ok. these are some i made for my son's bday 2 years ago. recipe is in u.s terms so you'll have to be a bit creative and calculate things, but they are really yummy...
2 sticks of butter
1 cup sugar
1 cup brown sugar
4 eggs
6 oz unsweetened chocolate
2 cups cake flour
1 tspn baking soda
1 cup buttermilk
1 tspn vanilla
cream together butter, sugar, and brown sugar.
add 4 eggs, 6 oz of melted chocolate
add and alternate
2 cups of cake flour and 1 tspn of baking soda
with buttermilk and vanilla
bake at 350 for 20-25 minutes.
frosting
1/2 cup of butter (melted)
4 1/2 cups confectioners sugar
1/3-1/2 buttermilk or milk
vanilla extract.
if you want really chocolately cupcakes (add a bit of melted chocolate to frosting-
2. Cream butter and sugars until light and fluffy. Add eggs beating well after each addition. Beat in vanilla and jam. Fold in combined sifted flour, baking powder, and soda alternating with the milk.
3. Pour into molds and bake for about 20 min
4. Stir the ingredients for the buttercream in a pan under low heat until smooth and glossy. Spread over cooled cupcakes
Yum yum! I feel like munching this now! I made a hot-milk sponge cake yesterday so unfortunately I can't have this now...gotta control the piggy wig part of my brain!
Nil, sorry to spoil your fun but it isn't healthy to eat raw batter. Besides, I don't think the batter is really an indication of what they will taste like once baked. Can't help you on the recipe. I do have a muffin cookbook from Canada(eh?) with some great recipes, including banana muffins. Perhaps healthier than the chocolate.
Well I am not going to say yes or no as it is not my place but i have dabbled in some forbidden foods since being pregnant, i am sure the little bit of raw egg you consumed wont have any adverse affects. Its just precaution to not eat raw eggs, meat, cheeses etc... (just in case)
not concerned, just careful. Raw eggs can be a risk for salmonella and if pregnant-Nil became ill then it would be much more risky for you than not-pregnant-Nil. During pregnancy it's normal to have a "better safe, than sorry" approach to raw eggs
1. Use the Denner Kuchenmehl (cakeflour). It produces a softer cake than the usual Weissmehl or Haushaltmehl.
2. Don't overmix right after you add the floor. Fold it in gently till just combined. Overmixing makes the cake tougher, hence drier, because mixing develops the gluten in the flour.
3. Add two or three tablespoons of yoghurt or milk if the batter appears too thick.
4. Separation of the eggs makes cakes fluffier as it adds more air. Whisk the whites separately and fold it into the batter gently.
5. Check that you have enough baking powder (but not too much baking soda as it adds a 'funny' taste). Rough guide is: one teaspoon of baking powder for each cup of flour.