Showing posts with label Hearts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hearts. Show all posts

Monday, 4 February 2013

Valentine's Raspberry Confetti Cake

I am one of the few women you will ever meet who is deadly serious when they say they don't like Valentine's Day. 
     I've never appreciated the obvious tackiness of it all: heart balloons that deflate too quickly, boxes of chocolate I won't eat for fear of them never leaving my hips and being given bouquets of luridly coloured flowers, by misinformed men, that clash with the monochrome décor in my bedroom.  
    Despite being in relationships, I choose to spend Valentine's Day with my best friend every year, getting horribly drunk, without a love heart or neon pink flower petal in sight. 


     However, now I'm taking my cake making quite seriously, I decided I should probably bake something for Valentine's Day, seeing as lots of people do seem to rather enjoy it.
     I'm more than slightly ashamed to say that I surprised myself with how horribly glittery, heart-filled and smushy I became. Apparently the one thing that can melt my icy exterior and stony heart, and in turn, make me a sickening 'hearts-and-flowers' kind of girl, is cake. I'm not quite sure why I'm so surprised...
     This cake is a raspberry sponge with cream cheese frosting, which you can decorate however you please. I planned on topping it solely with raspberries, however, as you can see, this plan soon changed and became just a few raspberries and far more heart sprinkles than I care to admit. So decorate as you wish, I won't judge you now mine looks like romantic carnage.

For the Sponge: 


350g butter
350g caster sugar
6 eggs
2 tsp vanilla extract 
450g plain flour
2 tbsp + 2 tsp baking powder
300ml soured cream
250g fresh raspberries
(One 25cm ring mould, greased.)



  • Preheat your oven to 170ºC (Gas Mark 3)
  • After you have whisked together the butter, sugar, eggs, vanilla extract, flour, baking powder and soured cream, spoon in your raspberries and mix well using a wooden spoon. 
  • After this, pour the mixture into your preprepared ring mould and place in the oven for 40 minutes. 
  • Once your cake has been baking for the full 40 minutes, test with a cake skewer. If your skewer comes out clean, leave to cool completely. If it doesn't place back in the oven for 5 minute instalments, testing after each one. 
  • Leave to cool completely on a cooling rack, do not remove the cake from the tin until it is completely cool. 


For the Frosting:

600g icing sugar

100g butter
250g cream cheese 


  • Simply whisk all your ingredients together for around 5 minutes, or until your mixture is light and fluffy.
  • Once your cake is completely cool, spoon on your frosting and smooth over the cake. (Preferably using a standard palette knife.) 
  • Once your cake is evenly covered in frosting, decorate it as you wish. Having raspberries on the outside looks beautiful and slightly rustic, but feel free to add whatever else you like.




     You'll be surprised how allowing your creativity to run free, also allows the hidden romantic in you to run far freer than you would usually allow it to. So have some fun with this loved-up little cake because; as the English proverb goes: "If you can't beat them, join them."


Best of luck with your amorous baking,


Enjoy, K x




Saturday, 13 October 2012

"I Love London" Themed Chocolate Sponge Cupcakes with Vanilla Frosting

This week I decided to go back to basics and make some super simple little cakes and 'go to town' on the decoration side of things! So, I opted for a chocolate sponge (who doesn't like that?) and some super sweet, vanilla buttercream frosting!
     I bought my decorations from 'The Happy Cupcake Company' (http://www.thehappycupcakecompany.co.uk) in Bath which, as we all know by now, is my favourite shop in Bath and does make me a happy cupcake baker! I used some London themed cases which each had red London buses round the outside and a Beefeater guard on the bottom (and yes, I shamelessly used and enjoyed the stereotypes...) I then sprinkled gold stars on the top and placed an edible, sparkly red heart on each - being the glitter loving lady that I am, happiness was then achieved.
     This was the recipe I used for these gorgeous cakes which were a vision in red, white and blue (with a touch of gold...)

(For The Sponge - Makes 18)



100g plain flour
20g cocoa powder
140g caster sugar
1 1/2 tsp baking powder
40g butter
120ml semi skimmed milk
1 egg
1 tsp vanilla extract

(For The Frosting)


250g icing sugar

80g butter
25ml semi skimmed milk
1/2 tsp vanilla extract


  • Simply preheat your oven to 170ºC (Gas Mark 3) and cook your cakes for 20-25 minutes.
  • Once cool , mix all your vanilla frosting ingredients together and then frost and decorate to your heart's content!


Enjoy, K x

Saturday, 6 October 2012

Macmillan Coffee Morning






On Friday 28th of September I held a Macmillan Coffee Morning at my house, in memory of my Granddad, who I lost to cancer in September 2011. 
I spent the whole of Thursday covered in cake mix (including a slither of cream cheese frosting on the end of my nose that I only got pointed out to me at the very end of the day.) Alas, six hours of baking, one ring cake, a batch of sugar cookies, dozens of marshmallow twizzlers and two tiers of Terry's Chocolate Orange and marshmallow cupcakes later, I was prepared for a cake-filled Friday morning. 
The overall showstopper of the morning was the blueberry ring cake, with everyone having more than one helping. It is a recipe based on one from the Hummingbird Bakery cookbook, however I tend to use a lot more blueberries than suggested, both in the sponge and for decoration. This is because I think they enhance everything and, due to their antioxidant properties, they also make a huge slice of cake seem a little healthier. However, If you don't want to use as many, you don't have to.

Here's the recipe:

(For the Sponge)

350g butter
350g caster sugar
6 eggs
1 tbsp vanilla extract

450g plain flour
2 tbsp + 2 tsp baking powder
280ml soured cream
250g fresh blueberries

(25cm ring mould, greased.)

(For the Frosting)

600g icing sugar
100g butter
250g cream cheese (Such as 
Philadelphia)
Around 250-300g of blueberries, to 
decorate.

  • Heat your oven to 170ºC (Gas Mark 3) and ensure you have a well greased ring mould (works beautifully for this cake). 
  • Beat all your sponge ingredients together, until light and fluffy.
  • Bake for 40 minutes. Skewer your cake at it’s deepest point, if the skewer comes out clean (with no cake mixture on it) then leave to cool. If not, place back into the oven for five minute intervals, until cooked through.
  • Remove from the oven and leave to cool completely, before removing from the mould.
  • Once totally cool, beat all frosting ingredients together and use a palette knife or spatula to ensure that your cake is completely iced.
  • Once frosted, spread the blueberries evenly over the top of the cake to decorate.

Enjoy, K x


P.S - The morning was a great success and it was lovely to see so many familiar faces, all from different walks of life, come together to support my chosen charity. Despite the current economic climate, between only twenty people we managed to raise a truly overwhelming £144.28, over the course of two hours. 
It was a truly heartwarming morning and one my Granddad would certainly loved to have been a part of - he was a fellow cake lover after all.

Wednesday, 3 October 2012

Classic Victoria Sponge


What better way to end our most patriotic summer to date, than with a traditional yummy slice of British, "Victoria Sponge" cake? (Clue: there is no better way.)

     This is a super simple recipe and how you present it is totally up to you. I simply added a piped buttercream heart to the top which encased a small, chocolate silver dragée and a simple dusting with icing sugar.
     If you prefer a Victoria Sandwich instead (minus the buttercream and simply use the jam!)


Recipe (For The Sponge)



  • 200g caster sugar
  • 200g softened butter
  • 4 eggs
  • 200g self-raising flour
  • 1 tsp baking powder 
  • 2 tbsp semi skimmed milk
(For the vanilla buttercream - if required)

250g icing sugar
80g butter
25ml semi skimmed milk
A couple of drops of vanilla extract.


  • Ensure you have properly prepared your cake tins (x2 20cm sandwich tins) with butter and greaseproof paper. Then heat your oven to 170ºC (Gas Mark 3) and cook for 20 minutes, before removing and leaving to cool.
  • Add whichever jam you like to one of your sponge (I favour raspberry and the tanginess it brings to the cake, but strawberry is gorgeous too!) Then spread your buttercream onto the opposing sponge base and sandwich together.

Super easy and super delicious!
Enjoy, K x

Earl Grey Sponge with Lemon Buttercream Icing




These are a beautiful summery, mid-afternoon cupcake. The earl grey gives them a beautiful richness while the lemon adds something a bit special and tangy to them. Don't be shy with the amount of lemon you put in your frosting, if you think it needs more, add it, just be aware you will also need to increase the amount of icing sugar you use.

      I opted to use blue gingham cases and a simple, chocolate silver heart dragée on the top, because it's a quintessentially British mouthful and deserves to be treated as such :)

My Recipe (Makes around 16 cakes)


(For The Sponge)


5 Earl Grey teabags

100ml just boiled water
80g butter
280g caster sugar
240g plain flour
1 tbsp baking powder
200ml semi skimmed milk
2 large eggs

(For The Frosting)


50ml semi skimmed milk

500g icing sugar
160g butter
2 tbsp lemon juice




  • The only thing I will point out is that while mixing your sponge ingredients together, you should leave you teabags soaking in their 100ml of water. It worked out nicely that once I had combined all my ingredients, my earl grey was stewed enough to add in.
  • Otherwise, set your oven to 190ºC (Gas Mark 5) and cook for 18-20 minutes. Remove until cool and then decorate as you please!


Enjoy, K x