Recipes from a Normal Mum

Strawberry & vanilla cupcakes

So I overhauled the blog. Did you notice? Do you like it? I am still getting used to it. I may even write a whole blog post just on the reasons why. Like a kind of blog therapy. I do LOVE it, don’t get me wrong. I think it seems a bit whizzy and cool for me. Like when I bought a racing green, soft top car at the age of 27 and kept expecting someone to laugh in my face as I pulled up at the traffic lights. I got pregnant about 6 months later and swapped it for a Skoda so all was well in the world again.

So we’re moving. Yep, almost a year after we saw the house we fell in love with at first sight, the move date it set. I am in full denial mode at the moment. Boxes are mounting up from all our generous and helpful friends, but they remain unfilled. I want to have a huge life laundry style clear out, but it’s oh so hard with little ones. They just need (and want) so much stuff. Mostly plastic. And puzzles. We have a lot of jigsaw puzzles.

As a displacement activity for all this packing (or rather not packing) and blog makeover anxiety I’ve suggested I bake scones for the children’s sports day at school. Three days before we move. How stupid is that? I might make some of these too. They’re summery, no?

Lots of great recipes like this in my book, Recipes from a Normal Mum, out now… on Amazon, The Works, at Waterstones, WHSmith, The Book Depository and many smaller outlets.

This time last year: Carrot, courgette & cheese mini savoury pancakes, Broccoli, cauliflower and pasta cheese, Easy rough puff pastry sausage rolls and Cheesy breadsticks.

Two years ago: Simple chocolate ganache tart, Meringue roses and Flat vanilla cupcakes.

Three years ago: Razzamatazz ribs, Banana and custard cupcakes and After Eight cupcakes.

Four years ago: Banana and custard melts.

Strawberry & vanilla cupcakes

Makes 12

Ingredients:

For the cakes:

For the topping:

Cupcakes fit for Strawberry Shortcake take a little time. Let’s get going.

Preheat the oven to 180°C/gas mark 4 and line a 12 hole cupcake tray with cases. Beat together all of the cupcake ingredients either using an electric mixer or by hand. This should take about 4 minutes with a mixer or about double the time with a wooden spoon. When it’s ready, the mixture will be lighter than when you started, and look a little like whipped double cream. It will also easily drop off a metal spoon if held from a height. Divide the mixture equally between the cases and bake for 20 – 25 minutes until the cakes are light brown, feel springy and a toothpick inserted into the middle cake comes out clean. Remove from the tray and cool on a wire rack.

Make the buttercream by beating the butter until soft then adding the icing sugar a tablespoon at a time, beating well after each addition – then add the extract and beat again. To get really easy to pipe buttercream you need to beat the whole mixture for an extra 7 minutes once all the icing sugar has been added. I do this with a stand mixer to achieve a mousse like consistency that’s flecked with air. You can try and do this by hand but beware it is hard work! Remove half the icing and place in a bowl, then to the remaining icing add a dot of the food colouring and beat until you have the pink colour you want.

Take a Wilton 1M nozzle and place into a disposable icing bag with the end just snipped off to expose the points of the nozzle. Place the bag into a pint glass or large jug and bend the rim of the bag over the top of the glass/jug to secure it and make it easier to add the icing. Then take it in turns to spoon the icing into the bag, one pink spoon, then one white one, and so on. Once you have filled the icing bag half way hold the bag up and let gravity push the icing to the nozzle. Give the bag a little squish all over to mix the colours up a little and also try and remove any air bubbles. (You can often see these when you hold the bag to the light – pinch the little suckers!)

To pipe the cupcakes place the cakes onto a tea towel to keep them from skidding about. Then pipe a swirl of icing around the perimeter of the cake by holding the bag with one hand, at a right angle to the cake (so straight up right – not in any way to the side so you can see what you’re doing) about 1.5 cm from the cake surface, pushing from the top of the bag with the other hand to smoothly push the icing out. As you reach the beginning of the swirl release the pressure – ie/ just stop pushing the icing out. That way you will have a nice tapered point. Then add a spoon of jam to the middle of the cake and add sprinkles. There are videos of me icing cupcakes here and here if you wish to see a general icing technique too.

NB: Add more icing to the bag if you need to, but be sure to push every last drop out first (can be straight into the bowl for reusing). It’s better to fill an icing bag twice than overfill it and have a nightmare pushing such a heavy amount of icing through a piping bag.

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