When peaches come to mind, many of you probably think “Georgia,” but a peach in summer always says “Louisiana” to me. I grew up on Ruston peaches, and no peach tastes quite the same. I recently spent a week with family in the Bayou State, and what other special ingredient could I chose to include in a batch of cupcakes?

I chose two ripe–but not overripe–peaches for this recipe from Cupcake Project, one I’d not tried before. (I used a different frosting recipe than the one included there, see below.) I peeled the peaches and cut them in slices that I then chopped in thirds. I’d read that cutting the peaches up into smaller pieces decreased the flavor, and I wanted to avoid that! It turned out well, chunks of flavorful peaches and cake that was not at all heavy.

adding peaches

I used my stepmom’s KitchenAid Professional Bowl-Lift Stand Mixer to make these, and I have to say I like my KitchenAid Artisan Tilt-Head Stand Mixer better. I am ok with being no professional, if that is what that means! I really like having a tilting head, and I found it difficult to add ingredients without one. Though perhaps I would get used to it, I disliked having to lower and raise the bowl–or remove it entirely. I also missed the pouring shield I often use at home. That said, it is still a great mixer, and it certainly got the job done!

kitchen aid

Another change, I used an ice cream scoop this time. It’s a pretty standard method, but I don’t own this type of scoop myself. I still like my soup spoon method–I’m just so used to it!–but this works nicely, too. I tried a larger scoop, then switched to a smaller one.

icecream scooper cupcaking

For the frosting, I used a brown sugar recipe also found on the Cupcake Project website. It was simple to make. I melted butter and mixed in brown sugar, bringing to a boil, adding milk (I used 2%) and boiling for a few minutes. Once the mixture cooled to a lukewarm temperature, I whipped in powdered sugar. The frosting tasted like a sweet caramel with molasses, which is really exactly what it was.

brown sugar icing

This brown sugar topping was very sweet, as you might expect, but the peach cake was less so, and it was a successful mix.

“Is this the best cupcake you’ve ever made?” asked one satisfied taste-tester. I don’t know about that, but they certainly were good!

While all adults agreed, the kids–my nephews, 2 1/2 and 4–weren’t so pleased. They licked the frosting, then abandoned my cupcakes for M&M cookies. I think the molasses taste was a bit sophisticated for them, I’ll try again in a few years!

peach cupcakes

More photos from this post can be found in the Photo Gallery!

I decided to make cookies and cream cupcakes with cream cheese frosting for my boyfriend’s birthday party. He doesn’t like his sweets super chocolatey, but he is a fan of the Oreo. The recipe I used was from Annie’s Eats, except I did not put a cookie at the bottom. (I did add extras to the batter. No one complained.)

You see, I had another cookie idea, and it couldn’t be buried at the bottom of a cupcake.

penguin cookie cutter

My man, as it happens, is a fan of penguins. When I came across this cookie cutter in a local shop, I knew I had to do something with it for him.

I wanted a cookie close in taste and texture to an Oreo wafer, so I searched for a chocolate wafer recipe, settling on one from FoodNetwork.com. They didn’t turn out to be as intense in flavor as I might like, but in combination with the cupcakes, they worked. (And I perhaps like my flavor more intense than average.)

I iced their tummies, gave them eyes, and my waddle of penguins was ready to party.

penguin cupcakes

We had a lot of fun with these guys during the birthday celebration, both before and during their consumption. Watch the video.

The second photo is by me, the above and the nice cookie cutter shot are © Jason Yung.

Perhaps cupcakes aren’t ideal for sand, sea, and sun, but friends and I had planned a day at the beach, and it was the perfect opportunity to create seashore-themed treats!

Seashore Cupcakes by Amelie
Cupcake Amélie at Brighton Beach

I started by baking a batch from one of my standby recipes, the Classic Chocolate Buttercream Cupcakes from Fergel Connolly‘s 500 Cupcakes. I like making them when I want a less intense chocolate, they use just a few tablespoons of cocoa in the batter. They were my first cupcakes to get rave reviews, and they are my default when I need a sure thing and/or just want to concentrate on decoration.

Hurdle #1: Missing Ingredient

My first challenge of the night was a near-empty bag of self-rising flour, which I don’t often use. This particular recipe calls for it, though, and I didn’t have enough. So, I made some extra by adding 1 1/2 teaspoons of baking powder and 1/2 teaspoon of salt to 1 cup of regular unbleached all-purpose flour. Voilà, self-rising flour! (As an aside, I’m not entirely sure why this recipe calls for self-rising flour and additional baking powder, why not just call for regular flour, baking powder, and salt?)

Hurdle #2: Bottom-of-the-Barrel Blue

The real fun was making these into beach and ocean. I mixed up my regular Vanilla Buttercream Icing for them, putting cocoa in half the batch. I planned to color the rest blue for my faux water.

I pulled out my handy dandy box of food coloring, popped the top of the blue, and squeezed gently. Nothing. I squeezed harder. Nope. I ended up cutting the bottle open, scraping the coloring out with my finger and swirling it into the icing (yes, I’d washed my hands). There is still, several days later, a blue cast to that fingernail.

I grabbed a Wilton 1M tip, filled a pastry bag with the blue goo, and started piping without a real plan. I made squiggles, then peaks, starting to pipe more freely and aggressively.

“Choppy water!” both the friend who had joined me to decorate and I exclaimed in unison.

Ocean Cupcakes

Hurdle #3: Faulty Fondant

The fondant I had on hand, leftover from another project, was rock hard when we pulled it out of it the container I’d thought was airtight. Microwaving in 5-10 second bursts helped to a certain extent, but eventually we had to take more drastic measures, working soft butter into it.

Red Fondant

It was still a nightmare to work with. My friend made me throw out the excess, we won’t be working with that batch of fondant again! While I frosted the rest of the cupcakes with chocolate and made graham cracker “sand,” however, she did manage to make reasonably realistic starfish, beach balls, a towel, shark fins, and, randomly, a sunbathing alien. I arranged them as I saw fit, we added a few cocktail umbrellas, and called it a night. For amateurs, I think we did pretty darn well.

Seashore Cupcakes

Hurdle #4: Mr. Sunshine

It wasn’t a hot, hot day, but the sun’s warmth still did a number on the icing, melting my waves and making a mess of our decorations. (I feel a heat vs. icing experiment coming on… Stay tuned for a future post!)

Oddly, I think the taste was enhanced by the heat, especially for the chocolate-frosted cupcakes. The chocolate buttercream seeped into the chocolate cake almost to the point, in at least one case, of seeming as if I’d filled them with it.

On the cupcakes with the plain vanilla icing, however, it seemed to melt the butter from the icing into the cupcake, leaving plain sugar on top. It didn’t work as well as the chocolate, in my opinion, but it wasn’t a horrible occurrence. One friend suggested I melt butter on baked cupcakes, then ice them. I’m trying not to clog my friends’ arteries in one fell swoop, though!

All in all, they were a success, my sunbathing companions were pleased. We were even able trade one for a beer from a beach vendor.

“This is the best cupcake I’ve ever had,” he said. “I mean…” He looked around. “My sister isn’t here, is she? Really, this tastes amazing, better than any I’ve eaten before!” I think he was drooling a little.

My photographer—and fondant designer—for this post was Jennifer Pinkowski. Learn more about her and her work at www.jenpinkowski.com.

My friend requested something with berries and chocolate for her son’s birthday, so I started thinking about the ways I could incorporate berries into cupcakes. Strawberries cooked in? Mix berries in the icing? Core the cakes and drop a fresh, raw strawberry in?

Ready to make some icing?

Then I was reading about a well-received frosting for a strawberry birthday cake that was made with fruit preserves to get around the problem of introducing too much liquid when using fresh berries. I was planning to use strawberries, blackberries, blueberries, and raspberries, so when I saw a jar of no-sugar-added berry preserves at Le Pain Quotidien that included all of the above, I snatched it up.

In my research, I came upon recipes with anywhere from one teaspoon (right…) to half a cup of preserves per batch of icing. I started with my basic buttercream with a little cream cheese–I had about 3-4 oz. leftover from something else–and added preserves a tablespoon at a time.

I kept going until it tasted just right.

Most of the jar ended up going in, and I added some extra powdered sugar to get the right consistency. Once it was a nice flavor and color, it was ready to meet its cupcakes!

I had baked a batch of chocolate cupcakes, half mini and half regular size. I tackled the small ones first, using a basic round tip to pipe a good dollop of icing onto the cakes.

I finished them with berries, 2-3 raspberries and/or blueberries on each and some with one big, juicy blackberry. The large cupcakes got several berries or one large strawberry.

I took them off to a two-year-old’s birthday party, where they were met with high acclaim. They were quite pretty and tasty, if I do say so myself!

More photos from this post can be found in the Photo Gallery!