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Key Lime Cupcakes with Coconut Frosting

3 Aug

Last Sunday I did another Random Act of Cupcakes.  In what has now become Random Act of Cupcake tradition, I had no plans to make cupcakes.  Rather, I was cleaning out my closet and (finally) found my beloved Lilly Pulitzer scarf. That got me thinking about palm trees,  then that got me thinking about key lime pie.  Next thing you know I was at the grocery store looking for key limes and thinking up a way to make a coconut frosting.

I thought about my never-fail butter cream frosting, and thought that if I just swapped out the regular milk for coconut milk, it should do the trick nicely.  I was right! Holy coconutty goodness!! When I was all done I had 18 insanely delicious key lime-filled cupcakes with coconut frosting.  They were so good I had to share, so I took to twitter and withing minutes the hilarious @ALL_CAPS and I were arranging a delivery time! (BTW: If you aren’t following him on Twitter you should!)

I have to tell you, these cupcakes tasted so good actually I cried a little bit when I was eating one.  I have received more compliments on these cupcakes than I have received in a very long time (and I get a lot of compliments for my cupcakes, let me tell you!)

So, if you’re looking for a cupcake that channels key west, break out your Lilly Pulitzer dress and serve up some of these babies at your next backyard barbecue.  I have visions of serving these at a super-cute baby shower – the little lime slices just scream the kind of cuteness  that a baby shower calls for!

Key-Lime Filled Cupcakes with Coconut Frosting

1 Large lime
3 egg yolks, plus 1 whole egg
1 pkg (18 oz ) Yellow cake mix
1 pkg ( 3.4 oz ) Vanilla instant pudding mix
1 1/4 cup Water
1/3 cup Vegetable oil
1 tsp coconut extract/flavouring

Filling
1 can Sweetened condensed milk
1/3 cup Key lime juice (about 8 key limes)

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

Prepare the cupcake batter:
Zest the lime until you get 1 teaspoon of zest, and set aside. Squeeze the lime and reserve about two tablespoons of juice.  Set aside.

Separate three of the eggs, placing the yolks in a mixing bowl along with one whole egg.  Place the egg whites in a container and store in the fridge for another use.

To the eggs, add the cake mix, pudding mix, water, oil, coconut flavoring, lime zest and juice.

Blend with an electric mixer until the batter is smooth.

Scoop the batter into lined cupcake pans, and bake at 350 degrees for about 20 minutes.  Remove from oven and place cupcakes on wire racks to cool for 10-15 minutes.

Prepare the key lime filling:
Cut the key limes in half and juice until you get 1/3 cup.  Key limes are pretty small, and they tend to vary in their smallness, so you will need about 6 or 8 key limes.

Place the sweetened condensed milk and Key lime juice in a small bowl and whisk together until combined.   At first you will think that it is going to be far too runny, but the reaction between the milk and the juice makes the mixture thicken very quickly.

Spoon the mixture into a pastry bag fitted with a medium tip. Press the tip 1/4 inch into the top center of each cooked cupcake and squeeze the bag to insert a generous amount of filling into the cupcake, lifting the tip out of the cupcake as you squeeze.

Pipe with coconut frosting and garnish with a key lime slice and sprinkle with a mixture of flaked, sweetened coconut and lime zest.

Coconut Frosting

This frosting is based on the Magnolia frosting that I use frequently.

1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, softened
6 cups confectioners’ sugar
1/2 cup coconut milk
2 teaspoons coconut extract/flavouring

Place the butter in a large mixing bowl.

Add 4 cups of the sugar and then the coconut milk and coconut extract. On the medium speed of an electric mixer, beat until smooth and creamy, about 3-5 minutes.

Gradually add the remaining sugar, and mix until the icing is thick enough to be of good spreading consistency. You may need to add more or less of the icing sugar depending on the taste and consistency that you are looking for.

Random Act of Cupcakes

16 Jul

I woke up yesterday morning and declared it Cupcake Thursday; but instead of just going out and treating myself to a cupcake I thought it would be more fun to treat others to some.  So, I took to twitter and asked if anyone was interested in having cupcakes.  Within seconds I had replies!  I decided to pick the first two people who responded (Corey Tamas and Dana aka Wankergirl).

I’m pretty sure they both thought I was kidding – I mean, cupcakes delivered absolutely free, with no strings attached just because some crazy twitter chick wanted to do something nice.  meh. works for me.

So how does a grrl bake up a batch of cupcakes to send to her favourite tweeps? Remember the cupcakes in little jars I made and sent to my dad to surprise him last Father’s Day? That’s how!

This time I made red velvet with cream cheese frosting.
(I will post the recipe this afternoon.)

I packed them up and shipped them out this morning.

and now I wait. I hope they like them :)

I think we should start a Random Act of Cupcakes movement!  Send someone cupcakes and make them smile!

Not Your Mama’s Coleslaw

13 Jul

I came up with this coleslaw last summer when I was looking for something really pretty to include in a cookbook that I was working on.

I had a head of red cabbage in the fridge, and threw it together with a mishmash of other goodies I had lying around, and what I came up with has turned out to be my absolute favourite thing to serve with my world famous El Bandito Chili Rubbed Ribs.  It’s definitely not the coleslaw I grew up with.

Not Your Mama’s Coleslaw

1 small head red cabbage, very thinly sliced
2 large carrots, peeled and julienne or shredded
1 small green pepper, chopped into small cubes
1 can mandarin oranges, drained (but reserving juice)
2 green onions, chopped
1 cup chopped, fresh parsley
1/2 cup dried cranberries
1/2 cup raisins
1/4 cup sunflower or pumpkin seeds
1/4 cup sliced almonds
1/4 cup olive oil
1/2 cup white wine vinegar
1 clove garlic, crushed (optional)
Salt & pepper

Add cabbage, carrots, green pepper, mandarin orange segments, onions, parsley, cranberries, raisins, seeds and almonds to a large bowl.

In a small bowl or large measuring cup mix the oil, vinegar (garlic if you are using it) and reserved mandarin orange syrup. Stir well.

Pour over the salad and season with salt and pepper. Toss to ensure the dressing is evenly distributed.

Lemon Burst! Cupcakes

26 Jun

the lovely sassyredhead answered my cry for lawnmower a few weeks back, and offered to trade it to me in exchange for a batch of cupcakes.  Now how could I resist that trade?!  We chatted for a bit, and she decided on lemon cupcakes.  I’ve been wanting to make some lemony cupcakes for a while so it was perfect.

The recipe I used was based on a Kraft lemon cream cheese cupcake, but I added a lemon curd filling.  The recipe says it makes 24 cupcakes, but I would like to know how on earth that is possible.  I got 14.
Here is my slightly modified recipe:

Lemon Burst! Cupcakes

1 pkg. (2-layer size) white cake mix
1 pkg. (3.4 oz.) lemon flavour instant pudding
1 cup water
4 egg whites
2 tbsp. oil
prepared lemon curd
1, 8 oz pkg cream cheese, softened
1/4 cup (1/2 stick) butter, softened
2 Tbsp. lemon juice or 1 tsp pure lemon extract
1 pkg. (16 oz.) powdered sugar

Preheat oven to 350ºF.

Beat the first 5 ingredients in large bowl with mixer on low speed until moistened. Beat on medium speed 2 min. Spoon into 24 paper-lined muffin cups.

Bake for 21 to 24 min. or until toothpick inserted in centers comes out clean. Remove from pans and allow cupcakes to cool.

Filling:
Fill a frosting bag (equipped with a round tip) with lemon curd.  Insert the decorating tip deep into the top of the cupcake and squeeze the curd into the centre of the cupcake.  I found that I got more filling in there when I swirled the tip around inside the cupcake a bit. Gently pull the tip out as the curd fills the cupcake.  Continue this until you have filled all of the cupcakes.

As the cupcakes are cooling

Frosting:
Beat cream cheese, butter and juice with mixer until well blended. Gradually add sugar, beating on low speed after each addition until well blended. Fill a frosting bag with the icing and pipe it on the cupcakes.

Lessons learned:
I used lemon extract instead of lemon juice because I wanted to have a really nice strong lemon flavour.  What I hadn’t counted on was that the extract being a bit oil-based, played havoc with the frosting, and made it a bit runnier than I would have liked.  This resulted in me adding even more icing sugar than I would have wanted to.  The frosting tasted really really sweet.  In the future I will definitely use the lemon juice instead.  Lucky for me, the sweet icing still went really well with the cupcake.

The cupcakes that I made for sassyredhead were decorated with blue, yellow and white frosting.  For myself I opted for simple white with a lemon slice candy. I ate 2 or them myself, and gave the remaining 6 to Roz! Hope she likes them :)

These cupcakes are definitely worth making.  Very, very delicious!

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Cupcakes in a Jar

26 Jun

I thought I’d kick off my return to blogging with a little ‘how to’.

cupcakes in jars

After wanting to do this for months I finally got around to making cupcakes in a jar last week.  It was the perfect treat to send my dad for Father’s Day.

Here is a photo guide to how I made them.

Step 1:

Sterilize jars and lids in boiling water and set aside to cool.

jars

These are your basic 1/2 pint preserve jars. I found them at Wal-mart for about $7/box of 12.  I have seen them cheaper, but I was in a hurry.

I just boiled them for a few minutes and removed them from the water with tongs and laid them on a clean dish towel while the cupcakes were baking.

Step 2:

Bake cupcakes without paper liners.  I didn’t fill the pans as high as I usually do because I wanted to make sure they would fit in the little jars.

baking cupcakes

Step 3:

Removed the baked cupcakes from the pans and let them cool a bit on a wire rack. Cut the cupcakes in half; place the cupcake bottoms into the jars. Press them down gently to make sure they fill the bottoms and don’t leave big air bubbles.

cupcake bottoms in jars

Step 4:

Pipe a thin layer of frosting over the bottoms.

frosting layer

Step 5:

Place the top halves of the cupcakes on top of the frosting and press firmly.

cupcake tops

Step 6:

Pipe a small layer of frosting on top of the cupcakes, making sure not to add too much.  Decorate with candy sprinkles.

cupcake in a jar

Voila!

Place lids on the jars and decorate with pretty ribbon.  It’s just that simple. :)

cupcake in a jar

Yes, I know they won’t look this good when the jars are opened, but you know what, I’m OK with that – it’s the thought that counts, right? I know I wouldn’t complain if I recieved a surprise package of cupcakes in the mail. ;)

Apparently they can be frozen in the jars. You would just remove them from the freezer a few hours before you want to eat them.

I packed them in boxes with lots of tissue paper. They shipped wonderfully.

Thai Pumpkin Soup

9 Mar

Hell has officially frozen over. There’s nothing to do but suck it up, snuggle under a blanket and eat something warm. I’ve been thinking about this soup I had last Thursday at a work event to kick-off nutrition month (which is this month). The soup I had on Tuesday had some breast meat from a rotisserie chicken thrown in, which made it a little heartier.

It’s what I’m making for dinner tonight, dammit! Cold. Bah!

Thai Pumpkin Soup
Ingredients:

1 onion
3 cloves of garlic
2 tbsp grated ginger
1 tsp of red curry paste
1 – 28 oz can of pumpkin puree (not pumpkin pie)
1 can coconut milk
Soup stock or water
Salt and pepper to taste
Lime juice to taste
Cilantro as a garnish

Directions:

Fry the onion, garlic, ginger and red curry paste for 5 minutes or until the onions are soft.
Add the soup stock, pumpkin puree and let simmer for 10 – 15 minutes.
Add can of light coconut milk
Add salt, pepper and lime juice to taste
Garnish with cilantro

Add some chopped, cooked chicken if you like.

what’s a cupcakecowgrrl’s blog without cupcakes

1 Mar

I made cupcakes for a small work bridal shower tomorrow. I thought it would be cute to make her a dozen (cupcake) roses.

The recipe says it makes about 2 dozen cupcakes (depending on the size of your cupcake papers and muffin tins)·but I always get 30 – never fails.

Magnolia Bakery’s Cupcakes
1 1/2 cups self-rising flour
1 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, softened
2 cups sugar
4 large eggs, at room temperature
1 cup milk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Preheat oven to 325 degrees.

Line two 12-cup muffin tins with cupcake papers.

In a small bowl, combine the flours. Set aside.

In a large bowl, on the medium speed of an electric mixer, cream the butter until smooth. Add the sugar gradually and beat until fluffy, about 3 minutes. Add the eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition.

Add the dry ingredients in three parts, alternating with the milk and vanilla. With each addition, beat until the ingredients are incorporated but do not overbeat. Using a rubber spatula, scrape down the batter in the bowl to make sure the ingredients are well blended. Carefully spoon the batter into the cupcake liners, filling them about three-quarters full. Bake for 20–25 minutes, or until a cake tester inserted in the center of the cupcake comes out clean.

Cool the cupcakes in the tins for 15 minutes. Remove from the tins and cool completely on a wire rack before icing.

Magnolia’s Vanilla Buttercream Frosting
Makes enough for 2 dozen cupcakes

1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, softened
6 to 8 cups confectioners’ sugar
1/2 cup milk
2 teaspoons vanilla extract

Place the butter in a large mixing bowl.

Add 4 cups of the sugar and then the milk and vanilla. On the medium speed of an electric mixer, beat until smooth and creamy, about 3-5 minutes.

Gradually add the remaining sugar, 1 cup at a time, beating well after each addition (about 2 minutes), until the icing is thick enough to be of good spreading consistency. You may not need to add all of the sugar.

And the finished product…


and they actually PAY me to do this stuff!

23 Feb

If you were readers of my previous blog you probably know that I have been a freelancer for a for a while. You probably also know that I love to cook, and that I make killer cupcakes. Well, it just so happens that all of these little things have come together in my latest project.

I have been asked to contribute to a cookbook. Yay me! OK, so it’s not a dirty-big Food Network-type cookbook, it’s actually a charity project through Health Canada, but I’m super-excited about it. The best part is that I not only get to contribute some of my favourite concoctions, but I get to have a hands-on role in the book’s design, including photos. How cool is that?!

Now I have to go through my old site archives to dig up some of my favourite recipes (I actually don’t have them written anywhere else). It will be fun to go back through some of that stuff. I actually have a load of other recipes that I have had fun experamenting with over the past few months, and definitely have a few regular go-to dishes now that I really love. I will try to post some of them here for feedback.

Isn’t it cooll when all of the things you love to do come together in a project! I’m really excited about this one.

The Lunch Project

5 Jan

I figure the simplest thing I can do right away to save money and cut down on waste is to bring a lunch to work each day. I just started a new job last week, and I think I was actually more excited about packing my lunch than I was about starting the job.

Last spring I bought a Mr. Bento lunchbox thinking it would be a nice thing to have for when I did return to an office outside my home. So far it’s been great! I’ve packed a lunch everyday (though I only took a picture of the first day). It’s been a great way to use up leftovers that would otherwise have ended-up in the trash, and it saved me a load of money that I would have spent on buying my lunch at work (probably somewhere around $10/day). I’ve started buying things in larger packages for lunches now, things like yogurt and frozen bags of fruit; that way I’m cutting back on packaging. I find it is much easier to toss some chopped veggies, dried fruits and nuts in the little containers to make sure I have things to munch on throughout the day.

These are actually things that I don’t often eat at home, even though I know I should. I’m finding that packing lunch ensures that I eat better, and it also helps me control the portion size. Double bonus! I did a little reading online and found some other good tips for packing lunch in an eco-friendly manner, such as:

  • Avoid actually ‘brown bagging it’, and use a good, reusable lunch bag.
  • Use reusable containers instead of plastic wrap, plastic bags, and aluminium foil.
  • Get yourself a set of ‘lunch utensils’ and keep them with your lunch bag; that way you can avoid using disposable ones.
  • Avoid pre-packaged food items Buy larger or bulk sized snack items and pack them in containers to cut down on waste.
Here are a few links to some reusable lunch bags and containers that I love:

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