Bake It in a Cupcake: 50 Treats with a Surprise Inside
By Megan Seling
4.5/5
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About this ebook
Bake It in a Cupcake takes the cupcake craze to the next level, operating on the logical assumption that the only thing better than a delicious cupcake is one with a sweet or savory treat—mini pie, fruit, chocolate kiss, breakfast cereal, baklava, cheese, even egg—hidden inside it. As the saying goes, it’s what's on the inside that counts.
Based on Megan Seling's popular blog Bake it in a Cake (www.bakeitinacake.com), Bake It in a Cupcake includes 50 recipes—many accompanied by color photographs and step-by-step instructions so that even inexperienced bakers will find it easy to make these fun, eye-catching, and unique desserts. Recipes are organized into chapters by what's inside, whether that's another baked good, fruit, or your favorite candy.
Bakers of all ages and experience levels will enjoy making—and eating—Seling's delectable filled creations like Banana Pudding Pie Cupcakes with Butterscotch Frosting, Miniature Cherry Pie Dark Chocolate Cupcakes with Vanilla Bean Frosting and Mission Fig-Spiced Cupcakes with Vanilla Frosting.
“Brimming with fun and decadent recipes . . . an essential volume for the adventurous baker.” —Jessie Oleson, author of CakeSpy Presents Sweet Treats for a Sugar-Filled Life
“I've sampled several dozen of Megan's stuffed cupcakes—each a delicious work of art and a mind-boggling feat of engineering—and now it's your turn. Prepare to have your mind and your taste buds blown—along with any preconceived notions you may have had about what a cupcake can be.” —Dan Savage, author of Savage Love
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Bake It in a Cupcake - Megan Seling
INTRODUCTION
You love to bake. Or maybe you just love gawking at the delicious-look ing results of someone else’s hard work in the kitchen. Either way, this book has something for you: This is a cookbook dedicated to cupcakes and all the delicious things you can bake inside of them.
I grew up in a family of amateur (but terrific) bakers—my great-grandmother was known by neighborhood kids as the Cookie Lady, and my grandma (Hi, Grams!) makes the best oatmeal–raisin cookies you’ve ever had. But the baking bug didn’t bite me until one winter when I went on a holiday cookie–baking binge. I found the act of baking both relaxing and fulfilling, but it wasn’t long before I wanted to do more than just follow a recipe. I started small—changing the amount of certain ingredients just to see what would happen, or substituting one cookie mix-in for another based on what I had in my kitchen, but I never got too wild.
Until one spring day, after being inspired by an aisle of 50 percent–off Easter candy, I wondered what would happen if I baked a miniature Cadbury Creme Egg into the center of a cupcake. Duh! Why didn’t I think of this before? I grabbed a boxed cake mix, a tub of frosting, and an armload of foil-wrapped chocolate eggs, and rushed home to begin my sweet scientific experiment.
It worked! And friends raved. Thus the idea of Bake It in a Cupcake was born. Since the summer of 2010, I’ve been baking pies into cupcakes, French toast into cheesecakes, and Twix into brownies, and I’ve posted many of my results on my Web site, www.bakeitinacake.com. Over time, I crafted what I believe to be the perfect cupcake recipe—a slightly heavier cake that can hold the candy insides—and whipped up a really simple but oh-so-delicious buttercream frosting base which I use on just about everything.
Within these pages there are fifty recipes that make up a collection of creations that will satisfy even the most monstrous sweet tooth. There are even some savory recipes—Chili- and Cheddar-Filled Biscuits and Egg-Filled Croissant Cups with Swiss Cheese and Chives, just to name a couple.
The best part (I bet you thought it couldn’t get any better): This is only the beginning. One of the greatest aspects of baking things into other things is that the list of possibilities is literally endless. So at the end of the book I’ve left some space for you to begin building your own Bake It in a Cupcake creations. On here I have shared some tips so you can learn from my mistakes—and believe me, my kitchen has seen many messy mistakes.
Gone are the days where you have to choose cake or pie for dessert. With Bake It in a Cupcake recipes you can have them both at the same time. As the old saying goes, it’s what’s on the inside that counts.
BAKING TIPS AND RECOMMENDED TOOLS
You don’t need fancy kitchen gadgets or expensive designer cupcake tins to get the results seen within this book. With stuffed goods growing increasingly popular every day, the baking industry has come out with a slew of different gadgets that make it easy to create filled cupcakes—I’ve seen everything from cupcake corers to spiked muffin tins that supposedly hold your treat in place. You can buy those things if you want, but I did everything in this book using a small collection of easy-to-find items, many of which you probably already have in your kitchen. Here’s a list of what this book will ask you to use, as well as a few lessons I’ve learned along the way. You don’t have to take my advice, of course. Get crazy and take a risk. Dive right in and see what happens. That’s how this whole thing started, after all.
WHAT YOU WILL NEED (AND SOME STUFF THAT’S NICE TO HAVE)
An electric stand or hand mixer
Two 1 2-cup (average-size) muffin tins
Two 24-cup (miniature-size) muffin tins
A 1-inch cookie dough scoop
A good, sturdy spatula or wooden spoon
Measuring cups and measuring spoons
Cookie sheets
A rolling pin
Parchment paper
Nonstick baking spray
Mixing bowls
A pastry bag with assorted tips
A sense of adventure and a sweet tooth
WHAT YOU WILL NEED TO KNOW
• As far as I can tell, you cannot bake chewy, fruit-flavored candy like Starbursts, jelly beans, gummy candies, or taffy into a cupcake. I’ve tried. Believe me, I’ve tried. Sour Patch Kids are one of my all-time favorites, and I’d love to put them in a cake. But because they’re basically just flavored sugar, the softer candies melt and sink to the bottom of the cupcake tins, resulting in an inedible, gooey mess. Such candies are best used as decoration or, if you must do something with those Buttered Popcorn Jelly Bellies, you can melt them down and whip them into frosting.
• Sadly, marshmallows don’t work, either. I’ve tried ’em frozen, I’ve tried ’em covered in chocolate—I’ve tried big ones and small ones. Every single time, without fail, the air-filled sugar puffs just dissolve into nothing. They’re far too sensitive to heat. If you love marshmallows (Me too!), marshmallow creme works great in frosting (see here).
• You can bake just about any candy bar into a cupcake. Snickers, Take 5, Whatchamacallit, York Peppermint Patties, Almond Joy, PayDay—they all work wonderfully in both cupcakes and brownies. The heavier candy bars give the best results when baked in the brownie batter, as it’s denser, making it harder for the candy to sink.
• If you want to go rogue and bake something into a cake without a recipe (You can do it!), I recommend baking half a pan’s worth of cupcakes first, just to make sure your idea works. Now that I say this, it sounds like common sense; but there were several times when I was so excited to try a new idea, and so sure that it was going to work, that I baked off all my cupcake batter in one fell swoop, only to be left with ugly lumps of disappointment and no cupcake batter left to try again. Bake a small batch first, and if it doesn’t work, you still have some batter left, so your day isn’t a complete waste.
• Be fearless. I wonder if I can bake a mozzarella stick into a muffin. There is only one way to find out!
Chapter 1
BAKED GOODS IN A CUPCAKE
Coconut Macaroon Brownie Cupcakes with Chocolate Ganache
Banana Pudding Pie Cupcakes with Butterscotch
Baklava Honey-Vanilla Cupcakes with Spiced Frosting
Coconut Macaroon Key Lime Cupcakes with Key Lime Frosting
Seven-Layer Bar Brownie Cupcakes
Cherry Pie Dark Chocolate Cupcakes with Vanilla Bean Frosting
Lemon Bar Vanilla Cupcakes with Fresh Raspberry Frosting
Coconut Cream Key Lime Cupcakes with Toasted Coconut Frosting
Snickerdoodle Chocolate Cupcakes with Hot Chocolate Frosting
Cyclops Cookie Cupcakes with Peanut Butter Chocolate Frosting
Boston Cream Puff Pie Cupcakes with Chocolate Ganache
The Cheesecuppie Cake: The Ultimate Dessert
Oreo Cupcakes with Marshmallow Chocolate Frosting
Cheesecake-Filled Spiced Pumpkin Cupcakes with Nutella Frosting
Cadbury Creme Eggs were the first candies I baked into a cake, but the first baked good I ever put into a cupcake was a miniature cherry pie. I stood next to the oven, with my fingers crossed tightly, hoping that my seemingly genius idea would actually work—I had to fight the urge to open the oven door every 2 minutes to see how things were coming along. Just over 20 minutes later, voilà! It worked! The mini cherry pie, crust and all, was sitting pretty in the center of the warm chocolate cupcake, just as I imagined it would. And it was absolutely delicious.
That was the very moment my new hobby became an obsession. That very day I made a list of all the other pies I could bake into a cupcake—peach, blueberry, blackberry, apple, etc. A list of cookies, cake, and other desserts soon followed. As this chapter proves, just about any baked good can be baked successfully inside a cupcake, including miniature pumpkin pies, coconut macaroons, peanut butter blossom cookies, and even baklava. Sure, some of these treats require twice the effort, but all your hard work results in twice the reward, too.
Coconut Macaroon Brownie Cupcakes with Chocolate Ganache
An absolute MUST for anyone who is a fan of Almond Joy candy bars! A moist, homemade macaroon is baked in the center of a rich brownie and, for an extra dose of chocolaty goodness, these brownies are topped with a thick layer of ganache. I sprinkle mine with toasted almond slices, but if you’re not feeling like a nut, you can also top them with toasted coconut or even leave them naked.
MAKES 15 CUPCAKES
MACAROONS
1 egg white
1 cup sweetened condensed milk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 (16-ounce) package finely shredded unsweetened coconut
BROWNIES
4 ounces unsweetened chocolate, broken or chopped into small pieces
¾ cup (1½ sticks) unsalted butter
2 cups granulated sugar
3 large eggs
½ teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup unbleached all-purpose flour
¼ cup sliced almonds, or finely shredded unsweetened coconut, for garnish (optional)
CHOCOLATE GANACHE
4 ounces semisweet chocolate, broken or chopped into small pieces
2 tablespoons heavy cream
1 tablespoon unsalted butter
1. To make the macaroons, preheat the oven to 325°F and line a cookie sheet with parchment paper. In a medium bowl, mix together the egg white, condensed milk, and vanilla. Pour in the coconut and continue to mix until all the coconut is coated evenly. Use a tablespoon or a 1-inch cookie dough scoop to form tight mounds of the mixture and place them on the prepared cookie sheet. Bake for 15 to 20 minutes, until the macaroons are golden brown. The cookies will be fragile when first removed from the oven, so allow them to cool on the pan for at least 10 minutes before moving them to a wire rack. While they finish cooling, make the brownies.
2. To make the brownies, increase the oven temperature to 350°F and line 2 standard muffin tins with 15 paper liners. Place the chocolate and butter in a medium microwave-safe bowl and microwave on high for 90 seconds, stopping halfway through to stir the butter and chocolate together. After 90 seconds, continue to stir the butter and chocolate until all the chocolate chunks have melted completely into the butter. (If you microwave any longer, you risk burning the chocolate, so it’s best to be patient and let the chocolate melt slowly while you stir.) Using a wooden spoon, stir in the sugar. It will be thick and grainy, and the sugar should be distributed evenly. Next, stir in the eggs one at a time until the mixture is smooth. Add the salt and vanilla and stir for an additional 20 seconds, until they’re both incorporated. Finally, mix in the flour until just combined, taking care not to overstir.
3. Put a heaping tablespoon of brownie batter into each cup in the prepared tins. Place one macaroon in each tin, pressing it gently into the batter, and then top the macaroon with more batter so the top and the sides are completely covered. The tins should be about three-quarters full. Bake the brownies for 23 to 25 minutes, until they have begun to set. Begin checking for doneness at 20 minutes, as ovens vary. You can test by sticking a toothpick into the side of the brownie—if it comes out clean, they’re done. Be careful not to overbake, though, or your brownies will be dry. Allow the brownies to cool in the cupcake tins for 10 minutes, then transfer them to a wire rack to cool completely. If you are topping your cupcakes with toasted almonds or coconut, leave the oven on and spread the nuts out in a single layer on a nongreased baking sheet. Spread the coconut out in a thin layer on a cookie sheet lined with parchment