Why I'm making cupcakes for Easter
Every Easter weekend my baking plans seem to get left to the last minute, even when I know in advance what we鈥檙e supposed to be doing. So it gets to Saturday morning and I鈥檓 prowling the supermarket aisles looking for inspiration, and those Easter eggs that are just seem too depressing to give to anyone vaguely adult. It鈥檚 early springtime, and food needs a little joy and freshness to reflect the season, so cupcakes are the answer this year.
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For last-minute baking that looks impressive in a flash, cupcakes have the advantage as they鈥檙e quick to make, bake and cool down for decorating. With larger cakes there鈥檚 hidden time that doesn鈥檛 get mentioned in recipes - whether it鈥檚 lining the cake tin or waiting for the cake to cool - all extra stress you don鈥檛 need when you鈥檙e busy. Cupcakes also suffer less from the physical dynamics of baking, as the small size and crust-to-crumb ratio means they鈥檙e much less likely to sink if the ingredient measurements are slightly out.
Decorating can be very easy and has the added bonus of helping to balance the flavour. Before icing a cupcake I like to taste it first and see if it needs something. If the spice hasn鈥檛 come through, or if the flavour is a little too plain, I鈥檒l make the icing richer or flavour it strongly. You can use up small amounts of sprinkles or chocolate left in the cupboard so long as they're not stale or discoloured, as variations look good on a plate of cupcakes.
One challenge to watch for is dryness, as cupcakes can over-bake easily and suffer more from because of their size. Grated carrot and other root vegetables, apples and unripe pears help, as does dried fruit as the it contains helps to attract moisture into the crumb. Another trick is to replace some of the butter in a recipe with full-fat cream cheese as this helps the crumb taste moist when you bite into it.
Any cake recipe you鈥檙e happy with can be used to make cupcakes by just reducing the baking time. I find that for muffin-sized cupcakes about 25 minutes at 180掳C/160掳C fan/350掳F/gas 4 is a reliable starting point for the first tray, perhaps peeking in a few minutes before the timer finishes to check. Small fairy cake-sized cupcakes need much less time.
I've come up with some special cupcakes for Easter this year: a spelt carrot cupcake with cream cheese frosting, a mini-simnel cupcake and a spiced Easter 鈥渂un鈥 cupcake made in a fraction of the time it takes to whip up a batch of the traditional yeast ones. So what are you baking this Easter?
Dan Lepard is a food writer for the and a baking expert.听
Comment number 1.
At 22nd Apr 2011, sariyumurta wrote:This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the house rules. Explain.
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Comment number 2.
At 6th May 2011, Liverpool Restaurants wrote:I have to say I'm really not a fan of cup cakes, yes the can be quick and easy to make and offer a great variety options but I find them boring. I feel like like they are a quick way of making something that can look good but isn't a patch on other cakes.
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Comment number 3.
At 7th May 2011, Dan Lepard wrote:I鈥檒l agree with you in part as I鈥檓 not a fan of most cupcakes I taste. Wipe off the icing - often made with dubious fat that leaves a waxy coat on your tongue - and often you鈥檙e left with a slightly stale plain cake with a coarse crumb and a dull bland flavour. So I think there is some mediocre baking out there hidden under the swirl of a cupcake.
But鈥hat doesn鈥檛 make the cupcake genre bad or suggest anything wrong with baking 60g of cake mixture rather than 600g. If it鈥檚 a good cake mixture to begin with it won鈥檛 be better or worse for the size it鈥檚 baked.
I can see how you might think that, given the shoddy quality of many cup 鈥渃akes鈥 on sale but really the problem lies with the bake and the recipe rather than the unit.
In the name of fair reporting I should also add that I taste many poor quality large cakes in my work. If we were to put all our woops of nationalistic baking fervour to one side and get on with picking up more kitchen skills we could easily be much better cake bakers.
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