Has anyone ever made the caramel apple cupcakes? I wonder what you used for frosting. REC inside

dawnnys

Well-known member
Apple Cupcakes

9 regular cupcakes / 350 degree oven

2-3 apples, granny smith

2 cups all-purpose flour

1/2 cup sugar

1 teaspoon ginger

1 teaspoon cinnamon

1/8 teaspoon nutmeg

1 teaspoon baking soda

1/4 teaspoon salt

2 large eggs

1/2 cup oil

1/4 cup apple juice

1 teaspoon vanilla

Rinse and core the apples. Place them on an ovenproof pan or baking sheet and bake for 30-40 minutes until soft.

Remove the apples from the oven, let cool slightly, then remove peel and mush the apple with the back of a fork. Measure out 1 cup of apple mush and set aside to cool.

Combine flour, sugar, ginger, cinnamon, nutmeg, baking soda, and salt in a medium sized bowl and whisk to combine.

Crack the eggs into a separate, medium sized bowl and beat with a form to break up. Add the oil, apple juice, vanilla, and cooled apple mush and mix to combine.

Combine the wet and dry ingredients until all ingredients come together.

Scoop into cupcake papers about 3/4 full so cupcakes will have a significant dome. Bake at 350 degrees for 20-22 minutes, rotating the pan after 15 minutes, until a toothpick comes out clean.

Cream Cheese Filling

4 ounces Philly cream cheese

1/4 stick butter

2 cups sifted powdered sugar

1 teaspoon vanilla

Be sure to bring the butter to room temperature by letting it sit out for 1 or 2 hours. Then beat the butter vigorously with an electric mixer.

Scrape the bowl and add the cream cheese and beat until combine.

Add the sifted powdered sugar and vanilla and beat until smooth.

Fill Cupcakes

Cut out a cone from each cupcake. Flip the cone and cut off the excess. Set the top aside.

Fill each cavity with the cream cheese filling.

Replace each top.

Thick Caramel

1/2 cup butter

1 cup packed brown sugar

1/2 cup light corn syrup

6 ounces sweetened condensed milk

1 tablespoon heavy cream

1 teaspoon vanilla

1/2 teaspoon salt

Bring the butter, brown sugar, corn syrup and sweetened condensed milk to a boil over medium-high heat stirring to combine.

With a wooden spoon, stir all ingredients together and then slowly add the heavy cream.

Continue to stir for about 20 minutes until the caramel reached 248 degrees. It is important to continuously stir the mixture and to allow it to reach temperature.

Remove from heat and stir in the vanilla and salt. Transfer to a bowl and continue to stir for 2-3 minutes allowing the caramel to cool slightly.

Final Assembly

Using a small offset spatula, frost each cupcake with the caramel.

If desired sprinkle warm caramel with any number of toppings, like coconut or crushed nuts.

Transfer the cupcake into the freezer to allow the caramel to set without dripping over the edge of the cupcake paper.

Continue frosting and topping the cupcakes and try to work fast. As the caramel cools, it becomes less spreadable. If possible work in pairs and let your helper top the cupcakes and transfer them to the freezer. By the time you reach the last few cupcakes, you will not longer need to freeze them and you can take all the cupcakes out and transfer them to the counter.

Top off each cupcake with a popsicle or craft stick to finish off the look.

**Someone on the blog said she used a mixture of the filling and Dulce de leche.

http://cupcakeblog.com/index.php/2006/09/caramel-apple-cupcakes/

 
Follow-up question... has anyone ever made Dulce de leche

from putting a can of condensed sweetened milk in the pressure cooker? I have visions of wiping it off of my ceiling, so I'd like some hints or feedback ;o)

 
Dawn, I've heard of doing it in a pan atop the stove, but not the pressure cooker, and have never

tried it myself.

The cupcakes sound great!

 
Yes, I've made dulce de leche quite a few times but only

stovetop covered with water, never in the pressure cooker (I'm too chicken to use pressure cookers...lol). Here's the way I've done it....

Immerse the unopened can of sweetened condensed milk in a pot of water (it's okay to leave the label on the can). Bring to a boil, reduce heat to a slow boil/simmer and cook for 2 hours uncovered, adding water as necessary to keep full. Remove can from the water and let cool. Open the can and you will have fresh dulce de leche.

Pat's note: It's important to make sure there's plenty of water in the pan. I try to keep the can covered just slightly with the water. At work once, one of the chefs was doing something else while the can simmered away and didn't notice the water had boiled out of the pan. Yes, the can blew up and made an incredible mess EVERYWHERE...ceiling, walls, windows, floors...ohmygod, what a mess, and it was hard to get off of some surfaces once it started to harden, especially inside the stovetop hood and fan. But that's never happened to me...I keep a close eye on the water content.

 
I remember the Depression days when desserts were hard to come by (cue the violins)....

but every now and then a fad would sweep the neighborhood and this was one of them. We didn't call it anything as fancy as Dulce de leche. It was always a kind of rainy day activity as we spent the hours watching it carefully so it wouldn't explode. We also dipped squares of bread in uncooked condensed milk and then in shredded coconut and just barely browned them in the oven. Delicious. I refuse to buy condensed milk as I will spoon it right out of the can in one greedy session.

 
My father made it when I was a child. No problem, I hour in the

pressure cooker at 3 atmospheres.

I think my Christmas present to myself this year must be a pressure cooker.

 
Oh u were luuucky, we didn't even have books-we had scratches n dirt & were d*mn glad 2 have it! smileys/wink.gif

...and after we read the chicken scratches we ate the dirt for dinner...and we were d*mn glad to have it!!!

smileys/bigsmile.gif

Sorry this just took my mind right to the Monty Python bit, lol!

 
Well, if I'm not using a pressure cooker, I cook it for 3 hours.

You can have it harder or softer, though. I think 3 hours is on the hard side.

 
Thanks. Since I'm making it to add to the cream cheese mixture for a

frosting (in the recipe above), I think I'll try a half-hour and hope for the best. Thanks!

 
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