This week's
Sweet Melissa Sundays recipe,
Red Velvet Cake, was chosen by Rosy of
Rosy Lips and Lavender. With Valentine's Day around the corner, this week's pick made perfect sense. I've never made Red Velvet Cake from scratch before so I was pretty excited. Thank you, Rosy, for picking a recipe I've never tried before.
While comparing the SMS recipe to the Red Velvet Cake in Rose's Heavenly Cake, I learned that it's better to use baking powder instead of baking soda, to prevent the cake from turning brown-ish while baking. I also left out the vinegar as the buttermilk in the recipe provided sufficient acidity to the batter. For the red food coloring, I used McCormick's liquid red food coloring.
With the batter in the Pyrex cup, dividing up the batter was a breeze. 11 cupcakes total.
An inside look into the Red Velvet Cupcake. I made a third of the recipe and baked cupcakes. The batter yielded 11 cupcakes. When the cupcakes came out of the oven, I couldn't wait to try them. I was happy to see that the cupcakes retained their red color. As soon as they were cooled and just slightly warm, I broke a cupcake in half to look at the texture and feel the cake's moisture content. So far so good. Now let's have a taste... oh it has no frosting yet, you ask? I couldn't wait for that. This is my homemade Red Velvet Cake from scratch and I want to taste it NOW :o) I can't tell you how disappointed I was. I expected a chocolatey cupcake that happens to be red in color. Not the case. No chocolate flavor to be found. After you swallow, you get this weird and off-taste in your mouth. I have to believe that the food coloring is the culprit. This is the first time ever I considered throwing a baked good in the trash. For now, I bagged them in a ziploc bag and put them in the freezer. Maybe if I cut them up, doused them with a chocolate syrup and lots of whipped cream, I could make a palatable trifle with them. Needless to say, I decided not to "waste" a good cream cheese frosting on these. Sorry!
This oil-based chocolate batter came together quickly. These cupcakes baked in a 300 degrees oven for quite some time, about 35 minutes, even though the recipe stated 20-25 minutes. It didn't negatively impact the cupcakes though. With this setback, I needed a backup. After all, I had my mind set on eating cupcakes that evening and they had to be chocolate. One recipe that's been on my todo list is Molly Wizenberg's recipe from her book,
A Homemade Life. Molly is widely known for her award-winning blog,
Orangette. You can find the recipe for these super-chocolatey, moist and fudgy cupcakes
HERE. I made a 1/3 of the recipe which yielded 12 cupcakes and used a simple chocolate glaze to "frost" them. Hubby really liked these. He already had a dessert today so he was only going to eat half a cupcake. When I came back into the room, the other half was gone :o)
Doesn't that look gorgeous? The cupcake in all its chocolate glaze glory. Bon appetit! Final thoughts/tips:
- Hubby didn't like the Red Velvet Cupcakes either. I didn't share with him my opinion until he told me his. He too said it had a "funny taste".
- Since the red food coloring was the only ingredient I don't normally using in my baking, I'd have to think that that was the culprit but I'm not sure.
- The recipe for the Red Velvet Cake can be found HERE. A big thanks to Rosy for hosting this week!
- The backup chocolate cupcakes more than made up for the RVC setback. They were absolutely delicious. I'm not much of a milk drinker but if you are, I'm sure you'd want a tall glass of cold milk with these cupcakes. They're very moist, fudgy and tender, and are deliciously chocolatey even without the chocolate glaze.
- If you're in a serious chocolate mood, try the Chocolate Cupcakes. The recipe can be found HERE.
- Don't forget to check out the other SMS bakers to see if they had better luck with this recipe.