Marshmallow Cupcakes
A community recipe by tootsievalentineNot tested or verified by Nigella.com
Introduction
I stumbled on these by accident, a sort of kitchen experiment! I was so pleased with how they turned out I have been making them ever since! Once cooked the marshmallows give the cupcakes a soft, molten texture on the inside. It makes a lovely contrast against the crumbly cake surrounding it. Minimal icing is needed as these are already quite sweet. I usually pipe a few stripes of icing accross the cupcakes and then plonk two raspberries on the top of each one! Children seem to love these, I think it's the promise of a hidden taste beyond the cake, the 'jam doughnut' effect!
I stumbled on these by accident, a sort of kitchen experiment! I was so pleased with how they turned out I have been making them ever since! Once cooked the marshmallows give the cupcakes a soft, molten texture on the inside. It makes a lovely contrast against the crumbly cake surrounding it. Minimal icing is needed as these are already quite sweet. I usually pipe a few stripes of icing accross the cupcakes and then plonk two raspberries on the top of each one! Children seem to love these, I think it's the promise of a hidden taste beyond the cake, the 'jam doughnut' effect!
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Ingredients
Serves: 12
For the Cupcakes
- 175 grams butter (softened)
- 175 grams caster sugar
- 3 large eggs
- 350 grams self-raising flour
- 3 tablespoons milk
- 12 marshmallows (pink - one per cupcake if making a bigger batch)
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
For the Decoration
- writing icing (pink)
- raspberries (fresh, or any small fresh fruit)
For the Cupcakes
- 6 ounces butter (softened)
- 6 ounces superfine sugar
- 3 large eggs
- 12 ounces self-rising flour
- 3 tablespoons milk
- 12 marshmallows (pink - one per cupcake if making a bigger batch)
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
For the Decoration
- writing icing (pink)
- raspberries (fresh, or any small fresh fruit)
Method
Marshmallow Cupcakes is a community recipe submitted by tootsievalentine and has not been tested by Nigella.com so we are not able to answer questions regarding this recipe.
N.B instead of using paper cases, I sometimes use a silicone muffin tray, where you don't need paper cases, the mixture is just poured straight in. The cupcakes are then easily removed.
N.B instead of using paper cases, I sometimes use a silicone muffin tray, where you don't need paper cases, the mixture is just poured straight in. The cupcakes are then easily removed.
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What 4 Others have said
Mixture bit sticky and thick but another drop of milk would rectify this. Other than this, nice flavour. Be sure to cover all of marshmallow.
I was a bit dubious about the amount of flour and thought there was too much cake mix in the cases. However I was delighted with the final cakes. Delicious and beautiful. Thank you so much. I will definitely bake these again.
I tried these this afternoon with my daughter - the cake mixture was pretty thick and although I made sure the marshmallows were covered fully, each one exploded and leaked marshmallow 'juice' over the tray. Consequently the cakes (whilst nice flavour) were just dry and a bit plain. It did seem like a lot of flour to add to the mixture...perhaps less next time? Also, I'd wondered if I should use smaller cases, but as the mix filled the 12 muffin ones very nicely (once cooked, risen etc), I think the muffin ones are the right size.
I can't wait to try these. My younger sibling is joining in on a school bake sale and the the kids will be so tempted to try 'em out. Thank you :)