very good.  A reader suggested Upside Down Cake, but a very popular cupcake shop (Trophy) does these so I didn’t want to go with that either.  After extreme googling, I discovered the Union Square, a cocktail created by a famous bartender using New Amsterdam Gin.  I thought maybe it didn’t really exist, but then I found another reference.  So if it exists twice on the internet, it’s real, right?

        If there is a (stolen) photo, then it must be real!

        The ingredients for the cocktail:

        • 2 oz New Amsterdam Gin
        • 2 strawberries
        • sprig of basil
        • 1/2 oz fresh lime juice
        • 1/2 oz fresh lemon juice
        • 1 oz agave nectar
        • 1/2 strawberry for garnish

        The strawberries are muddled with the basil until thoroughly crushed.  Then the other ingredients are added and the whole mess is shaken and poured over ice.  If anyone out there likes gin, let me know how this tastes.

        I started off with Sprinkles strawberry cupcake recipe and added a little lemon and used agave nectar for part of the sugar.  I was going to substitute it all, but after tasting the agave (not tasty), I used 1/2 sugar and 1/2 agave.  I swear I had lemons in my cart at the grocery store, but somehow they didn’t make it into the kitchen with me, so I used RealLemon juice.

        • 1 stick butter, room temperature
        • 1/3 cup strawberry puree (from frozen strawberries)
        • 1/2 cup sugar
        • 1/3 cup agave nectar
        • 3/8 cup milk (I actually used Horizon vanilla flavored milk as that’s what I had on hand)
        • 1 tablespoon-ish lemon juice
        • 2 egg whites
        • 1 whole egg
        • 1 & 1/2 cups flour
        • 1 teaspoon baking powder
        • dash of salt

        Cream the butter and add the sugar, mixing until light and fluffy.  Meanwhile,  in another bowl, combine the flour, baking powder and salt.  In a third container, combine milk, strawberry puree and agave.  Add egg whites and whole egg one at a time to butter mixture and mix until just combined.  Add 1/2 of the dry ingredients, then the milk mixture, then the rest of the dry ingredients, mixing just until combined after each addition.  I added the lemon juice to taste at the end.  (So far I haven’t died from eating raw cake batter.)

        Scoop into lined mini muffin tins and bake for 14 minutes (ish) at 350 degrees.  Allow to cool for 10 minutes in the pan and the rest of the way on wire racks.

        To make the icing, I essentially used the same icing as I used for the Tiramisu cupcake, except I infused the cream with basil.  I figured basil is a leaf.  Tea is a leaf.  I could impart basil flavor without having a leafy icing by making a basil/cream tea.  I heated to a simmer 1/2 cup of cream with a few basil leaves added.  I let it sit while I made the cupcakes, then fished out the leaves.  While the cupcakes cooled, I allowed it to cool in the frig.  Once it was chilled, I added it to a container of mascarpone (8 ounces) and roughly 1/2 cup powdered sugar.  After I whipped it together, I added a tiny squirt of lime juice to taste.   I piped it onto the cupcakes using the tip with a huge hole and garnished 1 of them with a basil leaf.  (Unfortunately, my bunch of basil didn’t contain very many small leaves.)

        Union Square cupcake

        I think this turned out to be a very nice cupcake.  All of the flavors are very subtle…just a little hint of strawberry, basil and citrus.  The icing is very creamy and not too sweet.  It’s definitely not a Kiddie Cupcake, even though it’s tiny.  I think this would probably be very nice for afternoon tea.

        Posted in Mrs Shuck's Creations | Tagged agave, basil, Lemon, lime, strawberry, Union Square
      • T is for Tiramisu

        Posted at 9:35 pm by MLea
        Jan 25th

        Tiramisu, photo stolen from Wikipedia

        According to Wikipedia, tiramisu is made of biscuits (lady fingers, a small sponge cake) dipped in coffee, layered with a whipped mixture of egg yolks and mascarpone, and flavored with liquor and cocoa.   Cupcakes are eaten out of hand, not with a fork, so I didn’t want them dipped in coffee.  I decided to do a coffee flavored sponge cake instead.   Marsala wine or rum is commonly used as flavoring.  I knew that I’d end up using the rest of the rum (with some pineapple juice, yum!), so I went with that instead of the marsala wine.   I didn’t want to serve raw egg yolks, so I decided to use a custard instead and filled the cupcakes with a rum custard.   I would ice them with a whipped mascarpone icing and sprinkle the tops with cocoa powder.

        I started the night before by making the custard.  To make it, I used a standard vanilla custard recipe, but substituted rum for some of the milk.  I wasn’t sure if the lack of fat in the rum would make a difference, so I used some cream instead of part of the milk.

        Rum Custard Ingredients:

        • 1/2 cup sugar
        • 3 tablespoons cornstarch
        • 1/2 teaspoon salt
        • 4 egg yolks, beaten slightly
        • 2 cups milk
        • 1/2 cup rum
        • 1/2 cup heavy cream

        I mixed all ingredients together in a heavy bottom saucepan and brought to a boil over medium heat until it thickened (about a minute).   I  removed it from the heat and allowed it to before straining it into a bowl and covering with plastic wrap on the surface of the custard.   This refrigerated overnight, but could have just cooled for a few hours.

        I attempted the sponge cakes last week and severely overcooked them.  (See What To Do With Overcooked Cupcakes). I used a jelly roll sponge cake recipe and wasn’t sure how long to cook them.  Apparently 16 minutes is too long.

        Espresso Sponge Cake Ingredients

        • 4 large eggs, room temperature (I always forget to take the eggs out, so I put them into a bowl with a little warm water to speed them along)
        • 2/3 cup suger
        • 2 teaspoons instant espresso powder
        • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract (just realized that I forgot to put this in!)
        • dash of salt
        • 1 cup all purpose flour
        • 2 tablespoons melted and cooled butter (also forgot this! Not used to the fat going in last…)

        I preheat the oven to 350 degrees and lined mini cupcake pans with liners.

        The 1st 4 ingredients were combined and beaten in the Kitchen Aid until the mixture was thick and fluffy.  (The recipe described this as “falling in ribbons when the beater is lifted”.)  I sifted the flour into the bowl in a few parts , gently folding until incorporated after each addition.  I should have added the oil after the flour.  I used a small scoop to put the batter into the pans and baked for 7-8 minutes.  (Cake tester/toothpick should come out clean and cake should start to pull away from pan.  In this case, the liners contracted away from the sides of the pan.)  These cooled for 10 minutes in pan, then 20 minutes more on racks.

        I cooked the cupcakes 3 different ways:  1.  Using regular paper liners.  2.  Using foil liners.  3. Using no liners, with just a circle of parchment at the bottom.   My previous test of the sponge cake had resulted in a cake that was very hard to peel out of the wrapper.  In case it was still the case with the shorter cooking time, I was hoping to be able to salvage some of the cakes.    The cake was still a little hard to unwrap even after reducing the cooking time.  I thought it would be too messy to unpeel such a small cupcake after it was filled and frosted, so I unwrapped all of the cupcakes ahead of time.  The ones that I baked without a wrapper stuck a bit to the pan and didn’t seem to rise as much, so I’m glad that I didn’t cook them all “naked”.  The foil wrappers were easiest to remove.

        After unwrapping all of the cakes, I attempted to fill them using a piping bag with the tip poked in.  They were a little dense, so I ended up poking a hole in the middle and filling it up.

        Filled Tiramisu cupcakes

        The icing covered up the hole of custard so all was good.

        For the icing, I used a conglomeration of mascarpone icings that I found on the internet: Martha and Giada both had one, JustJenn had one, Joy of Baking had another.  Some whipped the cream first, some whipped the cheese and added the cream later.  I started off whipping the cream, then attempting to fold in the cheese, but that didn’t work very well.  I ended up having to beat the heck out of it to get rid of all the lumps.   I ultimately combined an  8 ounce tub of mascarpone cheese, 1 1/2 cups whipping cream and probably 1 1/2 cups powdered sugar (whatever was left in the bag.)

        Icing on

        After I got all the cakes iced, I put them out on a piece of parchment and sifted cocoa powder on top.

        Finished Tiramisu cupcakes

        I think these cupcakes were extremely successful although they didn’t look very nice when I got them to work with me.  I normally pad my cupcake carrier with mini marshmallows acting as packing peanuts so the cakes don’t slide around, but I was out.  I had to slam on the brakes and ended up with a mess!  I will make sure I keep the marshmallows in stock.

        In retrospect, I should have made less filling and icing.  Mr Shuck and I had a mixture of the 2 for dessert tonight.  Delicious even without the cake!

        Posted in Mrs Shuck's Creations | Tagged tiramisu
      • What to do with overcooked cupcakes?

        Posted at 8:45 pm by MLea
        Jan 16th

        I attempted a sponge cupcake for T= Tiramisu.  I had no idea how long to bake them since I was converting essentially a jelly roll sort of cake recipe into mini cupcakes.  Apparently 14 minutes is too long.  Probably 10-12 minutes is about right.

        So I had 24 mini cupcakes unsuitable for solo consumption… While I made an espresso custard, I unwrapped them all and put them in a bowl.  I dumped the custard on top, refrigerated and ended up with a trifle!

        Yum!

        Posted in Mrs Shuck's Creations
      • What to do for “U”??

        Posted at 12:52 pm by MLea
        Jan 15th

        So….originally I had planned to do “U-No bar” for “U”.  (T is soon to be tiramisu, I didn’t forget it…) Last night, I picked up a U-No bar at Rite Aid to see what a “smooth rich milk chocolate truffle like center covered in milk chocolate and ground almonds” candy bar tastes like.  It doesn’t taste good.  The chocolate is waxy.  I got no sense of ground almonds.  The truffle like center may be smooth and rich, but it was overpowered by the waxyness of the exterior coating.  I suppose I can still do a milk chocolate cupcake filled with ganache and topped with milk chocolate and ground almonds… I guess if I don’t find something else, that’s what it will be.  I’ll just try to make it actually taste delicious instead of waxy.

        Posted in Mrs Shuck's Creations
      • S is for Sticky Toffee Pudding

        Posted at 6:59 pm by MLea
        Jan 9th

        It’s not pretty.  It’s definitely sticky.  It’s pretty tasty.  If I were a little more ambitious, I’d tell you a story about Sticky Toffee Pudding.  I’m lazy, so I’ll just link to Wikipedia here.

        Sticky Toffee Pudding

        Back in October, my friend Millie sent me a link to this recipe for Sticky Toffee Pudding in the Seattle Times.  (Coincidentally enough, there was another recipe in the Seattle TImes the day I made these.  I might wish I had seen this one first…)

        I started my task by chopping dates.  Being unfamiliar with dates, I didn’t realize how unbelievably sticky they are!  I started out chopping them with the kitchen scissors, but ended up using the food processor so I didn’t end up stuck to the kitchen wall or something.  After chopping them I added them to 1 cup of boiling water in a sauce pan and let them sit until the water was absorbed.  Then, I added a teaspoonful of baking SODA and let it sit for 20 minutes…resulting in this….

        I almost had to run to the store.  I looked in my baking powder can and it was almost empty.   I scooped out a half of a teapoonful and there was almost as much left in the can, so I just dumped the rest into 1 and 1/2 cups all purpose flour.

        In the Kitchen Aid bowl, I creamed together 1 stick of softened butter and a cup of light brown sugar, then added 2 eggs and some vanilla.  After that, I dumped in the flour mixture and stirred until combined, then the same with the date mixture.  I scooped into mini cupcake pans and baked for 16 minutes or so at 350 degrees.  (I ended up with around 36 minis.)

        I followed the recipe directions for the sauce, but made just a 1/2 a batch.  I originally was going to fill them with the sauce then make a muscovado Italian Meringue butter cream, but after trying just the cake and the sauce, I decided they were done.   The sauce was easy.  I combined 1/2 stick of butter, 1 cup muscovado (VERY BROWN) sugar, and 3/4 cup heavy cream and boiled it until it thickened up.  I poked a couple of holes in each cupcake using a drinking straw, then spooned some sauce over.  The sauce hardened as it cooled (and did not reheat smoothly) and I ended up icing the last few cakes with the toffee rather than pouring it.  There was enough sauce for probably 24-30 of the 36 cakes.  (A few cakes that were stuck to the pan got eaten pretty quicky….as a quality check…I didn’t count the ones that I packed up to take to work.)

        The response at work today was very positive.  I have a pound of dates left over and I’m thinking about throwing them in the food processor with some almonds to make some homemade Larabars.

        Posted in Mrs Shuck's Creations | Tagged dates, sticky toffee pudding
      • R is for Rocky Road

        Posted at 8:25 pm by MLea
        Dec 14th

        If I had to do Rocky Road again, I would rethink it…

        1.  The cake turned out to be really light and tender.  Filling it made it a bit unstable.

        2.  I used a Cooks Illustrated recipe for the icing.  This turned out to be a little heavy for the light cake.  It’s like a ganache with butter added and it hardened up quite a bit.  A description on Chowhound said that it was like the “stuff in the can”.   I should have just used a whipped ganache or an American butter cream.    I took a break to eat dinner and came back to finish icing the cakes and it was too hard to work with.  I just dipped the remaining cakes in melted chocolate.

        3.  I mixed the peanuts into the icinge.  This wasn’t very attractive and might be borderline gross.  After I dumped the nuts in, I thought, “How am I going to pipe this?”

        Maybe it will all seem better in the morning.

        Dark chocolate cake filled with marshmallow fluff and topped with chocolate peanut frosting and marshmallow drizzle.

        Posted in Mrs Shuck's Creations
      • Q is for Queen Anne Cherries

        Posted at 10:18 pm by MLea
        Dec 8th

        The Queen Anne® Chocolate company describes these candies on their website as “The perfect combination of sophisticated dark chocolate and premium cherries for an ideal Dark Chocolate Covered Cordial Cherry.”  My grandmother LOVED these and thus these were a perfect Christmas gift for her every year.  I abhor Maraschino cherries anyway.  (What’s the deal with brined artificially colored fruit?)  I especially don’t like biting into a chocolate and having it squirt liquid into my mouth.   I like the idea of it even less after reading this article on chocolate covered cherries. Apparently the cherries are coated in an enzyme then covered in fondant before being covered in chocolate.  This enzyme over time breaks down the sugar in the fondant into sugar syrup.  So…if you ate a chocolate covered cherry that hadn’t been aged properly, you’d end up with no liquid inside.  I might like that better.  I like Chukar® Cherries’ chocolate covered cherries; they consist of a dried cherry dipped in chocolate.

        I started off my cupcakes by making dark chocolate ganache for the icing.  I used 4 ounces of bittersweet chocolate which I melted into 1/2 cup of heavy cream

        Instead of fondant, I thought I would use a cherry white chocolate ganache, which I made using a little cherry schnapps, 8 ounces of white chocolate and 1/4 cup heavy cream.  I ended up with the wrong proportions because the ganache never really thickened up.

        Since cherries aren’t in season, I used cherries canned in heavy syrup.  They were a little soft.  Frozen might have been firmer, but I didn’t want a bunch of leftover cherries.  As it was, I ended up with only 3 cherries left over.   If I had to do it over again…I would make these during cherry season!

        I found a new Cook’s Illustrated chocolate cupcake recipe that uses BREAD flour instead of AP or cake flour.   Their logic (confirmed through extensive testing) is that since cupcakes are eaten out of hand, you don’t want them to be as tender as cake.  Too tender results in crumbs which results in a mess.   Bread flour has a higher gluten content which would make them less tender, but would hold the cakes together better.  I didn’t want to invest in a whole bag of bread flour, so I used regular whole wheat flour.  I will use the recipe again and will use bread flour next time.   I used a tiny cookie scoop to put the batter in the mini cupcake liners, then dipped a cherry into the ganache and placed it on top.  I cooked the cupcakes for 15 minutes.

        After the cakes were cooled, I dipped them in softened ganache.  They weren’t the most beautiful cupcakes in the world, but I think they turned out very tasty!  The cake and ganache weren’t overly sweet and the cherry inside made them very moist.

        Posted in Mrs Shuck's Creations
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