You heard me.
In early November, we celebrated girlfriend's birthday, our decision to shack up together in cozy San Francisco bliss, and my new life as a cat-mom with a fancy little shindig at the apartment. This is the same occasion where I discovered the to-die-for chocolate stout cake recipe on epicurious.com. I also decided to try my hand at filling cupcakes with tasty vanilla cream.
And I bought all of the implements to complete my project, finally replacing the muffin tins I had lost and picking up some pastry bags and tips for the filling portion of the program. I found a basic vanilla cream filling recipe online from a fellow baker-blogger and felt satisfied enough with the positive comments to try it.
It didn't turn out great (so thank god for that chocolate stout cupcake recipe I can't stop talking about). First of all, the filling recipe called for a lot of powdered confectioners sugar, which I had on the shelf, but apparently hadn't touched in a year. The result: Really lumpy confectioners sugar, which not only didn't blend well, but also clogged the tips on the pastry bags. Some cupcakes got tons of filling, some got zero. Second problem: Shortening.
I totally hate shortening. Shortening tastes like slippery. This filling recipe called for shortening and I knew I shouldn't do it but I did it anyway because it was my first time doing it. And so the filling--at least in the cupcakes that didn't fall victim to the clogging--tasted like white vanilla slippery. When girlfriend and I sampled one before the guests arrived, I said,
"I hate shortening. It tastes like slippery." [Pause, thinking about my soft fat alternatives.] "Wouldn't this be great with bacon fat instead?!"
Flash forward a few weeks. It's Sunday, one week after having made a fantastic breakfast of bacon, eggs, and toast at home. I've got a few tablespoons of bacon fat in the fridge, and it's a few hours before Colleen's birthday potluck. I decide to give the bacon cream filling concept a go.
I scour the interwebs for a different decent chocolate cake recipe, just to switch it up a bit. All signs point me to a devil's food cake recipe from that lady Martha. I'll summarize the recipe with two words: Big. Disappointment. The cake really lacked the deep chocolate flavor I was looking for. I guess I also could have made it wrong, too.
But no matter, because it was the bacon cream filling that was really supposed to shine anyway.
I adapted this recipe from the Delish blog
(note that there's not a spec of slippery shortening in sight, yay!). I have no idea if it's really okay to just dump a bunch of bacon fat into a recipe and call it even. But no one vomited or immediately died, so I'm assuming it's not a short-term problem. I can't make any guarantees about long-term artery health, however.
Bacon Cream Cupcake Filling
fills up to 36 cupcakes
3 tbsp unsalted butter, softened
3 tbsp bacon fat [note: Some potluck people complained that the bacon flavor wasn't strong enough. I might next time take this up to 4 tbsp fat and 2 tbsp butter to really make it pop.]
1 1/2 c confectioners sugar
3/4 c marshmallow creme
1 1/2 tbsp heavy cream
Using a mixer, beat the butter and bacon fat with the confectioners sugar, marshmallow creme and heavy cream until fluffy and bacon-y. Transfer filling to a pastry bag with 1/4 inch tip.
Insert the tip of the pastry bag into the middle of each cupcake; squeeze lightly for about 5-7 seconds to fill with cream.
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