Anonymous wrote:I break off the bottom and make a little sandwich.
Anonymous wrote:Scraping off the frosting is very nouveau riche.
Anonymous wrote:46-yo guy here. My cupcake days are behind me for the most part.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no polite way to scrape the frosting off a cupcake so you actually look childish if you do it. Either decline it or eat it.
At least with cake you can kind of discretely do it with your fork, if you must.
Peel off cupcake liner. Use knife. Scrape frosting. Put excess frosting into cupcake liner. Discard.
Sounds like changing a baby’s diaper.
But what knife? If a party is having pizza and cupcakes, which is pretty common, there isn’t a stash of knives anywhere. This is similar to the people that peel that cheese off pizza. Gross. There is no polite way to deconstruct a cupcake at a party without looking awkward and picky.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Obviously most kids just eat the entire thing but most adults know to remove most of the icing first before eating a cupcake, right? Bakers put more than necessary on for aesthetics.
No, lol. You make it sound like there’s only one proper way of eating something. Lame. I’m not a big cupcake person but if I decide to have one I only get good ones and the icing is heaven
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no polite way to scrape the frosting off a cupcake so you actually look childish if you do it. Either decline it or eat it.
At least with cake you can kind of discretely do it with your fork, if you must.
Peel off cupcake liner. Use knife. Scrape frosting. Put excess frosting into cupcake liner. Discard.
Sounds like changing a baby’s diaper.
But what knife? If a party is having pizza and cupcakes, which is pretty common, there isn’t a stash of knives anywhere. This is similar to the people that peel that cheese off pizza. Gross. There is no polite way to deconstruct a cupcake at a party without looking awkward and picky.
You don’t need a knife. You can slide most of it off with the liner. Realistically, no one cares that you are taking most of the icing off of a Giant cupcake in the middle of SkyZone or the skating rink at a preschool party.
If you care how other people eat a cupcake, you are a weirdo.
Anonymous wrote:Obviously most kids just eat the entire thing but most adults know to remove most of the icing first before eating a cupcake, right? Bakers put more than necessary on for aesthetics.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, with my tongue.
Anonymous wrote:Obviously most kids just eat the entire thing but most adults know to remove most of the icing first before eating a cupcake, right? Bakers put more than necessary on for aesthetics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Imagine someone who thinks they're too good for icing, yet thinks cupcakes are a legitimate adult good.
Cupcakes from a good bakery, with butter or cream cheese frostings, are fantastic. Grocery store and low rung cupcake retailers are rubbish.
The ones baked by good home bakers are often the best of all.
In my experience, usually good cake and good frosting go together. So, if the cupcake is worth eating, then I eat the whole thing. If it's not, then I decline the whole thing. Deconstructing the food someone serves you is rude. I guess if you're home alone with the left overs from your kid's birthday you can do what you like.
Home baked?? DCUM says NO. They may have cats or children. They may not wash their hands. I have learned here that homemade food is a death trap.
You'll be shocked to know that when I eat these home baked cupcakes I know whether the person who made them (me or my kid) has cats (nope) or children (me - yes, kid - no) and whether they wash their hands (yep). We haven't died yet. If we do, I'll drop you a note.
You can eat your own. Just don't eat someone else's. I won't eat anything at a potluck if I know the person has dogs or cats in their house. Gross.