Red Velvet Cupcakes

June 6, 2010

Red Velvet Cupcakes

Red: the colour of passion, lust, desire.

It’s the colour of roses bursting into bloom.

Nervous blushes & giggles. Love.

Factoid of the day: did you know that women wearing red are perceived as more attractive to men? By my logic, I’d say a lady wearing red whilst holding a red velvet cupcake would be darn irresistible. Must try this at the pub next week, he he.

Such sexy little cupcakes, with their bold red colour and innocent white creamy frosting. Give them to a special someone, and let the science speak for itself.

But what exactly is Red Velvet Cake, oh Cake Mistress? Glad you asked. Red Velvet is a light cocoa and vanilla flavoured moist cake topped with a white fluffy cream cheese frosting. Say no more indeed.

The red colouring originally came from the cocoa, however, the bold colouring is achieved nowadays with very liberal use of red food colouring. Although I’ve made cupcakes here, you could up the dreamy cream cheese factor and make a red velvet layer cake instead.

Red inspires passion, lust & desire. And cupcakes? Also inspire passion, lust & desire.
So the two combined? Well, my friends, that’s love :)

RED VELVET BAKING TIPS:

  • The bi-carb soda, white wine vinegar and buttermilk are essential to the recipe. Do not omit them or change the quantities.
  • For the red colour, i’d use a liquid red food colouring and use 20 ml. Queen brand is excellent. I’ve previously advocated using a gel/paste, which can be harder to source. Also, some brands of gel/paste I’ve encountered have a strong bitter taste to them, ruining the cupcakes and causing a really dense or chewy texture.
  • The key to these cupcakes, and most cake recipes, is to know when to stop mixing. The only time it’s ok to whip things to a frenzy is when creaming the butter and sugar together, and adding eggs. This is adding volume to your cake by whipping air into the batter. But from that point onwards, you really want to minimise mixing, because you might be beating the air out, which will deflate your cupcakes. Also, if you overbeat flour, you’re likely to get tough cupcakes.
  • Electric mixers have their place, for sure. But when it comes to adding ingredients like flour, the safest option is to just use a wooden spoon and gently stir it in. The aim is to ensure the ingredients are evenly mixed only.
  • Carefully weigh all ingredients and make sure they are the correct ones. Sounds silly I know, but it’s easy to accidentally pick up the plain flour instead of self raising and vice-versa.
  • Bi-carb soda, which is similar to baking soda, is not the same as baking powder. They cannot be directly swapped. In this recipe, the bi-carb soda reacts with acid (white wine vinegar) to create lots of fizzy bubbles and help give the cupcakes their desired texture. Remember making exploding volcanoes at school? Yeah, like that on a small scale. Using powder is going to balls things up. And check the expiry date!
  • Buttermilk is also acidic, and helps counteract the tangy taste of bi-carb soda. Using regular milk isn’t recommended, as it will affect the flavour at the very least.
  • Check that your oven is calibrated correctly. Quite often the temperature on the oven knob doesn’t match the temperature inside!
  • Red flags that your oven is too hot and/or the cupcakes aren’t cooking on the centre rack: large domes, very cracked tops, exploding cupcakes.

I’ve made a video tutorial demonstrating how I make them and what they should look like. It’s really tricky for me to know what went wrong if they look or taste strange, but I can show you what happens when they go right. The tutorial is up on YouTube here 

 

RED VELVET CUPCAKES

YOU WILL NEED

Cupcakes
60 g Unsalted Butter, room temp
150 g Caster Sugar
1 large Egg, lightly beaten
10 g Cocoa Powder
20 ml Red Food colouring, liquid gel/paste
1/2 teaspoon Vanilla Extract
120 ml Buttermilk
150 g Plain flour
1/2 teaspoon Salt
1/2 teaspoon Bicarb Soda
1 1/2 teaspoon White wine Vinegar

Cream Cheese Frosting
300 g Icing sugar, sifted
50 g Unsalted butter, room temp
125 g Cream Cheese, slightly softened

Makes 12

DIRECTIONS

  1. Preheat the oven to 170c. Line a 12-hole cupcake tin with patty cases.
  2. Place butter and sugar in a medium bowl and beat with an electric mixer until light and fluffy. Slowly add the egg and beat until everything is well mixed.
  3. In a small bowl, mix the food colouring, cocoa powder and vanilla extract until it makes a thick paste.
  4. Add the paste to the butter mixture and beat thoroughly until the colour is mixed evenly through the batter. Be sure to scrape down any stray batter from the sides of the bowl with a rubber spatula. The mix should be a deep rose pink/red.
  5. On slow speed, slowly add half the buttermilk until just mixed then add half the flour until just mixed. Repeat for the remaining milk and flour.
  6. Add the salt, bicarb and vinegar, beating only until they are fully incorporated.
  7. Spoon a heaped tablespoon of mixture into each paper cases until no more than two-thirds full.
  8. Bake for 20-25 minutes on the centre oven rack, or until the top of a cupcake bounces back when lightly touched. (A skewer inserted in the centre should come out clean).
  9. Once the cupcakes have cooled slightly in the tray, remove them and place on a wire rack to cool completely. Meanwhile, prepare the cream cheese frosting.
  10. In a food processor or electric mixer, beat the icing sugar and butter until it has a sandy texture.
  11. Dice the cream cheese into smaller cubes then add to the mix one-by-one, beating until completely combined. Do not worry if the mixture seems too thick halfway through; it will thin itself out as more and more cream cheese is added.
  12. On medium-high speed, continue beating the frosting until it becomes light and fluffy. This takes around five minutes.
  13. When the cupcakes are cold, pipe the cream cheese frosting on top, or use an icecream scoop to dollop the frosting on the top.

(Adapted from The Hummingbird Bakery Cookbook)
The Hummingbird Bakery Cookbook

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  • This cake is extremely good!

  • my cupcakes just failled because in the steps you forgot to say when to add a egg..

  • Hello,

    I’m sorry to hear that your Red Velvet Cupcakes did not work this time. The directions state that the egg is slowly added in step 2. It’s a very reliable and delicious recipe, and I hope it goes well for you next time.

    Kind Regards,
    Emma

  • Thank you so much for this recipe. I’d never eaten nor made Red Velvet cupcakes before today (but had heard they were divine) and these were just lovely! So light and fluffy – and the frosting is perfect. I used Wiltons Pink Terracotta colouring because my only red option was the cheap & nasty Queens Pillar Box Red and they still turned out beautifully red. Will definitely be making this again and again!!!

  • YUMMMMMM!!!!!! these were delicious!! a huge hit with my work collegues!!! 

  • Hi Lanie,
    Instead of using white wine vinegar you could try lemon juice instead. The acidity should still react with the bicarbonate soda for the cupcakes.

    Regards,
    Emma

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  • Hello!
    The Red Velvet Cupcakes can be made with a different frosting. They’re a spongey cake with a light choc/vanilla flavour, so a vanilla or choc buttercream would work if you don’t like cream cheese frosting.

    Happy baking!
    Emma
    The Cake Mistress

  • These cakes are absolutely fantastic. All my family say they are the best cakes I have ever made! I add more red dye t make them even brighter.thanks heaps Tracey

  • Thank you Cake Mistress for a wonderful, delicious and easy to make recipe. I made them for my dad’s birthday. He loved them!! They looked so beautiful and tasted divine!

  • Hi, I notice that this recipe doesn’t have baking powder. I just made mine from another website, and turned out a flop. I will definitely try this recipe from this web page, and fingers crossed it works out!! Yours look divine and soooo yummy!! 

  • Hello. I made these cupcakes yesterday and they were a hit. I used cider vinegar instead of the white wine and came out perfect. Thank you so much. :-)

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  • Hi Emma, I have not tried your recipe yet however I am wanting to make these for my sons’ 5th birthday party next week. I just wanted to know if you can use same quantities to make one cake instead of cupcakes? I also wanted to attempt cake pops. Thank you for posting the recipe, your cupcakes look devine, can’t wait to try!

  • OMG! These are the best cupcakes I have every tasted! So light & moist. I dont usually eat cupcakes because they tend to be a bit dry but not these, they taste as good as they look! I made them today for a family dinner and they were a real hit! They turned out exactly like the photo, everyone was so impressed. I sacrificed half of one of these lovelies to crumble into tiny pieces to decorate on top of the frosting, they looked magnificent. Thank you for the best little cakes ever! :-)

  • Hi there – thank you for this great recipe. Id like to make them for a b.day party about 80 of them. Can you tell me best way to store them if i make day before and also frost them on the day or prior?? thank you – linda

  • Hi there! This looks great. I was just wondering if this recipe would work for a whole cake? I am thinking a 9inch? Thank! :)

  • I’ve had these on my to do list for ages and finally got around to it. They are delicious, so much better than my previous recipe. Now I want to make another batch.

  • hey thanks so much for such a great recipe, just wondering how long do they keep for in just a regular container, or is it better to store them in the fridge? xx

  • Hi Emma,
    this was my first time making red velvet cupcakes and I was a bit nervous but the recipe turned out perfectly :) I love how bright red they are and as I am a sucker for anything cream cheese, loved the icing. Thanks so much!

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  • Is this really any good?

  • Hello,
    Sorry to hear they didn’t work out so good. Chewiness might happen if they were over-beaten. I also had a bad experience with a certain brand of red gel colouring making them denser than usual. But the holes in the bottom part has me stumped sorry. I haven’t heard of what might cause them to bake that way.

    Kind Regards,
    Emma

  • I’ve just made these wonderful red velvet cupcakes.  They turned out absolutely perfect!  Now I just have to make the frosting.  Thanks for a great blog – I have just discovered you and I am sure to be making more of your recipes!

  • Mine look like they exploded ..the bottom is nice and cake like but the tops are crazy and hard and yer look like they exploded… solutions?

  • My cupcakes exploded .. help!!

  • Hi Kris,
    Oh dear. Not 100% sure, but that sounds like what happens when the oven is too hot and/or the cupcakes weren’t on the centre rack. If the oven is too hot, the top crust hardens and cooks too quickly. When the batter underneath starts to rise up it breaks apart the crust, forming weird domes and large cracks. I’ve actually just done a red velvet video tutorial here: http://youtu.be/5p4jMJ09wFc
    Hope that helps!

  • Hi Joy,

    I’m sorry the cupcakes were a huge disappointment. I’m puzzled as to why things went off course. These have been baked many times with great results and shouldn’t take more than 25 minutes to be done. I have had a bad experience with a certain brand of food colouring before, but if you’ve used the same ingredient in the other recipes it can’t be that.
    The ingredient list is directly from the Hummingbird Bakery, and I stand by the quality of the recipe. I wish I could tell what happened. Thanks for your feedback though. It’s inspired me to video record recipes so I can communicate them far better than through plain words. The first one is actually this Red Velvet recipe. The link is here if you’re curious to compare methods. http://youtu.be/5p4jMJ09wFc

    Regards,
    Emma

  • Love the video tutorial! I will be madly baking away the week before our wedding making these little beauties (from this recipe!) as our wedding “cake” in 5 weeks time! Have already road tested them and the bridesmaids approve :-)

  • am about to try this reciepe for the first time over valentines day!
    the video tutorial and music were both to die for – im such a fan of that genre and it really does help clarify the steps needed and to be properly followed.
    cant wait to see how these turn out – the reviews have make me uber excited!
    as an asipring “cupcake mistress” myself – i look forward to trying out more of these delights and creating some of my own.

    happy baking!

  • Just made this recipe and it worked out great. However mine didn’t rise up as high as yours. I had trouble getting the butter and sugar to be light and fluffy (don’t know why, not usually a problem!!). Would this cause the cupcakes to be flat? Everything else wasn’t overmixed so can’t think of anything else.

  • Hi Michelle,
    That would be my first thought. Mixing the butter and sugar to be light and fluffy adds volume (air) into the cakes. If there was a problem there and not enough air was incorporated, they could be flat. Also, sometimes when I couldn’t be bothered waiting for the butter to go soft, I’ve microwaved it. It was then not quite right for whipping and I think the butter sinks to the bottom? Were they dense at the bottom and lighter at the top?
    Glad they worked out well otherwise!

    The Cake Mistress

  • Hello,
    Hmmm… Is the cream-cheese added cold straight from the fridge? Also, I know I advocate beating the frosting A LOT to get it whipped nicely. But there is advice in the original cookbook the recipe comes from warning about OVER-beating the frosting, where it can become runny. I haven’t seen it happen before, but maybe a combo of soft cream-cheese, high speed mixing and running the beaters for that bit too long will give it a translucent appearance? That would be my guess.

    Happy Baking,
    The Cake Mistress

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  • 20 minutes is a long time. Usually the beating of sugar and butter process takes about 5 minutes for me, so I’m not sure what went wrong there.
    Before I controlled my oven temperature, I used to get bigger domes on the cakes, but now they come out flat. Just watch the temperature inside is what it should be. If the oven is too hot, you’re more likely to get big peaks and cracks in the tops.
    Hope they’re a success at the kitchen tea!
    Emma

  • Just made them and the recipe is AWESOME! They turned out FANTASTIC! Amazing. :-)

  • Just for the pedants like myself, I found that 50g for a regular muffin-cake-wrapper and 12g for a mini-muffin worked best.
    (Yes, I weigh my cupcakes; I am incapable of measuring the same amount into each cup by eye.)

  • Hi. Stumbled upon ur webbie n tried d recipe. Fell in love instantly. Cool!

  • I tried this recipe and was amazing! I’m going to bake them again today as trials for my friends wedding. I was wondering if you can use this recipe as a cake? Does it just need longer cooking time? I’m also making a friends birthday cake and hoping to use the same mixture. Thanks :)

  • Followed the recipe exactly as it is written – and made the most beautiful delicious cupcakes ever!! Thanks for this! I’ll be making them again soon :)

  • Yay, glad it worked well! Yes you can use the recipe for a cake. The cookbook advises to double the ingredients, divide them between three 20cm cake tins and bake them for 25 minutes at the same temperature (they stacked a layered red velvet cake).
    Happy baking,
    Emma

  • I made these for a BBQ and I must say that this is the best recipe I have found for Red Velvet Cupcakes. I am incredibly impressed and have passed this recipe along to my friends. Thank you!

  • I baked these cupcakes for my school musical cast. They all loved them! The only thing I found was that the icing was a tad runny… But apart from that they looked and tasted delicious :D thanks for this fabulous recipe, I will definitley be using it again :) xo

  • I know this is an older post, but I’ve made these particular cupcakes before and they were AMAZING, and now I want to make a Red Velvet Cake, and I want to know if I can use the same recipe but bake it as a cake instead? or if I should try using a specific ‘cake’ recipe

  • Hello!
    The original recipe recommends doubling the cupcake ingredient quantities for making a cake and splitting the batter between 2 or 3 pans to create a layer cake. The baking time will be different as well, so keep an eye on it for doneness. I think the frosting also gets doubled so you have enough to cover the layers, top and sides of the cake.
    Hope that helps!
    Emma

  • Dear Cake Mistress,
    Just made your recipe- the cupcakes look amazing! however my palate is a tad confused about the tastes incorporated, the cupcake tastes a little sour/bitter- is this normal? i followed exact measurements, particularly for the bicarb and white wine vinegar.

    Thankyou in advance!

  • Hi Serenay,
    I guess it depends on your palate. It’s really hard to describe the sensation, but they’re like tingly fizzy mild cocoa/vanilla flavoured cupcakes. I’ve sometimes found accidental sourness or bitterness with different brands of food colouring. Some are tasteless and some are horrid! I love Queen liquid colouring.

    Regards,
    Emma

  • I have used your recipe numerous times (it really works) but my cakes never come out as red as yours.I have used Queens liquid, Americolor gel, Wilton paste and they all come out a dirty red/brown colour. Any ideas?

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