Queen Rosie’s Royal Rose Cupcakes

I’d like to introduce you to a delightful 6-year old who will become my sister’s stepdaughter next year … (will that make me a step-aunty?). My sister is obviously failing to live up to the evil stepmother cliché but instead has been busy in the kitchen stirring up wonderful magic and regal surprises. Here’s the tale of Rose Fairy …

Rose Fairy writes letters to me. I make houses for her out of boxes and glitter. Lucy and I read a story called The Fairies Cupcake Ball (we borrowed the book from Kate, L, M and T) which is about a girl called Flossie and she dresses up when she’s cooking. Flossie and her Mum bake cakes for fairies. We chose the recipe for Queen Rosie’s Royal Rose Cupcakes because we were making them for my Rose Fairy.

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We chose special ingredients to make the cake taste of rose and we decorated them.

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Here’s me putting the decorations on the cakes.

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This is the cake I decorated for Rose and her friends.

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In the afternoon, I made a fairy house for Rose. I used a shoe box and made a bed and a bath for Rose. I used a match box for Rose’s bed. I made some perfume for her too. I used rose water and a drop of food colouring and put it in a tiny perfume bottle. Wainwright, the dog, got very messy because he got pink paint on his chin! My Dad loves clearing up glitter…especially when he gets all sparkly!!

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The inside of the house

In the evening, I put the house outside before I went to bed. I left out the special cake for Rose. The next morning, Rose had left me a card and she’d eaten the cake with her friends. There were crumbs all around the house and in the friends’ bed!

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This is what she did.

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It’s really fun making houses and cakes for Rose.
Amazingly, my tooth fell out the following day so I was lucky enough to be visited by two fairies on two nights!

Queen Rosie’s Royal Rose Cupcakes

Ingredients

Cakes
115g sugar
115g softened butter
115g self-raising flour
2 eggs (we used medium organic)
½ teaspoon rose water

Icing
25g melted butter (only we forgot that bit and it worked out fine!)
400g icing sugar
4 tablespoons cold water
A few drops of natural pink food colouring

Finishing Touches (all bought from Cake Expectations)
Pink icing roses
Edible diamonds
Jelly roses

Method

Ask a grown-up to turn on the oven to 190 degrees C

Mix all the cake ingredients together really well.

Put 12 cupcake paper cases into a 12-hole fairy cake tin and spoon the mixture evenly between the cases.

Bake for 15 minutes and then ask a grown-up to place them carefully onto a wire rack to cool.

When cool, place all of the icing ingredients into a mixing bowl and mix them together for a few minutes. You might need some help with this because it’s really stiff.

We used a piping bag to swirl the icing onto the cakes but you can just use a warmed teaspoon if you don’t have the icing bag and nozzle.

The best bit is decorating the cakes – have fun!

Choc Chip Cookie Brownie Cake

Five years ago today, I wrote about rainbows and unicorns. That was when M was four years old, and the Rainbow Cake that I made for her birthday soon became one of my most visited posts on A Merrier World. Now, little M has just turned nine and the rainbows and unicorns have grown up into cookies and brownies.

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And M herself is not so little now, either. Her ‘good toes and naughty toes’ have transformed into Junior Associate feet of The Royal Ballet School

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But there is still plenty of time for dreams …

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… and choc chip cookie brownie cake.

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side

top

Choc Chip Cookie Brownie Cake

Cookie base
8 oz butter
5 1/2 oz golden castor sugar
6 oz light muscovado sugar
1 tsp vanilla extract
2 large eggs
13 oz strong white flour
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp salt
12 oz choc chips

Brownie top
5 oz butter
9 oz castor sugar
3 oz cocoa powder
1/4 tsp salt
2 eggs
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
2 1/2 oz plain flour

Preheat the oven to 180 degrees C.

Grease and baseline a circular 9″ springform pan.

To make the cookie base, cream the butter and sugar. Add the vanilla and eggs gradually, beating to incorporate. Mix together the dry ingredients then stir into the dough. Stir in the choc chips.

Press the cookie dough into the base of the prepared pan (I filled it to about 1/3 full and used the leftover dough to make a giant cookie, about the size of my hand …)

Put the pan in the fridge while you prepare the brownie batter.

To make the brownie topping, melt the butter, sugar, cocoa and salt together in a bowl over a pan of hot water. It will look like it’s never going to come together, but it does …

Remove the bowl from the heat and stir in the eggs, one at a time. Stir in the vanilla.

Fold in the flour, then give the batter a good stir for about 5 seconds to strengthen it a little (there isn’t much flour in the recipe, so it’s okay to develop a bit of gluten to give the brownie some structure).

Remove the springform pan from the fridge and pour the brownie batter on top of the cookie dough. Level the top.

Bake in the centre of the oven for 30 to 35 minutes.

Cool for 10 minutes in the pan, then loosen the sides and remove the springform ring.

Cool completely (I left the cake on the base of the pan because I didn’t want to risk losing the whole thing if it collapsed while I tried to unstick it … nobody seemed to mind and it made it easier to carry to M’s ballet class!).

Melt some white chocolate and use a fork to drizzle over the top in a pretty pattern.

Sweet Salad Trifle

It is July, M is now 8 years old and the end of another school year is approaching. For the last few weeks, M has been busily writing in a large blue book that she brought home from school. It was all very secret … something was going on. It turned out that the something was a challenge M’s teachers had set the Year 3 pupils – to design and create “an invention”.

I had visions of wires, circuits, remote controls and wheels and planned instantly to hand over the supervision of the ‘create’ stage to my husband. But no, M had come up with something far more interesting 😉 … her invention was designed to fill a gap in the food market …

Sweet Salad Trifle

M would like to tell you about it:

On Fridays after school, Mum sometimes takes us to a sweetie shop in Exeter called Mr Simms. We each get £1 to spend but I never know what to choose. It is really very difficult to choose out of my favourite sweets.

When our teacher gave us a cross curricular challenge to invent something, I knew what to do. We were told to identify a gap in the market – an object which does not exist at the moment, but which would be very useful. We had to invent a solution by designing an object to fill this gap. I thought, “When I walk into Mr Simms’s, is there something missing?” The answer was yes. Mr Simms needs a sweet salad … something that holds all my favourite sweets.

I wanted to make it with chocolate, gummy bears, fudge, smarties and jelly. It would be very tasty!!

My first idea was to make a sweet salad with my favourite sweets in melted chocolate, so I found out how to melt chocolate.

How to melt chocolate

The problem was that when the melted chocolate cooled it went too hard. I wanted it runny and smooth so you could scoop it out with a spoon.

I thought of a solution. I needed to make a ganache.

 How to make ganache

Then I had another problem. It was quite hard to get everything in the right place. I wanted the sweets to be a surprise in the middle but they kept sinking to the bottom.

I wanted it to look more than just melted chocolate with things swimming around in it, so I had a second idea. I had this idea when I was watching my sister singing in Evensong in the Cathedral. Divine inspiration!! I decided to make a trifle sort of thing with different layers of sweets in a knickerbocker glory glass.

Planning the trifle

This is how you make it:

First you need to get a knickerbocker glory glass and put some pieces of cake in the bottom. Then drop some gummy bears on top of the cake. Make some raspberry jelly and pour this over the cake and gummy bears. You have to put the glasses in the fridge until the jelly has set.

Cake and jelly layers

Next you need to chop up some chocolate into very small pieces in a food processor. Then you put some cream and some light muscovado sugar in a pan and heat them together just until they begin to boil. Mum did this next bit because I didn’t want to burn myself. You turn the food processor on and slowly pour the hot cream through the spout thing in the lid until the chocolate has melted and the ganache is smooth. Scrape it out into a bowl.

Making ganache

When you have finished make sure nobody’s looking and lick the spatula you have just used to scrape the ganache out of the food processor with.

Tasting

Then you cut up some pieces of fudge into small pieces and put these on top of the jelly. Make sure that the ganache has cooled a bit or it will melt the jelly, then pour in into the glasses on top of the fudge. Put the glasses back in the fridge. When you are ready to serve the sweet salad trifles, take them out of the fridge and put some smarties in a pattern on the top.

Smarties on top

Here are some things that my friends said about my invention:

Alex said it looked nice. Georgina said that she liked the technique I used and that she liked the idea of different layers. Ruth said that I could make it better by putting more sweets in it! Martha said yum and Peter said he was speechless. Bea said COOL!!!

Mrs Housego said that it inspired her to make one for when her friends come round. Mr Yeo said, “That looks really tasty!”

When I tasted it, I decided that I could do it in a smaller glass or a bowl and use a bit less chocolate and gummy bears. I thought the cake and jelly were really nice.

And that is how you make a Sweet Salad Trifle 🙂