Kamis, 31 Maret 2011

How Do You Like Your Eggs?

I know what you're going to answer! Sunny side-up? Over easy? Hard boiled? Scrambled?

If you ask me, I just like my eggs two ways:

Cooked when I eat it:

And raw when I have to bake cupcakes... hehehe :)
This all started with these egg like toys. Hollow on the inside. Just the way  like it. Cute.

Then I melted some Goya Easy Melt Cream White Chocolate Buttons into the egg shells. I think this is the closest we have to candy melts. 
The piping gel is the secret to the almost real rendition to the egg whites.
See what I mean? A pool of fresh egg whites.
So now you know how I like my eggs.
How do you like yours?
Happy Cupcaking, 
Aikko


Rabu, 23 Maret 2011

Dear Malin


Thank you so much for the lovely cupcake liners! They're absolutely adorable. I love them! :)



Let me know the next time you are in town, I'll bake you a cake :)


See you soon!
Aikko

Senin, 21 Maret 2011

Cottony Soft Three Vanilla Japanese Cheesecake



My friend Abbie sent me a link awhile back (make that way way waaay back). She came across a cheesecake recipe that seems to be too good to be true.

And indeed it is. I can't believe I tried making it just now. It was tangy yet sweet, cottony soft and definitely a "where have you been all my life?" kind of cheesecake.

I tweaked the recipe a bit to make it a three vanilla cheesecake. Why three?

My cheesecake has vanilla sugar, vanilla beans and pure vanilla extract. It couldn't get any vanilla-ish than that.
The recipe calls for butter, cream cheese and milk. Simple enough.
Which I'd need to melt over a double boiler. Then set aside to cool. This is where I added the vanilla beans. Beans of one pod is enough. Yummy!!!
The recipe calls for corn flour. I got stuck there for awhile when I first read the recipe. I can't find corn flour in the grocery aisles. Just cornstarch. Lucky me, I found out they are one and the same.
Once the cream cheese mixture has cooled, I folded in the cake flour, corn flour, egg yolks and lemon juice. A very dense mixture will come out.
In another bowl, I whisked the egg whites till foamy, then I added the vanilla sugar gradually.
I waited until soft peaks form then I folded it into the cream cheese mixture. 
I then made sure to fold it gently then added the vanilla extract. Pour mixture into an 8-inch spring form pan.
I covered my pan with aluminum foil since I'll be using the Bain Marie (a.k.a water bath) technique.
I baked it at 325 F for an hour.
Oops! I almost burned a part of it. Hehehehe! I blame the oven for this, not me who got distracted because I was reading "The Lost Hero"... again.

Cottony Soft Three Vanilla Japanese Cheesecake
recipe adapted from Diana's Desserts

Ingredients: 
140g fine granulated vanilla sugar 
6 egg whites 
6 egg yolks 
1/4 tsp. cream of tartar 
50g butter 
250g cream cheese 
100 ml fresh milk 
1 tsp. lemon juice 
60g cake flour /superfine flour 
20g cornflour (cornstarch) 
1/4 tsp. salt.
1tsp vanilla exract
1 vanilla pod



Instructions:
1. Melt cream cheese, butter and milk over a double boiler. Cool the mixture. Add vanilla beans. Fold in the flour, the cornflour, egg yolks, lemon juice and mix well. 
2. Whisk egg whites with cream of tartar until foamy. Add in the vanilla sugar and whisk until soft peaks form. 
3. Add the cheese mixture to the egg white mixture and mix well. Mix in the vanilla extract. Pour into a 8-inch round cake pan (Lightly grease and line the bottom and sides of the pan with greaseproof baking paper or parchment paper). 
4. Bake cheesecake in a water bath for 1 hours 10 minutes or until set and golden brown at 160 degrees C (325 degrees F). 

Makes 1 (8-inch) cheesecake, 12 servings



Happy Cupcaking, 
Aikko




ps: To the people of Japan, my heart goes out to you.


Senin, 07 Maret 2011

I ran out of...

Vanilla extract last weekend. So I headed to the nearest Gourdo's (Greenbelt 3) to buy a bottle or two.
That was the plan. 
But plans don't always work out. When I saw Wilton's Bake Easy, I thought, I just have to have it. 
And then I saw this. Isn't it beautiful? I can see a butter cake being baked in this pan. Pops can imagine gelatin being formed in it. Wilton calls it a Cascade Pan. I don't know why but I'd like to call it a Bundt pan doubly prettified,
Want to see how it looks like on the inside? Can this pan get any prettier? And I just have to have it. There goes my plan of only buying vanilla extract! :)

Happy Cupcaking,Aikko





Sabtu, 05 Maret 2011

Black Background, I Don't Get You

I'm supposed to be writing about something work related. Instead, I have this post open typing the night away. 
I don't like a black background, no matter how black the background is, I can't get it to look the way black should look in my photos.
See, first I tried taking a picture of one cupcake, then three and then five cupcakes. It's still not black enough. I'm not doing something right, am I? Camera settings perhaps?
This is the blackest black I got for the background. Unfortunately, the composition sucks, hehehe! :)
The roses are made from gumpaste. As you see, I still need lots of practice. They look like weird roses. I like it though when I gathered them all and made them into a bouquet. They actually look better together than on top of the cupcakes I made! 

Why red stems you ask? This post is inspired by a YA - Beastly by Alex Flinn. A modern retelling of Beauty and the Beast. I love fairy tales and also love fairy tale retellings. I'm supposed to tell you more, but I got distracted the not-so-black background. Anyway, there's always the next time. 
Happy Cupcaking, 
Aikko

ps: Beastly, the film version, opened last Friday. Can't wait to see it.

Rabu, 02 Maret 2011

Pinoy Cupcake: Champorado at Tuyo

When I was a kid, I don't like food (I don't have that problem now, a perfect evidence is my waistline). Every year come the school annual physical examination, I give my mom a report from the school nurse saying I was underweight. You know what one of Ma's tricks was? Using condensed milk as her paintbrush, she'd put a smiley face on a champorado. Then she'd coax me to eat it, "Look now! We're eating the eyes", "Oh look, we're eating the lips!" Ma totally worked her magic on me. 
Champorado (and I am quoting from Wikipedia) "is a sweet chocolate rice porridge in Filipino cuisine. It is traditionally made by boiling sticky rice with cocoa powder, giving it a distinctly brown color and usually with milk and sugar to make it taste sweeter. However, dry Champorado mixes are prepared by just adding boiling water. It can be served hot or cold and with milk and sugar to taste. It is served usually at breakfast and sometimes together with salty dried fish locally known as tuyo."
As part of my Pinoy Cupcake Project, I made these Champorado and Tuyo cupcakes. Chocolate cupcakes made of rice flour and tablea de cacao, iced with chocolate ganache, topped with a sliver of fried tuyo and drizzled with condensed milk.
This post is also for Joshua and his wife Roma, my sister's school friends. They now live in London so I am guessing they terribly miss Filipino food, hence the request to make champorado cupcakes. Joshua and Roma, these are for you.


Happy Cupcaking!
Aikko