Thursday, 29 August 2013

Lion Chocolate Peanut Butter Cup Cupcakes


Last week was my boyfriend's birthday :)  So for his birthday, I decided to make him some lion cupcakes :) 

I got the idea for decorating them from this video, which gave really good detailed instructions on how to do it.  The face was hand shaped out of a softened caramel candy with details piped in with black icing.  I used a Wilton's grass tip to make the 'hair' for the lion's mane.  

Since his favourite chocolate is Reese's Peanut Butter Cups, I decided to make Chocolate Peanut Butter Cup Cupcakes.  They are just as they sound, a chocolate cupcake with a Peanut Butter Cup inside!     

These cupcakes were moist, similar to the cake from the cupcake tower, probably because they both contain sour cream.

The peanut butter cup makes them very rich, but delicious :)

For the icing, I made a peanut butter frosting, which is like an American buttercream but with some of the butter replaced with peanut butter!  It had a nice flavour without being overwhelmingly peanut buttery.

Since I was just making 6 cupcakes, I got a new 6 cup muffin tray.  I could have just used the full 12 cup tray and filled the extras with water, but with this smaller size, I could do my baking in the convection toaster oven :)  I tend to do as much baking as I can in the toaster oven, so I can conserve energy.  I've done cakes, pies and cookies in it and they have all turned out well.  If what I'm making fits in the toaster oven, I'll bake it in there :)


Recipe:
Adapted from Cooks Illustrated

Yield: 6 cupcakes

Cupcake:
1/4 cup unsalted butter
1 oz bittersweet chocolate, finely chopped
1/4 cup Dutch-processed cocoa
6 tbsp all-purpose flour
1/4 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp baking powder
1 large egg, at room temperature
6 tbsp granulated sugar
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 cup sour cream
6 Reese's Peanut Butter Cups

Peanut Butter Frosting:
1/2 cup unsalted butter, at room temperature
1/2 cup of cream peanut butter
1 1/4 cups powdered sugar
1 tbsp heavy cream

Decoration:
12 soft caramel candies
black icing

1.  To make the cupcakes: preheat the oven (toaster oven in my case) to 350 degrees F. Line a 6-cup muffin tin with paper liners. Set aside.

2.  Place butter, chocolate and cocoa powder in a medium heatproof bowl.  Microwave in 30 second intervals, stirring in between, until butter and chocolate are melted and mixture is smooth.

3.  In a small bowl, sift together the flour, baking soda, and baking powder.

4.  Whisk the eggs in a medium bowl to combine, then add the sugar, vanilla and salt and continue whisking until fully incorporated. Add the cooled chocolate mixture to the bowl and whisk to combine.

5.  Add one-third of the flour mixture into the bowl and whisk gently to combine. Add the sour cream and whisk to combine. Finally, add the the rest of the flour mixture into the bowl and whisk until everything is well combined.

7. Place a spoonful of batter into each cupcake liner. Place a Reese's Peanut Butter Cup on top of the batter. Cover the peanut butter cups with remaining batter, filling each about 2/3 full. Bake until a toothpick inserted into the center of the cupcakes comes out clean, about 18-20 minutes. Remove the pan to a wire rack and let the cupcakes cool for a few minutes before removing them to a wire rack to cool completely.

8.  Beat butter and peanut butter until creamy. Slowly add in powdered sugar. Mix until combined and add the heavy cream. Mix until frosting is fluffy.

6. Pipe cooled cupcakes with the peanut butter frosting and decorate as shown in video link above.



Tuesday, 27 August 2013

Rosette Cupcake Tower

A few weeks ago, a friend of mine asked me to make her birthday cake :) I was excited as this was my first actual cake order!  She requested a chocolate cake with vanilla icing and red velvet cupcakes.  She asked that the cake be green and the cupcakes to be blue, yellow and green, other than that she's really easy going and gave me a lot of freedom with it.  Here's how it turned out.



The cake was 3 layers of Extreme Chocolate Cake with Italian meringue buttercream icing.  The 24 cupcakes were Red Velvet with cream cheese icing. 

The cakes and cupcakes were all decorated with rosettes.  If your remember, I like the rose cake and have made it before in Week 4 of Baking Arts.  I tried to improve on it by making the colours have a gradient, with a darker green on the bottom, but it ended up looking like the middle colour was the same as the bottom colour :( I still think it looks pretty though.

I had some problems with the cream cheese icing for the cupcakes holding it shape when it was piped because it was too soft.  If you look at some of the cupcakes, there isn't too much definition on the rose, so I think next time I make this recipe I will use more powdered sugar to stiffen it.

The cake turned out very moist, I find the sour cream really makes it almost a fudgey consistency :)   

Wednesday, 21 August 2013

Caramel Crunch Cake

I realize I haven't posted anything in a while, its not that I have stopped baking since class ended, just that I haven't been taking pictures and writing!

This week, I had an order for a Caramel Crunch Cake :)  I made my own spin on the La Rocca Caramel Crunch Cake (see pic below) that are in most grocery stores which consists of layers of almond meringue, caramel and whipped cream.

I started with the meringue.  I ground up a mixture of almonds and pecans in the food processor until it was a fine powder.  It wasn't getting as fine as I would like so I further pulsed it with cornstarch.  Once this was done, I put it through a medium strainer to get out any remaining lumps.  With the mixer, I whipped the egg whites to stiff peaks, which actually took almost 8 minutes on high to get the right consistency.  After folding in the nut mixture gently, the mixture was divided and spread into three 11" squares.  It's easiest to get the dimensions right if its marked on the underside of the parchment you are spreading it on.

While the meringues were in the oven, I started on the butterscotch caramel.  My first batch actually didn't turn out well since I burned the caramel and it crystalized...so I started again.  The second batch worked out much nicer, but I forgot to take pictures.  I made it fairly light and added a bit of salt at the end to give it a salty caramel flavour.


Next, the whip cream...such a simple thing, yet it tastes so yummy.  I added a pack of Whip-It to the cream just to make sure it was stable enough to hold up during the travel and until the next day.  Also, I switched out the traditional vanilla with cognac, since I've used it in ice cream before and found it really elevated the flavour. Although I only used one tablespoon, I think I went a little overboard with it, one teaspoon is more than enough. 




Once the meringues were out of the oven and cooled, I assembled the cake by layering one of the meringues, a thin layer of butterscotch caramel, a layer of whipped cream and repeating until all of the meringues were used.  Its not a big deal if the meringue cracks or breaks during assembly since the cream covers all of that.  Overall this cake wasn't too difficult and was easily done in one night with no previous prep work.  I think I will make this again as everyone seemed to really like it :)



My Modified Recipe

Meringue

100g almonds
20g pecans (any mixture of 120g of nuts should work)
8 egg whites
30g cornstarch
450g sugar
1 tsp vanilla

1.  Draw three 11" squares on parchment paper
2.  Grind almonds, pecans and cornstarch in food processor until a fine powder and sift through a medium strainer
3.  Whip egg whites to a foam, then slowly add sugar.  Continue whipping until meringue forms stiff peaks
4.  Mix in vanilla
5.  Gently fold in nut mixture by hand
6.  Spread meringue onto the prepared parchment paper
7.  Bake at 250F for 90 minutes until meringue is dry
8.  Turn off heat and let cool in the oven for 30 minutes


Butterscotch Caramel

900g sugar
200g water
350g 35% cream
110g unsalted butter
8g salt

1.  Heat the cream just until scalded; set aside
2.  Cook sugar and water until light golden colour (wash sides of pot down with a brush to prevent crystalization)
3.  Remove from heat
4.  Mix in cream until blended
5.  Mix in butter and salt until blended
6.  Pour caramel onto baking tray to cool


Chantilly Cream

1000g 35% cream
50g sugar
1 package Whip-It
1 tsp cognac (can be substituted with vanilla)

1.  Place sugar and cream in a mixing bowl and whip to medium firm peaks
2.  Add Whip-It and mix until blended
3.  Mix in cognac


Assembly

1.  Place a layer of meringue on the cake board
2.  Spread a thin even layer of butterscotch caramel on the meringue
3.  Spread an even layer of cream on top (can use a #9 plain piping tip for this)
4.  Repeat steps 1-3 for 2nd and 3rd meringues
5.  Drizzle extra butterscotch caramel on top