Happy Christmas Eve!

Peppermint is one of my favorite holiday flavors. Paired with chocolate—a flavor for all seasons—I’m in dessert heaven.

chocolate peppermint

I baked these for Mala Yoga‘s Holiday Party. (Interested in me and yoga? Read my yoga story!) One of my yoga teachers doesn’t eat wheat but can tolerate spelt, so I had an opportunity to use some of the spelt flour I’d gotten from my CSA. I hadn’t baked with spelt before, and I was curious how it would go.

You will hear spelt referred to as an “ancient grain.” This is because it is an ancestor of modern wheat. Spelt has slightly fewer calories than wheat and more protein, fiber, and certain vitamins.

spelt flourspelt flour
My spelt flour came from Farmer Ground. Visit their website!

Spelt flour is NOT gluten free. It has a different type of gluten, one that is often more easily digestible for people with gluten sensitivities, but it is not suitable for those with celiac disease. Many who have a wheat allergy, however, can eat goods baked with spelt flour.

Baking with Spelt Flour

My research instructed me to reduce the liquid in my recipe by 1/4 and to let the batter rest 10 minutes before baking. Spelt apparently absorbs more moisture than wheat, or maybe it just reacts a little differently to water. Otherwise, I just used my favorite chocolate cupcake recipe, substituting the spelt flour for regular wheat flour.

chocolate peppermint spelt

They were yummy, I have to say. I could tell there was something different about them, but I couldn’t tell that much. The main thing I noticed was that they were a little more crumbly, but that was no problem. I’d be happy to bake again with spelt flour any time!

I made a peppermint buttercream (my regular vanilla frosting with natural peppermint extract) and topped them with crushed candy canes.

For Sugar Rush for Relief, I baked two different types of cupcakes—vanilla and pumpkin. I made regular vanilla cake with vanilla buttercream and pumpkin cake with cinnamon-, clove- and nutmeg-spiced frosting. (If you are looking for a recipe, the pumpkin were similar to these without the cranberries and with the additional spices in the frosting.)

spiced pumpkin cupcakes

I’d love comments from any who bought them at the bake sale, as it’s the first time I’ve baked and packaged a big batch. I hope they were a pleasing addition to your Thanksgiving dessert table. Thank you for supporting New York Cares!

vanilla cupcakes by amelie

Happy Independence Day, USA! I made you these.

I stuck with the basics for these patriotic cupcakes, vanilla with vanilla buttercream. The batter I colored blue, the icing red, using Ateco Spectrum Gel Food Colors.

blue vanilla cupcake with red vanilla buttercream icing

 

I made these Easter weekend, as you might guess from the decoration. Carrots, to me, also fit the spring theme. Bunny food, right?

I usually put golden raisins in my carrot cake, and no nuts. (I like nuts, but I don’t love nuts in my cupcakes.) Fresh out of raisins, I remembered I had some crystallized ginger stored away. Sounded like a good combo to me, so I chopped up the ginger and threw it in. The sugar cooked off and into the cupcakes, leaving slightly crispy chunks of pure candied ginger in with the shredded carrots.

carrot cake easter

I made a big batch of cream cheese icing, coloring some green to pipe as grass, the rest pink or yellow. I got lots of piping practice with the “grass,” for which I used a multi-opening decorating tip. I could have used icing with a slightly thicker consistency. Some of my grass looked a little like green spaghetti. The general idea came across, though! They were topped with M&M’s Speckled Easter Eggs Candy to finish the look.

All I can say is that they went fast! At the party where I served them, I ate two myself (usually I try to stick to one), and I don’t even love carrot cake. For me, the ginger made it.

green frosted Guinness cupcakeSt. Patrick’s Day was approaching, and I was pondering my cupcake options. It seemed an appropriate opportunity to try my hand at baking with booze, so I decided to make cupcakes incorporating Guinness, the best-known Irish stout.  I’m not a huge beer drinker, but Guinness happens to be one I do enjoy. It was the first drink, my boyfriend reminded me, that he ever bought me.

I followed this recipe from Holidays Central, but there are several versions across the web to consider trying. Some add Baileys and/or whiskey to complete the Irish alcohol theme. This one uses reduced Guinness in both the batter and frosting, embracing the stout flavor. The alcohol is cooked off, so these cupcakes are appropriate for all. My changes were that I used bittersweet instead of unsweetened chocolate and reduced the sugar to 1 1/2 cups.

Cooking beer on the stove top was a new one for me. The entire apartment smelled like it. I simmered a cup of Guinness with a stick of butter, adding chocolate, and that started to smell just delicious.

beer butter eggs
Beer and butter, eggs and sour cream

Also new, eggs and sour cream are not usually the first thing that goes into my mixer, and I don’t usually mix batter with the whisk attachment. It all worked out a-ok, though.

While the cupcakes were baking, it smelled a bit like baking bread. One who tasted them made a comment that they tasted a little bit like sourdough. Interesting… I did notice that the Guinness flavor seemed more intense when the cupcakes were a day old.

For the frosting, I added all of the reduced Guinness, determined to get the taste, but the mixture went a little weird, separating. I added more butter, which started to smooth it out, then more powdered sugar, until I got a consistency I like. The Guinness buttercream was still different from my regular frosting, it didn’t seem to want to completely let go of its bubbly beer nature.

Guinness cupcakes
They really did look a bit like nice frothy-topped mini pints of creamy Guinness.

I couldn’t resist going green for St. Patrick’s Day, so I colored some of the frosting with green food coloring and piped swirls and dollops on top. They were all dressed up  in green, ready to make an appearance at two St. Patrick’s gatherings that evening.

St. Patrick's cupcakesThey tasted like chocolatey beer in a decidedly pleasant way. The flavor was more subtle in the frosting, but it was there, a twist on my regular vanilla buttercream. The consensus was that they were great. My baking with Guinness got a thumbs up!