Archive for December, 2008

Mimosa Cupcakes

Mimosa Cupcake – soft, fluffy orange cupcakes with Mimosa truffle topping and decorated with candied orange zest. Price available upon request.

bring on the bubbly!

I love the taste of freshly squeezed orange juice. I also love sucking on orange wedges. However, I just found this article that says that habitually sucking on orange, lemon and grapefruit wedges will result to a loss of the front teeth enamel because of acid erosion. Yikes! Since, I don’t habitually suck on those juicy wedges, I guess my pearly whites are safe. :-)

2009 is nearly here and I was thinking of what cupcake to make to celebrate this momentous occasion. Champagne came to mind. What’s more appropriate to escort out the old year and usher in the new one than sipping some bubbly? I tried a recipe called New Year’s Eve Pink Champagne Cupcakes. I don’t know if I did something wrong—the description promised a light cupcake but mine turned out dense, almost pound cake-like. I am not of the dense cake camp so this cupcake did not appeal to me at all.

While Googling for information on champagne, some results showed Mimosa. Now what is a Mimosa? A Mimosa is a cocktail of freshly squeezed orange juice and champagne. The ratio of champagne to orange juice varies from recipe to recipe, sometimes depending on personal tastes. Some call for two parts champagne to one part orange juice or vice versa or equal parts of champagne and orange juice.

So why not a Mimosa cupcake? The Cupcake Project has a recipe that I think has been making the rounds of cupcake blogs everywhere—I’m sure it tastes great. However, I concocted my own. I adapted one of my recipes into an orange-flavored one. I contemplated on adding orange extract but in the end, I just added lots of orange zest which is really a powerhouse of a flavoring besides being more natural than the commercial extract.

The cupcake tasted heavenly—it was fluffy and tender— and the citrusy aroma just permeates the air. The children in our house liked them so much that nothing was left for me to frost so I had to bake another batch. The Mimosa truffle topping I made has a subtle hint of champagne—it does not stand out but one can definitely taste it.

For the final touch, I chose candied orange zest. The recipe I followed stressed that “if any pith remains on the peel, scrape it away” so scrape away I did. The resulting candy was a joy and it delivers a happy burst of sunshine to the taste buds. I was quite proud of this feat as I never imagined myself making candied zest.

I would add this cupcake to my list of favorites. To me, oranges bring happiness and champagne evokes celebration and that’s what this cupcake reminds me of.

Candied Orange Zest from The Cake Bible

3 oranges, thick skinned
1 c sugar
1 c water
1 tbsp corn syrup

Peel the oranges with a sharp knife; avoid any white part of the peel when doing so. Cut the peel into julienne strips. Place in a heavy saucepan of boiling water, reduce to simmer and cook for 15 minutes. Drain; rinse with cold water. Place in the same pot as it was cooked in and add in the sugar, water and corn syrup. Bring to boil stirring constantly, then stop stirring. Add in the zest and cover with a tight fitting lid. Reduce to simmer and cook over low heat for 15 minutes without disturbing. Remove from heat and allow to cool in pan covered. Refrigerate the candy in syrup in airtight container. Store up to a month.

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a champagne by any other name . . .

Nowadays, a true champagne is one that is produced in the Champagne region of France. All others that employ the same method of fermentation are called sparkling wines. Sparkling wines produced in various parts of the world have their own designations: Spain, cava; Italy, spumante; (Italian sparkling wines made with muscat grape is called DOCG Asti); South Africa, cap classique; Germany, sekt.

18 comments December 31st, 2008

The Mighty Lemon Bars

twas the night before christmas …

After baking tons of goodies to fulfill Christmas orders (and tasting various versions of chocolate chip cookies), I was ready to nibble on something less sweet. My family was also in the same wavelength. Eight-year old P._ asked me to make his favorite lemon bars. A dash to the supermarket yielded no lemon harvest. Fortunately, I still had a stash of lemons just enough for an order of New York style cheesecakelettes and some mighty lemon bars.

I had instructions that these treats will be served strictly on Christmas day but the little ones could not resist. In the end, we all gave in!

Happy Christmas to all!

3 comments December 24th, 2008

A Cooky Story

Cookies were the very first thing I baked when I got interested in the culinary arts. It was December and while browsing through a women’s magazine, I saw a recipe for spritz butter cookies. The recipe looked simple enough to make. My mother was into cakes and has never baked a cookie in her life so it was a surprise when I found a cookie press somewhere in our kitchen drawers.

For a first attempt, the cookies baked just right and I was very pleased with the results. I baked them again, put them in tins and gave them as Christmas gifts to my colleagues in the office. One of our managers Mrs. A._ liked them so much she asked for the recipe which I shared willingly. A few days after, she called and said that her cookies didn’t turn out like mine—did I give the correct recipe and directions? Of course I did. Anyway, she gave up and just asked me to bake for her and told me she will pay for it—my very first order! Mrs. A._’s failure actually jump-started my cookie business.

I have since expanded my repertoire to include cakes, chocolate confections and now cupcakes. But I still enjoy cookies. In fact, when I established my business, I named it Cookie Blossoms.

Recently, my friend M._ asked what sort of party favors can her daughter give away to her classmates on her 10th birthday. Cupcakes are out of the list since one classmate already had them. I suggested extra large chocolate chip cookie pops. While baking one test batch, it occured to me that I have these cookie pop molds. So I baked some double chocolate chip cookies and these were how they looked like:

M._ told me that the children were delighted with the cookie pops and everything was devoured. I’m sure the adults would have loved them, too!

Add comment December 15th, 2008


Not Your Average Cupcake

Made only with the finest ingredients, baked to perfection and artfully decorated to give you a dessert experience nonpareil. All cupcakes are tested and developed in my kitchen in Paranaque, Philippines.

Cupcake Flavors

ABC Blocks
Alice in Wonderland
Angry Birds
Atis Delight
Basketball
Bees in the Garden
Billiard Balls
Blackgold Truffle
Blooming Garden
Buzzy Bee (Honey)
Caesar's Mint Chocolate
Calamansi Cloud
Chocolate Banana
Chocolate Carrot
Chocolate Naranja
Citrusy Sunflower
Confetti
Dalmatian (Cookies & Cream)
Days of Wine and Roses (Red Wine)
Dinos Rule!
Ebony and Ivory
Ebony and Ivory v.2
Flower Pot
Fortune Cookie
Good Golly Miss Holly
Hazelnut Freckles
I Love You
Macapuno-Ube
Mango Overload
Matcha Harmony
Matcha Harmony v.2
Midnight Bliss
Mimosa
Mocha Latte
Monogrammed Cupcakes
New York Style Cheesecakelettes
Nutella Hazelnut
Orange Creamsicle
Pistachio
Runner's Treat
Safari
Starry Night (Earl Grey)
Sweet Baby (Christening Cupcakes)
Sweetheart
Thriller Cake Project
Tiramisu
Vanilla Bean Heaven

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