Having made a lovely batch of lime curd and "putting up" some tasty (if a tad thick!) plum jam, I thought it would be great to share some of it with my colleagues in baked goods. I then thought, what better way to do this than in filled cupcakes.
My mind ticked over, and thought that lime and coconut would be great friends when teamed up in a cupcake, while plum and chocolate would also be perfect. Accordingly, I searched my recipe books for coconut cupcakes and chocolate cupcakes that I could use as a base for my creations. That trusty cupcake tome, The Australian Womens Weekly Cupcakes, came to the rescue with some suitable base recipes (see their Lemon Meringue Cakes on p60 and their Honeycomb Creams on p 12), and lo, there were two dozen filled cupcakes in contrasting flavours.
Lime coconut cupcakes
To make lime coconut cupcakes, you will need:
125g cubed butter at room temperature
2 teaspoons lime zest
2/3 cup sugar
2 eggs
1/3 cup milk
3/4 cup dessicated coconut
1 1/4 cups self-raising flour, sifted
6 teaspoons lime curd
250g icing sugar, sifted
juice of one lime
green food colouring
green sanding sugar
Preheat your oven to 180 degrees Celsius, and line a 12 hole muffin tin with cupcake papers.
Beat the butter, zest, sugar and eggs together with an electric mixer until light fluffy. Using a wooden spoon, stir in the milk, coconut and flour. Put even quantities of the batter into each cupcake paper, and bake the cakes for 2-25 minutes until cooked through. Turn out the cakes onto a wire rack to cool.
Once the cakes are completely cool, cut a cone-shaped hole in the top of each cake, cut off the point of the cone-shaped piece of cake and set aside as a "lid" for that cake. Fill the hole with approximately half a teaspoon of lime curd, then pop the "lid" of the cake on top of the curd.
Make the icing by combining the icing sugar with the lime juice, adding water if necessary to form a thick, spreadable icing. Dye the icing the desired shade of green, then spread the top of each cake with green icing, and sprinkle with sanding sugar to decorate. Set aside until the icing has dried.
Chocolate ginger plum cakes
For the chocolate ginger plum cakes, you will need:
1/2 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup plain flour, sifted
1/2 cup self-raising flour, sifted
1/4 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
1 teaspoon ground ginger
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
90g butter, cubed, at room temperature
1 egg
1/4 cup milk
2 tablespoons golden syrup
50g dark choc bits or chopped dark chocolate
6 teaspoons plum jam
250g icing sugar, sifted
1 tablespoon cocoa powder
cold water
sprinkles to decorate
Preheat your oven to 170 degrees Celsius and line a 12 hole muffin tin with cupcake papers.
Combine the flours, bicarbonate of soda and spices in the bowl of your electric mixer. Add the butter, egg, milk and golden syrup, and beat on low speed until the ingredients are just combined, then increase the speed and beat until pale and fluffy. Using a wooden spoon, stir through the chocolate chunks/bits, then place equal quantities of batter into each cupcake paper. Bake the cakes for 30 minutes or until cooked through, then turn them onto a wire rack to cool completely.
Once the cakes are cool, cut a cone-shaped hole in the top of each cake, cut off the point of the cone-shaped piece of cake and set aside as a "lid" for that cake. Fill the hole with approximately half a teaspoon of plum jam, then pop the "lid" of the cake on top of the jam.
To make the icing, combine the icing sugar and cocoa powder in a small bowl, then gradually add cold water, a little bit at a time, until you have a thick icing of spreadable consistency. Spread the icing on the top of each cake, then decorate with sprinkles.
I was surprised in that my favourite cakes were the chocolate ginger plum cakes, which have a lovely gingerbread quality. The lime coconut cakes seemed a little dryer, and didn't have the same depth of flavour as the chocolate ginger cakes.
My tip when making cupcakes in cupcake papers is NOT to let them cool in the muffin tin - I found out to my detriment that the heat from the tin steams the papers partly off the cakes, making for a slightly untidy appearance. You all probably knew that already, but hey, I didn't, and if I can save one other person from making this mistake, it was worth it.
At work, the chocolate ginger cupcakes were the biggest hit, confirming that I have very good taste (and can make a mean, if thick, plum jam!).
THese sound delicious! THe ginger in the plum chocolate really caught my eye!!
ReplyDeleteRemember that song?.."you put the lime in the coconut...".
ReplyDeleteWhat wonderful cupcakes!!
ReplyDeleteI love the idea of coconut & lime cupcakes as you know I baked a coconut & lime cake and just blogged it today lol
WOW those chocolate ginger plumb cupcakes sound equally as delicious too!!
Rosie x
Both of them looks delicious so i guess i will have them both :-)
ReplyDeleteWowowowo :-D these cupcakes are stunning darling!! Really great also the colours!
ReplyDeleteFantastic and thanks a lot for the recipes!
I send you a kiss :-D
and a hug
and a kiss
.and another hug
:-DSilvia
I know how delicious coconut and lime is, but now I'm intrigued by your plum and chocolate ginger plum cupcakes. I don't believe I've ever seen plum jam. Could you suggest a substitute? As for chocolate and ginger, oh my, is it ever heavenly. :)
ReplyDeletethey look cool! I have that book so am keen to try out the gingerbread plum cakes
ReplyDeleteBeautiful looking (and I bet tasting!) cakes
ReplyDeleteI have that cake stand too - it's lovely isn't it?
oh this is so beautiful and delicious..i have been craving for cupcakes lately..gotta try this recipe!!!
ReplyDeleteI read somewhere that we should let it cool about 5 to 7 minutes in the muffin tray, then remove and cool on a wire rack. As for temperature, I normally use 150C. Anyway, cute and colourful cuppies !
ReplyDeleteHi Susan, I suggest using raspberry jam instead - both jams have a rich, sweet flavour, so I think that would work well here.
ReplyDeleteHi Caked, I bought this cakestand in England too, in a tiny but perfect town whose name I now cannot remember.
These cupcakes put me in mind of "Little Cake Days," those fundraisers we had in primary school. (Although I don't think those cupcakes were quite so sophisticated...)
ReplyDeleteChocolate ginger and plum sounds absolutely delicious. That would have been my pick too :)
ReplyDeletegreat idea for using preserves in baking - I had expected you would bake the jam in them - I have seen that in some recipes. Those chocolate ginger plum ones sounds absolutely delicious
ReplyDeleteI love the ingredients you used. They look wonderful on your cake stand.
ReplyDeleteThese cupcakes look such a treat. I see how you love the taste of lime. :-D
ReplyDeleteThe cupcakes look dee-lish!
ReplyDeleteCoconut and lime are a classic combination, but the chocolate/plum idea is inspired! They both look lovely and very delicious!
ReplyDeleteI have something for you at my blog.
ReplyDeleteOoooh, these both sound good to me! I think I'm especially drawn to the chocolate, ginger, and plum ones - what an amazing combination of flavours!
ReplyDeleteI'm just coming from Rosie's blog and you are right: great minds think alike!
ReplyDeleteThe chocolate-ginger-plum cakes sound like a sweet and slightly spicy treat and would gladly eat a couple of those too.