Showing posts with label Frosting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Frosting. Show all posts

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Week 14 - Marshmallow Fondant

Never liked fondant!

Never liked cakes made with fondant!

Until I tried this recipe for marshmallow fondant.  Now I am a believer.  I always figured why go to the effort to make a cake that tastes gross . . .  but not anymore!

1 regular bag of marshmallows (small or large -- it doesn't matter)
a 2 pound bag of powdered sugar
food coloring
a little water

Decide what colors you want a head of time and how much you might need of them. 

Put the marshmallows in a microwaveable bowl.  Melt them (30 second intervals for about 2 minutes). 

Once melted, you can easily add the food coloring to the marshmallows (but you can always color it later if you want to)

Put the powdered sugar onto a clean counter and make a mound out of it and then depress the center to make a bowl (like mashed potatoes waiting for gravy or like how you make homemade pasta).

Start mixing the 2 together.  (Yes, it will be messy)  As it starts to come together you can add a tiny bit of water to help it all congeal.  Keep kneading.  And then keep kneading! 

When you have a nice ball of fondant dough, use immediatly OR spread some shortening around the outside and put it in a ziplock bag.  Store (I put mine in the fridge, but I don't think you have to)  It will keep a LONG time.  (Unless you let your kids have a taste -- then it will start to disappear!!!)

Monday, March 1, 2010

Week 7 - Texas Sheet Cake


I grew up having lots of Texas sheet cake and always liked it but never remember thinking I had to have it. Right before we moved away from Texas to Connecticut my mom's friend Linda T. brought this Texas sheet cake to a get together. I could not keep away from it. I probably ate 4 squares of it. I immediately asked for the recipe and wrote it down. I stuck it in my binder. I moved. I forgot all about it. I found it a while ago and realized I could not actually make Texas sheet cake as I did not own a jelly roll pan.

But, now I own 4 of them. I also found powdered buttermilk at the store so I have buttermilk whenever I want (like for this recipe) although both my Mom and my sister said they just add vinegar to milk -- I guess I missed learning that substitution.

It did not disappoint. It was delicious. The frosting especially. I had to lick the spoon and bowl.

In a saucepan bring to a boil
1. 1 cup water
2. 1/4 cup cocoa
3. 2 sticks margarine (I used butter as sticks of margarine are tricky to find here in the greater NYC area -- I can get them at Stop N Shop, but not costco, trader joe's, or stew leonards which are the 3 stores I shopped at this week).

Remove from heat and add
1. 2 cups sugar
2. 2 cups flour

Stir well, then add
1. 1/2 cup buttermilk
2. 1/2 tsp cinnamon
3. 1 tsp vanilla
4. 1 tsp baking soda

Pour into a jelly roll pan (I sprayed mine with Pam although I don't know if it is necessary) and bake at 350 for 20 minutes.

While it is baking make the frosting.
Boil together
1. 1/4 cup cocoa
2. 1/4 cup plus 2 Tbs buttermilk
3. 1 stick margarine (again, I used butter)
4. 1 tsp vanilla

Remove from heat (it looks really creamy and like you want to taste it, so I did and it is awful at this point -- only bitter chocolate!!!)

Now stir in 1 pound of powdered sugar and 1 cup of nuts if you so desire.

When the cake is done, let it stand 5 minutes then pour the frosting on top. Don't forget to leave some in the bowl because now it tastes really good!
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Saturday, November 28, 2009

Mint Chocolate Chip Cupcakes

 


My friend brought me a grasshopper cupcake from Crumbs the other day. It was good. It had everything I like in desssert, chocolate, chocolate, and mint. So I decided to try my hand at making them myself. The result was even better than the original! And not hard to do at all!

First, make a batch of chocolate cupcakes. Just follow the directions on the box. Any chocolate mix will work.

Next, make a bowl of instant chocolate pudding. Again, just follow the directions on the box. Let it set for about ten minutes and the put the frosting into a piping bag with a small tip (I use the little star tip)

Then, make some homemade frosting. (this is definately worth the effort)

1 1/2 cups of Crisco vegetable shortening (this is the one thing that I have noticed a taste difference between the brand name -- Crisco and the generic ones, so go ahead and splurge on the Crisco -- it will matter)
2 pounds of powdered sugar
1/4 tsp salt
1/2 - 2/3 cup of milk
1 tsp vanilla

That is the basic recipe -- for this specific cupcake, lower the vanilla to 1/2 tsp and then add 2 tsp of peppermint extract. (I always taste it -- you may decide you like it mintier and add more -- or you may decide that 1 1/2 tsp of peppermint is enough)

Now -- after you have added the vanilla -- but before you add the peppermint, get a quart freezer ziplock bag and put in 2 heaping spoonfuls of the white frosting.

Then add the peppermint and several drops of green food coloring to the big batch.

I then load the green mint frosting into a piping bag with a plain tip -- although for this cupcake you could just put it on with a knife.

Last, gather or prepare the chocolate shavings -- I used hershey's bar that I chopped. You could use mini chocolate chips (that is what crumbs uses) or really any chocolate. How can you go wrong???

Now you are ready for the assembly.

1. Make sure the cupcakes are completely cool.
2. Using the piping bag filled with chocolate pudding, shove the tip into the middle of the cupcake about 3/4 of the way down the metal tip. Then squeeze about 1 1/2 Tbs of pudding into the middle of the cupcake. You will see the cupcake get kind of fuller and when it is "full" the pudding will be at the top of the hole. Do this to all the cupcakes.
3. Now frost them nice and green. Important, go all the way to the sides -- so that when you roll them in chocolate there is something for the chocolate to stick to.
4. Take your freezer ziplock of white frosting and snip the corner and add the little dollap of white in the middle.
5. Roll the edges in the chocolate.

6. This step is not necessary, but I think it makes them better. Refrigerate them for an hour or two. It gives the pudding a chance to set up even firmer and gives the cake a chance to absorb all the moisture from the pudding and be so yummy and moist.

7. Eat and Enjoy.
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Friday, November 21, 2008

The trouble with decorating . . . SOLVED

Most people I know love decorating cookies and cupcakes and love eating them that way. But no one likes making all the frosting, getting out all the piping bags and tips, and the mess involved. For several years now (as you can see in a previous post) I have only used freezer ziplock bags with the edge snipped to pipe icing. That way you can throw it all away, but it does limit your designs significantly. My aunt Kelli is a cupcake fanatic and hers always look so beautiful, but she uses a wilton 2D tip, which to me means, messing piping bags or specialty parchment paper ones that are not found at any of my local stores-- but yesterday I thought I would try using the 2D tip in a freezer ziplock and . . . it worked fabulously. I was a little worried it would leak due to the 90 degree angle of the bag and the 30 degree angle of the tip, but the freezer bag held up nicely. It was so easy and mess free. I just spooned one store bought tub of icing into the ziplock where the tip was waiting in the corner. I clipped the corner of the bag just enough to let the tip slide slightly into the hole. It worked like a charm. If ziplock really wanted my life to be easy they would make triangle shaped ziplock freezer bags.