Saturday, June 06, 2009

Fête Fairy Cakes



Today is fête day, but with storm clouds rumbling outside and showers of hail I'm seriously thinking it is going to be called off. Like all good fêtes we have a cake stall. As I'm renowned for my general cake geekiness I thought I should contribute to the cake stall. No nipping off to Tescos and trying to pass their cakes off as mine, for me!

I decided to make something that I haven't made in years. While cupcakes have been à la mode for the last few years I wanted to go English Old School and go for the cupcake's daintier, less ostentatious cousin - the humble fairy cake. Until I made this batch I had forgotten how much smaller the fairy cake is compared to a cupcake.

As I'm not a huge fan of icing at the best of times, though I love the look of big cupcake swirls, I wanted to use a thinner icing that could be brightly coloured with ease. This icing acts more like self-levelling concrete and hides all the cake imperfections and also can hide a cake if it hasn't risen as much as you hope. Frankly I wanted another excuse to play around with my new food dyes.

I found the animal decorations in the back of my baking cupboard. Hubby bought them when we attempted chocolate covered apples, but thankfully I found hundreds and thousands before we made them; and yes these sugar animals were still in date. Hopefully the cakes sell well and make some money.

There is a secret ingredient, well not so secret as I'm about to tell you, that goes into these cakes; and it's custard powder. The custard powder does 2 things. It makes the cakes fluffier as well as flavouring the sponge. Hubby tasted one of the cakes last night and spotted the subtle custard taste. I don't really use custard powder for making custard, I prefer proper custard or a tin of ambrosia (yes I know, but there is something very comforting about it!) and use it in baking more. If you have any custard powder you can use cornflour to help keep the cakes fluffy. Of course cornflour alone won't flavour the cakes so add some vanilla extract.

This recipe is based on a Good Food recipee, though I have altered the method and icing.

The storm is getting worse...I wonder if these cakes will end up on the staffroom coffee table tomorrow instead.

Fairy Cakes
makes around 20

140g unsalted butter, softened
140g vanilla caster sugar (you can use normal caster)
3 eggs
100g self-raising flour
25g custard powder

for icing
200g icing sugar
2 tbsp lemon juice
2 tbsp boiling water
food dye (optional)
sprinkles (optional)

1) Preheat oven to 190oc. Arrange cake cases in fairy cake tin. Beat together butter and sugar then one by one beat in the eggs.

2) Stir in flour and custard powder until ingredients are well combined. Half fill each fairy case with the batter. Don't over fill or you won't have room for the icing to puddle.

3) Bake for 15 min until risen and golden. Allow to cool on a wire rack.

4) Beat together icing sugar, lemon juice and boiling water until you have a smooth icing. Colour with dyes if wanted. Using a teaspoon slowly pour the icing on top of the cakes. You can guide the icing somewhat as to where you want it to go. Once you have finished icing, cover with sprinkles and leave for the icing to set.

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21 comments:

goodshoeday said...

They look so pretty - I hope the storm passes so you get to sell them on the stall though I imagine your colleagues in staff room might prefer that the fete is called off so they get to tuck in!

Serena said...

I love the coloured icing (the blue in particular) and the tiny animals!

I'm not a very good baker (that's not fake modesty :)) but I recently did something completely random that ended up tasting quite good. When making water icing, I substituted ALL the water for freshly-squeezed lime juice.

Not as tart as lemon juice, it made the icing less cloying and more zingy. More luck than judgement I think!

amylane said...

I tried that recipe and mine didn't turn out well! Yours look lovely! Hope the weather improves for the fete.

Jules said...

goodshoeday - no sign of the weather improving. I've just driven through snow & hail?!? You know my work mates too well ;)

Serena - I love the blue too. I find it is the due that works the best. I like the lime juice idea.

Anylane - Did you follow the method they post? I was a bit suspect of it as their method can lead to the cake batter curdling or make heavy cakes so did it with my usual method.

Happy cook said...

Wow they look beautiful.
Love the colours.

Beth said...

Well we went to the Royal CornwalL Show yesterday and got absolutely soaked!!! Im sure these tasted great despite the weather! Lowen would love those sprinkles

Lucy said...

Ahh beautiful coloured icing :) It just hailed here but I am hoping it that it clears up for your fete!

Claire said...

They look great. Love the icing colours and the animal toppers.

Sylvie said...

There's nothing wrong with a tin of Ambrosia every now and then or a fish finger sandwich in my opinion. Not together though. What pretty cakes. I hope the weather holds and that the fete is a success.

Elra said...

WOW Jules, your cupcakes indeed look very happy. Love the color of that icing. Very beautiful.

C said...

They're really pretty, and I know exactly what you mean about wanting to play with colours - I had to wait ages until I made something that I could colour the icing purple for. I'm still waiting to use my blue!!!

Love the idea of using custard powder, may well be trying that one out. Hope the rain held off for long enough for you to sell them all and make lots of cash!

Heavenly Housewife said...

Hope you had fun at your fate and didn't get rained on. I was in london today at it was raining on and off. Fairy cakes look pretty and sweet. I love using food colouring too. I am thinking of trying some kind of layered cake with different colored layers. But first, I think i better get on the treadmill. I've been very bad this weekend.

zurin said...

they look pretty! thnx for dropping by my blog Jules :). i hv never made a cake with custard powder b4...will try it soon esp if it makes the cake fluffier!thanx for sharing.

Alfie said...

these look yummy - I bet they sold like 'hot cakes'!!

Susan from Food Blogga said...

Fairy cakes? What a precious name! They're adorable.

Pen said...

I think you were fete-ing while I was cafeing. These are fab! The Guides would love them I shall add them to the list of things to make next time we have a baking night! xxx

Tulip said...

Did your fete go ahead in the end or did the cakes end up in the staff room?

We have our fete this weekend, so I'm going to give these a try, love the idea of using custard powder!

♥Rosie♥ said...

Those fairy cakes would brighten any cloudy day up - they look beautiful Jules.

Jules said...

Happy Cook, Claire, Elra, Zurin, Rosie - thank you :)

Beth - Lowen sure would love them.

Lucy - The rain didn't stop so we crammed as much as we could in the hall. It did mean though we had to abandon the bouncy castle and BBQ.

Alfie - they sure did!

C - the cakes sold well. I hope you manage to find a use for your blue dye soon!

Heavenly Housewife - I've seen some amazing rainbow cakes on tastespotting that I'm keen to try.

Sylvie - Fish Finger sandwiches...mmmmmmm.

Susan - Fairy cakes is the traditional name for cupcake style cakes here in the UK. the word Cupcake is relitively new to us.

Pen - I hope your Guide cafe went well

Tulip - yes it ended up going ahead inside. I hope the weather is ok for you.

butlaura said...

Made these last night and they are just great. Lovely fluffy yellowy sponge, and fairy-cake size is just small enough to not make you feel like a hog for having two (or three) with a cuppa! Thanks so much for the recipe Jules.

Jules said...

butlaura - glad you liked the recipe and I certainly agree with you about fairy cakes and their less guilty size.

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