These are pretty, right? Hot diggity dang, I think they’re precious.
In the middle of frosting these cupcakes I looked down at my hands. No big deal. I was simply looking down at the cupcake in one hand, and frosting covered knife in the other. I had to see what I was doing, right? When I looked down at this particular moment, I saw… my grandmother’s hands. There they were, the worn and wrinkled hands that had absolutely fascinated me as a child… only now spotted with powdered sugar and tinted with food coloring.
When I was a kid I would hold my grandmother’s hand in my lap and study it like it like I might study my favorite picture book. Somehow her hands weren’t at all different from reading an intricate a story.
So there I was, frosting a cupcake with my grandmother’s hands. The image was so strong that I even put down the cupcake and knife and bent my left index finger with my right hand. It ached a little. I don’t know why. And just like that… those hands were gone from me.
That was simultaneously perplexing and so comforting. I had to share that with you… I now only hope that I live long enough for my hands to be read like a story book.
Now let’s talk cupcakes!
Pretty. Pretty. Pretty. Pretty. Pretty. Pretty. Pretty. Pretty. Pretty. Pretty… right?
I’m proud of these little gems. I’m even more proud of the fact that it only took one stick (otherwise known as 8 tablespoons, 1/2 cup or 4 ounces) of butter to make both the cupcake aaaaaaaand the frosting. That’s bonkers, right? I know! Just three tablespoons of butter for the dozen cupcakes and 5 tablespoons for the buttercream. Who says you need a pound of butter for cupcakes?
Vanilla Cupcakes with Vanilla Buttercream
adapted from The Hummingbird Bakery Cookbook
makes 12 cupcakes
1 cup all-purpose flour
a scant 3/4 cup sugar
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
pinch of salt
3 tablespoons unsalted butter, at room temperature
1/2 cup whole milk
1 egg
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
Put the flour, sugar, baking powder, baking soda and butter into the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, or use a handheld beater and beat on slow speed until the mixture is a sandy consistency and everything is combined. Gradually pour in half of the milk and beat until the milk is just incorporated.
Whisk the egg, vanilla and remaining milk together in a separate bowl for a few seconds, then pour into the flour mixture and continue beating until just incorporated. Scrape any unmixed ingredients from the side or the bottom of the bowl with a rubber spatula. Continue mixing until the batter is smooth. Just a few minutes. Do not overmix.
Spoon the batter into paper lined muffin tins, dividing between the 12 cups. Bake for 20-25 minutes or until light golden and a skewer inserted in the center comes out clean. Let the cupcakes cool slightly in the pan, then turn them out onto a wire rack to cool completely before frosting.
Vanilla Buttercream Frosting
from The Hummingbird Bakery Cookbook
makes enough for 12 cupcakes, double this recipe to frost an 8-inch cake
2 cups powdered sugar, sifted
5 tablespoons unsalted butter, at room temperature
2 tablespoons whole milk
1/4 teaspoon vanilla extract
Beat the powdered sugar and butter together in an electric mixer fit with a paddle attachment on medium low speed until the mixture comes together and is well mixed. Turn the mixer speed to low. Combine the milk and the vanilla extract and slowly stream it into the butter and sugar mixture. Once incorporated, turn the mixer to high and beat until the frosting is light and fluffy, at least 5 minutes. The longer the frosting is beaten, the fluffier and lighter it becomes. If you find that your frosting is getting to warm in the summer months, stop beating and set in the fridge for a few minutes. Once chilled, hook the frosting back up the the mixer and beat once more until you reach the desired consistency.








{ 103 comments… read them below or add one }
I couldn’t seem to comment on your post for “The Best Chocolate Buttercream Frosting”, so my comment is a little out of context with this post’s recipe. I really wanted to thank you for posting the chocolate buttercream frosting. I had a bad experience while making buttercream once before, so I scoured the internet for the perfect buttercream. Yours caught my eye, and I’m so glad that I tried it! I couldn’t stop taking little tastes while I was icing the cake!
“So there I was, frosting a cupcake with my grandmother’s hands. The image was so strong that I even put down the cupcake and knife and bent my left index finger with my right hand. It ached a little. I don’t know why. And just like that… those hands were gone from me. ”
Man. That was such a beautiful image. Even more beautiful than these pretty little cupcakes.
beautiful pictures
beautiful words.
x
I love how your typo of “love” instead of “live” was a beautiful, Freudian slip.
Lovely photos as usual.
these are so so pretty! the colours are so nice. wow and only 3 tbl in the cupcakes. I m making these :) I think you ve got a mistake though 8 tbl are equivalent to 1/2 cup not 1/4 I think. You really touched my heart imagining you and your grandma. cause I ve done that too :)
dangit typos! thanks snooky doodle and memoria. blerrrrg.
I’ve always been put off by food colouring cuz they just look so unnatural to me. But if they can look this beautiful, I might have to change my mind. Well done, Joy the Baker!
sweet, very moving & emotionally charged…wow! how lucky to have that connection w/your grandmother…& a shout out for one stick of butter!
Really pretty and really easy! Love the recipes and I will now have to bake these gems! I know the feeling about looking at yourself and seeing your mother or grandmother…scary and moving at the same time.
Joy, you’re just awesome. And your cupcakes too!
Oh WOW these are precious!!!! So super cute!!!! I loved how you looked down and saw your grandmothers hands. What a wonderful memory :)
Ok so the fact that you totally used just a wee bit of butter in these beauties is something else!! I must try!! :) Thanks Joy!
Aww these are so pretty! :) Happy, summery colors!
Snooky doodle’s right – one stick of butter equals half a cup, not a quarter. But still decent for cupcakes (esp. if, like me, you don’t like/eat frosting).
wow they colours are so pretty!
Wow!
Your story reminded of my childhood time with my Nenek – I have a scar on my right thumb – a lil adventure I had with the kitchen knife, but a sweet memory of the times we spent in the kitchen together.
Love the cupcakes and I will make them! Thanks!
I do the exact same thing. My hands will be so stained by the time I’m my grandmother’s age! But they will be beautiful, none-the-less.
don’t forget that one stick of butter is also 113 grams ;)
hugs from europe joy!!
ha! Thanks Celeste!
That’s really sweet about the hands.
Your cupcakes look delicious; I love how little butter there is in them!
Maybe it’s the early morning tiredness starting to wear off, maybe it’s the cupcake addict in me, but your story made me a little teary eyed! I feel the same way every time I make my great grandmas oatmeal raisin cookies, like she’s there with me telling me to try the cookie dough and make sure it taste “okay”.
Great, now I want cookies and CUPCAKES!
…You’re so dadgum sweet! Your grandmother must be proud! :o)
…And yes those cupcakes are very pretty but seriously, have you ever met an ugly cupcake?
…Thanks for the recipe!
…Enjoy your Saturday and blessings too… :o)
Lovely cupcakes! And I appreciated the story as well. Nice photos! I shall be back.
I am sorry if I am a killjoy, but I have conserns about the coloring. I checked AmeriColor’s website, but found zero information about the ingredients. So I will have to ask you; is the color all natural?
Either or, I love your blog. Thanks!
Hi Pete- No. I’m afraid the color is not all natural. Sorry!
Michelle- Thanks for unlurking! Yes! There is something so lovely about looking down and seeing your mom or grandmother’s hands. So much love and trust in those hands… I’m glad you know what I’m talking about. Thanks for saying hi!
These are so cute!
Thanks for posting this one today! I just bought the Martha Stewart cupcake book, and was looking through there trying to find a recipe to make with my boys today (they want to make cupcakes!!!) but I didn’t want to make a ton of them cause i’ll eat them all. :0) This is a great recipe, easy enough for the kids and fun too! Perfect!!
So very beautiful, it made me think of my grandmother. <3
Great recipe.
Hi, Joy. First time for my to de-lurk and comment, but this post got me. Right in the gut. At 10:40 on Saturday morning. I’ve recently discovered, after turning 40 on July 4th, that I have my mother’s hands. I remember watching her cut fruit or potatoes as a child and intently watching her hands. Then the other day ~ BAM! ~ I was cutting bananas for my little one and I saw them Her hands. I was proud as I’m sure you are too. :) Our hands not only “love”, but they create “love” and that’s just…well…nice.
Awesome cupcakes, btw. What a great recipe for when the butter supply is running low and you need a good dessert! (Said by the lady who regularly keeps 7-10 lbs of butter in her freezer!)
Not pretty. Gorgeous!
These cupcakes are so pretty! I looooove that they only use one stick of butter. I might have to try this recipe with some flavor variations (and by variations I mean chocolate and chocolate).
thank you for sharing. just lovely…
Pretty & perfect in every way… can’t wait to try these!
Who knew these cupcakes plus several glasses of wine would result in such a bad morning after..the cure is more cupcakes, right?
These are so pretty!
oohh oohh! *thank you* for the buttercream recipe! it is a pet peeve that most recipes for buttercream frosting whip up enough frosting for 2 1/2 cakes (when it’s only a little 8″ 2 round tin jobbie). seriously, how much frosting is one expected to drown a cup/cake in? & such a wonderful image of your grandmother’s hands:)
So, I definitely didn’t realize the “love” instead of “live” was a typo and just thought you were being super cute and clever. The cupcakes look great, I’ll hve to turn them into minis since I’ve yet to get a normal sized pan but I will be making these to send with my mom over to my sister in Russia (along with a batch of your chocolate chip cookies).
On another note: you inspire me so much. Hopefully one day I’ll get to be as calm, sweet, and amazing as yourself. Keep it up.
Lovely…..
The cupcakes(with super cute colors) and grandmothers’ hands…..
Beautiful post – Wish you were on the East Coast, I have a really neat son… Just sayin…
I made a batch of these incredible cupcakes this afternoon, they are devine! I love that they have less butter then most recipes but yet still taste oh so sinful!
Lovely story. It is funny how you start to see bits of your family (mother, grandmother etc.) in yourself. Expressed in different ways….
you all are the biggest food conformists out there.
get off her nuts and create your own sense of self.
oh – and stop jocking her writing style, for she lacks
one.
Sweet April! Thanks for coming into this space that I’ve created to hate on both me and my readers. No… seriously.. it’s cool. Want a cupcake?
Hahahhahahahhahahahahhahahahahhahahaaha
“Sweet April!”
Right on Joy!
Seriously.
Joy, thanks for sharing your moment. And your cupcakes.
Oh, I totally forgot to ask. How do you like the Hummingbird Bakery book? I thought about ordering it when it first came on Amazon, but the few reviews were mixed.
Nicole- This is the first recipe I’ve tried from the book and I was really happy with it. The book itself is just beautiful. Give it a try!
Wow, I love that they only have a stick of butter! You did a great job decorating them too, I love sprinkles!!
Pretty words!
Do you use special food coloring to get those snazzy colors?
Just moved to DC and can’t find a decent cupcake, so tonight I decided to bake my own. I added lime zest and some fresh lime juice to make them more summery instead of vanilla. They’re awesome!
I just have to say you have the BEST recipes evah!! I love you blog and quite honestly I really should quit reading it cuz it makes me so dog gone hungry and then I go bake!! Seriously you have the most delicious recipes and they’re easy and fun to make.
I have been reading your blog for about a month now – I’m sorry I haven’t commented sooner. (btw – love the giant sugar cookies! :))
This entry moved me. I recently lost my mother and I swear I see more of her in me – like her hands – every day. Aaaaand now I’m sitting here crying. It’s cool, tears of beautiful memories.
Thanks Joy – love the blog, love your little glimpses into your life!
Good to see cupcakes and frosting that is lower on fat. So now we can make our cupcakes and eat them. :)
To all the Aprils out there, I will bask in all things JOYful. You have to love a site that as you click into it, you know your day will be better. Just the simple thoughts, sweet recipes and nostalgia gives me a smile each and everytime I click on Joy’s site that is saved in my favorites box. Keep all the sweetness coming JOY!
Gorgeous! I absolutely love the colors you selected for the frosting. I will definitely give these a shot!
shout out to joy & to cheryl
joy … we heart you!!
less butter = more cupcakes!
I too have seen my mother’s and grandmother’s hands in my own. Perhaps the movement of hands is like a gait – impossible to change – but, since we cannot see ourselves walk we only ever see our family resemblances in hand movements (and hear it is our speech patterns!)? Either way, it is an interesting coming-of-age-ish experience.
{ 15 trackbacks }