My favorite person to sit next to at a birthday party is the
person that doesn’t like cake frosting. Ideally, they aren’t a complete
stranger, and offer to give me the frosting they don’t want to eat, but the
point is, I love frosting. I also love cake. In fact, birthday cake makes my
top five favorite foods.
In my family, we fought over who got the flower. You know,
the icing flowers that are piled on to the four corners of the cake, to make it
“classy”. For some reason I always thought that the pink, purple or blue
frosting that had been piped into the shape of a rose tasted the best.
Buttercream is one of the simplest frostings to make. It can
be as simple as two ingredients, butter and powdered sugar. Even with just three ingredients, either
vanilla or powdered cocoa, you can have a distinctively vanilla or chocolate
buttercream. Although I cannot deny that
buttercream is absolutely delicious, what I really crave in a frosting is
something lighter and fluffier; that sickeningly sweet, neon colored stuff that
you can (or so I thought) only find at a grocery store bakery.
For years, whenever my birthday came around, I would request
a store-bought cake. Not one of those $400-$500 Cake Boss style ones, covered
in fondant and 18kt gold petals, but one of those $9.99 ones you pick up off a shelf in the
grocery store and pass back to the baker to pipe a name onto. A Baltimore grocer, Graul’s, has my favorite.
Side note: Have you ever watched one of those cake shows and
been completely disgusted by how much the cakes/fondant get handled? I’m sure
they practice excellent food safety, seeing as they are on camera, but it still
skeeves me out.
It finally occurred to me that I could probably make what
I’ve always referred to as “grocery store frosting” at home. Naturally I turned to the interwebs for help
and in my first Google search for “grocery store frosting” I found my
recipe. The best part of finding the
recipe was reading the reviews, and discovering there are other grocery store
frosting enthusiasts out there. Most people look at me disgusted when I
describe my passion for grocery store frosting, but the reviews confirmed I am
not alone.
RAYvens cupcake w/ grocery store frosting
This recipe makes a lot of frosting, but it also keeps well,
unrefrigerated even, in an airtight container. I lucked out recently and had
three occasions to make cupcakes for within a week of one another, the Superbowl,
a friend’s birthday, and my roommate’s birthday, so I used it for all three and
none went to waste. I always add a lot
of vanilla, which makes it extra tasty.
Grocery Store Frosting
1 cup shorting
½ cup butter
1 ½ tbs vanilla (I add more like 2-3 tbs)
2 lbs confectioner’s sugar
1/8 tsp salt
4 tbs water (possibly a few extra)
In stand mixer, combine shortening, butter, vanilla, and
water. Add the sugar and salt and beat
until well mixed. At this point, you may also need to add a couple extra tbs of
water (make sure to add a little at a time, as you can always add more, but can’t
take away). Turn mixer to highest speed and beat for 10-15 minutes.
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