Sweet Dreams Bake Shoppe

Sweet Dreams Bake Shoppe
Like us on Facebook for more pictures and information

Saturday, 16 November 2013

Quick Fix Monogram Cupcakes

So I normally don't post a recipe or method of decorating baked goods until I am one hundred percent happy with it. Then I thought that maybe you could learn from some of my mistakes...

It was my student teacher's birthday so I thought that I would quickly whip up some cupcakes for the class. I was totally swamped with work though so I decided to whip up something quick. 

I baked some chocolate cupcakes and debated about my frosting choice. I broke down and bought butter cream and decided to use some candy melts for the base. I chose candy melts because I knew it would be too complicated and messy to try and transport mountain high iced cupcakes to school.

Ingredients:

Butter cream
Candy Melts (or you could probably use another type of chocolate or icing glaze)
Cupcakes of your choice

Method:

Make sure that all of your cupcakes are completely cooled before icing.



Heat up some of the candy melts in 30 second intervals. Don't microwave for too long as the chocolate can seize up. Spoon the candy melts onto the top of the cupcakes. Use the back of your spoon to even out the topping. Do this quickly or else you will end up with lumps and bumps like I did! If you can't spoon the candy melts on fast enough, don't worry because you can reheat the candy melts (that's the upside of using these special melts; regular chocolate can be a little bit more difficult to work with). 


The candy melts dry fairly quickly so you can add the butter cream pretty soon after you apply the candy melts to the cupcakes. 

You know what I notice about buying butter cream from the store? It's always way too floppy and doesn't ever produce the nice thickness that a homemade butter cream produces. Here's a small and easy tip: add icing sugar. Make sure to actually test the thickness though before you start piping, because mine was still too floppy which is why you can see little peaks and flops everywhere on the finished product. 



*Tip: do not use anything else except for a piping bag or parchment triangle to ice cupcakes or cookies because plastic baggies will explode on you

Use a small tip to pipe the butter cream. Make sure to use a good amount of pressure and stop squeezing the piping bag when you would like to end a line. Single lined letters are nice, but I decided to op for the double line as it looks a little bit more stylized and fancy. Don't worry if you mess up, because the candy melts provide a hard and shiny texture, you can easily wipe away butter cream mistakes. 


My students loved presenting these cupcakes and singing Happy Birthday at the top of their lungs. They also requested that I "make them special cupcakes everyday". Oh how I wish I could!

Beautiful Baking Sweeties

Monday, 11 November 2013

Peppermint Mocha Macarons

Hello fellow bakers,

Last night I had the most stress-free macaron making day ever! Crazy how when you're not under a time crunch, baking seems so much more relaxing.

For these macarons, I used a basic macaron recipe. This easy macaron recipe is similar to the one that I use except my macaron recipe makes about 160 shells which makes 80 completed macarons. As mentioned in previous posts, I cannot give out the recipe I have as it is not mine to distribute. However, I can share with you the little tips and tricks that I use to make sure I get the perfect little 'feet' and smooth shell every time.

You may use any macaron recipe you like, but make sure that your recipe contains the following:

For the mint chocolate ganache filling (note: I did not use mint chocolate because I thought the mint would come out more in the shells. If I were to do them again, I would make sure to use mint chocolate if you really want that minty flavour. Make sure to use dark as well as it will help cut through the sweetness of the shell):

Approximately two bars or equivalent of dark mint chocolate (I find that Lindt is the best quality you can find at your average super market and it isn't overly expensive. Making macarons is a tough and laborious task though so I would say if you are only going to make these once a year, be sure to use the best quality chocolate you can find!)
Softened room temperature butter
Whipping cream 


For the shells:

Ingredients:

Almond flour (which is simply just ground almonds; you can make this yourself, but it's very time consuming and it can alter the way your macarons will turn out)
Icing sugar
Granulated sugar
Water
Aged egg whites (you should age them for seven days, but if you can't, it's not a big deal; I have found that if you age them for only three or four days, they turn out just fine, but if you don't have a good stand mixer, then your egg whites won't whip up nicely)
Instant coffee (I used instant Starbucks Peppermint Mocha)
Optional gel food colouring

These are only some of the ingredients and tools; I took the picture before I was actually done laying things out---silly me!

Tools: 

For the filling:

Digital scale (do not try to convert the recipe into cups; this will alter the recipe completely although the measurements are close, they need to be EXACT)
Heat proof bowl
Sauce pan
Whisk
Glass pan
Saran wrap

For the shells:

Digital scale
Large bowl
Food processor 
Large baking sieve
Kitchen Aid Mixer (or any other stand mixer)
Spatula
Small bowl(s)
Large whisk
Heavy duty baking pans (not the ones that you use to make cookies on; these ones are literally heavy)
Oven
Stove
Digital candy thermometer 

I would re-write the method, but the method previously mentioned recipe and method would work well with a few little tweaks here and there. Here are some tips:

For the ganache:

With any ganache recipe, make sure to melt the chocolate in a heat proof bowl over a simmering pot of water. While the chocolate is melting, heat the whipping cream in a pot on medium heat until it boils. As soon as soon as you see large boiling bubbles, take the pot off the heat and stir it in three parts into the melted chocolate. Once the chocolate and whipping cream are fully incorporated, take the chopped up pieces of room temperature butter and whisk them in. At this point you want to whip super vigorously. Keep whipping until the butter is fully incorporated and the ganache feels slightly thickened. Pour the ganache into a shallow glass pan and place saran wrap directly onto the ganache to ensure that a skin does not form on the ganache. 

For the shells:

Before placing the icing sugar and almond flour through the sieve, make sure to process the almonds in a food processor. Shake the food processor every now and then and scrape the sides of the processor with a spatula. Pulse and shake the food processor so that the almonds are fully ground and appear almost powdery. Although the almond flour appears to be fairly ground up when you first buy it in the bag, you want to make sure that all of the little chunks are gone. If you ever see a macaron shell with bumps and lumps, it is because this step has been skipped. It makes for an unpleasant and improper macaron shell texture. 

After grounding up the almonds once more, incorporate the icing sugar and the instant coffee powder. Shake this up once more in the food processor. Your arms may hurt after picking up your food processor, but most food processors can't process everything evenly all the time (consider this your work out before you eat the macarons). 

After processing all of the dry ingredients, then put it through a sieve. 

In the previously mentioned method, they use the French meringue method which means there is no boiling of water and sugar. Although I do use this method for making meringues, I generally use the method of boiling sugar and water together first when making macarons because this is much more reliable than the French method. 

Boil the sugar and water on the stove. While the sugar and water is boiling, make sure to place half of the egg whites into your stand mixer. When the boiling water and sugar gets to 239 degrees F (use a digital candy thermometer; don't try to fiddle around with an analog one), turn on the stand mixer to a medium high speed. Once the boiling water and sugar gets to 244 degrees F, take it off the stove, turn up the mixer on high and slowly pour the sugar water into the egg whites. A small and constant stream should be coming from the pot. Once everything is incorporated, make sure to whip the egg whites for one minute on high and another minute on medium. 

Incorporating the dry ingredients into the egg whites is the most difficult part. Over whipping, under whipping, it's all a nightmare! If you under mix at first, it is probably better than over mixing as you can't undo that. I still mess up the texture every now and then, especially when I am out of practice, but I always make sure to under mix a little bit. During the first incorporation of ingredients, it is okay if the mixture is still a bit thick. Let the mixture rest for thirty minutes loosely covered in plastic wrap. Mix it one more time. The batter should fall off the whisk slightly and mound up on the batter as it falls. After about thirty seconds, it should be incorporated back into the batter after falling. I test out the batter by piping out one or two onto the parchment. After a few minutes, if the batter still has a little bit of a peak, then the batter is too thick. If it is so soupy that it spreads out instantly, then it is too soupy and your macarons won't work out. 

After piping out all of the batter, you may choose to sprinkle on some decorations or cocoa powder. Make sure you do this step before the skin has formed over your macarons as shown below:



Here are the macaron shells that have formed a skin after forty-five minutes. They have a matte finish as oppose to the shiny finish the above macarons had:



Place them in the oven at 350 degrees F for five minutes, turn the pan and bake them again at 330 degrees F for another five minutes. I guarantee if you do this right, you will get feet!


Fill up your completely cooled macaron shells with the mint chocolate gancache. The macarons cannot be eaten right away. You need to freeze them for two days, take the amount that you would like out of the freezer, let them thaw for forty-five minutes and enjoy!

These were a little bit more red in person, but for some reason they look very pink! Oh well, I am sure people won't mind eating pink-ish Christmas macarons.

Beautiful baking sweeties!







Sunday, 10 November 2013

Organizing Baking Supplies

Hello fellow bakers!

I am back for some baking blogging. It feels so nice to actually be able to sit down, relax, blog and bake for once. I no longer sell sweet treats to the public as I am far too busy being a grade one and piano teacher, but I still do enjoy baking from time to time. I am sure there are plenty of busy people out there as well that find they never have the time to do much baking so I am sure you can relate to my baking woes! I missed out on Halloween cookies this year so I vowed to myself that I would most definitely not miss out on Christmas baking. I am going to kick off my holiday baking early today by whipping up some peppermint mocha macarons (yes, I am extremely excited to make these and yes, a blog post will soon follow!). 

Before I was even ready to think about making macarons I needed to make sure that I cleaned out all of my baking supplies. It was the last few hot summer days when I stopped baking for business and I discovered something horrible. Some of my baking supplies were infested with ants! I could not believe it as some of the wonderful sugar flowers I had spent eight hours working on for a personal cake were being eaten alive (alright I understand that my sugar flowers weren't actually alive, but when you spend that many hours working on something they're like your babies). There were hundreds and hundreds of ants swarming some baking tools as well (which made no sense to me because they were all cleaned and didn't have any ounce of sugar on them). Needless to say, my fiance sanitized all of my baking tools that were attacked, threw away my sugar flowers and got rid of the ants over the next few weeks as I cried on the couch. I am such a baby when it comes to my baking. Surprisingly, none of the ants got into my ingredients, but I was still too worried to use them. I had one last sugar cookie order that a friend had asked me to fill months ago, but I refused to use any of my tools and any of the ingredients that I had. Although the ingredients and tools cost me far more than what the cookies were going to cost, I sucked it up and bought all new ingredient and tools. Needless to say it took me about two months until I was ready to tackle my ant phobias. I had peeked into the ingredients box every now and then to make sure that there were no ants, but I screamed when I opened it. No, there weren't any ants, but the ingredients box was a total mess! So were my cookie cutters, edible dyes and pretty much anything else I used to bake beautiful creations.

I decided that if I was ever going to bake again, I needed to re-organize all of my things. I decided to tackle my ingredients box first. I took a look into my ingredients and realized that although things were messy, I had sealed off all of my ingredients properly. After taking out all of the ingredients and laying them on my kitchen counter, I cleaned out the giant tub that holds my ingredients. I took it outside, hosed it down, sanitized and dried it. I carefully sifted through all of the ingredients to ensure that no damage had been done and placed them into containers. I usually left flours and sugars in the bags that I bought them in because the containers I had bought before were too narrow to even fit a half measuring cup into, but I found this method was too messy. I picked up a tip from a friend to place sugars and flours into large Tupperware containers. So much easier to dig in and reduces the mess almost completely. I continued to label all the rest of the containers I had and I felt so good as I looked into my organized ingredients box.


After the ingredients, I knew I needed to clean out my cookie and cake decoration box. I carefully cleaned off all of the edible dyes and once again sanitized my baking tools. To save room, I also took out all of my decorative sugars out of their half empty containers and put them into plastic Ziploc bags. I also got a cute mini scoop to scoop the sugars out of the bags. Don't worry about not having the little shakers that usually come with the sanding sugars and crystal sprinkles. I find that with sugar cookies, its best to scoop out the sanding sugars rather than trying to sprinkle it on. For cupcakes, it also creates a much nicer effect if you use pinched fingers to distribute the sugars rather than the shaker. My tips also kept shifting every time I opened the drawer and it would make it near impossible to find which tip I was looking for so I put the tips pointing upwards in a measuring cup. I then added some labels to each drawer to make sure that I never have to utter the words "where is that ______?" again. Nothing is more frustrating than not being able to find something when you need it or worse, finding it dirty!




After that, it was time to tackle the cookie cutters. My cookie cutters are probably what frustrated me the most when I was in a hurry. I used to place my cookie cutters into categorized Ziploc bags, but I could never find any of the ones I needed when I needed them. I lost my figure skate cookie cutter for months and it resurfaced when I was re-organizing them again. Turns out that I had categorized the figure skate as a Christmas cookie cutter which does make sense, but I assumed it would be under the 'miscellaneous' category. To avoid this again, I went to Wal-Mart and bought a whole bunch of containers. I carefully re-categorized all of my cookie cutters and placed them into labeled drawers. It took a little bit of time to write down every single cookie cutter that I had, but I am glad I did. Total cookie cutter count: 129. Here is the list:

Characters:

Full Body Hello Kitty
Hello Kitty Head
Large Hello Kitty Head
Mickey Mouse Head
Mickey Mouse Profile

Clothing:

Bikini (2 Pieces)
Chef Hat
Cowboy Hat
Cowboy Boot
Dress
Flip-flop
High Heel Shoe
Jersey

Halloween:

Bat
Cat
Large Pumpkin
Orange Pumpkin
Spider
Witch Hat

Beach:

Seashell
Starfish
Sun
Umbrella

Birthday:

Cake with Candle
Cupcake with Candle

Food:

Apple
Carrot
Cotton Candy/Ice Cream
Strawberry
Martini

Transportation:

Airplane
Car
Motorcycle

Music:

Black Eighth Note
Eighth Note
Guitar

Miscellaneous:

Fairy
Golf Bag
Graduation Hat
Mini Tiara
Teapot

Animals:

Butterfly
Butterfly and Flower Mini Cutter Set (11 Pieces)
Chick
Dog Bone
Fish
Rabbit
Yellow Chick
Unicorn

Flowers and Foliage:

Flower Fondant Cutters (6 Pieces)
Maple Leaf
Sunflower
Tulip

Numbers:

0
1
2
3
4
5
6 and 9
7
8

Shapes:

Circle Set (9 Pieces)
Clover
Egg
Oval
Rectangle
Star (2)

Christmas:

Bell
Blue Snowflake
Candy Cane
Christmas Tree (3)
Gingerbread Man (2)
Gingerbread Woman
Holly Leaf
Large Figure Skate
Mini Figure Skate
Mitten
Ornament
Polar Bear
Snowflake (2)
Snowman (3)
Stocking

Baby Shower:

Baby Bottle
Bear
Bib
Carriage
Fancy Carriage
Foot
Onesie

Wedding/Valentine’s Day:

Dove
Hand
Heart
Joined Hearts
Large Pink Heart
Lips
Mustache
Scalloped Edge Heart
Wedding Cake


I finished off my day of organization by collecting up all of the pans and molds I had and placing them into a large tub. I discovered that I had a mini bunny cake pan and cookie press that I had forgotten about. Spritz cookies at Christmas? Yes please! It was a great day of organization and now I feel much better about starting a baking project. 

Beautiful baking sweeties!


Monday, 15 July 2013

Custom Cupcake Wedding Stand

For one of the last wedding orders I completed I needed to construct a stand ASAP. I didn't have time to go and buy one that met the bride's specifications (plus, large scale stands that can hold 70 cupcakes are ridiculously expensive) so I knew I needed to get working. The supplies to make the cupcake stand were a tad bit on the expensive side, but I wanted to make sure the stand was food safe and stable. My bride wanted something with bling to match the glamorous cupcakes so I needed to buy bling wrap, but you can basically decorate this cupcake stand with anything you desire.

Time: 2 Hours

Materials needed to make the basic cupcake stand (approximately $115.00 for all of the materials I used):


  • Varying sizes of flat and square/circular styrofoam blocks (get the strong stuff, not the garden stuff!)
  • Cube shaped styrofoam boxes 
  • Food safe wrap (it kind of looks like gift wrap, but it is food safe and a lot more pliable; I bought my roll from Michael's)
  • Cake board
Optional Materials that I used:
  • Ribbon
  • Bling Wrap
Tools:
  • Glue gun
  • Stapler

Instructions:

1) Wrap all of the flat Styrofoam pieces with the food safe wrapping (shown right on the picture above); Don't worry about wrapping them all the way around as only one side will be visible (as shown below). TIP: Make sure that you place a few staples in the middle so that your tiers don't shake and rip the paper. I had a little bit of an issue!


2) Place a small amount of hot glue on the edge of the Styrofoam block and carefully line up the ribbon to create a straight border. Only apply a little bit of glue at a time as hot glue tends to dry very quickly. Run your hand over the ribbon to even out the glue. It will look silly if the ribbon is popping off of the edging.


3) Next, I added bling wrap using hot glue to give it that extra pop. Bling wrap is awesome as it comes in thick strips that can be cut to your specifications. I chose to cut rows of three as it was the perfect amount. Not too much bling, but not too little either.


Once you are finished, your boxes should all look uniform.


4) Cover all of the smaller boxes with the food safe wrap. For these ones I would recommend covering the whole box. 

5) I added ribbon and bling wrap to the boxes, but feel free to leave them plain as the cupcakes may end up covering a lot of the detailing.

6) Hot glue the largest tier on the cake board.

7) Hot glue one of the cubes onto the middle of the bottom tier. Make sure all of your tiers and blocks are super centered or else the law of physics will be against you and your tiers will tip over. Continue the hot gluing process with the rest of the tiers and blocks. 


When placing your cupcakes on the upper tiers, make sure that you equally distribute the weight of the cupcakes. 


Beautiful baking sweeties!

Saturday, 13 July 2013

Oreo Cupcakes

I am back my baking buddies! I became so incredibly busy with finishing up my education practicum that I have obviously failed on writing blog posts. I have taken plenty of pictures of my baking endeavors the last few months, but I didn't have time to post all of my tutorials so I will do that in due time. 

UPDATE: I shut the bakery down to the public because I am officially going to be a full time kindergarten teacher this September and I am still going to continue to teach piano as well (not to mention the fact that I am getting married!). I now only provide baked goodies for family and friends, but please visit SD Bake Shoppe's Facebook page (and hit like if you love sweets!) for up to date pictures. 


It was a ton of fun making these and it was one of the smoothest and quickest orders I ever completed. Hope the kiddies enjoyed them as their party favours!

Now let's get baking!

My sister is absolutely obsessed with everything Oreo so my mom requested that I make these fantastic Oreo cupcakes for our annual family BBQ. 

I used my favourite vanilla cupcake recipe from Glorious Treats. I also opted for the less traditional Oreo cookie. Who knew that they had mint triple chocolate Oreos? I sure didn't!

Preheat your oven to 350 degrees F

Place the Oreo half with the icing on the bottom of a cupcake liner (my apologies for the blurry photo)


With the halves without the icing, toss them into a food processor for expediency or place them in a strong plastic Ziploc to form cookie crumbs. This will later be used for the buttercream frosting. 


After all of the cupcake liners are filled with Oreo halves, cover the cupcakes in cupcake batter 3/4 of the way full. I like to use a measuring cup with a spout for easy batter pouring. 

Bake the cupcakes for 12 minutes, turn the pan around and bake for another 4 minutes. The cupcakes should have a slight golden brown edging. I cut these in half so I could see the yummy goodness!



For the buttercream, I used a typical vanilla buttercream recipe. 

Ingredients:

3 Cups Confectioners Sugar
1 Cup Unsalted Butter
1 Tablespoon of Milk
2 Vanilla Bean Pods

Cream all of the ingredients together until it forms a stiff buttercream. Add the cookie crumbs and pipe onto your cupcakes. For the mint cupcakes, I dyed the icing green and added mint chocolate chips. Enjoy with a tall glass of milk.


Beautiful Baking Sweeties!

Sunday, 7 April 2013

Easy Peasy Lemon Bars

I didn't make any Easter cookies this years because I am busy with my education practicum, but I did manage to whip up some lemon bars for my soon to be mother-in-law (who absolutely loves them). I brought them over for Easter dinner for a light and lemony dessert.

I got this recipe from allrecipes.com and the title says it perfectly: The BEST Lemon Bars. It's true, they are the best and I followed the recipe's rule of thumb by using no substitutions. So why am I posting about a recipe that is already awesome? Well, if you're like how I was a few years ago, you might need some extra guidance for each step so here goes!

The Recipe:

For the crust:


1 Cup Butter (softened)
1/2 Cup Granulated Sugar
2 Cups All-Purpose Flour

For the lemon filling:

4 Eggs
1 1/2 Cups Granulated Sugar
1/4 Cups All-Purpose Flour
2 Lemons Juiced (I used one and a half and managed to get a great lemon flavour; it really depends on the size of your lemons and the amount of tartness you prefer)

The Method:

Preheat your oven to 350 degrees F


Take the softened butter, the granulated sugar and the all-purpose flour and blend it together. I used my Kitchen-aid, but you could very well do this by hand if your butter is nicely softened.

The mixture at this point will be quite crumbly. Place it in a 9 inch pan (I made sure to butter mine generously even though my pan is already non-stick) and press it in. The mixture should seem rather firm once it is pressed in. I used the flat of my hands and fists to level out the crust. Bake the crust for approximately 17 minutes. Don't worry if the crust doesn't come out golden on the edges because the crust will be placed in the oven again later.

While the crust is baking, whip up the eggs, granulated sugar, all-purpose flour and lemon juice with a hand whisk.


Your mixture should look something like this!

Take out your crust from the oven and pour the above mixture directly over the crust.


Pop it into the oven for another 17 minutes. It should come out looking like this



After the mixture cools, sprinkle some icing sugar on top using a sieve for a nice snowy and light effect. Cut into squares and I guarantee your friends and family will gobble them up...


Just like I did


Beautiful Baking Sweeties!

Saturday, 30 March 2013

A Break from Baking: Easy and Frothy Iced Coffee

My friend, Andreya and I were feeling parched after a romp through the forest with her adorable puppies. We decided that an iced coffee would hit the spot just right (and I figure that since we live in Vancouver, we only have a short window of opportunity to enjoy something iced!).



Aren't they super cute!

Anyway, back to more important things in life....like coffee

*WARNING: MEASUREMENTS ARE NOT EXACT (our apologies; we sometimes like to do things on the fly)

There was an old pot of coffee chilling out from this morning so we decided to use what was leftover for our icy beverages (yay for not wasting!). 

Ingredients (for two large iced coffees):

Coffee (your favourite kind will do; preferably strong coffee as the taste will get diluted by the other ingredients; enough coffee to cover the ice)
Ice (approximately 2 cups) 
Milk (we used 1%)
A dash of vanilla
Sugar (to your preference)
Whipped cream topping (optional)
Shaved chocolate (optional)

Method

1) Put ice into a blender
2) Pour coffee over top of the ice until just covered
3) Add a splash of milk
4) Add sugar (we added approximately a tablespoon; don't worry about the sugars not dissolving, the blending allows the sugars to be fully incorporated)
5) Blend until frothy (ours turned out super frothy and yummy from the milk and sugars!)

If your iced coffee still is lacking in coffee flavour, add a couple of teaspoons of instant coffee mixed with a small amount of water (till just liquid-esque)

Additional (optional) steps:

1) After pouring the iced coffees into two tall glasses; use the same blender to make your whipped cream
2) We used about a cup of whipping cream and a couple pinches of granulated sugar; pour this directly into your blender (no need to clean up the iced coffee mixture as this adds additional flavour to the whipped cream)
3) Blend the ingredients until you achieve the desired texture and stiffness (takes about 2 minutes or so depending on how awesome your blender is)
4) Shave a block of chocolate (we used mint chocolate) with a cheese grater for a chunky effect or simply use a straight edged knife to create mini chocolate curls

Voila, delicious and frothy iced coffees for two. 


You could also try adding different types of extracts or syrups. Be careful when adding mint extracts as they can overpower the iced coffee. 

Some suggestions:

Hazelnut Mocha (Addition of hazelnut chunks and chocolate syrup)
Mint Chocolate (Addition of real mint leaves and chocolate syrup)
Caramel (Addition of caramel drizzle)

Would love to see your icy creations!

Beautiful Baking (Blending) Sweeties





Friday, 22 March 2013

What in the sugar is a macaron?

I have been receiving many orders and questions about SD Bake Shoppe's macarons so I hope that I can answer most of your questions in this post. 

I have described what a macaron is in previous posts, but I did not go very in depth. Here is an FAQs list regarding the Parisian treat!

"I would like a maca---a macar---". Don't worry! I had trouble pronouncing it for the longest time too. 

How to say it: MA-KAH-RONS (You can give it the French 'r' as well if you want to be fancy) 
How not to say it: MA-KAH-ROONS. Macaroons are made with coconut and do not taste at all like macarons. 

"What is it made out of?"

The shells are made out of almond flour, icing sugar, aged egg whites, granulated sugar and water.

"Is it gluten free?"

It is gluten free, but because I bake a lot of non-gluten free items at the bake shoppe I would recommend that those who have a serious allergy should not consume them. 

"What is a 'good' macaron?"

A properly made macaron should have an airy shell that collapses delicately when bitten. It should also have a slightly chewy centre and a delectable filling inside (as shown below)!



"These are pricey! What is so special about them?"

Macarons are my favourite type of cookies in the whole entire world, but they are also one of the most temperamental and difficult cookies to make. The ingredients and tools needed are quite expensive. I buy good quality almond flour and only use my stainless steel pans imported from France (I don't use these pans for any other type of cookie). They are also quite time consuming as there is a lot of wait time and they need a whole lot of TLC, planning ahead and preparation!



"How do you make different flavours?"

I personally only change the flavouring of the filling of my macarons rather than the shell itself. 



"How long do they keep for?"

I have heard that they last up to three months in the freezer, but I wouldn't want to freeze them for over a month depending on the type of filling.

"Why is it that specialized macaron orders have a minimum?"

Because I do a lot of custom work, most customers prefer particular coloured macarons. Colouring macarons is a lot more difficult than colouring other types of cookies as you cannot simply separate the batters and colour them.


Hopefully that answers most of the questions you may have about macarons! Keep an eye out for some of our past and future macaron tutorials.

Beautiful Baking Sweeties





The Laziest Chocolate Fudge Cupcakes with a Mint Chocolate Ganache Filling

I love baking everything from scratch as the end product feels so much more rewarding, but there are exceptions...

Yesterday I really wanted to surprise my fiance with cupcakes at his work (since I had a portion of the day off---a rarity!). He works about an hour away from where I live so I needed to make something expedient yet yummy. I didn't want to rely solely on my box of chocolate fudge cake mix so I made a few alterations. I had some leftover mint chocolate ganache in the fridge from filling my macarons the other day so that inspired  me to make chocolate fudge cupcakes filled with mint chocolate ganache.

Ingredients:

For the Cupcake:

Chocolate Fudge Cake Mix (you can pretty much use any boxed cake mix, but I like the idea of chocolate on chocolate)

Mint Chocolate Ganache (dark or milk chocolate would also work; you could probably use white chocolate as well, but I am personally not a huge fan)

For the Topping:

Approximately 1 Cup of Whipping Cream (or more!)
Approximately 2 Tablespoons of Confectioners Sugar (some people like a sweeter topping so feel free to add more; you could also use granulated sugar instead if you don't have icing sugar on hand)

Optional: You could add some green food colouring to really highlight the mint flavour. I also added some crushed up mint chocolate chips (I just crushed them because I thought it looked more 'gourmet')

The Method:

Mix your cake mix according to the box's directions:


It's okay if your mixture is a bit lumpy!

For easy pouring, I always put the cupcake mixture into a liquid measuring cup. Some people like to use an ice cream scoop, but I find this method works a whole lot better for me. After transferring the batter, place cupcake liners in your cupcake pan and fill the individual cups with batter three quarters of the way. Then take your refrigerated mint chocolate ganache and spoon about a tablespoon into the centre of the cupcake batter. The batter I used was fairly thick so the ganache didn't fall to the bottom like I expected it to.


Pop them in the oven at 350 degrees F for around twenty minutes. The toothpick test will still work with these cupcakes, just stick your toothpick on the side of the cupcake rather than the centre (or else you might mistaken the yummy chocolate ganache for uncooked cupcake batter). 



Once the cupcakes come out of the oven, place them on a rack to cool. Now it's time to make the whipped cream topping! My fiance absolutely hates icings of any kind, but adores whipped cream so I made this just for him.

Take your whipped cream and pour it into a chilled mixing bowl to avoid potential whipped cream floppiness (I popped mine into the freezer for about five minutes). Then add your confectioners sugar and whip your whipping cream until it is stiff. You want it fairly stiff so you can pipe it onto your cupcakes like icing. If the cupcakes will be consumed later, don't pipe on your whipped cream too far in advance. 



I added some green food colouring to my whipped cream, but it looks great in white as well. 

Wait till your cupcakes are completely cooled then fill a piping bag fitted with a medium-large star tip (or any tip!). Ice your cupcakes and then sprinkle some mint chocolate chips on top if you like. So good that I ate three in one sitting.


Beautiful Baking Sweeties!