Everyone should have a cake

I’ve been baking again. This time it’s because the smallest of the small people did not approve of chocolate and cherry cupcakes.

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These are basic sponge buns with chocolate drops in, which *do* meet with approval. It’s a recipe given to me by my grandma, and it’s my fallback recipe whenever I need to whip up cakes without having to buy fancy ingredients. You can use the same recipe baked in two sandwich tins to make a Victoria sponge (preferably filled with whipped cream and fresh strawberries) but buns are best for small people. The recipe’s main advantage is that as long as you remember the ingredients and method, you never need to remember quantities.

So, because chocolate and cake are proven to help when puzzling over a complicated stitch pattern, I present the recipe in all its glory.

Ingredients:
2 large or 3 medium free-range happy eggs
Self-raising flour
Unsalted butter
Sugar
Vanilla extract (optional)
Chocolate chips
12-cup bun tin lined with paper cases

Method:
Weigh the eggs. Weigh out the same weight in the flour, butter and sugar. Cream the butter and sugar together until pale and soft and fluffy.

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Beat in the eggs one at a time with a little of the flour. Add a teaspoonful, or as much as you want, of the vanilla extract, if using. I didn’t, because I couldn’t find it in the cupboard and I might not actually have any… Fold in the rest of the flour with a metal spoon.

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Mix in as many chocolate chips as you want (just one packet is considered a bit miserly in this house) and spoon the mixture into the cases, remembering to scrape out all the excess with a spatula so there’s no reason for any arguments about who gets to lick the bowl.

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I prefer the contrast of plain chocolate with the sponge, but my corner shop only has milk chocolate drops, so that’s what I’ve used. :(

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Note: I use larger than average cake cases because they come decorated with dinosaurs and footballs and other things. If you’re using the regular white Supercook bun cases from the supermarket, you’ll probably be able to make around 18 buns. The mixture will be fairly thick, so just dollop it into the cases; it spreads out when it’s in the oven.

Bake at 190Âșc/gas mark 5 for 15 to 20 minutes, turning tin around halfway through this time if you have a crappy oven like mine. Turn cakes out of tin and leave to cool on a wire rack for as long as possible. Add icing and sprinkles and other doodads if you can be bothered, but they’re quite interesting just as they are. :-D

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5 Responses to Everyone should have a cake

  1. That looks good! I think that’s what we, the French, call Quatre Quart cakes because you have equal quantities of egg, butter, sugar and flour.

  2. Excellent! Thanks for the recipe/method. Let’s see if I can bugger these up too! :)

  3. It is funny to see how things are called in different countries! We call them cupcakes.. or maybe muffins if you do not ice them; here in the US! Usually, except for cinnamon buns, or such like that, a bun is a small roll, for with dinner, or to make a sandwich! You probably already know these things, as I babble on to you, but it struck me as interesting.

  4. look yummy. we call them fairy akes.

  5. Mmmmmmm. Neil approves of not being miserly, and he also admits to preferring choc bits over cherries too. He has a lot in common with your small boys – I wonder if he’d like footballs on his cupcake paper…

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