So the other week the fiancé came home with a request from my willing taste testers in Dundee: After Eight cupcakes. Well, I like a challenge and this was a chance to get creative, although in theory this was a fairly simple thing. After Eights meant I would be doing chocolate and peppermint. I knew I would definitely want a chocolate cake and ideally a very dark chocolate one. Then I would put something peppermint in the centre. I would also make peppermint buttercream. Originally I was going to just drizzle dark chocolate on top but then thought it would be cool to cover the buttercream completely in chocolate instead, just to give a further impression of an After Eight.
Now I've never dipped buttercream in chocolate before so I wasn't sure how well it would turn out. I knew I had to chill it beforehand or it would melt when it got dipped. I also figured it would be easier to coat the whole thing if the buttercream was piped flat against the top of the cake, rather than the usual towering swirl I do. This all worked out fine but with every cake I had gaps in the chocolate. I did fill as much in as possible by dripping chocolate into the gaps with a spoon but still couldn't get a perfect covering. As a result I thought it looked a bit messy. My testers though thought they were some of my prettiest cakes and that the slightly messy chocolate top was very reminiscent of the After Eight's patterning.
I
was so glad I was able to get green cases to go with these. It really
pulls the whole design together. I really doubted I was going to have
them in time but then I luckily got offered a trip out to Rejects in
Kirkcaldy and they have a cookery/baking section. So I raided the cases
they had for sale and found a set of 'Buffin' cases in five colours
including green. Rather a perfect green too. The cases also turned out
to be an ideal size for the chocolate cake recipe I chose to use. The
name 'Buffin' amuses me. Apparently it's bigger than a bun case (which I
refer to as a cupcake case) but not quite as big as a muffin case.
They're quite tall and a bit narrow but very cool. I was very pleased
with them. I had originally wanted foil cases but these ones worked out
perfectly and probably looked better overall. If you can get green cases for these cakes, I recommend doing so.
So what was the result? Perfect. That's what I was told. These cakes were perfect. A soft but crumbly cake that was really dark with the perfect amount of peppermint running all the way through. Apparently they tasted just like an After Eight. I was rather proud.
Now I really wish I had gotten better looking photos. I just could not find a way to pose these that I was happy with.
Cakes - adapted from Foods of Our Lives:
- 115g/4oz butter
- 60g/2oz dark chocolate (I used Bournville)
- 45g/1.5oz cocoa powder (Bournville cocoa for me)
- 105g/3.75oz plain flour
- 1/2 tsp bicarbonate of soda
- 3/4 tsp baking powder
- 2 large eggs
- 150g/5.25oz caster sugar
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 115ml/4fl.oz sour cream
- Preheat the oven to 180°C/350°F/Gas Mark 4 and line a 12 hole muffin tin with 'buffin' cases (or muffin if you can't find 'buffin').
- Put the butter, chocolate and cocoa powder in a glass bowl and place over a saucepan of gently simmering water. Stir until the butter and chocolate have melted and the mixture is smooth. Whisk if you need to. Set aside to cool slightly.
- Combine the flour, baking powder and bicarbonate of soda in a small bowl.
- In a separate, larger bowl beat the eggs, sugar, vanilla and salt until pale and frothy.
- Add the chocolate mixture to the egg mix and stir in until fully incorporated.
- Add a third of the flour mixture and stir in.
- Now add the sou cream, mix, and then the rest of the flour. Beat until smooth.
- Divide the batter evenly amongst the cases.
- Bake for 20-25 minutes until the cakes are risen and the tops are springy. A skewer inserted into the centre should come out clean.
- Remove from the oven and allow to sit in the pan for 10 minutes before transferring to a wire rack to finish cooling.
- 115g/4oz icing sugar
- 1 tsp peppermint extract
- 25ml/1fl.oz water
- Green, blue food colouring
- Put the icing sugar, peppermint extract, a couple of drops of green and the tiniest amount of blue colouring into a small bowl.
- Add a tablespoon of the water and mix in until smooth.
- Add the rest of the water a little at a time, mixing after each addition until you get a smooth but fairly runny paste.
- Cut a core out of the cooled cupcakes and put about a teaspoonful of the filling into each one. Replace the cores.
- 170g/6oz butter
- 340g/12oz icing sugar
- 3/4 tsp peppermint extract
- 1 tsp water
- Green, blue, white(optional) food colouring
- Beat the butter until smooth and creamy.
- Add the icing sugar, peppermint extract and water and beat together until smooth.
- Add a few drops of green, one blue and a little white if using and mix until colour is evenly spread through.
- Put the buttercream into a piping bag fitted with a large star nozzle.
- Pipe a flat spiral that completely covers the top of each cake.
- Put cakes in the fridge to chill for 2-3 hours to allow the buttercream to firm up.
- 170g/6oz dark chocolate (I used Green & Black's 70% cocoa)
- Once the buttercream is firm, break up the chocolate and melt in a glass bowl placed over a pan of gently simmering water.
- Take the cakes out of the fridge one at a time, hold by the base and dip into the chocolate, submerging the buttercream up to the edge of the case.
- Remove and shake gently over the bowl to get rid of any excess chocolate.
- Turn right way up and use a small spoon to drizzle chocolate into any exposed gaps. You want to hide as much buttercream as possible.
- Leave on a wire rack to set.
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