So...I've been asked to do 100 cupcakes. Can we talk heat-resistant frosting???

cheezz

Well-known member
Half of them will be caramel cake with caramel icing like I did for the baby shower above-

http://eat.at/swap/forum1/215247_Lion_and_lamb_cake_a_big_success_It_actually_held_together_in_the_transport_a

That picture was after 3 hours of sitting out in a 90 degree kitchen. Honestly, I think the frosting would survive a nuclear blast.

The other 50 cupcakes will be lemon coconut and if the weather stays warm, I'm afraid of making a buttercream. The party will be outside in a park and you know how that is.

I've heard Italian meringue buttercream holds up well? I've made Swiss meringue a few times but am not sure how that compares.

Any help appreciated!!!!!

 
The original frosting for red velvet cake is nice and it is more stable because

you make a cooked milk and flour paste that you then beat butter into. You could add lemon zest & top with coconut. I like it a lot.

Waldorf Astoria Original Red Velvet Cake with Cooked Icing

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Prep time
20 mins
Cook time
20 mins
Total time
40 mins

Original Red Velvet Cake
Author: Cookie Madness
Recipe type: Dessert
Cuisine: American
Serves: 12
Ingredients
1/2 cup (3.4 ounces) shortening
1 1/2 cups granulated sugar
2 large eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 teaspoon butter extract
1 1/2 ounces red food coloring
3 tablespoons natural unsweetened cocoa powder
1 teaspoon salt
2 1/2 cups sifted cake flour (carefully spoon and level — don’t pack flour)
1 cup buttermilk
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 tablespoon vinegar


Frosting
3 tablespoons flour
1/2 teaspoon salt (omit if using salted butter)
1 cup milk
2 sticks unsalted butter, softened
1 cup granulated sugar
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
Instructions
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Spray three 9-inch round cake pans with flour-added cooking spray. For a higher ratio of cake to frosting, use two 9×2 inch pans. You may also use three 8-inch pans. If you use three 8-inch or go with two 9-inch, you will probably need to tack on about 4 minutes to the cook time due to the batter being deeper.
Using high speed of electric mixer, beat shortening and sugar until creamy. Beat in eggs, vanilla extract and butter extract, scraping sides of bowl occasionally. Make a paste of red food coloring and cocoa powder, then stir that in. Or, do what I did and stir the red food coloring and cocoa in, then beat. When the batter turns red, stir in the salt and beat so that it’s very well mixed. Starting and ending with flour, add the flour and buttermilk alternately to batter, stirring so that flour gets absorbed.
Place the baking soda in a little cup. Add the vinegar to the baking soda, then stir the fizzy vinegar mixture into the cake batter to lighten it.
Now, dump the cake batter into the pans, dividing evenly.
Bake for 20 minutes or until a wooden skewer inserted in the center comes out with moist crumbs. Let cakes cool in pans on a rack for 10 minutes. Flip out of pans and cool completely. Note: If your oven runs hot, cook the red velvet cake at 325 degrees F. The cakes will turn out dry if overcooked.


Make the frosting. In a heavy saucepan, whisk together 3 tablespoons of flour and 1/4 cup of the milk until smooth. Whisk in salt and remaining milk. Turn heat to medium and cook, whisking constantly, until mixture is thick and creamy. Let it cool completely.
Using your electric mixer, beat butter and granulated sugar until fluffy. Beat in the vanilla. Beat in the thoroughly cooled flour mixture. Beat and beat until the icing is fluffy and no longer grainy (this may take a while, depending on how good your mixer is). For this recipe, I recommend using a stand mixer.
Cover cake with frosting.

 
You know, I have looked at this flour/milk frosting recipe so many times but have never made it.

I'm afraid of a floury taste I guess. Do you think it would be more stable than a meringue-based buttercream?

 
I'm not sure about the other. This does not taste floury at all. Very nice

light fluffy frosting, and not as sweet as buttercream, which would be a good thing if it is topped with sweetened coconut. I don't think there is an ideal answer when they are going to be sitting in the heat for an extended period, except if you had room to freeze them and start off with them in a frozen state. It would delay the softening.

 
This was me exactly 1 yr ago: 100 cupcakes in a park...

(Gah, I typed a whole post and lost it. New rule: don't try to embed a slideshow.)

I needed to do 100 cupcakes that could sit overnight in my house at rm temp (AC) and then sit outside in a park in the shade the next day in the heat of Sept. My quest was all about icings that would stand-up to the heat of the outdoors.

I searched many recipes/types. I spoke to folks at 2 cake stores that do cakes for events, all said don't use butter in heat. Still looking for flavor, I'd read about Butavan, couldn't find it locally, but tried some other butter flavor and really didn't like it. So, after a test run that included putting the cupcakes out in the heat of my sunroom (and they didn't melt and lose shape), opted for some butter you'll see in the linked Buttercream Dream Icing recipe. Can't recall if I used the clear vanilla, I've come to realize I'm not a big fan of vanilla in icing as I normally use almond extract instead. I did use high-ratio shortening though.

Do a search on "icing" and my user name and you'll find the threads from Sept of last year on all of this.

Also, someone brought tulle to decorate and it ended up being a lifesaver to keep tree droppings off the cakes.

http://i788.photobucket.com/albums/yy163/4ebay_bucket/1st%20Birthday%20cupcakes%20and%20more/IMG_1648.jpg

http://eat.at/swap/forum/index.php?action=display&forumid=1&msgid=196968

 
Maria, where do you get your high ratio shortening? From what I understand,

As of 2011 they outlawed trans-fat high-ratio shortening in the state

 
They had it at the cake supply store...

If my memory is correct, and that's iffy, I think it's ok for commercial use, which is why they were able to sell it.

 
I grew up with the Crisco version where it sat out all day at Serbian picnics. I changed

it to "all butter" after Sandi in Hawaii tried that and said it worked.

I used it for the last library luncheon and did 60 cupcakes with it. There is a slideshow on the link below. They sat for four hours in a room 10 feet from the door that folks kept opening and leaving open. And it was Florida Hot--with humidity. The cream cheese icing on the cake softened, but not the cupcakes.

The only problem I have with these is you have to be sure to blend the flour well...otherwise, there are tiny lumps. Oh...and you have to warn folks that there is gluten in the icing as there normally isn't.

http://www.eatdotat.com/swap/forum/index.php?action=display&forumid=1&msgid=186599

 
Also...I seem to have a hard time finding greaseproof cupcake liners

How do you cope with presentable looking cupcakes, short of wrapping each one?!

 
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