Champagne cupcakes are white cupcakes with champagne mixed into the batter. The pink frosting is vanilla with a touch of champagne mixed in.
Course Cakes
Cuisine American
Prep Time 20 minutesminutes
Cook Time 23 minutesminutes
Total Time 43 minutesminutes
Servings 12
Author Cookie Madness
Ingredients
1 ½cupsWhite Lily or 1 ½ cups plus 1 tablespoon of cake flour. Whichever flour you're using it should weigh around 6.2 ounces or 175 grams**
1 ½teaspoonsbaking powder
¼teaspoonsalt
3large egg whites
6tablespoonsunsalted buttersoftened (84 grams)
¾cup147 grams granulated sugar
2tablespoonswhole milk
1 ½teaspoonvanilla extract
¼cupplus 2 tablespoons dry or extra dry champagne
Pink Frosting
1stick/8 tablespoons115 grams butter, at room temperature -- salted or unsalted
1 ½cupssifted powdered sugar
1tablespooncream at room temperaturemilk not recommended**
¼teaspoonvanilla
1tablespoonchampagne at room temperature or more cream
Pinchof salt
Dash of red food paste
Instructions
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Line 12 cupcake cups with paper liners.
Mix together the flour, baking powder, and salt.
With an electric mixer, beat the egg whites until soft peaks forms; set aside.
With the same mixer, beat the butter and sugar until pale and fluffy. Beat in the vanilla and milk. By hand, stir in the flour alternately with the champagne until smooth. With a silicone scraper, fold egg whites into the batter until smooth. Divide batter among cupcake cups and bake for 20-23 minutes or until tops spring back when touched. Let cool completely, then ice with Pink Champange Frosting.
To make the frosting, beat the butter until creamy. Gradually add the powdered sugar and continue beating, scraping sides of the bowl. Add room temperature cream and continue beating, then add vanilla and beat until smooth. Add champagne if desired, or use more cream as needed.
Notes
I used White Lily, but if I hadn't had any around I would have used cake flour. Because cupcakes sometimes benefit from a little gluten, these might also be good with a mix of 1 cup cake flour and ½ cup all-purpose to equal 6.2 ounces. If you don’t have a scale, make sure to stir and aerate the flour before measuring. This frosting is excellent, but will curdle if the ingredients aren't at room temperature or in some cases, if milk is used in place of cream. As for the salt, regular or salted butter is okay. If you use unsalted, add a very tiny pinch of salt to counter the sweetness a bit.