For everyone who thinks vanilla is
kinda blah - myself included - prepare to be proved wrong! Yeah, I said it!
I've never tried to make vanilla
cake/cupcakes/anything. Vanilla is just soooo ... vanilla! Or so I thought. But
then a friend asked me to make 60 cupcakes for her engagement/fiancĂ©’s birthday
party - half of them red velvet and half of them vanilla, and not relishing the
thought of having 30 crappy cupcakes on my hand on the day of the party and
delivering only half (the red velvet which I've made before) to the party, I realised
I'd have to try out a recipe or four (as many as it took to get them right)
before my cupcake-athon (great idea by the way, I could raise money for charity
by eating erm, I
meant baking, cakes for charity - just an insight into how my ingenious mind
works! ;p).
So now that
the decision was made, all that was left was to find a few recipes and choose
which one to try first. Easy. Right? Ummm, No! I have LOTS of cake books but do
you know I could not find a single vanilla cupcake recipe??? And I refuse to
turn to the Internet when I currently must have about a gazillion (rough
estimate) cake recipes on my bookshelf which I haven't yet tried. So finally
(as is always the way, it was where I looked last) I turned to a book I had
never used; The Crabapple
Bakery Cupcake Book by Jennifer Graham. And right
there on the very first page was a recipe for vanilla cupcakes. Yay! And what
cupcakes they were; fluffy and so tasty that I still find it hard to believe
they came from such a simple recipe! This is officially my new favourite
cupcake book - sorry Martha Stewart!
If you live in Victoria, Australia
(which must be a fantastic place, judging by the name ;p), then you have to
check out the Crabapple Bakery because even if their cakes are only just as
good as their recipes, then they must be amazing!
I was also practising my icing
technique which needs so much work; but more on that in a later post. If
you were ever going to try making cupcakes; I suggest you start with these :D
Sorry measurements are all in cups!
But to be honest, a lot of the best recipes are American or Australian so if
you're a keen baker, I suggest you invest in a set.
Ingredients for the cupcakes
2 and three quarters cups plain flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
200g softened unsalted butter
1 and three quarters cups caster
sugar (I used golden)
4 eggs
1 tablespoon vanilla extract (I used
2)
1 cup milk
Makes: 24
Keeps: 2 days
Freezes: 2 months
Ingredients for
Vanilla Buttercream Frosting
200g softened unsalted butter
1/2 cup milk
1 tablespoon vanilla extract (I used
2)
8 cups icing sugar (I found I only
needed around 6 and a half)
Makes: Enough
for 24 cupcakes
Keeps: 1 week
Cupcakes
1 - Preheat oven to 170ÂșC. Line two
12-hole muffin trays with cupcake papers
2 - Mix together the flour and the
baking powder
3 - In a separate bowl, cream the
butter for 1 - 2 minutes. Add the caster sugar a third at a time, beating for 2
minutes after each addition. After the last addition, beat until the mixture is
light and fluffy and the sugar has almost dissolved
4 - Add the eggs one at a time,
beating for 1 minute after each addition or until mixture is light and fluffy.
Add the vanilla extract and beat until combined
5 - Add a third of the flour to the
creamed mixture and beat on low speed until combined. Add half the milk and
beat until combined. Repeat this process. Add the remaining third of the flour
and beat thoroughly until combined; do not over-beat as this will toughen the
mixture
6 - Spoon mixture into cupcake
papers, filling each about three-quarters full. Bake for 18-20 minutes or until
a fine skewer inserted comes out clean
7 - Remove cupcakes from trays
immediately and cool on a wire rack for 30 minutes before frosting
Vanilla Buttercream Frosting
1 - Cream the butter for 1-2 minutes.
2 - Add the milk, vanilla extract and
half of the sifted icing sugar, and beat for at least 3 minutes or until the
mixture is light and fluffy.
3 - Add the remaining icing sugar and
beat for a further 3 minutes or until the mixture is light and fluffy and of a
spreadable consistency. Add extra milk if the mixture is too dry or extra icing
sugar if it is too wet.
If you wish to colour/flavour the
buttercream, this is the best time to do it. Add a drop at a time and beat in
until you reach the required colour and/or flavour.