Thursday, December 31, 2009

A Gingery-Molasses Letdown


I'm the first to admit that this particular cupcake attempt did not yield the most excellent results. There are a few reasons for this. For one thing, I over-filled the liners and I went without a cupcake tin. I mean, that's just leaving way too much in Fate's hands. I acknowledge that.


Thus, there was much spillage and the cupcakes came out all wide and wonky-looking. Like so:


Also, while the outer sides of the cupcakes were chewy and tasted exactly like the best gingerbread cookie you can possibly imagine (I think the use of fresh ginger is an awesome idea), the middles were so moist they were borderline soggy. I love me some butter, but I don't like to think about how much butter I'm chewing on. So while the taste was really good, there was a greasiness factor that I can't quite chase from my memory.

Finally, there was the whipped cream topping which was, literally, just whipped cream and a dash of ground ginger. I'm not a huge fan of whipped cream topping on cupcakes in general (unless it's like a version of strawberry shortcake or some such thing), and in this case I was so not digging it. It's just so bland and icky.


(This is the best-looking one, so at least there was one that looked okay.)

It's okay. This is how we learn. And the nice, spicy ginger-molasses flavor was festive and seasonal a few weeks ago when I made these little guys. So. Happy holidays! (?)

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Applesauce Spice Cupcakes, Brown Sugar Cream Cheese Frosting



Whenever the season shifts from autumn to winter, so many of the delightful flavors of fall (apple, pumpkin, etc.) seem to vanish, replaced by holiday flavors (gingerbread, peppermint). Now, I loooove the holiday stuff, and I'm excited to get going on Christmas treats, but I wanted to squeeze in one more autumnal recipe before the holiday insanity sets in. Hence: Applesauce Spice Cupcakes with Brown Sugar Cream Cheese Frosting.

I got this recipe from Martha Stewart's hefty tome (which I am loving, btw). The cupcakes came out light and airy, with a subtle apple flavor and a bit of spice. On their own, they'd make for good breakfast cake. But here they're made even better by cream cheese frosting that includes brown sugar in place of confectioner's sugar. I was worried at first because the texture seemed to be grittier than "normal" cream cheese frosting, but the taste is awesome. The brown sugar lends a sort of maple-y caramel-y flavor to the rich cream cheese. Stupendous!

My friends enjoyed them. Here's Alana on the verge of a taste-test, which ultimately got a thumbs-up:

Salivation Snapshot: Mission Minis

It's been a long time since I've posted, I know, I know. And now that I'm back I'm just posting one measly photo? Yes. It's true. But there's more to come. And this picture is so cute! A friend sent me this photo from the San Francisco bakery Mission Minis. Adorable.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

A CupKate's Birthday — The Big 2-9

The penultimate birthday before Things Get Serious in the 30s is not necessarily a cause for insane debauchery. (Though I would like to point out that for just another month and a half I'll be able to remove the "00"s from the year — say, 2009 — to produce my age. That was so cool! :( Sad. But now it's kind of cool because for the next several decades (... um, probably until I die), you can split the year in half, and add those two halves to create my age — 2010 is 20+10 = 30! and so on. Yes, I know that that only works for 1.5 months per year, but whatevs! Math magic!)

Anywho, my 29th birthday (today) has been a relaxing, quiet affair during which I've enjoyed many a call/email/text/facebook messages, I've written a bit, I sat in the sun for a while trying to withstand the cold in an effort to get a tan, and, of course, had a few cupcakes.

Let's start in the morning, shall we?

My birthday breakfast included coffee (note the mug, follow its advice) and cookies-and-creme cupcakes courtesy of the highly talented Malerie (the flowers are also her doing — thanks, Malerie!). On the bottom of each cupcake is half an Oreo — it's seriously fun.



For part of my lunch I enjoyed a cupcake from Rocco's Italian pastry shop near my folks' place in Hamden. Delicious chocolate cupcake with what appears to be a chocolate ganache topping and a chocolate mousse filling. Ridiculous....ly amazing.


And finally, with evening came a chilled bottle of Riesling from this winery that I recently wrote about! What's more, I got to drink it in my brand-new cupcake wine glass. So awesome. :)


This was a very happy, cupcakey birthday.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Vegans — They're Just Like Us!

Haha, no, they're not.

Kidding! I'm not prejudiced against vegans. Some of my closest friends are vegans! It's just that, to an omnivore, veganism can be a little baffling. No cheese? Those two words next to one another do not compute. And to the voracious dessert consumer, the idea of baking vegan treats is downright preposterous. But over recent years, my omnivore friends have been dropping like flies (er, is there a more cruelty-free phrase? Dropping like acorns?) and I've adjusted my baking ways in order to properly celebrate birthdays and holidays so it doesn't look like I prepared 24 cupcakes that only I can eat ("It really wasn't on purpose! I thought you could eat eggs as long as they disappeared into something!").

This photo is just to show that it was perfect cupcake-baking weather.

When I first baked vegan cupcakes, I did look with disgust upon the apple cider vinegar (vinegar! Gah!) in the recipe, but to my surprise, I literally cannot tell the difference between these cupcakes and those that feature animal products. What's more, Pillsbury-brand frosting is totally vegan. That's reason alone to celebrate — a brand of sweet stuff that I already know and love can be accepted by vegans and omnivores alike.


In this recipe, there's an option to use all vanilla extract or to use some vanilla and some almond extract. I'd never tried the almond for these cupcakes, so I did this time and I kinda regret it. The cupcakes are supposed to be chocolate, and they look like they're chocolate, but they taste almost entirely like sweet almond. Bleh. I wasn't psyched about that. But otherwise they were vegan cupcakes fit for an omnivore! (Sorry, sorry.)

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Best. Vineyard Name. EVAR!

I've never tried any wine from this vineyard and I'm already in love with it. It's called Cupcake Vineyard! Seriously, the best name ever.

I want to try all their wines and then put the bottles all over my house.

Cupcakes. Wine. Bliss!

Monday, October 12, 2009

Cupcake Camp San Francisco 2009



I'm not totally sure what I was expecting, but from the name "Cupcake Camp" my thoughts vaguely had to do with Kumbaya Cupcakes or "Capture the Cupcake" games. In reality, from what I could tell, Cupcake Camp was more like a mildly organized cupcake free-for-all bonanza in which cupcake-loving San Franciscans could bring their cupcakes for people to eat. For free. You didn't even have to bake them yourself! You could just bring store-bought cupcakes and set them up at a table and give them to people. That's it!


Now, I love cupcakes. So this was a cool, interesting thing to experience. Several people brought multitudes of miniature cupcakes in several different flavors — so I tried a spicy gingerbread-y mini-cupcake and a peanut butter chocolate chip mini-cupcake from the same baker (or group of bakers at this one table). And it was neat to see the variety and the creativity put into making them all.

I also tried a filled Hostess-style cupcake which was good, though extremely sweet.

Thing is, if you tell a whole city of people that there will be free cupcakes if you just show up at this place on a Sunday afternoon, there will be cupcake chaos.

It was insanely crowded! There was a kind of system: there was a set schedule posted of which cupcakes would be at which tables inside the venue, with each table changing bakers every 15 minutes. And every person was allowed to eat five cupcakes, so the bakers would mark on our tickets when we'd go up to get a cupcake. But there were so many people there, there was never not a line in front of each table, and if you wanted to wait in another line, you had to squeeeeze through the throng of patiently waiting cupcake lovers (and general fans of free treats) and hope you there would be enough cupcakes for everyone in line.


I'm glad I went, though next year I'm showing up with a team of people so we can divide, conquer and take bites of each others' cupcakes. I might also put on some of those football player shoulder pads.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Cupcakes and Muffins: Kissing Cousins

My friend Nancy (creator and editor of the excellent sandwich blog Between the Bread) recently sent me this photo of a muffin I baked and gave her one morning soon after hearing that she'd gotten engaged. Mostly I wanted to just post this photo because I think it's cute, despite the fact that it's a muffin and not a cupcake. But then I started thinking . . . what's the difference between muffins and cupcakes?

It might seem like an obvious distinction to some people — cupcakes have frosting, muffins do not. However! In the above photo, a lemon poppy-seed muffin has been drizzled with a sugary glaze. It's maybe not frosting, per se, but it is a kind of icing.

In doing some cursory Internet research on the subject, it appears that in addition to the "frosting vs. no frosting" debate, many folks also point out that muffins are cups of baked bread and are intended as a breakfast food, while cupcakes are far sweeter and are used as desserts. And yet, over on the blog Cake Spy, they conducted a whole experiment about this question and found that the recipes they used for the cupcakes and the muffins each called for the same amount of sugar! That is, however, only in the cupcakes themselves and doesn't count the sugar in frosting.

The editors at Cupcakes Take the Cake decided that it wasn't the amount of sugar but rather the ratios of fat, sugar and eggs:

The quick-and-dirty answer on this is that cupcakes have frosting, whereas muffins do not. However, in researching, I found an excellent formulaic definition of the difference courtesy of Diana's Desserts: "A basic formula for muffins is 2 cups flour, 2-4 tablespoons sugar, 2½ teaspoons baking powder, ½ teaspoon salt, 1 egg, ¼ cup oil, shortening or butter and 1 cup milk. When the fat, sugar and egg ratio in a recipe reaches double or more than this, you have reached the cake level."

I know which one I'd prefer on any given day, but which do you enjoy more: Cupcakes or muffins?

Monday, October 5, 2009

"Fall"-ing in Love With Pumpkin-Ginger Cupcakes


Obviously, birthdays are always reason to celebrate, but they especially fill me with specific kind of glee: Yay, legitimate reason for cupcakes! When my friend Katie told me that her husband's birthday would fall during their visit to northern California this past weekend, I was off the phone and planning cupcakes in no time. I fussed with my cupcake books for a while, pondering which recipe to choose. Basic chocolate cupcakes with chocolate frosting? Elaborate-looking cupcakes with aliens built from doughnut holes and dipped in frosting the color of Ecto-Cooler?

Ultimately, I just looked outside for inspiration. Even here in San Francisco the air has a crisp bite to it, though the sky remains a brilliant clear blue — it's definitely autumn. Thus, for Dave's birthday, I chose something autumn-appropriate: pumpkin-ginger cupcakes with a cream cheese frosting.

The recipe called for crystalized ginger to be chopped up into tiny bits and added to the batter (which featured real pumpkin — yum).

I'd never worked with crystalized ginger before, and it really does add a spicy kick to the cupcake when you get a bite with a little nugget of pure ginger.

The cupcakes filled my apartment with that rich pumpkins-n-cinnamon aroma that calls up memories of Thanksgiving and Home. They came out a nice light orange-brown color.

Finally, I set aside part of the frosting, added some milk and a whole lot of cinnamon to color it brown, and piped the darker frosting in circles on top of the white coating. Then I pulled a toothpick down from the center to the edges, curving the brown circles into a "spiderweb" design. They didn't look exactly like the photos in the cookbook, but I was pretty proud of my delicious pumpkin-y spiderweb cupcakes nonetheless.

Happy 31st, Dave-o!!

Friday, October 2, 2009

So Sweet: The Very Hungry Caterpillar o' Cupcakes

This is one of the coolest things I've seen in a while:


I used to love those books by Eric Carle, too.

It's amazing to me when cupcakes are used so artfully. This photo comes from the flickr uploads by coco cake cupcakes, and there are plenty more adorable, delightful cupcakecreations where this one came from.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

A Beautiful Sight

Though this came out of the same night as the "angels and demons" cupcakes, I figured this photo deserves its own post.

How beautiful is this? Devil's food cupcake with sea salt caramel filling and a glass of California Bubble Works' sparkling Cabernet Sauvignon. Awesome.

Angels and Demons


There was no new episode of Top Chef this week (boooo!) but they did re-air the episode from last week in which the "cheftestants" had a quickfire challenge having to do with the little angels and little devils that sit upon everyone's shoulders. They were instructed to create a dish reflecting their interpretations of these dichotomous sides of the conscience. Personally, I thought this challenge wasn't that different from an earlier one this season in which they had to create a dish inspired by their own personal vices (they love to use this Las Vegas theme — sins, addictions, devils), but it was still interesting to see what the chefs came up with.

And I decided to do my own cupcake version of the challenge! Now, I have to preempt this all by noting that I rarely use boxed cake mixes for my cupcakes (and I rarely use packaged frosting, too), but in the interest of time for this one, I did end up collaborating with good old Duncan and Betty.

I also went with the most obvious interpretation of "angel and devil" with angel's food cake and devil's food cake. But! I did add a devilishly tangy component of my own (and made from scratch) to make the chocolately devil's cupcakes that much more diabolical: a sea-salt caramel filling.

You can probably guess which of these cupcakes I prefer. But it was interesting to make both of them. I've actually never baked angel's food cake, and using cupcake tins produced some fascinating results. For one thing, the instructions were to not coat the pans before baking, and the cupcakes stuck to them!

Once I got them out and tasted them, they were chewy and tasted much like toasted marshmallows.

The middle part was that light, airy white cake that pairs so perfectly with fruit and cream, though. Thus, my angel:

As for the little devils, I made my first homemade caramel from a recipe I received in my cupcake class a few months ago. It's so simple! You just boil a bunch of sugar in water for a while, add some heavy cream, butter, lemon juice and sea salt and voilà!



Okay, admittedly, I think I left the sugar boiling for a few seconds too long and the caramel was slightly burnt-tasting. At the same time, it kind of works for this particular recipe — the salty tanginess is just a little sharper than normal. My friend Reed, fellow Top Chef (and Glee) fan and courageous cupcake taster, generously called the caramel "smokey," which is actually even more in keeping with the demonic/fiery hell theme of the "devil's" cupcakes. So I'm going to go with that. :)

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Gimme S'More!


Once, during a brainstorming fit, I came up with a whole bunch of "genius!" ideas for cupcakes. Some really were delicious-sounding (chai tea cupcake with a creamy-gingery frosting), though I came to realize that none of them were particularly groundbreaking.

The one that made me salivate the most was an idea for a s'mores cupcake featuring a rich chocolate cupcake with a marshmallow-y topping and some kind of buttery graham cracker crumbly thing sprinkled generously on top.

Of course, I'm not the first person to come up with a s'mores cupcake. So, I feel a little less special than I did before, but at the same time, it's so awesome to see the seemingly endless cupcake variations of this campfire classic. To see a whole roundup of s'mores cupcake recipes from the web, check out this list from the lovely ladies who edit Cupcakes Take the Cake.

The most recent s'mores cupcake I came across is this one (pictured), currently offered on Fridays at Boston's Kick*ss Cupcakes. The flavor description reads: "graham cracker cupcake with chocolate ganache and a toasted vanilla bean marshmallow."

Um... yum!?!

Interestingly, this same bakery is apparently holding a competition in October to find new cupcake ideas. Clearly I can't submit my s'mores idea, but there are plenty of others where that came from! I just might want to Google the ideas before submitting...

Monday, September 28, 2009

Cupchives: Bittersweet Cafe Birthday Treats

Wellll, okay, "cupchives" is my way of combining "cupcake" and "archives," as in, older, archived photos/stories about cupcakes. Aw, just humor me! :)

The vegan cupcakes are coming later this week — really! Along with a special themed treat on Wednesday, which is, as everyone knows, Top Chef Day. More to come on that...



For now, I present some photos from my last birthday, November 2008. I went on a "cupcake crawl" around San Francisco, though at some point it turned into just cramming my face full of sugary treats of any sort. First stop: Bittersweet Cafe on Fillmore Street.



As you can see, I couldn't stop at just one little mini-cupcake.



In addition, I had to try the dense chocolate biscotti (which turned manageably soggy — but not gross — when dunked in the amazingly rich cup of Blue Bottle Coffee), a chocolate cookie, and a homemade hunk of marshmallow which puts those gummy pre-packaged tubular marshmallows to shame. Seriously. The marshmallow cube was sugary but not too sweet, dusted finely with powdered sugar and dissolved beautifully in the mouth. Divine! The mini-cupcake was great as well — yummy chocolate cake topped by a dollop of light frosting. Not too much, not too little.

I'd recommend Bittersweet to anyone and everyone who has ever enjoyed anything sweet.


Sunday, September 27, 2009


"When you look at a cupcake, you've got to smile."

- Cake baker Anne Byrn

It's so true, isn't it?


Bienvenue à CupKate Land!

Welcome to my long overdue cupcake blog. I devote this blog to all things cupcake — from the history of the miniature cakes to my own adventures in baking to my exploration of the various cupcakery offerings around San Francisco (and elsewhere!).

This just might be the sweetest little blog around.



To start, I present some photos of the best cupcakes I've ever made, using a recipe for Hummingbird Cake (banana, pineapple, pecans, spices — utterly delicious) with a cream cheese frosting piped through my new (at the time) piping tools.



Behind them you can see the photos of how they should turn out, and this is probably my most true-to-picture production of...well, anything ever. I brought these into the office and proudly passed them around. After gulping down some, ah, not as perfect cupcakes over about a year and a half, my coworkers were thrilled with these.







Stay tuned for more cupcake awesomeness. Tomorrow I'm venturing once again into vegan territory — and this time I'll actually capture it in photos before they're all gobbled up. :)