Gingerbread Cupcakes with Mango Buttercream Frosting

Everybody Loves Cupcakes!

Gingerbread Cupcakes
with Caramelized Mango Buttercream Frosting
by Bobby Flay

For the ginger syrup:
1 cup water 1 cup granulated sugar
1 (2-inch) piece fresh ginger, peeled and coarsely chopped

For the cupcakes:

1 3/4 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
3/4 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon ground ginger
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
1/2 stick unsalted butter, melted
3/4 cup dark brown sugar
2 large eggs
6 tablespoons black strap molasses
3/4 cup water

For the caramelized mango buttercream:

2 tablespoons unsalted butter
2 cups (1 pound) unsalted butter, at room temperature, cut into small pieces
1 to 2 tablespoons honey
3 ripe mangoes, peeled, pitted and coarsely chopped
6 egg yolks
3/4 cup sugar
1/2 cup light corn syrup
1 tablespoon pure vanilla extract
1/4 cup candied ginger, finely diced

For the ginger syrup:
Bring all the ingredients to a boil in a small saucepan and cook until the sugar has melted and the mixture thickens slightly. Remove from heat and infuse for 30 minutes. Remove ginger just before using.

For the cupcakes:
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Line 12-muffin tin cups with paper cupcake liners and spray the inside of each liner and the top of the pan with nonstick cooking spray.

Sift together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, ginger, cinnamon and cloves into a medium bowl.

Whisk together the melted butter, brown sugar, eggs, and molasses in a large bowl until blended. Add some of the water to batter then some of the dry ingredients to the batter. Continue alternating with the water and flour until everything is added and smooth.

Fill each paper liner with 1/3 cup of the batter, about 1/4-inch below the top of the liner.

Place into preheated oven and bake just until the tops feel firm and a toothpick inserted into the center come out clean, about 15 to 18 minutes. Remove from the oven and brush the tops liberally with some of the ginger syrup.

Allow cupcakes to cool prior to frosting.

For the caramelized mango buttercream:
Heat 2 tablespoons of butter in large saute pan over high heat. Add the honey and the mangoes and cook until caramelized and soft. Transfer to a food processor and process until smooth. Pass mixture through a medium mesh strainer into a bowl.

In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a wire whip attachment, beat the egg yolks at medium-high speed until creamy and pale yellow, about 5 minutes.

In a nonstick saucepan, combine the sugar and corn syrup. Place over medium-high heat and bring to a full rolling boil without stirring and cook until it reaches soft-ball stage (238 to 242 degrees F) on a candy thermometer. Immediately pour the mixture into a buttered measuring cup to halt the cooking.

Add a small amount of the syrup to the beaten egg yolks, turn on the mixer to high speed, and beat for about 5 seconds. Continue stopping the mixer, adding syrup, and beating in the same manner until all of the syrup is incorporated and the mixture is cooled completely.

Add the butter, 1 piece at a time, and beat until incorporated before adding the next piece. When all of the butter has been blended in, add the vanilla and slowly add the mango puree. Continue beating until combined.

Frost each gingerbread cupcake with the caramelized mango buttercream and sprinkle with the candied ginger.

All Rights Reserved by Fantastic Toys
Please do not repost Tim's photos or repost download
without his express or implied permission.

Photos and Instructions by Tim of Fantastic Toys
Thank you Tim!
You’re invited to a Cupcake Party!!!
Make a yummy cupcake in your favorite flavor. Decorate it any way you wish, add frosting, sprinkles or fruit. Share a cupcake with a friend or family member. Celebrate your LOVE of cupcake.
Materials Needed:
Craft Felt
Craft Glue
Needle/Thread
Trim-Ribbon
Polyfill Stuffing
Embroidery Floss
Pins
A PDF version is available for download.
www.myfantastictoys.com/cupcakeparty/cupcakeparty.zip

These are adorable.
Make them for a family or make them for a friend.
A perfect wonderful holiday gift or swap exchange present.
If you're like me and all thumbs,
you can purchase these and a gallery of
Tim's original designs at his Etsy store.
Tim:
Please do not sell the cupcakes.
They are to be made for your enjoyment and
given away as gifts to family or friends.

Betseyville Sweet Treats Purse
Originally uploaded by magicsparklebean

The owner got this on clearance online for only $26.00!
It retailed for $92.00!
Great bargain.
Photo by NY Times

Anybody remember the Krispy Kreme craze?


They had their heyday before the company over expanded.
The mystique of the product wore off with market saturation
and the low-carb craze of the late '90's.

Will cupcakes lose their market appeal?
Or their Tiffany status?



***
From the New York Times

New York City may well be the cupcake capital of America. Magnolia Bakery of Greenwich Village has produced a list of progeny very Old Testament in length: Magnolia begat Billy’s and Buttercup, and Buttercup in turn begat Sugar Sweet Sunshine.

And then there are Crumbs, Cupcake Cafe (which dates to 1988) and Burgers and Cupcakes. Los Angeles appears to be hopping on the cupcake bandwagon, but New York remains the genesis of cupcake awareness. (Los Angeles, however, gave us the yogurt craze with Pinkberry.)

Many of the cupcake shops have started to clone themselves. Magnolia opened a second spot on the Upper West Side in addition to its Village location. It plans a third store in Rockefeller Center this month. Buttercup Bake Shop now has two places on the East and West Sides of Manhattan. Within the last several years, Cupcake Cafe also now has two locations. Even with expansions, these places have retained their boutique appeal.

But Crumbs, which started in 2003 with a single store on the Upper West Side, is expanding more aggressively, with 40 planned stores over the next year and 150 within the next five years. (All self-financed.)

This kind of growth brings to mind the tale of Krispy Kreme, another sweet phenomenon that went national very fast. It, too, offered a nostalgic dessert at premium prices, with lines around the block and fawning press coverage. Krispy Kreme went public in 2000 and was a high-flying stock that confounded analysts with its market appeal, rising even as the dot-com bubble burst.
Paul Frank Cupcake Purse
The background of the bag is sparkly.
And, of course, it has a cupcake on it.

Cupcake in Bloom
Originally uploaded by SmallThingsIced
T
his is one gorgeous cupcake.
By Nicky:
A vanilla, muffin sized cupake with a fondant banket,
decorated with a single embossed red flower and embossed leaves.
The cupcake artist, Nicky is from the U.K.
She also designs unique cakes and cupcake wrappers too.
smallthingsiced.blogspot.com/
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