Vanilla-speckled cupcakes studded with mini chocolate chips and a pile of fluffy cherry buttercream. Top with a cherry – or bake one right inside!
As I’m sure every single of one of my US-based readers know, October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month. You know the drill — everything suddenly turns pink, from the top of the Empire State Building to NFL attire.
This year, KitchenAid is joining in with a campaign called 10,000 Cupcakes. All you have to do is bake a cupcake, take a picture, and share it on Twitter or Instagram with the hashtags #10000cupcakes and #donate.
In exchange, KitchenAid will donate $1 for every cupcake photo shared up to $10,000. Bake a cupcake and $1 is donated to breast cancer. Pretty sweet, right? (Literally and figuratively!)
So why not whip up a batch of these deliciously pink chocolate chip cherry cupcakes?
Breast cancer is a pretty central theme in my own family. In the evening, you’ll find me in my kitchen, creating new recipes. But during the day, I’m a scientist in a biophysics lab, where I study two proteins that are overexpressed in breast cancer and melanoma. I research protein structure and function in a quest to discover new targeted treatments for these cancers.
My husband is a radiologist, fellowship trained in women’s imaging, who spends his days reading mammograms (and his evenings washing all my dishes and taste testing new recipes!). Part of the reason he chose to specialize in women’s imaging is because his own mother is breast cancer survivor.
Yes, the pink gets a little overwhelming in October, but we all know someone who has been impacted by breast cancer.
I’m (obviously) participating in the 10,000 Cupcake challenge and hope you will too. In fact, I’m bringing my two dozen chocolate chip cherry cupcakes to work to share with my coworkers and encouraging each of them to take a picture of the cupcakes and share them on social media.
Bake a batch of these cupcakes, share them with friends, and spread the word on the 10,000 Cupcake challenge. Suddenly, that’s $24 to support the fight against breast cancer. Want to do even more? Make a direct donation to my favorite breast cancer research charity.
Now, on to the delicious part of this post – the cupcakes! Vanilla cupcakes, made with both vanilla extract and vanilla bean paste, for a boost of vanilla flavor. If you don’t have vanilla bean paste, you can skip it – but I highly recommend this one, and you can add it to everything for extra flavor and beautiful brown vanilla specks. Miniature chocolate chips for just a little chocolate flavor – after all, everyone loves that chocolate and cherry combination, right?
We’re using maraschino cherries here, because it’s October and there is nary a fresh cherry in sight. Every summer, I have grand plans to bake with fresh cherries… and then just eat them all plain, because cherries are my favorite fruit. I try to plan ahead. I buy three bags of cherries instead of just one. And yet somehow, I still can’t save enough for baking. Add in a little boy who also loves cherries, and now it’s hopeless. Maraschino cherries it is!
Finish your chocolate chip cherry cupcakes with a big pile of pink cherry buttercream frosting, and of course, the cherry on top. Unless you put the cherry right into the batter and bake it into the cupcake. I couldn’t decide, so I did half and half. The cherry on top is such a classic look, but the cherry inside is a fun little unexpected crunch. I love the little heart shape it forms when I cut the cupcake in half!
Chocolate chip cherry cupcakes and breast cancer funding – a perfect pair. But get on this quickly, friends – the 10,000 Cupcake Challenge ends October 18th. For more information, check out the 10,000 Cupcake and Cook for the Cure site. Fortunately, these cupcakes are delicious year round, so even if you miss the challenge, you can still make them. Over and over. I know I will!
Vanilla-speckled cupcakes studded with mini chocolate chips and a pile of fluffy cherry buttercream. Top with a cherry – or bake one right inside!
A Bunsen Burner Bakery Original Protocol