26 July 2015

Lemon Fool Cupcakes


Ah, British summers. One moment we're complaining because it's too hot, the next we're complaining because the sun has retreated behind the clouds and it's threatening to rain for the next two months.

However, I am not too fussed about the weather outside because I received some exciting news this week. I've been offered a new job, and am moving to Birmingham at the end of August. This is the culmination of months of job applications and despair that I will never leave the Cambridgeshire Fens. I've been living here for two years now, and have had enough. There is some beautiful scenery here with endless landscape (because there are no hills here - the land was a swamp until steam pumps were brought in a couple of hundred years ago), but there isn't a lot to do for a single person with no roots in the area. Now I have an opportunity to move on, and I can't wait to live in a busy, cosmopolitan city again.


Wherever you are in the world, the smooth lemon flavour in these Lemon Fool Cupcakes is sure to make you feel a little bit like summer. I was originally planning to make Eton Mess Cupcakes, but my raspberries went off before I could use them. The whole point of making the cupcakes was actually a ruse to use up a tub of meringue that I may have bought when I was still a student (so we're going back more than two years...) - what better way to decorate a cream-topped cupcake than with meringue pieces?

Lemon Fool is not that well known these days, but is a dessert using lemon curd, whipped cream and possibly meringue pieces. Think summery BBQ and garden party settings. I first heard of it in a recipe book that I was given for my GCSE Food Technology course, which was full of useful gems but hasn't been seen since I left my student halls in 2010, my to my chagrin. 


These cupcakes are made with lemon juice to give a smooth lemon flavour, topped with sweetened whipped cream which has been swirled with lemon rind, then sprinkled with crushed meringue pieces. Of course, you can make your own meringue or even use newly-bought meringues, if you so desire. The Lemon Fool Cupcakes went down well at work, though there was some debate about whether the meringue still tasted fresh...

Makes 12
Ingredients
  • 260g Caster Sugar
  • 200g Butter
  • 3 Eggs
  • 200g Plain Flour
  • 2 Tsp Baking Powder
  • 1 Lemon
  • 300mL Double Cream
  • 2-3 Crushed Meringues
Recipe

  • Preheat the oven to 200C/180C fan, and line a cupcake tin with cases.
  • Cream the butter and 200g sugar together until light and fluffy.
  • Beat in the eggs, one at a time, until smooth.
  • Sift the flour and baking powder into the batter and fold in until well combined.
  • Grate the rind from the lemon, collecting it in a separate bowl, and place to one side.
  • Squeeze the lemon into the cake batter, then fold in until smooth. The batter should have a soft dropping consistency, but if not add a little milk until this is achieved.
  • Divide the batter between the cupcake cases and bake for 22 minutes, or until a skewer comes out clean.
  • Cool the cupcakes on a wire rack.
  • When the cakes are cool, place the cream, remaining sugar and lemon rind in a bowl and whisk until the cream has a stiff peak consistency.
  • Pipe the cream onto the cakes, decorating with pieces of crushed meringue.
  • Store in the fridge.

4 comments:

  1. Congratulations on your new job!!! I hope it will make you happier and hope that the move goes smoothly. And that after the move you be back in the kitchen making things I want to eat agian quickly ;)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you, Laura! I am so excited. A good kitchen is pretty much top of the priority list in my flat hunt ;)

      Delete
  2. Congratulations on the new job! Hope all goes well with the move. The cupcakes look fantastic, I don't get to bake with lemon very often as the OH isn't keen.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Congratulations on your new job and hope the move goes smoothly too! I love lemon anything and these cupcakes are calling me!

    ReplyDelete

Did you try this recipe? Let me know what you think! Comments are always appreciated. Unless they are spam.