grace grits and gardening

ramblings from an arkansas farm girl

  • Home
  • Bio
  • Publishing
  • SHOP!
  • Garden
  • Food
  • Reading & Books
  • Sunday Letter

Maple Glazed Cupcakes

December 1, 2012 By Talya Tate Boerner

Maple Glazed Cupcakes - great holiday recipe!

Maple syrup and pecans – a classic combination, right? Maple Pecan Cupcakes are intensely flavored and fittingly festive for holiday entertaining.  And the best part – the few basic ingredients needed to create these heavenly cupcakes are likely already in your pantry.

Don’t let the three-part recipe dissuade you. Really, this is simple. But read the entire recipe before you start, and dole out the ingredients in little bowls like the Barefoot Contessa. It really is more fun and efficient. You don’t want to get to the sticky caramel part and realize you have no parchment paper….

(Recipe courtesy of Cupcake Heaven, Susannah Blake)

Cupcake
1 stick unsalted butter, room temperature
¼ cup packed brown sugar
2/3 cup pure maple syrup, dark
2 eggs, room temperature
1 cup self-rising flour
½ cup roughly chopped pecans
Preheat oven to 350F. Beat the butter and brown sugar together until creamy. Add maple syrup and continue beating. Beat in eggs one at a time. Scrape down the sides of your bowl if needed. Fold in flour and nuts. Easy. Especially with a Kitchenaid.

Maple Glazed Cupcakes


Spoon into cupcake liners. I use an ice cream scoop. No mess.

Maple Glazed Cupcakes

Bake in the preheated oven for 17 minutes until golden and a toothpick inserted in the center cupcake is clean. Cool on a wire rack.
Frosting
3 tablespoons unsalted butter, room temperature
3 tablespoons pure maple syrup, dark
1 ¼ cups confectioners’ sugar
 Beat the butter, maple syrup and confectioners’ sugar until pale and fluffy. (Note the adorable measuring spoon… a 50th birthday gift from one of my BFFs.)

Maple Glazed Cupcakes

Ice the cupcakes only after they have completely cooled… This frosting is amazing on spice cake and chocolate cupcakes. Don’t forget to lick the spatula.

Maple Glazed Cupcakes

Decoration
½ cup granulated sugar
2 tablespoons water
12 pecan halves
To make the caramelized pecans, gently heat the granulated sugar in a saucepan with water. Stir, stir, stir until the sugar melts. 

Maple Glazed Cupcakes

Gradually increase heat and continuing stirring until the mixture turns a pale brown color. About 5 minutes. Spread the pecan halves on a sheet of parchment paper and spoon a bit of the caramel over each nut to individually cover. Let cool. Top each cupcake with a caramelized pecan half.

Maple Glazed Cupcakes

Makes 12. But they won’t last long…
Maple Glazed Cupcakes
A note about butter and flour…
Make sure your butter is room temperature (the texture and feel of Crisco – soft but not too soft). This is important because room temperature butter has structure. When the recipe calls for ‘creaming’ the butter, the sugar crystals are actually cutting up the butter and making tiny holes that help incorporate the other ingredients. The holes also make for a better texture (fluffy, light, flaky) when baking.
Spoon the flour into your measuring cup. If you scoop it straight from the bag with your measuring cup, it will pack down and you will end up with way more than needed. (If a recipe calls for 3 cups and you scoop it, you may end up with 4 cups in your dish, which will totally affect the outcome.)
Enjoy!

talya

Grace Grits and Gardening
Farm. Food. Garden. Life.



Like and Share:)

November 15, 2012 By Talya Tate Boerner

Day 4 of Arkansas Women Bloggers ThanksBlogging Challenge – Link up with Facebook…

No matter what you may think about Facebook–good or bad–it is an amazing social networking website, shrinking the world every day, allowing long lost friends to reconnect and strangers to stalk one another. 

At the urging of Arkansas Women Bloggers, I created a Facebook page for Grace Grits & Gardening. I should have done it sooner…

With my Grace Grits & Gardening Fan Page, I have the potential to reach millions of people–if friends ‘like’ and share and their friends ‘like’ and share, and so on and so on…. 

The power of the internet.


Schnauzer pics and “Go Hogs” shout-outs are posted on my personal page. Posts related to writing, gardening, etc are included on my Grace Grits & Gardening Fan Page. Sometime there is overlap – oops.
I try not to overshare or whine on either page. No checking in at Wal-Mart or political rants. No ticker tape thoughts for the day. If you agree, please like and share🙂

talya


Smoked Cheddar Cheese Grits Souffle

October 19, 2012 By Talya Tate Boerner

smoked cheddar grits souffle
This is my favorite grits recipe. And we Girls Raised In The South love our grits.
Great as a breakfast food or brunch dish, it also works as a main vegetarian course for supper with a basic green salad. Add grilled shrimp or ribs with a side of collard greens and your husband will propose to you again. 
A perfect side with your Thanksgiving turkey. 
Very versatile, this is the most requested dish in my house any season of the year loved by my vegetarian daughter and carnivore son/husband.
Ingredients:
Serves 8
1 1/2 cups quick grits (the five minute grits)
1 pound of smoked cheddar cheese, grated (Tillamook is my favorite)
3/4 cups butter 
4 eggs, slightly beaten
1 teaspoon dry mustard
Worcestershire Sauce (to taste)
Cayenne Pepper (to taste)
•   Grate the cheese. This is the hardest part. I can never find smoked cheddar cheese already grated. And it must be smoked. And it must be grated so that it will melt smoothly.
•   Preheat the oven to 350F. 
•   Cook grits according to directions on box. (3 to 1 ratio works for me. 3 times the water as dry grits.)
•   Once the grits are done, stir in the butter. You can eat it now, but then you won’t be able to say you made a soufflé. Every southern girl wants to make a soufflé.
•   Temper your eggs. This means, pour a tiny bit of the egg mixture into the hot grits mixture whisking like crazy. Then pour a bit more. And so on until all the egg mixture is incorporated. If you pour all the eggs in at once, you will have scrambled eggs on top of your grits. If this happens, you may as well throw on a strip of bacon and call it a breakfast bowl like some odd dish at a fast food restaurant. Or start over.
•    Add cheese and stir. If you eat them now you will have cheesy grits – yum. Of course at this stage there are raw eggs inside. Some frown on this, but raw cookie dough (with raw eggs) has never killed me, so I say at least have a few bites. Plus you’re gonna want to lick the spoon. Like chocolate cake batter. 
•   Add the dry mustard, Worcestershire and cayenne to taste. I like it spicy, but a little goes a long way.
•   Pour into a shallow 2-quart baking dish. No need to grease because there is so much butter in the mixture. Bake for about 30-35 minutes until it sets.
You can add other ingredients to it such as chopped peppers, onions or a different type of cheese. But why? Everyone will rave about this. It’s that good. 
Recipe adapted from A Texas Hill Country Cookbook

talya

Give your farmhands (that is, your children) cold cereal for breakfast and see how many rows they hoe. Make them a pot of grits and butter, and they’ll hoe till dinner and be glad to do it. – Janis Owens, The Cracker Kitchen

This is Day 5 (last day!) of BLOGtober Fest with Arkansas Women Bloggers. Theme (Foodie Friday) Favorite Fall Recipes…

« Previous Page
Next Page »


Hi! I'm Talya Tate Boerner. Writer, Reader, Arkansas Master Naturalist / Master Gardener, Author of

THE ACCIDENTAL SALVATION OF GRACIE LEE (2016)

GENE, EVERYWHERE: a life-changing visit from my father-in-law (2020)

BERNICE RUNS AWAY (2022)

THE THIRD ACT OF THEO GRUENE (coming 2025)

Recent Ramblings:

  • Sunday Letter: 11.23.25
  • Maggie and Miss Ladybug: My New Children’s Nature Book
  • Sunday Letter: November 9, 2025
  • Sunday Letter: Oct 26, 2025
  • Sunday Letter: Oct 5, 2025

Novels:

Coloring Books:

Fiction-Themed Coloring Books

Backyard Phenology:

Children’s Nature Book:

Never miss a blog post! Subscribe via email:

Looking for something?

Categories

All the Things!

A to Z April Blog Challenge Autumn BAT Book Reviews childhood Christmas creative writing prompt Dallas Desserts Fall Fayetteville Food Gracie Lee Halloween Hemingway-Pfeiffer holiday recipes home humor Johnson Family Keiser Lake Norfork Lucy and Annabelle Mississippi County Mississippi Delta Monarch butterflies Munger Place Nana nature Northeast Arkansas Northwest Arkansas Osceola poem Reading Schnauzer simple living simple things spring spring gardening Summer Talya Tate Boerner novel Thanksgiving The Accidental Salvation of Gracie Lee Thomas Tate Winter Wordless Wednesday

Food. Farm. Garden. Life.

THANKS FOR READING!

All content and photos Copyright Grace, Grits and Gardening © 2025 · Web Hosting By StrataByte