Some people smoke, some people go running and some people take the dog out for a walk. When I'm feeling stressed, a little bit sad or even just a little bit bored; I bake.
Tuesday, 8 November 2011
Summer Flower Jam Cakes
Red Raspberry Graduation Cupcakes
150g butter, softened
150g caster sugar
2 med-large eggs
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
125g plain flour
25g ground almonds
1½ tsp baking powder
1 tbsp red food colouring
12 teaspoons seedless raspberry jam, stirred so it is slightly runny
For the topping:
200g tub philadelphia cheese (I use low fat to try and limit the calorie damage)
2 desertspoons icing sugar
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/4 pack of ready made white fondant icing (if doing lettering) plus icing sugar for rolling out
Red writing icing to highlight your fondant lettering
Preheat the oven to gas 4 or 150 degrees centigrade.
For these cakes, I double line the muffin tins. This is to help stop the jam making the paper cases go too see-through.
Ensure that your butter is soft enough to cream well. Mix the butter and caster sugar together with electric beaters until light, creamy and fluffy.

Add 1 egg and the vanilla extract, then beat again. Add the 2nd egg and, again, beat well.
Next add in your food colouring. If using natural food colouring, you may need to add in an extra 1/2 tablespoon to ensure the mixture is a deep enough colour. Have a look at my photo for how vivid this colour should be. Beat this in as well. You may need to get a wooden spoon at this point and scrape any unincluded mixture into the bowl, as otherwise you will end up with uncoloured flecks in your cakes.
Once you are satisfied that your mixture is the correct colour, sieve in your flour and baking powder. Add in the ground almonds and mix with a wooden spoon until just combined, making sure there are no uninvited lumps of unmixed flour hiding in there.
Spoon the mixture equally into your 12 cases. I normally put a bit in each and then top them up. Smooth down the tops without pushing all the air out.
Now for the jam; put a level teaspoonfull of the jam onto the middle of each cake. Using a cocktail stick or the handle end of a teaspoon, swirl in the jam. Don't go too mad with the swirling, you want to see ripples of jam in the mixture, but bot huge blobs of it.
At this point it is worth pointing out that your cupcakes will look quite gross. Mine look a bit like a gory accident...
Put your cakes in the oven to bake. They will take around 25 mins in total to cook. I always check mine after about 15 mins, as my oven has a rather annoying hot-spot at the back right, meaning one cake is normally sacrificed and burnt, even if i turn them round half way through.
Time for a tidy up. I am quite a messy cook...
Now I promised I would show any problems with my cakes, so here is one I will share. I use the silicon muffin tins for my baking. Unfortunately these cakes are very very fragile when they are only half baked, due to the jam hindering the rising slightly. The silicon cases are quite floppy so while I was turning mine around in the oven in an attempt to stop the back right burning process, I knocked the cakes. See the below pictures, I think they look a little sorry for themselves in their sunken states.
Photos above are before and after turning them around, they are very sunken in the 2nd image.
A little advice which I am going to try next time; either put the silicon cases on a baking tray, or use solid metal tins for this recipe - the cakes are too fragile to bash around!
The cakes are cooked when they are springy to the touch.
Leave to cool in the cases for 20 mins (to help avoid any further sinking incidents) then transfer to a wire rack to cool completely. Once on the wire rack, tease apart the two case layers so that the outer one stand out from the inner one. It is not necessary but makes the cakes look much nicer!
For the topping;
Mix your 200g tub philadelphia with 2 desert spoons of icing sugar and 1/2 teaspoons of vanilla extract. Once mixed it will go a little runny, so return to the fridge for 40 mins or so while your cakes cool off. It is very important not to put the topping on the cakes until they are completely cold, the cream cheese topping will go really runny and ruin your cakes!
If doing novelty lettering on you cakes, roll out your fondant icing on a surface you have dusted with icing sugar, so it doesn't stick. I use cookie cutters for my lettering, as i find it creates a neater finish than cutting them out by hand. Cut out your letters and lay them on a flat surface, dusted with icing sugar, for them to harden. Make sure they are not warped before you let them dry, you will break them if you try to bend them later.
Once cold, spoon 1 generous teaspoon or so onto the top of each cake and ease over the surface using the back of the spoon. Then carefully place your lettering on the top, being careful not to push it around to much once it is on there.
As these cakes have cream cheese on, it is advisable to keep them in the fridge until you need them, plus it will help to set the topping, which is a little glossy and runny.
Outline your fondant lettering in the red writing icing. This needs a steady hand and you need to try and do each one in a continuous line, as if the icing breaks it will look messy. Practise on some paper before if you need to.
Any they are finished! Dust with some extra icing sugar if you want to, just before you serve.
Bitter Chocolate Cupcakes

Monday, 7 November 2011
Vanilla Chocolate 'Half and Half' Cupcakes


Recreational Activities

