Yesterday – Saturday morning I was up early for the beginning of a busy baking weekend, and thought it would be easy to whip up a quick batch of cupcakes before breakfast. The recipe looked easy enough to do in my sleep which is my usual state before breakfast. I don’t usually bake before breakfast but it was my crazy way of trying to make it seem quick and effortless because breakfast is one of the earliest things I do in the day.
There was some method in my madness. I wanted to test a new mini-muffin pan, but more importantly to try out substituting a new branch of gluten free flour I had bought the previous week. My sister and I were holding a gluten free morning tea the next day and I wanted to check this flour could be substituted easily.
When my niece Grace was originally tested positive as celiac, I bought some freedom foods gluten free flour mix which had the squeaky consistency of cornflour and when I substituted it for wheat flour it was sorely disappointing. But my mum had been having great luck with substituting her flour so I decided it was time to try a different brand. I bought Casalare at the health food store and wanted to test it on my cupcakes.
After putting mixture into new mini-muffins pan I realised I had forgotten to add the bicarbonate soda – you might call it a mistake or an accidental experiment. I once put a cake in the oven and remembered I had forgot to add the sugar – when I tipped mixture back into a mixing bowl and added sugar, I was amazed at how the texture changed into a more gooey mixture.
Luckily yesterday I had another batch to put in the oven and was fascinated to see the difference that bicarb soda makes. The first batch didn’t change shape or texture as much or turn golden. Whereas the second batch were a lot more cake-like. The texture had a proper crumb and they rounded out as they rose and went golden brown.
I hope not to do this again but am sort of glad I did as it was interesting. It has made me realize that even a tiny bit of bicarb soda does a lot more than make cakes rise. (Oh, and the Casalare gluten free flour was much better)
Lemon Yoghurt Cupcakes
(from Wiltshire mini-muffin pan packaging)
makes 24 mini muffins
90g butter
100g castor sugar
1 egg
135g plain flour
¼ tsp bicarb
60g plain yoghurt (I did 60ml – is that the same?)
Zest of one lemon
25ml lemon juice
Preheat oven to 180 C. The recipe says to use electric beaters but I just used a metal spoon. Beat butter and sugar til creamy. Then add egg and beat well. Add remaining ingredients. Spoon into mini-muffin moulds and bake 10 minutes (it says 6-8 minutes in the recipe). Cool on a wire rack.
On the stereo
The Jarvis Cocker Record: Jarvis Cocker
Hi Johanna, I'm tagging you for a meme :) Check out my blog for details.
ReplyDeleteI'll have to try out the Casalare flour. I have some F.G. Roberts brand which has been a miserable failure in substitutions. viz the latex rubber Hot Milk Cake.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the tip!
Thanks Brooke - enjoyed your comments on your blog and will be back with my own soon I hope
ReplyDeleteKathleen - I am beginning to think that the brands of gluten free flour mixes matter a lot - it is so different to just buying a packet of any old wheat flour! I also find brown rice flour quite good - will blog about my GF choc chip cookies soon!
"Thought it would be easy to whip up a quick batch of cupcakes before breakfast" - Good grief, Johanna! You are superwoman!
ReplyDeleteThese sounds wonderful.
thanks Wendy - I would have said overambitious or just plain crazy - but 'superwoman' sounds much better
ReplyDeleteI love anything lemon! :)
ReplyDeletevicki if I could I would send you some of our surplus of lemons - one of E's work colleagues keeps bringing them in for him - some days I am happy to use lemons in cooking but I'm finding these little cakes a bit too much lemon for me! (although it made me not care too much if they were a total disaster)
ReplyDelete