Today I’ll begin a series of posts that will cover (most) all of the basics of making cupcakes. A pretty cupcake is always a welcome sight at parties, or as a special treat. Before we can frost or decorate, we need a nice cupcake to start with, so let’s get baking!
First, you need a good recipe. I rely on my favorite Chocolate Cupcake Recipe and Vanilla Cupcake Recipe the most often, but I have several other delicious options on the Cupcakes page. You are certainly welcome to use a box mix, or other recipes as well, most of the tips below will apply to any recipe or mix you use.
1. Follow directions. I know… I’m sorry I have to say it, but it’s true! Recipes are written using certain techniques, each for a reason. If you don’t measure your ingredients properly, or omit ingredients, or over or under mix your batter, you should expect less than desirable results.
2. Preheat your oven. Don’t place your cupcakes in the oven until it is fully pre-heated. The heating element in your oven is extra intense as it is pre-heating, if you put your cupcakes in while pre-heating, the cupcake bottoms may over bake.
3. Don’t over fill the liners. Most cupcake batters need the structure of the sides of the liners to rise properly. Overfilling your batter will cause the batter to spill over the edges of the liners as it rises, often resulting in flat or mis-shaped cupcakes, and a big mess. Follow the instructions for the recipe or mix you’re using, most recommend filling the batter about 2/3 full.
(above) This is how high I fill the liners for most recipes (or box mixes), probably a bit less than 2/3
(below) You can see the baked results.
4. Divide the batter evenly among the liners. It’s impossible to get exact same amount of batter in each liner, but if they can be reasonably even, the cupcakes will bake evenly as well. For thinner batters, I use a large measuring cup with a pouring spout (shown below) to pour batter into the liners, doing my best to fill them about 2/3 full. For thicker batters, a large cookie or ice cream scoop works great. I have a scoop that holds about 3 tablespoons of batter, and it works great for dividing the batter.
5. Check the cupcakes at the minimum baking time. If the recommended baking time is 18-22 minutes, check them at 17 or 18 minutes (just a quick peek, make sure not to let too much heat out of the oven). If the tops are rounded and no long appear wet, they may be done. Pull out the pan and use a toothpick to check for doneness if you’re unsure. A toothpick inserted into a cupcake should come out with a few moist crumbs, but no wet batter. Over-baking the cupcakes, by even a few minutes, can cause them to be dry. Be carefully not to under-bake them either, the cakes need time to develop the structure to hold together. Cupcakes removed from the oven too early may never properly rise, or will sink in the center as they cool.
6. Cool cupcakes on a wire cooling rack, not in the cupcake pan. When you remove the cupcakes from the oven, allow to cool only a minute or so in the cupcake pan. Then use a potholder to hold the pan, and tilt it so you can remove the cupcakes and place them on a cooling rack. If you leave the cupcakes in the pan, they will continue to bake from the heat of the pan, and can dry out.
7. Store the cupcakes properly. Once the cakes have cooled, frost or cover right away. Cupcakes made from box mixes can be stored loosely covered, since they tend to get a bit sticky if stored airtight. Most cakes made from scratch can be covered with plastic wrap, or in a tupperware type container. Most cupcakes are best if eaten the day they are made. If needed, store the cupcakes up to 1 full day at room temperature, or freeze (wrapped well) until ready to use (defrost at room temperature).
8. With cupcakes, as with life… there are no guarantees. These tips will hopefully help you bake beautiful, delicious cupcakes, but much of baking is experimentation. I have made my share of over-baked, dry, ugly or otherwise sad cupcakes. I don’t have the answer to every possible baking dilemma… your oven, the weather, your ingredients… all play a part in the end results. In many cases, a swirl of icing and some sprinkles can cover quite a bit!
Happy Baking!
Adell says
Your style is very unique compared to other people
I’ve read stuff from. Many thanks for posting when you have the opportunity, Guess I’ll just bookmark this blog.
Janelle says
I made these cupcakes last year for my kids birthday and they turned out great. This year I want to make a sheet cake. Do you think this same recipe will work, or do you have another recipe for sheet cakes?
Anshul says
dear marcela
my recepie for chocolate cup cake is:
Semi-Sweet Baking Chocolate – 4 oz (113g)
Butter – 4 oz (113g)
Eggs – 2
Sugar – 1/3 cup (75 g)
All-purpose Flour – 1/4 cup (40g)
after preparing batter i bake this batter in 180c for 12 minutes, it was good but my cake shows some wet structure and the texture of upper layer was not OK, also i want to raise my cake volume, for that how much baking powder do i have to add?
Please advice me on the above statement.
Eagerly waiting for your reply.
Thankyou
Anshul
Catherine Caracciolo says
I love your website! Is it ok to fill a cupcake (lemon curd) the day before or will the filling soak into the cake?
Thanks for the help!
Liz says
Love your recipe!!!!
can you bake them on the bottom and middle rack or do you have to bake them 1 at a time?
last time I placed 2 trays next to each other and they came out with the top side ways
and for the last batch it was only 1 tray and they came out perfect!!!
Thanks for sharing
Liz
Quincy says
Very nice recipes n tips…thanks sooo much!
Ennie says
Thank you so much for this…. God Bless you real good….. Merry Christmas in Advance!
Bernadette says
Hi Glory ~ I love your recipes and used your vanilla cupcake one for my daughter’s bday ombre cake with great results, so thank you, thank you, thank you. When making mini cupcakes, how full do you recommend filling the liners and how long should they bake (using your go-to cupcake recipes. Thanks!
Dani Richards says
Thank you for these tips. I am about to bake 100 cupcakes for a charity fund raising drive and these tips will help. Perhaps you can help me with a little problem – I am making all the decorations with fondant, which I will colour myself. How can I prevent the colours from ‘bleeding’ onto the frosting????????
Glory says
Hi Dani,
I”ve never had a problem with the fondant bleeding onto the frosting. My best advice would be to make sure your fondant decorations are nice and dry (and have been drying for at least 2 days). Best of luck!
Marcela says
Hi! I’m from Chile, South America, and I’m totally into cupcakes! Actually, I’m planning on starting a business on this. I found your page AMAZING… it’s already among my favorites. I have one question: I need to find the best type of oven to bake cupcakes and muffins. Would you recommend electric or convection ovens?
Glory says
Marcela- I have an electric oven, and have only used a convection oven a few times. In general, I like electric ovens for nice even heating, without the extra air blowing (as with a convection oven) which can cause cakes to rise unevenly.