Home :: Books :: Children's Books  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books

Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Hey There, Cupcake! : 35 Yummy Fun Cupcake Recipes For All Occasions

Hey There, Cupcake! : 35 Yummy Fun Cupcake Recipes For All Occasions

List Price: $16.95
Your Price: $11.53
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Innovative twists on a classic dessert
Review: "Hey There Cupcake!" is not so much a cookbook as it a book filled with instructions on how to make cupcakes special. But boy does it ever succeed in what it sets off to do.

Author Claire Crespo starts off with some helpful tips for making cupcakes, and then shares some basic recipes - 10 for cupcakes and 6 for frosting.

Then the fun REALLY begins. The rest of the book is filled with 35 specialty cakes designed to make it fun to serve these traditional kid favorite desserts. Crespo presents innovative ways to decorate the cakes, using your basic cupcake ingredients, a few extras here and there, and some imagination.

Some of her innovative and stylish work include "Asprin Cupcakes" (basic cupcakes with a fondant topping with a crease down the middle); "Pina Colada cupcakes" (cupcakes stacked three high, separated by whipped cream, in a pina colada glass); "Crop Circle cupcakes (chocolate cupcakes decorated with a fanned out green frosting, and complemented with a tiny plastic tractor and cow); and my favorite, "Bleeding Hearts cupcakes" (basic cupcakes filled with raspberry jelly, cut into an irregular shape and decorated to look like a heart with red frosting as a background and blue veins stretching across it).

This is the kind of book that can be enjoyed by anyone interested in cake decorating, in making cakes and pies, but most especially, folks and their children. The Baseball cupcakes would be particularly an easy cake for kids to help frost and make for a kids party, and some of the others would be great for a whole group of kids to make at such a party.

Crespo obviously spent a lot of time thinking about each of the innovative designs (I love the look of the Sushi cupcakes, which really DO look like sushi), and it's obvious that she loves to make food fun. And with "Hey There Cupcake!" at your side when you're baking, no matter what your age or what you're usually into making in the kitchen, you're bound to have lots of fun making them.


Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Cute ideas, beautifully photographed
Review: Finally there are some books to be found that have both cute and classy ideas for cupcakes!

This book stands out for the cute ideas it offers for decorating cupcakes in a way that all kids will love to eat and look at, and adults will love to make. It holds several fresh and new ideas that I haven't come across before in my collection of baking and cake decorating books.
The cupcake flowers with bees on it are one of my favorites, as are the cub cupcakes. The mushroom cupcakes photographed in the woods look fantastic too.

The reason I am giving this book 4 stars, is that I ordered the book 'the artful cupcake' by Mrs. M. Miller at the same time and was so impressed by the way this book turned a simple cupcake into a show stopping dessert (but also has ideas for presenting it as a more simple treat) that it was hard to beat.

If you're aiming to please children get 'hey there cupcake', if you're looking to wow adults, get Mrs. Miller's book.



Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Extra yummy, extra fun!
Review: I fell in love with this book when I had only seen a brief booklet of its photos. How can one resist a cupcake that's shaped like a flower, with a bee pollinating it? Or the koala and panda cupcakes, which are my absolute favorites. I don't even bake, but I still adore this book, and am happy to report that a friend made the panda and koala cupcakes for my birthday and they were just as adorable and delicious as they looked. Clare Crespo is a true food genius and I'd recommend this book for kids and adults of all ages. If you are ever feeling down, one look at Hey There, Cupcake! is sure to cheer you up. The photos and recipes are creative and cheerful and truly do the delicous treat that is the cupcake justice. Eat up!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: 35 Fun cupcakes - geared more towards preteens & up
Review: I was looking for a book geared more towards children's cupcakes and this has a a lot of designs for children, in my opinion this is geared more towards preteens and up! I do love the idea of the cupcakes that look your main dish then dessert - the spaghetti with meatballs and the sushi would be awesome to serve as a April Fools Day dinner. The brain, bleeding heart and eyeball cupcakes would be great for a Pre-Med student or Halloween party.

I can't wait to make the Panda & Koala face "Cub"cakes! Another terrific book for children's cakes & cupcakes is "FamilyFun Birthday Cakes - which has 50 different cakes matching cupcakes. Both books are a must for your children, you'll be the coolest parent on the block and birthday party circuit!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Cupcakes are yummy and fun!
Review: When I first flipped through the pages of this book, it was like I was looking at an art book. The pictures are so good! My friend made some of the cupcakes from the book for my birthday and they were fantastic! The recipes are creative and easy.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Leader in the Cupcake Derby. Highly Recommended
Review: `Hey There, Cupcake!' by culinary writer, Clare Crespo answers the burning question of where can I find a good cupcake recipe when I need one. This is actually the second cupcake book I am reviewing and I am happy to have both; however, if asked, I will definitely recommend Ms. Crespo's opus over `The Artful Cupcake' by Marcianne Miller.

First and foremost is the fact that Ms. Crespo's book is simply more fun, and I suspect that is what cupcakes are all about, aside from being, in Ina Garten's words `a delivery system for icing'. Both books are a bit light on recipes for the `cake' half of the cupcake team. Neither has a recipe of, for example, a carrot cake cupcake. I have also just noticed that neither has an index, although you will probably not really miss it, unless you happen to be looking for a carrot cake cupcake recipe.

Ms. Miller is less a culinary writer than a `crafts' writer, as I pointed out in detail in my review of her book. Oddly, `The Artful Cupcake' has a lot more general information on cupcake tools, general techniques, and ingredients. Ms. Miller handles the writing on baking and the cupcake designs are actually done by visiting crafts people. So, Ms. Miller is more of an editor than a true author. Ms. Crespo, on the other hand, seems to have done all the writing and cupcake designing chores on her book. As proclaimed by her subtitle, '35 Yummy Fun Cupcake Recipes for All Occasions', I repeat that Ms. Crespo's book is simply more fun. Among other things, this means it is a much better book for younger bakers. In fact, while Clare does not push this point too much, there is a sense about the book that it was written for a young audience, without actually talking down to the reader.

Aside from fun, one excellent advantage of Ms. Crespo's book is the fact that it does offer a lot of designs for specific occasions, especially specific occasions not generally covered by other pastry design books such as a knitting party (Ball of Yarn, Needle and Thread), New Years Eve (Clocks), atypical Halloween (Brain, Buried Alive, Eyeball, Brain), graduation (Brain, Coin), Superbowl (play-off) and so on.

Unlike some of Ms. Miller's designs, most of the decorations by Ms. Crespo are relatively easy, making excellent use of the kind of props you will find in a well-stocked craft store. I got the sense that these designs are very similar to the kind of skill and sense of humor we find behind some of Thomas Keller's more famous dishes where one kind of dish is made out to look like another, as with his famous doughnuts and coffee dish. Speaking of which, there is even a cupcake here that does an excellent job of masquerading as a cup of coffee, if served in a plausibly heavy white diner mug.

The book begins with a simple recipe for THE classic cupcake with white crumb and a vanilla butter cream icing, tinted pink, with a cherry on top. If I were teaching from this book, I would definitely encourage students to do this first. All cupcakes in the book are based on ten (10) cake recipes and six frosting recipes. This means that if you master a fair number of these sixteen recipes, you are well on your way to impressing friends and family with great cupcake improvisations.

My only reservation about the instructions in the book are that some directions for the decorating schemes would have been greatly improved by a few simple diagrams, especially if the book is to be tackled by young adults. It took me at least two or three tries to adequately visualize how one was to accomplish the design from the words in the directions. Compliments to Ms. Miller for providing such illustrations on a few of her more difficult designs.

As both of these books are relatively inexpensive, especially with a reasonable discount, I recommend them both. Ms. Miller's designs are much more suitable for grown-up occasions while Ms. Crespo's designs work much better for kids as both audience and sous chef to an adult who knows their way around a bag of King Arthur.

Highly recommended for original, entertaining cupcake designs.



<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates