Cupcake Cafe Cookbook
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Average customer review:Product Description
A uniquely idiosyncratic New York establishment, The Cupcake Café is a cozy mecca for lovers of all kinds of delicious homemade baked goods, including muffins, scones, coffee cakes, waffles, pies, sticky buns, and doughnuts. But it is best known for its fanciful cakes and cupcakes, elaborately decorated with homemade butter cream frosting. From many-tiered wedding cakes to tiny cupcakes covered in fresh fields of flowers, to sheet cakes embellished in vivid colors with virtually any scene you can describe or imagine, The Cupcake Café's baked goods are renowned for tasting even better than they look.
In The Cupcake Café Cookbook, Ann Warren shares all her secrets, teaching the home cook not only how to bake all of the Café's ambrosial products, but also how to decorate with butter cream in her own wildly fanciful style. Photographs in color and black-and-white, as well as detailed instructions for mixing colors, shaping flowers, and creating balance, bring even the most elaborate decorating techniques well within the ability of any home baker.
Writing not only with incomparable expertise, but also with the irreverence and wit that characterize everything she does, Ann Warren has re-created the entire unique Cupcake Café experience in book form.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #254691 in Books
- Published on: 1998-08-17
- Released on: 1998-08-17
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 192 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
The Cupcake Café Cookbook is a gem for everyone who loves doughnuts, originally decorated cakes, or off-beat New York City eateries. The actual café is a funky daytime oasis in the still-iffy neighborhood once known as Hell's Kitchen. Ann Warren and her husband, Michael, started the café as a bakery in 1988. They now serve food, too, but their fame comes from the breakfast baked goods and Warren's strikingly creative butter cream-frosted cakes and cupcakes.
You have to smile at Warren suggesting her doughnuts are health food because they're made from scratch with natural ingredients and eaten without butter or cream cheese. You will certainly enjoy every recipe for them and all of the muffins, scones and sticky buns, too. Warren's use of butter cream for decorating cakes with cascades of colorful flowers and other original designs is so magical that even Madonna and Mick Jagger have ordered from her. If you have an ounce of manual dexterity, Warren's detailed guidance on cake decorating will send you into orbit. Photos showing how to make the flower-encrusted cakes for which Cupcake Café is famous also a help. --Dana Jacobi
From Publishers Weekly
Warren, who owns the funky Cupcake Cafe in New York City with her husband Michael, presents an array of goods that have made the bakery a reported favorite of such high-profile sweet tooths as Madonna and Mick Jagger. Some are confections not usually made at home. Recipes for three yeast and five cake doughnuts include even Jelly Doughnuts, filled with a pastry tube. There is a wide selection of muffins, Sticky Buns, Brownies and Fruitcake. Eight pies range from a sturdy Apple to a spicy Mincemeat. The collection's centerpieces, however, are cakes, frosted and decorated with butter cream made in a 10-cup batch with four cups of sugar, six eggs and 2 1/2 pounds of unsalted butter ("enough to decorate one large two-layer cake") and artfully cast in garlands of flowers ranging from roses to hydrangeas. Although Warren and Lilly, who are sisters, offer reassurances, the prospect of dying butter cream in subtly varying hues and then wielding a pastry bag and decorating tips to create complex flower petals and leaves will likely daunt the nonprofessional. Warren suggests that success comes with repeated efforts. Even readers who are not inspired to take pastry bag in hand, will be intrigued by these and other decorating projects, such as drawing pictures on cakes with butter cream and erecting multi-tiered wedding cakes that serve from 20 to 150 people.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Although Warren and her husband opened The Cupcake Cafe with the idea of developing a wholesale doughnut business, it's the beautifully decorated cakes and cupcakes for which their somewhat funky establishment in New York City's Hell's Kitchen neighborhood is famous. With coauthor Lilly (her sister), Warren provides recipes for all the sweet baked goods the bakery/cafe offers, from those doughnuts to muffins and other "breakfast baked goods" to cookies, pies, and cakes. Most of the recipes are simple, and many are for old favorites like Cherry Pie or Oatmeal Cookies, but for those interested in duplicating Warren's gorgeous cakes and cupcakes (she has an art background, and now she paints with buttercream), there is a lengthy illustrated section on techniques. Recommended for most baking collections.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Customer Reviews
Poor recipe editing/testing
I've tasted products from the Cupcake Cafe and loved them which is why I was very excited about ordering this book. When I got the book last week I decided to try the Pumpkin Pie Recipe and the Pie Crust Recipe for Christmas. Luckily I am a seasoned cook and was able to adjust the recipes, however, I caution other nonseasoned cooks about the two errors I happened upon. In the Pumpkin Pie recipe they tell you to bake at 325 degrees for 30-35 minutes. Anyone who has experience baking pumpkin pies knows full well that at this temp it takes AT LEAST 45 minutes to be even close to done. At 35 minutes the custard was still liquidy. Also the pie crust recipe called for 1/2 cup of water at the top of the recipe, then told you in the instructions to BEGIN with 3/4 cup water. I used between 1/4 and 1/3 cup to finish the recipe.
Bottom line, I'm concerned about trying any other recipes, such as the butter cream---which is why I bought the book.
I'd like to know if anyone else has tried the butter cream recipe with success.
heavy heavy heavy
The Cupcake Cafe is much better known for the artistry of its buttercream cake and cupcake decorations than it is for the tastiness of its baked goods... and this cookbook plays to the Cafe's strengths. Not that the recipies aren't good -- they are, and the muffins, cakes and doughnuts they describe are all consistent and not at all 'difficult' or temperamental -- but they're all rather dauntingly SOLID, VERY heavy on the butter, and not especially inventive as far as texture and flavor are concerned. But anyone who's ever been to the Cafe can tell you -- that's authentic, and the book faithfully describes how to produce the Cafe's best-known products.
There's an ample section on decorating 'the Cupcake Cafe way', but surprisingly (and disappointingly) few step-by-step illustrations or photographs. Many of the flowers Ann Warren describes are very complex and more diagrams would have been very helpful. I was also surprised to notice that the photographs aren't really quite in focus, and don't give you any more than a general sense of what kinds of buttercream floral renditions the Cafe is known for -- which is to say, they don't do Ann Warren's artistry justice, since her work is beautiful.
Her recipe for buttercream frosting is, I think, a little unnecessarily delicate, given the heavy hand with which she expects you to apply the stuff (one 10" cake's worth of frosting calls for two pounds of butter!) -- I've had better results modifying her recipe with a little confectioner's sugar than I've had being obedient to the original.
All that said, this is a handy cookbook with reliable recipes for cakes, doughnuts and muffins, and it provides ample food for inspiration.
DON'T BOTHER - I finally threw this book away!
I have made several muffin recipes from this cookbook. I have been very disappointed in the fact that the authors never really employed a recipe editor to find typos and most of all inconsistencies! There are numerous inconsistencies!!!... For example: when it comes to the amount of butter - they switch back and forth from ounces to tablespoons, etc. Also, they never explain what they mean by way of the size of muffin tins. I was confused many a time in deciding what muffin tin size they really meant. One of the recipes (that I know of) omitted a sentence from the directions, and one had the order switched! Good Grief...those people who have not attempted to make anything from this book have no right saying it is a good cookbook! I am an accomplished cook - and I had problems with it...don't bother with this book. PS...the muffin recipes are nothing special. I have other cookbooks that are much better for muffin recipes!




