These are little cakes with a kick and health benefits, upping your daily intake of ginger. In the article Ginger is a Great Medicine it also says many consider Jamaican ginger to be the best in the world! Did not know that. At school my best friend’s Jamaican mum always had loads of flavour and spice to her food. I still remember the hot chicken, rice and peas fondly, along with our burning but happy mouths. So though Mr Kipling’s Jamaican ginger cake is my main model I imagined these cupcakes should have kick to them and threw in ground ginger, fresh ginger and some extra candied stem ginger. You might wonder if I was overdoing it but it works! And lemon frosting complements the moist coconut oil sponge, balancing the ginger heat with a subtle fresh citrus zing. Tada! Kick-ass Jamaican ginger cupcakes with lemon swiss meringue buttercream.
The cupcakes were made for a climbing trip so originally had no buttercream and you might prefer this healthier dairy-free and refined sugar-free version. The cupcakes seemed perfect: portable, easy and fast to make. Here they are unadorned at the rock.
And one trying to escape by rock-climbing solo.
The climbers loved them. The Catalan climber said they reminded him of Christmas and he enjoyed the soft texture and spices, as did the Rumanian friend who appreciated the lingering taste of ginger. She enthusiastically encouraged me to take the next step and add frosting to the remaining cupcakes back home. We loved them plain but had an enjoyable moment visualising pretty dressed-up cupcakes! (while the guys looked on baffled). But let’s take a step back in time.
20 hours earlier…
… as they say in suspense movies. 🙂
THE RECIPE – makes 16-18 cupcakes
I combined my go-to coconut oil sponge cake with a medley of online recipes for Jamaican ginger cake made with brown sugar rather than molasses. Brushing the baked cupcakes with apricot jam added some characteristic stickiness. These are not exactly classic Jamaican ginger cakes. But they have some of their spirit, flavour and texture then extra lift from the zingy lemon frosting complementing but not overshadowing the main star of the show: ginger.
Preparation
- Preheat the oven to 180°C/350°F (static oven) or 160°C/320°F (fan oven) and line a cupcake or muffin tray with cases/liners. Or place free-standing doubled-up cupcake cases on a baking tray.
- Mix the milk with the lemon juice in a small bowl and allow to develop 10 minutes or more before using.
- Have everything ready, weighed, grated and cut because when the dry and wet ingredients meet, the rising agents start reacting immediately and the batter should go into the oven as quickly as possible.
Ginger sponge
Dry ingredients
- 160g/1 cup and 2 tablespoons cake flour (T45) or all-purpose/plain flour
- 1 and a half teaspoons baking powder
- half a teaspoon baking soda
- 1 or 2 teaspoons ground ginger, to taste
- 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
- a quarter teaspoon fine sea salt
Wet ingredients/sugar
- 125g/half a cup and half a tablespoon almond milk (or any other kind) mixed with half a teaspoon fresh lemon juice
- 2 medium-large free-range eggs (110-120g)
- 100g/half a cup plus three tablespoons light muscovado sugar (or soft dark brown/demerara sugar)
- 35g/1 tablespoon and a half runny honey
- 125g/half a cup plus 1 and a half tablespoons coconut oil
- half a teaspoon pure vanilla extract
- 2 tablespoons grated fresh root ginger (32g, about 3-4 inches peeled ginger)
- 1 tablespoon ginger syrup from stem ginger jar (optional: you can replace with milk)
- 2 tablespoons finely chopped candied ginger in syrup, drained (about 2 balls) or crystallised ginger
Baking
Fill the cases half to three-quarters full. The batter’s quite liquid so go carefully.
Bake 12 -14 minutes in the middle of the oven. They should be golden brown and spring back when you touch them lightly with a finger. A skewer inserted in the middle should come out clean. Try to catch them while they’re nice and soft, before the tops get crusty.
Decoration
When cooled warm a few tablespoons of apricot jam (I used naturally agave-sweetened). Brush on your cupcakes then prepare the frosting.
Lemon frosting for 16-18 cupcakes with medium-sized swirls as in the photos
- 3 egg whites (around 120g) from medium-large free-range eggs
- 115g/half a cup and half a tablespoon caster/superfine sugar (or granulated sugar)
- pinch of salt
- 170g/three quarters of a cup good-quality unsalted butter
- 3 to 4 tablespoons lemon juice, to taste
- zest of one to 2 lemons, to taste
- a little icing sugar if you want to sweeten the frosting more at the end
After step 4 add the lemon juice and zest and whisk on low for just a few minutes till combined. Add a little icing sugar or extra lemon juice as necessary. Finally, use a nozzle and disposable piping bag to pipe the frosting on the cupcakes.
Storing and eating
These cupcakes keep in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 4 or 5 days. Take them out of the fridge 20-30 minutes before eating so the frosting softens up again. Yum!
Perhaps cupcakes are no longer my nemeses but my new friends. Just in time for National cupcake week!
I’ll take them to the Alphabakes challenge hosted by Ros@The More than Occasional Baker and Caroline Makes. Also to Recipe of the Week@aMummyToo, Tasty Tuesdays@HonestMum, Simply Eggcellent@BelleauKitchen and Treat petite@Cakeyboi and Baking Explorer. Do visit, mingle and check out the lovely recipes! 🙂
And please help yourself to a delicious Jamaican ginger cupcake with light fluffy lemon swiss meringue buttercream frosting.
I bid you farewell sweet reader. Stay frosty and have a lovely spicy and flavoursome week! Happy cupcake week, baking and eating! 🙂








Great chart illustration! Very unique.
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Thank you! So glad you like the illustrations. 🙂
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I don’t think I’ve ever had Jamaican ginger? I enjoyed your post and the climbing cupcake. I love the idea of pairing them with the lemon swiss meringue.
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I’d never heard of Jamaican ginger either Julie and would quite like to try some now! Thank you for your lovely comments and I’m glad you enjoyed this post and my little cupcake on the rock. 🙂 Yes, the cool lemon topping balances out the ginger heat nicely. I’d read that lemon and ginger pair well…
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I am unable to save your recipe through Pinterest. Am I the only one❓
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So sorry to hear you’re having trouble pinning it (though happy to know you like the recipe). I don’t know if anyone else has tried. I’ve pinned it to my small cakes and treats Pinterest board so maybe you can repin from there? Let me know if there’s still a problem.
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These look much tastier than the ginger snaps I had to eat as a kid to settle my stomach on car rides.
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Thanks Sarah! Yes, they’re yummy. Ginger snaps sound quite nice too – though perhaps not so much when you remember the car rides.
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I do think I would like them far more now than I did when they were entirely associated with feeling gross. Perhaps I will make some soon and see (and if I don’t like them, I am sure the hubby or someone at work will!
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I think you should enjoy these but let me know how it goes if you do make them! 🙂
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love the charts and the cupcakes look soooo good ! 🙂
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Thank you Anita! So happy you like the charts and cupcakes… and yes, I was surprised at how yummy the cupcakes turned out! 🙂
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These look delicious! I love ginger cake so I’m sure that these taste amazing 🙂 the lemon meringue buttercream sounds like the perfect combination too!
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Thank you and happy you like them! It’s nice to find a ginger cake lover and yes, they’re pretty yummy and I think you’d really enjoy the ginger-lemon combination! 🙂
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oooh yes! Ginger is one of my all time favourites and any kind of ginger cake is good for me! I love how you took them on your walk with you. Bravo! A great link to Simply Eggcellent, thank you x
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Thanks so much Dominic for your lovely comments! So glad you like ginger cake and these. I must confess I try to never go walking or climbing without cake. 🙂 Thank you for hosting the lovely Simply Eggcellent and I’m very excited it’s all about cakes this month! 🙂 x
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I have to limit my cupcake intake, but these look too good to resist, especially with that meringue.
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Thanks Hilda! Glad you like these little cupcakes. I think eating about two (three at the most) a day is fine … that’s what I did! Oh and the sponge is actually dairy-free and refined sugar-free so going towards healthy, if that’s any help. 🙂
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They look fabulous! I love ginger cake – can’t get Mr. Kipling in the US but I loved it back home.
I tried to make French Fancies for daughter’s birthday…. Great British Bake-off has a lot to answer for….!!!
If you want a laugh I’ll send you the link to the pictures – what a disaster! At least they tasted OK’ish 😉
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Thank you Alba! Happy you like these ginger cupcakes. No Mr Kipling in the US???!!! Oh dear … 🙂 Those Fondant Fancies would be quite hard to make. I’ve been wanting to make some for years… they’re my favourites. I’d love to see your photo if you send me the link – always happy to look at cakes 🙂
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Ooo, ginger is my favorite spice in a cupcake, and Jamaican Ginger? Hmm, I don’t think I’ve seen that around these parts. The cupcakes look so pretty, and I’ll bet didn’t last long 🙂
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Thanks Loretta, glad you like the cupcakes and ginger too! Yes, the climbers helped me finish off the unfrosted ones and they’re all gone now! 🙂 Perhaps I should have made it completely clear in the post that just everyday ginger is fine and the Jamaican in the title refers to the whole ginger cupcake (Jamaican-style). But if anyone out there has tried Jamaican ginger I’d be very curious to know what it’s like.
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