The first time my mother baked a zucchini bread--this was
way back in the Pleistocene era of striped bell bottoms, smocked tunics, and
Andy Gibb's "Love Is Thicker Than Water"--we all thought it was
wildly exotic. It was even crazier than banana bread, which was already pretty
crazy. "I can hardly even taste the zucchini!" we said, and shook our
heads in amazement. "It just tastes like cake! Like good cake!"
I feel that way about these cupcakes. They taste just like
chocolate cupcakes! Like good chocolate cupcakes! They're super-chocolatey and
almost obscenely moist--like the cake mix with the pudding in it, in a good
way. It's a great way to use up a glut of squash--and the green flecked against
the rich, reddish brown of the cake frankly delights me. "We're not trying
to get away with anything here," they seem to be saying, these flecks, and
I agree.
Sometimes I wonder if we don't give kids enough credit for
their own desire to be healthy eaters, you know what I mean? Ben always leafs
through the family magazines that arrive in the mail, and he hates nothing more
than the ads promising, "Your kids will like it because they won't know
it's actually good for them--they'll just think it's a deep-fried cotton candy
sno-cone!" Believe me, my children would be first in line for a deep-fried
cotton candy sno-cone. They love candy and junk food: they love to eat it and
talk about it and save it forever, and they will likely end up on that reality
show "Hoarders" with their stashes of ancient, carefully curated
trick-or-treat relics. But they're also proud and happy about eating healthy foods
when healthy foods are what they're eating: Birdy's a little bit in love with
herself, when she stands in front of the cherry tomato vines, cramming handfuls
of Sungolds into her happy mouth; Ben is excited to be a person who might order
a salad in a café. Can't these little ones, glucose-addled as they may be,
appreciate good nutrition without demeaning their great and powerful attachment
to sugar and grease? I think so.
But then again, I am not inclined to puree a tablespoon of
butternut squash into their every glass of chocolate milk or hide white beans
in their hamburgers like some kind of demented, nutritious Easter egg hunt.
Vegetables tend to be somewhat undisguised around here--not always, but
usually. Of course, if they would not deign to put a frank apricot or spinach
leaf into their toothless scurvy-ridden mouths, I might feel different about
this--and you are probably thinking that right now, if you're spooning zucchini
sno-cones into your own children's toothless, scurvy-ridden mouths. We all do
what we have to. I'm just saying, maybe your kids will actually be glad to know
there's zucchini in their festive, chocolatey back-to-school cupcakes. Or maybe
they won't.
Because, truth be told, when I was asking the kids about the
cupcakes, Ben ranted and raved about their supreme deliciousness, but Birdy
hesitated before announcing that she actually thought they needed a bit of
frosting. "Especially because of the zucchini," she added. "What
do you mean, 'because of the zucchini'?" "I don't know," she
sighed. "I could see it, and I just didn't really like knowing it was in
there. I think frosting would have distracted me." Well! But later, when
we were devouring the cake with friends, I teased her for having a second
piece, and she shrugged, this contradiction with her chocolate-ringed mouth,
and said, "It's actually really good. I actually really love it." So
there you go.
Chocolate Zucchini Cupcakes
Active time: 20 minutes; total time 50 minutes
Makes 2 dozen cupcakes, or 12 cupcakes and 1 8-inch cake
I developed this recipe by crossing a Heidi Swanson cupcake
recipe and a Bon Appetit one for cake. Feel free to omit the spices, although I
love the flavor combination--just don't cut back on the vanilla or the salt,
which the cake really needs in its successful fight against blandness.
2 cups brown sugar
1/2 cup (1 stick) butter, melted and cooled slightly
1/2 cup vegetable oil
3 eggs
2 teaspoons vanilla
1/2 cup buttermilk
2 cups grated unpeeled zucchini
(around 2 medium zukes)
1 cup chocolate chips
(I used milk chocolate)
2 cups flour
(I use half spelt)
1 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
2 teaspoons kosher salt (or half as much table salt)
2 teaspoons baking soda
1/4
teaspoon ground cloves
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 cup chopped walnuts, toasted at 350 for 5 minutes
(optional, of course)
Powdered sugar for topping (also optional)
Heat the oven to 350, and line 2 12-cup muffin tins with
paper liners. Or line only one muffin tin, and grease and flour an 8-inch cake
pan.
In one bowl, mix together the sugar, butter and oil. Beat in
the eggs, one at a time, and beat well after each. Stir in the vanilla,
buttermilk, zucchini, and chocolate chips.
In another bowl, whisk together all of the dry ingredients,
except the walnuts. Pour the wets into the dries, and mix well until combined,
adding the walnuts at some point, around halfway through the mixing. You don't
want to over-mix the batter, but you don't want to leave hidden pockets of
flour either.
Now scoop the batter into the cupcake liners, filling each
one about 3/4 of the way, then scrape the rest of it into the prepared cake
pan, if you're making a cake too. Pop the pans in the center of the oven and
set a timer for 25 minutes. When it rings, check the cupcakes: your want them
just set, with no jiggliness on top, true, but also without an excess of
bakedness--they'll continue to bake a bit as they cool, and you really want
these moist; a toothpick should come out with some damp crumbs clinging to it.
If they need another minute or two, give it to them. Check the cake at 30
minutes--mine took 33 minutes for perfect, moist doneness.
Cool on a rack and, if you like, sift powdered sugar over
them before serving.
Making these the night before my daughter starts high school. Thinking of you a lot lately as one of your babes starts the next chapter of his life.
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