(These cupcake and cupcake pops made by Lauren, who is bravely carrying her cupcake pops through the crowd, below.)
(These cupcake and cupcake pops made by Lauren, who is bravely carrying her cupcake pops through the crowd, below.)
It's labeled a peanut butter banana bacon cupcake, but I think it sounds an awful lot like the uberfamous Elvis Cupcake!
I'm a vegetarian, so I've never been able to taste any of the bacon cupcakes, but something tells me this might be my reaction too. *grin* (I should note that I totally trust Rachel, and she raves about the Elvis Cupcake, so YMMV.)
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Tired of cupcakes and cream puffs? Go fish!
San Jose Mercury News, USA - ... the 6-month-old San Mateo shop whose twist on the tradition has caught the attention of dessert fiends in search of the successor to cupcakes and cream ... |
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Cookies are as predictable around Christmas time as the turkey and dressing at Thanksgiving. For a more original holiday treat this year, we recommend cupcakes, which have long outgrown their image as a childhood favorite and developed into a creative (and impressive!) dessert. Whether you are serving a table of friends and family or putting out buffet-style holiday hors d'oeuvres, cupcakes are a perfect individually-sized treat – and the decorating potential is enormous, as you'll see in the recipes below. We've done the research for you and provided eight adorable must-haves in your kitchen this season. Enjoy!

Vanilla cupcakes before they are frosted. With cupcakes, the interest is all in the icing. Every cupcake we made started with the same vanilla cake, but chocolate lovers should feel free to branch out into other flavors. Red and green icing and M&Ms give this dessert the look of a traditional Christmas ornament, but be creative as well! Check out your tree for one of your favorites, and re-create it if you're feeling adventurous. A jumbo marshmallow and pretzel hook top off the ornament look.
Reindeer Cupcake

Assembling reindeer cupcakes.
What's more perfect than a reindeer at Christmas time? Virtually all of the Zimbio colleagues lucky enough to test the cupcakes thought this one was the cutest. Chocolate frosting and sprinkles gives the appearance of brown fur, and small marshmallows, green Dots and red M&Ms make up his face. For the antlers, break off pretzels and press them above the eyes. Don't forget about Rudolph – make a few cupcakes with red Dot noses for those extra-special guests.
Snowman Cupcake

Arranging cupcakes to be photographed.
The best way to wow a holiday crowd is to build a cupcake up, like a sculpture. Use a white frosting base to resemble snow, and pile one and a half jumbo marshmallows (stuck together with icing) on top. Press chocolate sprinkles into the marshmallows for the eyes and buttons, and use an orange gummy candy for the carrot nose. Top him off with pretzel stick arms and a junior mint hat. Try giving him a colorful scarf or placing candies in the frosting beneath him for a little extra.
Christmas Tree Cupcake

Finished cupcakes are ready to be transported.
Continuing on the the “building up” theme, these Christmas trees are a perfect edible decoration for the holidays, and in our test kitchen, they were some of the most impressive creations. Start with a frosted cupcake and place an upside-down waffle cone (with clean edges) onto the icing. Then decorate the cone with white or green frosting to look like an ornamented Christmas tree, using colored icing, M&Ms, gum drops, marshmallows, or any candy of your choice. For some authenticity, sprinkle powdered sugar around the plate you serve the cupcake on to look like snow. These are hard to eat, but they make up for it by being so easy on the eyes.
Naturally, there were plenty of adorable recipes I came across that weren't practical to prepare ourselves. Look below for some more festive cupcakes that are almost too cute to eat. Almost.
Polar Bear Cubcakes
That's right - Cubcakes. They are hands down the most precious and creative cupcake we've come across in our research, and they couldn't be more suited for this wintry season. Just stick a full-size cupcake to a mini cupcake with icing, ice the sides, and roll the whole thing in coconut. Use gum drops for the ears, junior mints for the nose, and chocolate chips for the eyes.
See the full recipe from FamilyFun.com.
'Glittered' Sufganiyot
In the grand tradition of eating fried foods over Hanukkah, these jelly doughnuts are perfect as gifts or just for holiday gifts. After frying the basic dough, you squeeze jam inside using a pastry bag and dip the whole thing in icing and sugar. It may not be the healthiest item on the menu, but you know it sounds good.
See the full recipe from Martha Stewart.
Holiday Snowballs
These seasonal treats look just like snowballs, but they taste much better than the real thing. It's simple: cover a vanilla cupcake with frosting, and roll it in coconut. It tastes a lot like the Polar Bear recipe, without the hassle of building the animal.
See the whole recipe at MSNBC.
A new software title for Nintendo DS turns the world's best-selling portable video game system into an interactive cooking coach, complete with tasty recipes and video demos. Personal Trainer: Cooking for Nintendo DS contains more than 240 dishes from dozens of countries around the world. The DS Chef, a friendly electronic cooking instructor, walks users through each step to make sure every dish comes out perfect and delicious.
Personal Trainer: Cooking even includes videos of various cooking techniques, such as how to properly julienne vegetables. The touch screen interface helps budding chefs check ingredients on an electronic shopping list they can take to the grocery store. It also lets them search recipes based on ingredients, number of calories or cooking time. When a user's hands are too covered in the business of cooking to use the touch screen, the voice-recognition feature comes in handy: Just tell the DS Chef to move on to the next step or repeat the last one.
"Personal Trainer: Cooking is the first in a new line of Personal Trainer titles from Nintendo designed to help users enrich their lives and learn new skills in fun and interesting ways," said Cammie Dunaway, Nintendo of America's executive vice president of Sales & Marketing. "Whether you're cooking for yourself, your family or your friends, everyone in the household benefits from these tasty recipes for months and years to come."
Personal Trainer: Cooking also builds on the social aspect of food as well. Roommates can try out recipes together, or parents can involve their children in preparing dishes for the family. With a tap, users can even scale the quantity of their recipes based on the number of guests they expect.
Users can customize
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Family opens bakery in memory of loved one
Edmond Sun, OK - On Easter Sunday 2007, Toni Hoffman, who grew up in Edmond, spent some time baking cupcakes with her 18-year-old niece, Sara Brinson. ... |