The Cult of the Cupcakes
(and the People Who Write about Them)
Story and photos by Jay Friedman
Here
in Seattle, we need another cupcake maker like we need another food
blogger. (Seriously, who isn’t a food blogger these days?) I
admit it: I’ve been pretty cynical about the whole cupcake scene.
Apparently, I’m not the only one. When I posted to Twitter, Facebook,
and some food message boards asking advice about cupcakes, many "foodie"
friends replied immediately with comments like "cupcakes are so last
year."
Photo: Cupcake Royale's candy cane cupcake
production line
Well, actually, they’re so last century. Or maybe even the century
before that. Cupcakes aren’t new, but the phenomenon is, spurred on by
the quality and creativity going into making them. And in the midst of
our Sugar Revolution (hello, frozen treat shops), the number of
cupcakeries in this city is skyrocketing.
As is the number of people writing about them. Go ahead: Google
"cupcakes," and note the proliferation of cupcake-related websites. Fans
debate cupcake quality (I saw a rating scale based on moistness, flavor,
sweetness, eat-ability, attractiveness, frosting-to-cake ratio, etc.),
how to eat them (I like the minis, which I can take in one bite), and
even their history (often referencing Sex and the City, which
seems appropriate, as disrobing a cupcake from its pleated "skirt" is
part of the foreplay of eating it).
So what’s the draw? "People have a nostalgic place in their hearts
for cupcakes," said Jody Hall, owner of Cupcake Royale, adding, "But
while Betty Crocker dumbed down our taste buds, we’re doing
cupcakes right—surprising people who’ve never had them made from
scratch." Hall sources flour and butter locally, then searches afar for
the best quality vanilla, chocolate and sugar.
Cupcake
Royale plays up female appeal with its pastel splashes, but Hall says
boys also love the cupcakes and the environment. Big boys, too. She’s
amazed how many construction workers come in and order a "Dance Party
with Holly Hobbie" (vanilla buttercake with pink vanilla buttercream and
rainbow confetti sprinkles) to go with a short cappuccino. The cupcakes
are on the sweet side, she says, "As we want them so that little kids
and grandmothers recognize them," with emphasis on "higher frosting
ratios, so that everyone gets that good corner piece."
Photo: Cupcake Royale's great tag line
No wonder their slogan is "Legalize Frostitution." (The sex educator
in me loves this!) At Royale, the cupcakes are hand-frosted with a
tell-tale swirl. I gave this a try at their cupcake camp, but failed.
But I was good at adding sprinkles. And good-looking or not, stack
enough cupcakes together, the colors and shapes are compelling. I can
see why people are spellbound at display cases.
I went to stores to watch people order, and even interviewed a few.
Six-year-old Lucy loved lavender, not for the alliteration, but because
"the colors are pretty." Meanwhile, Josh, an eager eight-year-old, told
me that "anything chocolate is the best." Despite the vast variety of
offerings, vanilla and chocolate combinations were very popular. And
seemingly everyone at every location coveting the red velvet cupcake.
Adults
bought cupcakes for various events, including pot-lucks, office parties,
baby showers, and birthday parties. But most didn’t need any excuse
beyond self-indulgence. A young couple tag-teamed in telling me about
the allure of the cupcake: "It’s all mine. I can pick the one I like. I
don’t have to share it. And I can eat the whole thing without feeling
guilty."
Photo: fans at Trophy Cupcakes
Call it the cult of the cupcake. It’s a bit out of control, don’t you
think? And it doesn’t just stop with edible sweets. I recently saw that
Metropolitan Market was selling meatloaf cupcakes, while at Neiman
Marcus you can buy a $25,000 cupcake car. But for three bucks or so, in
these tough economic times, the more basic cupcake is the perfect
combination of comfort and luxury.
I asked Michael Hein, owner of Yellow Leaf Cupcake Company (a shop
with male appeal that features some of the more savory flavors,
including their signature Tomato Soup cupcake), the inevitable question
of whether cupcakes are a passing fad. His quick reply was that
"Americans love to hate"—pointing out the irony that our success-driven
society is full of people who like to see ideas fail. Hein reminded me
that the cupcake rage is a coastal phenomenon that has yet to hit middle
America, let alone spread to Europe.
But
he did issue a warning. "Sure, the bubble will burst with the hipsters
first, but the real death of cupcakes will be when there’s a
Sprinkles-type chain on every corner doing mass-produced cupcakes."
Still, Hein said, the cream will rise to the top, and the best cupcake
places will succeed. "Yellow Leaf offers something you can’t easily make
at home," he explained, "And at the end of the day, everyone loves good
quality cupcakes, just as they like babies and puppies."
Photo: Yellow Leaf's Ultimate Chocolate cupcakes
So, for the sake of science (well, at least for this article), I went
out and sampled a couple. Okay, a few. Make that a half dozen. Or
actually more like a dozen. It was a long day of discovery. Among my
favorites: Yellow Leaf’s Ultimate Chocolate (made with Belgian Callebaut),
Trophy Cupcake’s Snowball (Valrhona chocolate cake with coconut
buttercream and pink shaved coconut), Wink Cupcake’s vanilla bean cake
with Madagascar bourbon vanilla buttercream, and Cupcake Royale’s Salted
Caramel (chocolate cake topped with housemade caramel buttercream, Fleur
de Sel, and dark chocolate curls).
In the end, what can I say? I get it. A cupcake is a package of pure
joy.
Now, excuse me while I go and eat the remains of the day. I have the
carnage of about a dozen different cupcakes calling out to me
(including, would you believe, a Dance Party), begging me to eat them.
And maybe write more about them. On one of my many blogs.
Jay Friedman is a freelance food writer and full-time sex
educator, with most of his work (well, at least the food part) compiled
at www.gastrolust.com. This is his first time writing about cupcakes,
but not his last time eating them.
December 2009