pomegranate red velvet cupcakes

Pomegranate red velvet cupcakes recipe and the ‘red’ experiment

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Special everyday cakes and treats, Uncategorized

Yes, you’ve seen the cake and now here are the cupcakes!  They’re faster, smaller and healthier.  Healthier?  Well, just because of the reduced quantities.  Tee hee. There’s half the quantity of sponge used in the original layer cake and a third of the frosting.  After the healthy stuff I’d been baking I had a sudden craving for red velvet cake, and fast.  So before seeing a friend for lunch I managed to quickly get these baked in the oven.  Later in the evening the frosting was added.  Yum.  Pomegranate red velvet cupcakes, perfect slightly chewy sponge fragrant with the heavenly combination of cinammon, vanilla, cocoa and salt.  Topped with scrumptious Philadelphia cheese, cream and vanilla.  Again, yum.  I really needed that! 🙂

pomegranate red velvet cupcakes

pomegranate red velvet cupcakes

Red?

Ah yes, I was experimenting to see whether the red food colouring was really necessary.  Because I’d read somewhere the acidic vinegar and buttermilk react with the cocoa’s anthocyanins turning them red.  But cocoa isn’t what it used to be and as you can see from my cupcakes there wasn’t a big colour change.  Sob.  If you want to know why you can read the article Why red velvet cake was originally red (and why it can’t be anymore).   After the initial disappointment (I’d been looking forward to a nice chemical reaction) I discovered the cakes were just as delicious and after a few bites swooned happily into cake bliss.

THE RECIPE

It’s exactly the same recipe as my big red velvet cake but with different quantities which I wanted to have here on a separate post for the sake of convenience.  Next time I need some red velvet cupcakes they’ll be super speedy to make without having to do lots of calculations again!  Of course this will be handier for you too.

pomegranate red velvet cupcakes

pomegranate red velvet cupcakes

Method

Hope you don’t mind going to my Pomegranate red velvet cake recipe for the method.  It’s very simple.

You preheat your oven at the same temperature.  But instead of a large cake tin prepare a baking or cupcake tray lined with 10 to 14 paper cupcake cases and fill them between half and three quarters full (they’re going to rise a lot).  Bake for 20 to 35 minutes, depending on your oven and the size of your cupcakes.  Just insert a skewer in the middle of a cupcake and it should come out clean when they’re ready.  You can spread the frosting over them as I did.  The frosting is quite thick so if you want to pipe you could whisk in a little more cream to lighten it up.  The pomegranate seeds can be omitted or replaced with other fruit like berries to keep a touch of freshness.

pomegranate red velvet cupcakes

pomegranate red velvet cupcakes

Ingredients

Sponge

  • 125g/ml less half a tablespoon full fat milk mixed with half a tablespoon freshly-squeezed lemon juice (or 125g/ml buttermilk)
  • I used NO food colouring this time, but for a nice red colour add three quarters of a teaspoon red food colouring (Wilton’s gel is usually more effective than other brands)

***************

  • Dry ingredients
  • 125g/1 cup plain/all-purpose flour (a scant cup in humid Barcelona)
  • a pinch of salt (half to three quarters of a teaspoon if using unsalted butter)
  • 1 tablespoons/5g unsweetened pure cocoa powder
  • a quarter teaspoon ground cinammon, or to taste
  • half a tsp/2.5g baking powder

***************

  • 60g/half a stick (a quarter cup) semi-salted butter, softened (or unsalted butter and increase the quantity of salt)
  • 125g/half a cup plus 2 and two thirds of a teaspoon golden (or white) caster/superfine sugar
  • 1 medium-large free-range egg, beaten (60g) and at room temperature
  • vanilla seeds, scraped out of half a split pod or a pinch of vanilla powder

***************

  • half a tsp/3.5g bicarbonate of soda/baking soda
  • 1 tsp white wine vinegar

Frosting

  • 33g/ml whipping cream – 35%
  • 200g/7 ounces Philadelphia cheese
  • 50g/a third of a cup plus 1 tablespoon and a third of a teaspoon icing/powdered sugar
  • quarter to half a teaspoon pure vanilla extract, to taste
  • seeds from 1 small pomegranate (a quarter to half a cup pomegranate seeds) – get nice dark red seeds, not the light pink tasteless ones

So hope you’ll give these little bejewelled beauties a whirl.  As a newly converted red velvet fan I could go on till the cows come home about the amazingly wonderful flavour and texture.

pomegranate red velvet cupcakes

pomegranate red velvet cupcakes

Have a bite of a pomegranate red velvet cupcake and you’ll see… 🙂

pomegranate red velvet cupcakes

pomegranate red velvet cupcakes

Farewell for now sweet reader!  Have a blissful week ahead with some happy baking and eating! 🙂 x

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Baking on Sundays with my French mum was a lovely part of my childhood. Later I experimented with baking books or internet recipes and did the pâtisserie course at Le Cordon Bleu Paris. Still trying out new recipes and inventing cakes with influences from all around the world, including some healthier ones. Yes, love cakes!!! Hope you'll love them too and have fun baking. :)

21 thoughts on “Pomegranate red velvet cupcakes recipe and the ‘red’ experiment”

    • Lili's avatar

      Thank you Ronit! 🙂 You make a great point about articial colouring and now I’ve got over the initial disappointment I think I’ve learnt to love these more natural little cakes. Though next time I might be tempted to add a tiiiny bit of colour! They were very yummy thanks. 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

  1. Ahila's avatar

    The pomegranate frosting is a lovely touch. A couple of years back, I was interested in experimenting with natural food colouring and tried adding red dragonfruit juice to the red velvet cake batter, instead of red food colouring. It did yield a slight reddish tint to the cake. I was wondering if you would have experienced the same had you used pomegranate juice in the cake batter as well.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Lili's avatar

      Interesting to hear about your natural food colouring experiment Ahila! This time my experiment was to see what cocoa did by itself but next time I’ll try using a little pomegranate juice in the cake batter as you suggest. Thank you for that idea! 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

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