Homemade Gift Ideas For the Baker in the Family
By Moonmaiden
Baking
Give the Gift of Homebaked Goodies
One thing we have in common is we all have to eat. What better gift than some fresh homemade baked goods given as a gift to your friends, office, family, church members or school teachers.
It's not as hard as you might think to bake a batch of muffins or cupcakes. There are many mixes and shortcuts available. And even without the mixes and the shortcuts, you can make things like banana bread or coffeecake in under an hour, not counting baking time.
Many of these ideas are kid friendly too. Spend quality family time letting your kids frost some cupcakes or stir in the cranberries. They will be so proud when you share their baking. And the broken cookies can be eaten along the way.
Fruitcake and Cupcakes
The busier people get, the less they seem to bake. So if you are one of those fortunate people with both time and talent you can be the baker in your family.
I know many jokes are passed around about the follies of fruitcakes. But one year my boyfriend decided to bake fruitcakes for all his office staff. Since neither of us drink we were determined to find a recipe that did not include alcohol. And after a few tries I googled one up. He started collecting all types of candied fruits from grocery stores and farmer's markets, and he made some truly wonderful moist and juicy fruitcakes. We handed out fruitcakes for about three years until the demand outweighed his desire to be chained to the stove throughout December.
This year I'm going through a gourmet cupcake phase. If you see how much those fluffy little suckers are at gourmet shops, you also might be motivated to make your own.
I've seen enough shows saying you don't really save money by mixing your own cake mix, so I just buy the boxes of cake mix. They make perfectly fine cupcakes. I always use those little paper baking cups. For a good selection check your kitchen supply store.
The fun comes when you frost them. You can make your own colored sugar easily. Put a few tablespoons of sugar in a locking baggie along with a few drops of food coloring. Close the bag and mush the mixture around in your fingertips until the color is blended. Remember you can mix red and yellow to make orange, red and blue to make purple and blue and yellow to make green.
Frost the cupcakes with white frosting and sprinkle the colored sugar on top. Or buy some of the ready made toppings like chocolate jimmies or confetti and sprinkle over the top.
You can also put gummy animals on top of cupcakes after baking.
Sometimes I like to mix up yellow cake mix, fill the cups, and then drop a few drops of liquid food coloring on each cupcake. Then I swirl the color around with a toothpick before baking. When you bite into them they have a beautiful swirly tie dye effect inside.
Wilton sells a cupcake stand to display all your fluffy wonders.
I buy plates at thrift stores and garage sales and use those for cupcakes I'm giving away. Then I never have to worry about getting the plate back. Or you can save those shallow cardboard boxes that six-packs of sodas come in and fill them with cupcakes.
Baking
Other baking ideas.
Other things you can bake include cakes, muffins, pies, tarts, brownies, pastries, cookies, bread and breadsticks. Display small items in baskets lined with a clean dishtowel. I have had great success with the Krutzease mixes for blueberry and cranberry muffins.
I've also made great banana muffins from scratch. Banana bread isn't all that hard either. There are literally thousands of recipes available on the internet. I'll list some of my favorite recipe websites below.
Tips for Better Baking
Before you open anything, make sure you have all the ingredients on hand.
Don't trust an old oven to keep the right temperature. Buy a thermometer to hang inside the oven.
Don't be an absentee baker. Stay in or near the kitchen and check your baked goods at least once halfway through the baking time.
Pre-heat your oven so the temperature is stable when you put the food in.
Teach your children about kitchen safety.
Use oven mitts.
Set a timer so if you forget you are baking, the timer will remind you.
Use fresh ingredients and real butter. It does make a difference.
Recipes
- Recipe Goldmine
Cupcake and frosting recipes. - Food Reference
Drooling yet? - Recipezaar
Recipes rated by you. - Cooks dot com
More recipes than you could cook in a lifetime.
My Cooking Blog
- Picky Eaters
I was in the kitchen making sausage links and scrambled eggs when I realized something. Often my boyfriend doesn't like my cooking, and it's been eroding my confidence in the kitchen. Thank goodness I was married 16 years and raised two kids who loved my cooking. In the over a decade I've been with my boyfriend, here are his eating no-nos. Nuts are fine as long as they are not in something or on something. That pretty much rules out cooking with them. So no banana nut bread, oatmeal raisin cookies, cashew chicken, walnut brownies, etc. He doesn't like bread based desserts, so if I make 12 cupcakes, I am expected to eat 11 of them. He doesn't care for bread with breakfast, so no pancakes, waffles, crepes, donuts or biscuits. If I make a cake he might have one piece, so the rest goes in my belly or into the trash. He likes fruit alone, but not with meals or in things. So no ambrosia, fruit salad, Cole slaw with raisins and so on and so forth. Like most women, I like to be appreciated for what I cook. In a subconscious effort to please him, I tend to eliminate 80% of the recipes I enjoy, because he won't eat them. I'll make dinner and then he'll go make his own dinner. Such a waste of time and food. Yet, if he made dinner, and I turned my nose up and it and made something else for myself, he'd be very offended. The one thing he loves to eat is spicy food. He has more hot sauces and Asian sauces than anyone I've ever known. Everything gets slathered with hot sauce, jalapenos, chili flakes, or something to that effect. It's not that I despise spicy foods, but my tummy let's me know post haste that it's in misery. If he makes chili, I can't eat it, and I love chili. We used to go to Ports O' Call in San Pedro for spicy shrimp fajitas. The first time I went I was fine. The 2nd, 3rd, and 4th time I tried it, it was quickly followed by a race to the nearest bathroom. Long story short, if it's mild enough for me, it's way too bland for him. He's also one of those people that eats food by compartments. All the salad first, then all the green beans, then all the mashed potatoes, then all the steak. Meat is at the top of his food pyramid. Maybe I can adopt a few people that will eat what he won't. Is being gastronomically incompatible grounds for divorce?
- Fry 'Em Up
For my boyfriend's birthday I gave him some money to get a new frying pan. He found a nice set of them at Sam's Club. He was going to get the ones with the black exterior, but I spotted the red ones and twisted his arm. We haven't even opened the box yet, but I'll take photos when we do. Is getting him a pan for his birthday like getting a baseball mitt for your mom? (Giggles).
- New Bake Ware
I just ordered some inexpensive bake ware off of Yardsellr. I'm looking forward to getting the muffin pan so I can try out cloverleaf buns. Yesterday we went to Jon's Market and I picked up some wheat flour and corn meal to round out my baking staples. And I got some feta cheese for some baked breakfast bread with bacon and eggs in it. That should be interesting. And I got the peanut butter for peanut butter and bacon muffins. It sounds so bizarre that I have to try it soon.
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Moonmaiden 5 years ago
Moonrock Cupcakes: http://www.recipegoldmine.com/cakecup/cakecup9.htm
I'm going to have to try this one.