Chocolate Cupcake Recipes From Food Bloggers To Celebrate National Cupcake Week

LOOK: Heavenly Choccie Cupcake Recipes
|

To celebrate National Cupcake Week, we've asked three bakers for their favourite chocolate cupcake recipes. Warning: things could get very chocolatey...

"These chocolate orange cupcakes are incredibly rich and due to the serious cocoa hit in the buttercream without being too sweet. Think of the most decadent chocolate mousse you’ve eaten and this buttercream is close to that. These are very much adult cupcakes, I think most children would find the intense chocolate too much.

"These cakes contain a small amount of ground almonds which helps keep the sponge moist. It also means the cake doesn’t rise as much as normal sponge which leaves you with a flatter top for icing."

Chocolate Orange Cupcakes

Open Image Modal

Makes: 9-12

For the cakes:

100g Stork or well softened butter

100g caster sugar

2 large eggs

50g self- raising flour

20g cocoa powder

40g ground almonds

1 tsp orange extract

2 tsp milk

For the buttercream:

250g butter

400g icing sugar

100g cocoa powder

4 tsbp milk (you may need more)

2 tsp orange extract

  • 1) Beat together the Stork and sugar until light and fluffy.
  • 2) Stir in the eggs one at a time. If the mixture begins to look a bit curdled add some of the flour.
  • 3) Mix in the orange extract, flour, cocoa and milk. The mixture should now be of dropping consistency.
  • 4) Place cupcake liners in a tin and fill until liners are 2/3 full.
  • 5) Bake at 160C for 15 minutes or until cakes are risen and cooked through. Allow to cool on a wire rack while you make the buttercream.
  • 6) Place the softened butter, icing sugar, orange extract, cocoa and milk in a bowl. Using an electric whisk beat the mixture until light and fluffy. Due to the cocoa the mixture can be very stiff. If this is the case add more milk 1 tbsp at a time.
  • 7) Put the buttercream in to a piping bag with 1M tip and pipe on to the cooled cakes.

Nazima Pathan who writes for the brilliant blog Franglais Kitchen (seriously, if you've never seen it, it is unbeatable food porn) volunteered this chocolate cupcake with the unusual addition of beetroot.

Beetroot and Bitter Chocolate Cupcakes with Caramelised Hazelnuts

Open Image Modal

"The slightly sweet flavour of beetroot complements the dark chocolate so well that even confirmed beetroot-phobes will be won over. The frosting is delicious, it is butter based but because the butter is melted and the frosting uses muscovado sugar it tastes soft and fudgy which I kind of prefer.

"If buying ready-cooked beetroot, make sure you look for plain beetroot and not slices or whole beets pickled in vinegar. I bought raw beetroot and boiled it till cooked through."

Preparation time: 30 minutes (plus cooling)

Cooking time: 20 minutes

Makes: 10 cupcakes

175 g (6 oz) self-raising flour

1 tbsp cocoa powder

1 tsp baking powder

75 g (3 oz) dark chocolate with at least 70% cocoa solids

75 g (3 oz) unsalted butter

175 g (6 oz) dark muscovado sugar

2 large eggs

175 g (6 oz) cooked beetroot, grated or chopped to a coarse purée

Chocolate frosting

75 g (3 oz) icing sugar

25 g (1 oz) cocoa powder

40 g (11⁄2 oz) unsalted butter

50 g (2 oz) dark muscovado sugar

  • 1) Make the cupcakes, preheat the oven to 180ºC/350ºF/gas mark 4. Line a muffin tray with 10 paper cases.
  • 2) Sieve together the flour, cocoa and baking powder. Break up the chocolate into small pieces and place in a large bowl over a pan of simmering water. Cut up the butter and add to the chocolate with the sugar. Leave until the chocolate, butter and sugar have melted, stirring occasionally until smooth.
  • 3) Remove the bowl to the work surface and let the melted chocolate mixture cool for a few minutes before beating in the eggs one at a time. Fold in the flour and finally the beetroot.
  • 4) Before removing the cupcakes to a wire rack to cool completely.
  • 5) To make the frosting, sieve the icing sugar and cocoa powder into a bowl. Cut up the butter into pieces and put in a small saucepan with the muscovado sugar and 2 tablespoons water. Heat gently until the butter and sugar melt, bring just to the boil, then remove from the heat and pour on to the icing sugar and cocoa. Whisk until smooth and then set aside to cool, stirring occasionally, until the frosting is thick enough to spread over the cupcakes.

For decoration I made caramelised hazelnuts and a bit of spun sugar:

  • I scaled the recipe down a bit and used 150g sugar and 50g hazelnuts.
  • Measure out a half cup of caster sugar and put it in a saucepan on low heat. Allow the sugar to begin to melt. Gradually add more sugar allowing it to melt, taking care not to let the sugar at the edge of the pan get too hot and turn to toffee (you want to get the sugar to a light brown syrup not let it heat through to dark brown).
  • When the sugar is melted, stir in the hazelnuts and then take out the hazelnuts, using a spoon to separate the nuts into small clumps of 2 or 3 nuts. Careful not to touch the sugar as it is HOT!
  • Any spare sugar can be used to make spun sugar type decorations. My little attempt was done by dribbling the sugar over the back of an oiled tablespoon.

Fudge brownie cupcake

Lola's Kitchen submitted this seriously addictive cupcake recipe - there's no way we could stop at one.

Open Image Modal

Cupcakes:

250g plain flour

1 tsp baking powder

Pinch of salt

190g dark chocolate (70% cocoa), chopped

130g soft butter, cubed

250g caster sugar

2 tsp vanilla extract

2 eggs

60g chopped nuts (optional)

60g white chocolate (optional)

Store brought milk chocolate sauce to drizzle

12 small cubes of home-made brownie (for decoration)

Muffin pan lined with 12 muffin cases

Caramel Chocolate Ganache:

100g caster sugar

¾ tsp lemon juice

225ml pouring or whipping cream

300g milk chocolate, finely chopped

  • 1) Preheat the oven to 180C / 350F / Gas Mark 4
  • 2) Sift together the flour, baking powder and salt in a bowl.
  • 3) Put the chocolate and butter in a heatproof bowl over a pan of simmering water. Do not let the base of the bowl touch the water. Heat, stirring, until the chocolate melts and you have a smooth, glossy mixture.
  • 4) Remove from the heat and beat in the sugar and vanilla with an electric hand mixer
  • 5) Add the eggs, one at a time and beat briefly until just combined.
  • 6) Reduce the speed to low and add the sifted dry ingredients. Beat briefly again until just combined. Stir in the chopped nuts and white chocolate, if using, then divide the mixture between the muffin cases.
  • 7) Bake in the preheated oven for 25-30 minutes or until well risen and a skewer inserted in the middle comes out clean.
  • 8) Remove from the oven and let cool completely on a wire rack before decorating.

While the cupcakes are cooling down make the caramel chocolate ganache

  • 1) Put the sugar, lemon juice and 60ml water in a saucepan and stir.
  • 2) Cook over a medium-high heat until the sugar dissolves, then cook without stirring until dark caramel in colour, about 7-10 minutes
  • 3) Remove the pan from the heat, add the cream and stir briskly to combine - beware that the sugar syrup will be dangerously hot and will bubble and spit when you pour the cream in!
  • 4) Add the chocolate and stir until melted and smooth. Allow to cool completely (about 1 hour), whisking occasionally.
  • 5) Refrigerate for 1-2 hours, whisking occasionally
  • 6) Spread the icing over the cold cupcakes using a spatula. Drizzle with chocolate sauce and top with a mini chunk of brownie.

Here's some more cupcake inspiration from HuffPost OWN:

Irresistible Cupcakes That Take the Cake
The Vanilla Cupcake, With A Twist (Actually, A Swirl)(01 of10)
Open Image Modal
Instead of jazzing up a basic vanilla cupcake with frosting or filling, this outrageous recipe has you swirling caramel sauce into the cake itself (it's your choice whether to add frosting on top of that). It's a brilliant technique: You scoop the batter into tins until each is just over 3/4 full, and then spoon about a teaspoon of caramel sauce on top of each cupcake, whirling it into the batter with a toothpick. We love using Happy Goat's buttery vanilla-bean caramel sauce, but any kind will give you delicious results.Get the recipe: Caramel Sauce Cupcakes (credit:Hannah Whitaker)
The Boozy Party Cupcake(02 of10)
Open Image Modal
Cherries jubilee may be one of the most celebratory-sounding desserts ever, and these cupcakes from Robicelli's: A Love Story, with Cupcakes take the concept -- cherries plus liqueur flambéed -- to a new level. They're vanilla cakes with a French buttercream frosting that has cherries-jubilee syrup stirred in. And, three cherries on top; because, hey, it's a jubilee.Get the recipe: Cherries Jubilee Cupcakes (credit:Eric Isaac)
The Red Velvet Cupcake You Weren't Expecting(03 of10)
Open Image Modal
We have a sneaking suspicion that the real reason many people love red velvet isn't the cool color or even the rich taste of the cake itself -- it's the decadent cream cheese frosting (and we can't blame them). These treats from the masterminds behind Baked, the Brooklyn bakery and line of baking mixes, use that topping to brilliant effect by stirring in cinnamon; it adds a sweet and hot edge to the cool and fluffy cheese.Get the recipe: Red Hot Velvet Cupcakes with Cinnamon Buttercream (credit:Anna Williams)
The Reason To Start Calling Cupcakes "Magdalenas"(04 of10)
Open Image Modal
This heavenly cupcake (or magdalena, in Spanish) from Robicelli's is a combination of two favorite Latin American sweets: tres leches cake and dulce de leche (you mix the latter with buttercream to make a frosting). Top this light and moist dessert with caramel shards -- they're easy to make with just water and sugar -- for a little bit of crunch.Get the recipe: Tres Leches Cupcakes (credit:Eric Isaac)
The Candy-Pie Cupcake(05 of10)
Open Image Modal
Although these adorable treats appear to be mini pies, they're really just a very creative use of candy and frosting. The blueberry-and-cherry pie filling is actually blue or red M&M's, and the frosting is tinted and piped to look like a lattice crust.Get the recipe: Bake-Sale Pie Cupcakes (credit:Alan Richardson)
The Cupcake That Celebrates The Other Amazing Chocolate Combination(06 of10)
Open Image Modal
Chocolate-peanut butter gets a lot of love, but Nutella (the chocolate-hazelnut spread) and bananas deserve some, too. Witness this outrageous cupcake from Robicelli's: It's a banana cake covered in Nutella buttercream, with bits of hazelnut praline sprinkled on top (crushed banana chips, roasted hazelnuts or a mixture of the two would work equally well).Get the recipe: Banana Nutella Cupcake (credit:Eric Isaac)
The Cupcake For When You Really Want An Ice Cream Sundae(07 of10)
Open Image Modal
Silvana Nardone, who writes the blog Silvana's Kitchen, makes edible bowls out of finely ground sugar cones, butter and chocolate. She fills them with coffee ice cream and chopped, chocolate-covered espresso beans and finishes off each one with whipped cream and chocolate shavings. Bonus: They're gluten-free.Get the recipe: Gluten-Free Cappuccino Ice Cream Cupcakes (credit:Stephen Gross)
The French Cupcake(08 of10)
Open Image Modal
Cookbook author and baking guru Dorie Greenspan makes a French yogurt cake that's wonderfully moist and lemony. To take it one step further, Joel Brown, a reader and member of the online cooking club built around one of Greenspan's books, cupcake-ified it, first by turning the loaf cake into individual cakes, and then topping them with a lemon glaze and a dollop of canned blueberry pie filling.Get the recipe: Blueberry Yogurt Cupcakes (credit:Joel Brown)
The Seasonal Cupcake You Can Turn To Any Time Of Year(09 of10)
Open Image Modal
Dessert stylist Amy Atlas makes these apple-like cakes for back-to-school events and bake sales, but you can vary the color of the sanding sugar on top to make them look like any fruit: strawberries in spring, peaches in summer or oranges and lemons in winter.Get the recipe: Delicious Apple Cupcakes (credit:Johnny Miller)
The Bacon Cupcake (Trust Gayle On This One)(10 of10)
Open Image Modal
When Gayle King judged the Vendy Awards (a cook-off among New York's street food vendors), she was surprised to discover that the Cupcake Crew's maple-and-bacon cupcake was the best thing she ate: "I knew I liked maple and that I also liked bacon, but who knew how much I'd like them together?"Get the recipe: Gayle King's Favorite Cupcake - The Maple-Bacon Cupcake (credit:Molly Rundberg)