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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Recipes  



2.1  Variants  







3 Pans and liners  





4 Shops  





5 Themes  





6 Cupcake kits  





7 See also  





8 References  





9 External links  














Cupcake






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Cupcake
Plain cupcake with strawberry icing, and chocolate cupcake with chocolate icing
Alternative namesFairy cake, patty cake,[1] cup cake
TypeCake
Place of originUnited States
Main ingredientsButter, sugar, eggs, flour; optionally frosting and other cake decorations

Acupcake (AmE), fairy cake (BrE), or bun (IrE) is a small cake designed to serve one person, which may be baked in a small thin paper or aluminum cup. As with larger cakes, frosting and other cake decorations such as fruit and candy may be applied.

History

Unfrosted cupcakes

The earliest extant description of what is now often called a cupcake was in 1796, when a recipe for "a light cake to bake in small cups" was written in American CookerybyAmelia Simmons.[2][3] The earliest extant documentation of the term cupcake itself was in "Seventy-five Receipts for Pastry, Cakes, and Sweetmeats" in 1828 in Eliza Leslie's Receipts cookbook.[4][5]

In the early 19th century, there were two different uses for the term cup cakeorcupcake. In previous centuries, before muffin tins were widely available, the cakes were often baked in individual pottery cups, ramekins, or molds and took their name from the cups they were baked in. This is the use of the name that has remained, and the name of "cupcake" is now given to any small, round cake that is about the size of a teacup. While English fairy cakes vary in size more than American cupcake, they are traditionally smaller and are rarely topped with elaborate frosting.

The other kind of "cup cake" referred to a cake whose ingredients were measured by volume, using a standard-sized cup, instead of being weighed. Recipes whose ingredients were measured using a standard-sized cup could also be baked in cups; however, they were more commonly baked in tins as layers or loaves. In later years, when the use of volume measurements was firmly established in American home kitchens, these recipes became known as 1234 cakesorquarter cakes, so called because they are made up of four ingredients: one cup of butter, two cups of sugar, three cups of flour, and four eggs.[6][7] They are plain yellow cakes, somewhat less rich and less expensive than pound cake, due to using about half as much butter and eggs compared to pound cake.

The names of these two major classes of cakes were intended to signal the method to the baker; "cup cake" uses a volume measurement, and "pound cake" uses a weight measurement.[6]

Recipes

Amass-produced Hostess CupCake, a typical "snack cake" style of cupcake

A standard cupcake uses the same basic ingredients as standard-sized cakes: butter, sugar, eggs, and flour. Nearly any recipe that is suitable for a layer cake can be used to bake cupcakes. The cake batter used for cupcakes may be flavored or have other ingredients stirred in, such as raisins, berries, nuts, or chocolate chips.

Because their small size is more efficient for heat conduction, cupcakes bake much faster than a normal layered cake.[8]

Cupcakes may be topped with frosting or other cake decorations. Elaborately decorated cupcakes may be made for special occasions.

They may be filled with frosting, fruit, or pastry cream. For bakers making a small number of filled cupcakes, this is usually accomplished by using a spoon or knife to scoop a small hole in the top of the cupcake. Another method is to just insert the pastry bag in the middle of the cupcake. In commercial bakeries, the filling may be injected using a syringe.[citation needed]

Variants

Pans and liners

A cupcake pan, made of tinned steel

Originally, cupcakes were baked in heavy pottery cups. Some bakers still use individual ramekins, small coffee mugs, large tea cups, or other small ovenproof pottery-type dishes for baking cupcakes.

Cupcakes are usually baked in muffin tins. These pans are most often made from metal, with or without a non-stick surface, and generally have six or twelve depressions or "cups". They may also be made from stoneware, silicone rubber, or other materials. A standard size cup is 3 inches (76 mm) in diameter and holds about 4 ounces (110 g), although pans for both miniature and jumbo size cupcakes exist.[20] Specialty pans may offer many different sizes and shapes.

Cupcakes may be plain cakes without any frosting or other decoration. These were baked on a flat baking sheet in a double layer of paper cupcake liners.

Individual patty cases, or cupcake liners, may be used in baking. These are typically round sheets of thin paper pressed into a round, fluted cup shape. Liners can facilitate the easy removal of the cupcake from the tin after baking, keep the cupcake more moist, and reduce the effort needed to clean the pan.[20] The use of liners is also considered a more sanitary option when cupcakes are being passed from hand to hand. Like cupcake pans, several sizes of paper liners are available, from miniature to jumbo.

In addition to paper, cupcake liners may be made from very thin aluminum foil or, in a reusable version, silicone rubber. Because they can stand up on their own, foil and silicone liners can also be used on a flat baking sheet, which makes them popular among people who do not have a specialized muffin tin. Some of the largest paper liners are not fluted and are made out of thicker paper, often rolled at the top edge for additional strength, so that they can also stand independently for baking without a cupcake tin. Some bakers use two or three thin paper liners, nested together, to simulate the strength of a single foil cup.

Liners, which are also called paper cases, come in a variety of sizes. Slightly different sizes are considered "standard" in different countries. Miniature cases are commonly 27 to 30 millimetres (1.1 to 1.2 in) in diameter at the base and 20 millimetres (0.79 in) tall. Standard-size cases range from 45 to 53 millimetres (1.8 to 2.1 in) in diameter at the base and are 30 to 35 millimetres (1.2 to 1.4 in) tall. Australian and Swedish bakers are accustomed to taller paper cases with a larger diameter at the top than American and British bakers.[21]

The cupcone is a cupcake baked directly in an edible, flat-bottomed ice cream cone.

Shops

A cupcake shop in New Orleans, Louisiana

In the early 21st century, a trend for cupcake shops, which are specialized bakeries that sell little or nothing except cupcakes, developed in the United States, playing off of the sense of nostalgia evoked by the cakes. In New York City, cupcake shops like Magnolia Bakery gained publicity in their appearances on popular television shows like HBO's Sex and the City.[22]

Crumbs Bake Shop, a publicly traded business running the largest cupcake shop chain in the U.S., reached its peak stock price in 2011. Declining sales, due to competition from locally owned mom-and-pop specialty stores as well as increased competition from grocery stores, caused a sharp decline in the company's prospects and stock price in 2013.[23]

Georgetown Cupcake was the first cupcakery to open in Washington, D.C. The cupcake shop gained widespread publicity after the 2010 premier of TLC's DC Cupcakes, a six-part reality show about the shop and its owners, sisters Sophie LaMontagne and Katherine Kallinis.[24]

Based in Beverly Hills, California, Sprinkles Cupcakes is owned by Candace Nelson, who is also a star judge on the Food Network's Cupcake Wars, and her husband, Charles Nelson.[25] Sprinkles is the first cupcake shop to debut a cupcake ATM, which could hold up to 350 cupcakes at one time.[26]

Themes

Periodic Table of Cupcakes

Cupcakes are sometimes used to celebrate and illustrate specific events or themes. Popular themes include unicorns and mermaids.[27] Holiday-themed cupcakes, such as reindeer at Christmas, are popular in grocery stores.[27]

Among educational themes, a periodic table of cupcakes is a collection of decorated cupcakes arranged in order to represent the atomic elements of the periodic table.[28] The cupcakes are usually frosted with the appropriate atomic number and chemical symbol.[29] The first person to bake and ice a set of cupcakes organized and colored to represent the elements of the periodic table was Ida Freund in 1908.[30] The first woman to hold a post as a university chemistry lecturer in the UK, Freund used the cupcakes as a pedagogical tool to engage and amuse her female students at Cambridge University.[31]

Cupcake kits

This cupcake kit, showing Cinderella from the Disney movie, includes a printed paper decoration and colored cupcake liners.

Cupcake kits are kits which provide a set of parts needed to allow an amateur baker to produce a themed batch of cupcakes, often to tie in with themed parties. Examples of themes include princess, pirate, fairies and dinosaurs. Typically kits include appropriately decorated cupcake cases and cupcake toppers, but some kits are available which also include the ingredients needed for baking.

Cupcake kits were introduced in 2008 by the partyware company Meri Meri[32] and continue to be popular items in kitchenware stores.

See also

  • Petits fours, individual-sized or bite-sized cakes made by cutting a large sheet cake and frosting the pieces
  • Muffins, cupcake-sized quickbreads
  • Tea cake, a broad class of breads and cakes served with tea
  • Embossing mat
  • Bun, small pieces of bread or pastry
  • Icing (food)
  • Kue mangkok, Indonesian traditional cupcake
  • References

    1. ^ Eriksson, Sofia; Hastie, Madeleine; Roberts, Tom (24 July 2014). Eat History: Food and Drink in Australia and Beyond. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 79. ISBN 978-1-4438-6479-4. The first recipe in my school recipe book was for patty-cakes, now known all over the country by their American name, cup cakes.
  • ^ Simmons, Amelia (1996) [1796]. Hess, Karen (ed.). American Cookery (2nd ed.). Bedford, Massachusetts, Albany, New York: Applewood Books. p. 48.
  • ^ "The Food Timeline". Lynne Olver.
  • ^ Leslie, Eliza, Seventy-five Receipts for Pastry, Cakes, and Sweetmeats (Boston, Massachusetts: Munroe and Francis, 1828), p. 61.
  • ^ "Food Timeline". Archived from the original on 2 December 2014. Retrieved 5 April 2010.
  • ^ a b "The Food Timeline: cake history notes". Retrieved 14 March 2008.
  • ^ Cupcakes - Food Timeline
  • ^ Sakin, Melike; Kaymak-Ertekin, Figen; Ilicali, Coskan (1 December 2007). "Simultaneous heat and mass transfer simulation applied to convective oven cup cake baking". Journal of Food Engineering. 83 (3): 463–474. doi:10.1016/j.jfoodeng.2007.04.007.
  • ^ Farrow, Joanna (2005). Cupcakes. Vancouver: Whitecap Books. pp. 40–41. ISBN 978-1-55285-626-0.
  • ^ Mackley, Lesley (1992). The Book of Afternoon Tea. Los Angeles: HP Books. p. 69. ISBN 978-1-55788-046-8.
  • ^ Moskin, Julia; Gand, Gale (2001). Gale Gand's just a bite: 125 luscious little desserts. New York: Clarkson Potter. pp. 68–69. ISBN 978-0-609-60825-8.
  • ^ Byrn, Anne (2005). Cupcakes: From the Cake Mix Doctor. Workman Publishing. pp. 98–100. ISBN 978-0-7611-3548-7.
  • ^ Klivans, Elinor (2005). Cupcakes. San Francisco: Chronicle Books. pp. 80–81. ISBN 978-0-8118-4545-8.
  • ^ "Cupcakes | How To and Instructions | Martha Stewart". Archived from the original on 29 October 2013. Retrieved 26 August 2013.
  • ^ "Cool Cakes for 2010" by Simone Sant-Ghuran (7 Feb 2010) at The Guardian Trinidad and Tobago Archived 14 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  • ^ "New York Cupcakes". Little Views. 4 February 2006. Archived from the original on 5 April 2011. Retrieved 29 March 2011.
  • ^ See, for example, this recipe Archived 1 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine for a turtle-shaped cake made from cupcakes, or these photos.
  • ^ "Candy-Topped Cupcake Cones". BettyCrocker.com. Retrieved 25 March 2024.
  • ^ "Funfetti® Cupcake Cones - Pillsbury Baking". www.pillsburybaking.com. Retrieved 25 March 2024.
  • ^ a b "The Joy of Baking". Scroll down the page to section labeled "PANS".
  • ^ Smith, Lindy. Bake me I'm Yours... Cupcake Celebration. David & Charles: Newton Abbot; 2010. ISBN 9780715337707. p. 7.
  • ^ "Cupcake Passion More Than a Trend". CNN. 15 January 2010. Archived from the original on 25 October 2010. Retrieved 27 October 2010.
  • ^ Maltby, Emily; Needleman, Sarah (17 April 2013). "Forget Gold, the Gourmet Cupcake Market Is Crashing". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 28 April 2013.
  • ^ Clark, Cindy (15 July 2010). "'DC Cupcakes': Washington's purveyors of power pastry". USA Today.
  • ^ "Why We Love The Cupcake". HuffPost. 14 November 2012.
  • ^ "More cupcakes! Sprinkles shuts down ATM to increase capacity (Video)". 17 January 2014. Retrieved 6 July 2016.
  • ^ a b “Little Gems: Why Small Has Become Beautiful.” August 2019. British Baker, 31–33.
  • ^ "The most beautiful table". New Scientist. 241 (3219): 5. March 2019. doi:10.1016/S0262-4079(19)30344-6.
  • ^ "Periodic Table Cupcakes". HuffPost. Retrieved 7 January 2014.
  • ^ Lykknes, Annette; Tiggelen, Brigitte Van (5 August 2019). "Cupcakes and Chemical Composition: Ida Freund's Legacy". Women In Their Element: Selected Women's Contributions To The Periodic System. World Scientific. p. 457. ISBN 978-981-12-0630-6.
  • ^ Hill, Margaret; Dronsfield, Alan (September 2004). "Ida Freund – pioneer of women's education in chemistry". Education in Chemistry. Royal Society of Chemistry. We found a very large board with the Table set out. The divisions across and down were made with Edinburgh Rock, numbers were made of chocolate, and the elements were ice cakes each showing its name and atomic weight in icing.
  • ^ Moss, Victoria (21 August 2023). "Inside the world of the super-sized kids' party — starting at £4,000". The Times. ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 21 August 2023.
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