Tag: unsalted butter

Cupcake bouquet

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Ingredients

For the cakes:

  • 100g unsalted butter
  • 100g caster sugar
  • 100g self-raising flour
  • 2 eggs
  • Zest 1 lemon
  • ½tsp lemon extract

For the leaves:

  • 50g fondant mixed 
  • Green food colouring
  • ¼tsp tylose powder (optional)

For the buttercream:

  • 1x 250g tub mascarpone
  • 80g unsalted butter, room temperature
  • 400g icing sugar
  • ½tsp vanilla extract
  • Varied food colours for the roses

You will also need:

  • Deep mini muffin pan with 20 mini cupcake cases
  • Piping bags with Wilton 1M nozzle
  • Flower pot
  • Polystyrene ball – cut in half
  • Cocktail sticks
  • Small bag of salt or something to weigh the pot down
  • Tissue paper and ribbon
  • Double sided tape
  • Scissors
  • Mini rose leaf cutter

That’s goodtoknow

Food colouring gels are much better than using liquid as the liquid food colours make the buttercream runny

Method

For the cakes:

  1. The day before – add the tylose powder, if using, to the fondant and knead well. Add green food colour until you get your desired shade, roll to 1/8 of an inch thick and using the leaf cutter cut 40 leaves. Leave them to dry on greaseproof paper or a drying sponge but not in an airtight container or they won’t dry.
  2. To make the cakes, add all the ingredients into a large bowl and beat until smooth. Don’t overbeat or the mix will be greasy and your cases will peel. Bake in the oven for 20 minutes at 160°C/325°F/Gas Mark 3. Remove and cool for at least half an hour before assembling the bouquet.

For the buttercream:

  1. Beat the mascarpone and butter until light a fluffy then add the icing sugar a bit at a time until smooth. Add the vanilla and beat again. Don’t over beat or the icing may become runny.
  2. Divide into 4 and colour as you wish.

To assemble the bouquet:

  1. Start with decorating your pot. Wrap a piece of ribbon around the pot and stick down with double sided tape. Tie a bow with a piece of ribbon and stick over the join.
  2. Weigh the pot down with a food bag of salt/rocks from the garden etc.
  3. Lay the tissue paper over the top of the pot, Victoria used two squares and to make it look like flower paper. Push the halved polystyrene ball into the pot, pushing the paper down with it.
  4. Take the cocktail stick and prick a hole in the centre of the bottom of each cupcake.
  5. Push the cocktail sticks into the centre of the polystyrene ball. Push them half way in, then pop a cupcake onto the stick to hold it in place.
  6. Start in the middle, putting 6 cupcakes around the centre one and then filling in the gaps after that. If you run out of cakes, don’t worry, you can pin the paper up around the cakes to fill in any gaps. Once the bouquet is full, you can start to ice your cakes.
  7. Add the icing to your piping bag. Pipe 5 roses onto the cupcakes, starting in the centre and piping over what you already piped by millimetre. Then repeat with the other colours until all the cupcakes have been decorated. Watch our how to pipe cupcake roses video.
  8. Finish off by adding the rose leaves to fill any gaps. Store in a cool place and remember not in a window or the flowers will melt off the cakes.

By Victoria Threader
Victoria Threader on Google+

What do you think of this recipe? Leave us your comments, twist and handy tips.

More Valentine’s day recipes

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Flourless fudge cake

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Ingredients

  • 200g bar dark chocolate 70% cocoa solids
  • 250g unsalted butter
  • 2 star anise, crushed to a powder to make 1/2 tsp
  • 300g light soft brown sugar
  • 6 medium eggs, separated
  • Zest of 1 large lime
  • Pinch of salt
  • Cocoa powder for dusting
  • Crème fraiche, to serve
  • 22-23cm (81/2-9in) loose-based/ spring-form tin, buttered and base-lined with baking parchment

Nutritional information

Each portion contains:

  • Calories373

    19%

  • Fat25.0g

    36%

  • Saturates14.0g

    70%

of an adult’s guideline daily amount

That’s goodtoknow

Leave to cool before serving for the best taste.

Method

  1. Set the oven to 160°C/325°F/Gas Mark 3. Break the chocolate into a heatproof bowl and add the butter, in chunks, and star anise.
  2. Put the sugar and 4 tbsp water in a small pan. Bring to the boil, stirring, until the sugar dissolves. Pour the syrup over the butter and chocolate and stir until smooth. Stir in the egg yolks and lime zest.
  3. Whisk the egg whites with a pinch of salt in an electric mixer to soft-peak stage. Add about a third of the egg-white foam to the chocolate mixture, folding it in with a big metal spoon, then gently fold in the rest of the egg white.
  4. Pour into the tin on a baking sheet and bake for 50-60 mins. Check if the cake is cooked by inserting a skewer, which should come out almost clean. The cake will have risen but will sink back and crack on cooling, and will still be a bit soft in the middle.
  5. Leave in the tin to cool, then take out and dust with cocoa powder. Slice and serve with crème fraiche.

By Woman’s Weekly

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Sweet Corn & Wild Mushroom Spoonbread – Best Cornbread Dressing I’ve Ever Accidentally Made!

It’s always nice when you start out making one thing,
and it unexpectedly turns into something else, which ends up being far better
than you expected. Such was the case with this quite homely, yet amazingly
delicious sweet corn and wild mushroom spoonbread.


I was trying to do a simple, wild mushroom-studded,
sweet corn casserole to reinforce our holiday side dish repertoire, and before I
knew it, I was eating the best, most flavorful cornbread dressing I’d ever
tasted. Not only that, but we completely eliminated the step of having to make
corn bread first!

Of course, I wish I could do stuff like this on purpose, but
like my golf buddies used to say, “better lucky, than good.” The only drawback,
as I obsessed over in the video, was the less that stellar appearance when it
came out of the oven. 



I may try some type of gratin topping next time, but
honestly, this was so wonderful tasting that I can’t even pretend to be upset
over such superficial concerns.  I
hope you give it a try soon. Enjoy!



Ingredients for 12 portions:
1/2 cup dried porcini mushroom pieces, softened in 1 cup hot
tap water, squeezed dry
1 stick (1/2 cup) unsalted butter
3/4 cup all-purpose flour
3/4 cup yellow cornmeal
1/4 cup sugar
1 teaspoon fine salt
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 tsp freshly ground black pepper
cayenne to taste
2 large eggs
1 cup buttermilk
1/4 cup milk
1 pound sweet corn, drained well
1/4 cup chopped green onions
oil to grease baking dish
Bake at 350 degrees F. for 30-35 min

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