I dedicate this post to Onada; whose favourite books are 'The Other Boleyn Girl' and a book on Marie Antoinette, is
Since I had an open bottle of champagne and have been wanting to try this recipe from Cuckoo's Bakery in Edinburgh via Stylist Magazine, it was the perfect occasion. I'm as indifferent towards champagne as I am the royal family - I'll drink it but I'd never ask for it - but these cupcakes make champagne taste good! You can't taste the champagne in the soft, delicate cake once they've been baked but the flavour is clear in the filling and the frosting. Clear, but not overwhelming and it helps to temper down the sweetness of those two elements of the cupcake. It is an amazing cupcake! Maybe my favourite cupcake I've ever made!
As you can see, I tried to do the red, white and blue of the British flag but without much success. My cakes turned out pink rather than red and my blue is sky blue rather than navy. Ah well, who cares with cupcakes so good!
Ingredients
160g unsalted butter
160g caster sugar
170g plain flour
2 1/2 tsps baking powder
3 large eggs, room temperature
3 tbsps champagne
125g unsalted butter at room temperature
275g icing sugar, sifted
4 tbsps champagne
8 tbsps raspberry jam
4 tbsps champagne
- For the cake: Preheat oven to 180C / Gas Mark 4 / 350F. Line a cupcake tin with 12 cupcake cases
- Cream the butter and sugar for two minutes using an electric mixer
- Crack the eggs into a jug and lightly beat them, add the champagne to them
- Combine the flour and baking powder in a bowl and add to creamed butter and sugar mixture
- Add the egg and champagne to the bowl
- Mix them at a medium speed for two minutes, scraping down the bowl as necessary
- Divide the batter among liners and bake for 18 minutes. Insert toothpick to test. They are ready if the toothpick comes out clean. Remove from oven and leave to cool on a rack
- For the buttercream: Place the butter into a mixing bowl and mix with an electric hand mixer until soft and whippy, about 2 minutes
- Sift the icing sugar into the bowl and slowly blend with the mixer. Increase the speed of the mixer slightly and beat together for 4 to 5 minutes, scraping down the side of the bowl as necessary
- Add the champagne and mix everything together for a further one minute at a slow speed
- Filling: Mix the raspberry jam and champagne together in a bowl
- Using an apple corer (or just a regular knife as I did), core out the centre of each cooled cake
- Using a teaspoon, fill the cored out cake with the champagne jam mixture and replace the cored out sponge back into the cake (You'll probably have to cut off most of the sponge from the middle and only put the cored out top back onto the cupcake)
- To decorate: Frost each of the cakes with a palette knife or piping bag and nozzle. Decorate with your favourite sprinkles, a cocktail firework or a fresh raspberry.
Thanks for the dedication! Too bad I can't taste it. You almost get a pardon for baking Jubliee cupcakes in honor of the queen!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful! I know you've frozen mine, I'll get it when I'm back :p
ReplyDeleteOMG!!!!!! Gosh....I'm in luv wit ur blog...wonderful pics..
ReplyDeleteAs someone who tasted them, I can confirm they were awesome! Defo one of my favourites Vickii.
ReplyDeleteVery chic Vickii, i really like! how did you achieve to two color buttercream effect?
ReplyDeleteI like the sparkly sprinkles too. Divarish cupcakes!
@Onada: I'll take that as a full pardon thank you very much ;)
ReplyDelete@Adura: Thank you! *Cough* Sure sure sure
@Dobby: Thank you so much :)
@Lara: Thank you :)
@Cake and Socks: Thank you! I use a disposable piping bag so after you've put in your frosting tip, using a spatula, place your first buttercream colour onto one side of the piping bag. Then turn the bag so that the first lot of frosting is on the upper side of the bag and use a clean spatula to try and place your 2nd colour on the bottom side of the bag. It won't be very tidy but once you're ready to pipe, your frosting will come out two toned
:)
These are so pretty!
ReplyDeleteIf you're like me and don't really care for champagne, there is something else that seems the same but FAR better. Champagne is far too dry for me, I prefer something sweeter so when I have a celebration I purchase Asti Spumanti. A very good line here in the US is Martini & Rossi Asti Apumanti. Give that a try. It's far tastier in my opinion. All I know is I would make a lousy celebrity snob as I don't care for Champagne and caviar isn't at the top of my list. In general its far too salty for me. I gave up salt MANY MANY years ago as a teenager (it was the first health fad of the day long ago) and I've become very accustomed to very little salt. Anyway, I've only had caviar one when that I thoroughly enjoyed it and believe it or not, it was in a dip served with crackers of the head CEO of an architectural firm I worked for in the early 80s. Both of the couple are long gone and to be honest, it wasn't until later I realized what it was I had eaten but by then I wasn't going to go back and ask Mrs. Cochran for a recipe. Any other way I've been served it as a little dollop on something its been salty to me. It wasn't horrible, I could eat it, but it wasn't the "be all and end all" that people act like its suppose to be. At least to me. So I guess I don't have "Champagne taste" but as I don't like beer, AT ALL, I don't have "beer taste" either. Not sure where anyone would classify me. I'll go with a nice cocktail everytime.
ReplyDeleteNot living in the country I may not know what happened. Why was the day prior to this posting a "sad day?" What happened?
ReplyDelete