How to make new baby cupcakes
Bake these new baby cupcakes with a sense of humour! Perfect for baby showers and mums-to-be, they're delicious too.
Bake these new baby cupcakes with a sense of humour! Perfect for baby showers and mums-to-be, they're delicious too.
Going to a baby shower? Visiting a mum-to-be? Make your friends laugh with these cute (and tasty) new baby cupcakes.
- 12 cupcakes (use our basic cupcakes recipe)
- 100ml (3½ fl oz) syrup
- 250g (9oz) ganache
- 500g (1lb 2 oz) skin-coloured icing (mix red, orange and brown)
- 200g (7oz) black icing (mouth)
- 150g (5½oz) red icing (tongue)
- 60g (2¼oz) white icing (teeth)
- Black food colour
- Decorating alcohol
- 60g (2¼oz) yellow icing (quiffs)
- Red petal dust
- Cornflour
For the ganache:- 1.2kg white chocolate, finely chopped
- 450ml pure cream
Equipment- Palette knife
- Pastry brush
- Large and small rolling pins
- Set of circle cutters
- Small kitchen knife
- Frilling tool
- Paintbrushes
Go to step 1
Step 1
1. First of all, make a batch of basic
cupcakes. To make icing the cupcakes easier, once cooled, ganache (cover) them with the ganache mixture. To make this, add the cream to a pan and bring to the boil. Add the chopped white chocolate and whisk until smooth. Leave to cool, set overnight then spread on top of cupcakes with a palette knife.
Steps 2 and 3
2. To cover the cupcakes, knead 450g (1lb) of skin-coloured icing to a pliable dough and roll to 3mm (¹⁄8 in) thick. Using a circle cutter in the same size as the cupcakes, cut out 12 circles and stick them on the cupcakes.
3. To make the ears, make two balls of the remaining skin-coloured icing and stick them on either side of the face. Press the frilling tool into each ball to create the ear shape.
Steps 4 and 5
4. Next, make the mouth. Roll out the black, red and white icing to each 3mm (¹⁄8 in) thick. Using a small circle cutter, cut a black circle for the mouth and stick it on the face with a little water.
GoodtoKnow Newsletter
Parenting advice, hot topics, best buys and family finance tips delivered straight to your inbox.
5. Using an even smaller circle cutter, cut a red circle and cut the circle again to make the tongue. Stick the tongue on the mouth. With a sharp knife, cut the white icing into long thin strips and then into rectangles for the teeth and stick two onto the mouth. With a paintbrush, paint a line on the tongue with black food colour mixed with decorating alcohol.
Steps 6 and 7
6. To make the eyes, use the paintbrush to paint two thin lines like meeting chopsticks on the face with black food colour mixed with decorating alcohol.
7. Then, make the hair quiff. Roll the yellow icing (or any colour) into a cone, then twist the cone between your fingers and stick it onto the head with a little water.
Step 8 (the last one...)
8. Finally, to give your crying babies some rosy cheeks, mix red petal dust with cornflour, dust on the faces with a dry paintbrush.
Your new baby cupcakes!
Now you've made these super-cute new baby cupcakes, take them along to a baby shower or give them as a funny gift to a new mum or mum-to-be!
Where to next?
Back to the start
Jessica Dady is Food Editor at GoodtoKnow and has over 12 years of experience as a digital editor, specialising in all things food, recipes, and SEO. From the must-buy seasonal food hampers and advent calendars for Christmas to the family-friendly air fryers that’ll make dinner time a breeze, Jessica loves trying and testing various food products to find the best of the best for the busy parents among us. Over the years of working with GoodtoKnow, Jessica has had the privilege of working alongside Future’s Test Kitchen to create exclusive videos - as well as writing, testing, and shooting her own recipes. When she’s not embracing the great outdoors with her family at the weekends, Jessica enjoys baking up a storm in the kitchen with her favourite bakes being chocolate chip cookies, cupcakes, and a tray of gooey chocolate brownies.
-
Why do I crave sugar? Causes of sugar cravings and how to stop them
If you're someone who suffers from sugar cravings you'll know how hard it is to give up the sweet stuff. But you're not alone.
By Debra Waters Published
-
Low sodium diet: the benefits of reducing salt and what foods to eat
By Emily-Ann Elliott Published