For these cupcakes, I baked with peaches from my mother’s orchard (she and my stepfather grow figs, lemons, and peaches on their cattle ranch in Winnsboro, Louisiana) and blueberries from Pop’s Blueberry Patch (north of Ruston).

I used the recipe from my previous peach cupcakes as a guide, but added blueberries and a little peach schnapps (because…well, why not?). Also, because my mother only had self-rising flour, I left out the baking powder and soda. Self-rising flour also includes salt, which wasn’t called for in the recipe. A little salt can bring out flavor, though, so I hoped for the best! (It all worked out just fine.)

peaches blueberries batter
The batter

My mom did not have any baking cups, either, so I put the batter directly into greased muffin tins. My main challenge there was that I had to wait for them to cool completely before removing, as attempts to remove after 5-10 minutes as I normally do resulted in their coming out in pieces. (That of course had to be eaten immediately, darn…)

I added peach schnapps to heavy cream and whipped it up for the topping. A half scoop of this spiked whipped cream went on each cupcake.

They were a tasty dessert, but also not too-too sweet for breakfast the next morning.

country cupcake
Cupcake in the country

What better to do with extra carrots from my CSA (Local Roots NYC) than bake carrot cake? I had about 1/2 pound, though, which wasn’t quite enough to make a full batch. I could have bought more carrots to make up the other 1/2 pound, but I decided to use zucchini instead. One big zucchini was enough to round it out. (The zucchini, I believe, brought in a little more moisture into the batter than just carrots would have.)

I worked from my usual carrot cake recipe (see my Carrot and Crystallized Ginger Cupcakes), but added chocolate chips instead of fruit or nuts. The chocolate chips sunk to the bottom, not necessarily a bad thing, but I had thought the grated vegetables would help suspend them in the batter.

I made cream cheese icing to top these, the traditional choice for carrot cake. I served them at a BBQ in 90° weather, and the icing was a melty mess. Everyone was very nice about that, even when they had to lick most of the icing off their fingers. One guest did run in to put his in the freezer for a few minutes before eating.

My boyfriend was coaching cupcake eaters. “Lift it very carefully. The icing won’t drip if you keep the cupcake level. Keep it steady… Eat it, quick!”

The chocolate chips were also a little melted, but the comment was that gave the cupcakes a just-out-of-the-oven taste. I didn’t intend to “cook” them with the icing on, though! Maybe my hot-day strategy should be to come with un-iced cupcakes, bring icing in a cooler, and finish on demand.

Recipe: Carrot Zucchini Chocolate Chip Cupcakes

Makes 2 dozen cupcakes

2 1/2 sticks butter
2 cups sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
3 large eggs
2 cups flour
2 teaspoons baking soda
2 teaspoons cinnamon
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
1/2 pound grated carrots
1/2 pund grated zucchini
1 cup semi-sweet chocolate chips

Preheat oven to 350° F and line muffin pans with 24 paper liners.

Using an electric mixer, cream the butter and sugar. Add the vanilla, then mix in the eggs, one at a time.

In a separate bowl, sift together the flour, baking soda, cinnamon, and salt. Add half of this flour mixture to the mixing bowl, reserving half, and mix completely.

Add the grated carrots and zucchini and chocolate chips to the remaining flour and mix well, then add to your batter. Mix until just combined, do not over mix.

Fill cups with batter about 3/4 full. Bake at 400° F for 10 minutes, then reduce temperature to 350° F and cook for about 20 minutes more. Cooking time varies, so start checking after 10-15 minutes. The cupcakes are ready when a toothpick comes out clean.

Remove from the oven, let cool 5 minutes in pans, then remove and cool completely on racks. Top with cream cheese frosting.

Frosting Recipe

Never thought you’d be reading about meat and potatoes on a cupcake blog, huh?

meatloaf cupcakes

I attended TechMunch, a conference for food bloggers, here in New York. One of the sponsors was the Idaho Potato Commission. They held a drawing, and I was one of the lucky winners. What did I get?

20 pounds of potatoes…

I live alone. I sometimes cook with my boyfriend or for other friends, but really, what was I going to do with 20 pounds of potatoes?!

I made potato salad, baked potatoes, and mashed potatoes. I made three kinds of soup including potatoes (with radishes, with radish tops, regular potato). I made hash browns and fries. However, I knew that I’d have to do something cupcake-y for this blog.

I’m not a red meat eater, so I looked for a turkey meatloaf to make my meatcakes. I went with Ina Garten’s recipe, which has gotten a lot of good feedback online. Ground turkey can get dried out when using it in recipes meant for beef or other meats with higher fat content, so reading that this recipe resulted in a juicy loaf was appealing. I made 1/3 of this recipe, which gave me 9 “cupcakes.” The only change was to use about 3 tablespoons of ketchup instead of the 1/2 teaspoon of tomato paste it called for, but I did not put any on top. (I used Heinz’s organic ketchup, which is made from organic ingredients including sugar instead of high fructose corn syrup.) Cooking time in muffin tins was about 35 minutes.

For the “icing” I made mashed potatoes. I peeled 4 of my winnings and boiled with a few peeled cloves of garlic for 25 minutes. I mashed and added butter and half & half and salt. I then puréed with my hand blender (usually to be avoided, I hear, to prevent rubbery mashed potatoes) to get smooth potato icing I could pipe. I topped with green “sprinkles” (chopped garlic scapes).

turkey meatloaf cupcakes

Thank you, Idaho!

Did You Know?

Potatoes, along with carbs in general, have gotten a bad rap in recent years. Yes, overindulgence can be a problem, but your body actually needs carbs. It is still a food group, even if it shouldn’t be your main food group (see the new food pyramid).

Also, potatoes have lots of Vitamin C, Potassium, and Vitamin B6, something I didn’t really realize before I looked it up. One potato has over 45% of your daily recommended value of each of these!

It is important, though, to eat the skins! That’s where you get a lot of the goodness. (I often leave the skins on when making mashed potatoes, but I removed them this time to get more of that icing look and feel. I never claimed my cupcakes were healthy, though, right?)

piping potato icing

“Something spicy” got top votes in a recent poll on my Facebook Page (flavor to pair with chocolate), and I decided habaneros would be that something. (Note: Since then, “nuts or nut butter” has as many votes. More chocolate flavor pairings to come… Click here to vote or leave your suggestions!) I’d done cayenne brownies before, but these were my first cupcakes to get a peppery spice.

I decided to roast my peppers to bring out flavor and, maybe, tame the heat. I halved them, removed the seeds, and put them in the oven at 450° for about 7 minutes. For the cupcake batter, I put the habaneros in my blender (use a food processor if you have one, I don’t!) with 1/3 cup cocoa powder and 3 tablespoons of brewed coffee and blended until it formed a paste. I then used that instead of some of the chocolate in my favorite chocolate cupcake recipe.

The icing (see recipe below) was very silky smooth and tasted great, but it was hard to pipe (too much half & half? my too-hot hands?). Once I managed to pipe the icing onto the cupcakes, it fell, but it firmed up in a short period of time so worked out OK. I finished by adding some red sprinkles, my little warning sign to the unsuspecting taster.

chocolate habanero cupcakes

Taste Results

I brought these to a post-half-marathon BBQ and a housewarming party that day, so I had plenty of taste testers. The first to want to try them were two children, and I worried they would be too spicy. The kids seemed to enjoy the cake, but mostly rejected the icing. Others also commented that it was the icing that was h-o-t (the grown ups loved it). I was surprised that the icing was so much spicier than the cake, as I put two peppers in the batter and only one in the icing. The cake did seem to have less of a kick. I actually thought all the milk fat in the icing would lessen the heat…and maybe it did, and this is the less!

The cake or the icing, this cupcake left a decidedly spicy aftertaste. The hot crept up a second or two after the first bite. Luckily, they did not turn out too spicy overall. Maybe a more spicy cake would have sent them over the edge. I go for the spicy—and am certainly a chocolate girl—so I loved these!

What’s a Scotch Bonnet?

A friend, below, had suggested I make cupcakes with Scotch Bonnet a few weeks ago. I’d never heard of Scotch Bonnets before. I thought, “Sure, I could try baking with Scotch sometime.” Then I showed up with these Habanero Cupcakes and he took credit for giving me the idea. What?!

After some discussion, we realized Habaneros and Scotch Bonnets are the same thing

Trevor with a spicy cupcake

Well, kind of… My research has revealed much confusion on the topic. Some websites say the Scotch bonnet is a type of habanero pepper, others say they are “cousins.” What I used were sold as habaneros at a local fruit/veggie store, so I am calling them habaneros for the sake of this post. I have to say, though, comparing them to photos on the internet, they look a little Scotch bonnet-y. Who knows what they really were? Habaneros and Scotch bonnets are both Capsicum chinense, and they are both HOT, that’s for sure! I’d assume you could use either if trying to replicate these cupcakes.

chocolate habanero cupcake

Recipe: Habanero Chocolate Icing

Makes enough for at least 2 dozen cupcakes (depends on icing method)

1 habanero pepper, roasted*
3 oz. cream cheese
1 stick butter, softened
6-7 cups powdered sugar
1 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
3 teaspoons vanilla extract
7 oz. half & half or cream (or less)

In a food processor or blender, process the habanero and cream cheese until pepper is very finely chopped and well blended.

Cream the butter and the cream cheese mixture.

Add the cocoa powder and powdered sugar alternately with the vanilla and half & half.

Beat until the desired consistency. *To roast pepper: Cut in half, remove seeds and bake at 450° (or broil) skin side up for about 7 minutes. Remove when skin starts to blister.

classic cupcake

Sometimes you just want a classic. With a cherry on top…

When a cupcake-loving houseguest came to stay, I kept it simple. I baked my favorite vanilla cupcake and whipped up my regular buttercream frosting (see comments below for recipe) with a square of melted Baker’s Semi-sweet Chocolate. I topped them with a sour cherry.

These didn’t last long.

vanilla chocolate cupcakes