Tuesday, August 10, 2010

If at first you don't succeed, throw it all away!

Tips:
  • Dust chocolate chips, blueberries, chopped strawberries, etc. with flour to prevent sinking in batter.
  • Separate your eggs when cold but allow the egg whites to reach room temperature before beating to achieve more volume and stiff, firm peaks.

I have these great aspirations for cupcakes so good you cannot eat just one which may defeat the purpose of these individually portioned treats but isn't it nice to have goals? It all started Friday when I thought to myself, "Wouldn't white chocolate filled vanilla cupcakes topped with strawberry buttercream frosting be delicious, like a flavor packed White Chocolate Covered Strawberry?" These were my exact thoughts,.. too bad my cupcakes nor the frosting were receiving my well thought out ESP signals. Instead they took on a mind of their own. The perfect little Vanilla Cupcake basically spit out my idea of a white creamy chocolate-y middle and sunk my chocolate every time I tried, tried again even after I dusted them with flour to keep the chocolate suspended within the batter. I tried placing two melting chocolate disks pushed down in the middle of the batter, placing a grouping of white chocolate chips in the middle of the batter and finally sprinkling as many white chocolate chips as the cup would hold on top of the batter in high hopes that even if the chocolate did sink, there were so many chips, they would be scattered throughout the cupcake. Finally, success! I cut open a fresh still warm from the oven cupcake and my white chocolate chips came oozing out of the bottom middle... 5 minutes later...poof! The chocolate hardened into a crunchy state. Not exactly my idea of white chocolate tastiness but I digress.

On to my fabulous buttercream.. or it was until I added 1 cup of chopped strawberries turning my once stout buttercream to a creamy mess. At first I thought I added too many strawberries, which I did, 1 cup to 1 lb of confectioner's sugar is not an even match but even after adding another pound and counting, my perfect buttercream was destroyed. The only saving grace is it was definitely tasty when paired with my Vanilla Cupcakes (with the crunchy white chocolate floating around the bottom) but in the end it all met its doom in my trash can. I could not handle constantly cleaning up drips from the counter top with every bite I took.

Monday I took another stab at Strawberry Buttercream frosting, white chocolate cupcakes and a new recipe for White Chocolate frosting. My thinking being, if I cannot succeed at Strawberry Buttercream this time, I have a fall back because I know I cannot mess up icing with an egg white base.

Wow, have the mighty fallen! Strawberry Buttercream Frosting... FAIL! Still a creamy mess! White Chocolate frosting ...FAIL! Everything was going great until I added the butter and white chocolate then it became a lumpy creamy mess! White Chocolate cupcakes...FAIL! This time I added 10 ounces melted white chocolate chips to the recipe trying to replicate the addition of white chocolate chips from another recipe I read online but using my Vanilla Cupcake recipe. This actually was not too disasturous. Because I had leftover yolks from the White Chocolate frosting debacle, I thought I would replace two out of the 4 eggs in my Vanilla Cupcake recipe with egg yolks to try to obtain the denser texture everyone seemed to love in the yogurt version of the Vanilla Cupcakes. I added a couple tablespoons of water to offset the liquid. The taste of the cupcake was Vanilla Cupcakes. I added a couple tablespoons of water to offset the liquid. The taste of the cupcake was quite delicious, however, it seems there was not enough "binding" in the batter to hold the cupcakes together so while very moist and great texture, the cake, out of the cupcake wrapper fell to pieces.




I look forward to the day when I will get it through my thick skull to make only one change at a time to a recipe. Maybe if I had left the recipe and eggs alone and simply added the chocolate, I would be sitting here today raving about my great cupcake skills! Maybe if I had only adjusted the eggs and not added any chocolate, I would also be raving about my great cupcake skills. Instead, I am defeated and overly sugared up with a trash can full of cupcakes and frosting.


On a more positive note, I have purchased Shirley Corriher's book Bakewise: The Hows and Whys of Successful Baking and will soon be learning everything I can about why I use baking powder in some recipes and baking soda in others, why my cupcakes sink and how to make them more moist. Crossing my fingers, it will be a good investment.






Strawberry Buttercream Frosting from Southern Living


Yield: Makes 2 1/2 cups
Ingredients

* 1 cup butter, softened
* 2 (16-ounce) packages powdered sugar, sifted
* 1 cup finely chopped fresh strawberries

Preparation

Beat butter at medium speed with an electric mixer 20 seconds or until fluffy. Add powdered sugar and chopped strawberries, beating at low speed until creamy. (Add more sugar if frosting is too thin, or add strawberries if too thick.)

White Chocolate Buttercream Icing from eHow
Step 1
First you need to make sure you have White Chocolate that has "Cocoa Butter" as one of the first two ingredients on the package.

Step 2
Take the chocolate and place it into a bowl and place the bowl over a pan of simmering water. Be careful not to let any water get into the chocolate or it will bind up. You may also place the chocolate into a microwave safe bowl, cover it with plastic wrap and microwave for 10 seconds at a time. Removing it after each 10 seconds and stir.

Step 3
Take the egg whites and beat till soft peaks form. Now start to gradually add the sugar a little at a time. When all the sugar has been incorporated beat on high till stiff peaks form.

Step 4
Add the butter a little at a time.

Step 5
Now add the melted white chocolate while beating slowly and then beat till smooth. You're done.

This will make about 6 Cups of Icing.

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