Homemade Twinkies
Updated Feb. 1, 2023

- Total Time
- 1 hour 40 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- Nonstick cooking spray or vegetable oil
- 60grams (½ cup) cake flour
- 30grams (¼ cup) all-purpose flour
- 1teaspoon baking powder
- ¼teaspoon salt
- 2tablespoons milk
- 4tablespoons unsalted butter
- ½teaspoon vanilla extract
- 5large eggs at room temperature, separated
- 12tablespoons sugar
- ¼teaspoon cream of tartar
- 6tablespoons unsalted butter, at room temperature
- 165grams (1½ cups) confectioners’ sugar
- ¾cup Marshmallow Fluff
- 2tablespoons heavy cream
For the Cakes
For the Filling
Preparation
- Step 1
For the cakes: Heat the oven to 350 degrees and adjust the oven rack to the lower-middle position.
- Step 2
To make single-use Twinkie molds, cut 12 pieces of aluminum foil 12 inches wide by 14 inches long. Fold each piece of foil in half lengthwise, then fold it in half again to create a rectangle that’s about 6 inches long and 7 inches wide. Repeat to make a dozen rectangles.
- Step 3
Place one sheet of folded foil on a work surface with a standard-size spice jar on its side in the center of the foil. Bring the long sides of the foil up around the jar, folding the sides and ends as necessary to make a tight trough-shape from which the jar can be removed. Repeat to make 12 foil molds. Spray generously with nonstick spray or coat with vegetable oil. Place the molds on a baking sheet.
- Step 4
In a mixing bowl, whisk together the cake flour, all-purpose flour, baking powder and salt. In a small saucepan over low heat, heat the milk and butter until the butter melts. Remove from the heat and add the vanilla. Cover to keep warm.
- Step 5
Using a standing mixer, beat the egg whites on high speed until foamy. Gradually add 6 tablespoons of the sugar and the cream of tartar and continue to beat until the whites reach soft peaks.
- Step 6
Transfer the beaten egg whites to a large bowl and add the egg yolks to the standing mixer bowl (there’s no need to clean the bowl). Beat the egg yolks with the remaining 6 tablespoons sugar on medium-high speed until the mixture is very thick and a pale lemon color, about 5 minutes. Add the beaten egg whites to the yolks, but do not mix.
- Step 7
Sprinkle the flour mixture over the egg whites and then mix everything on low speed for just 10 seconds. Remove the bowl from the mixer, make a well in one side of the batter, and pour the melted butter mixture into the bowl. Fold gently with a large rubber spatula until the batter shows no trace of flour and the whites and yolks are evenly mixed, about 8 strokes.
- Step 8
Immediately scrape the batter into the prepared molds, filling each with about .75 inch of batter. Bake until the cake tops are light brown and feel firm and spring back when touched, 13 to 15 minutes. Transfer the pan containing the molds to a wire rack and allow the cakes to cool in the molds.
- Step 9
For the filling: Using a mixer, beat together the butter, confectioners’ sugar and Marshmallow Fluff. Add the cream and beat just until smooth.
- Step 10
Just before filling the cakes, remove them from the foil. Using the end of a chopstick, poke three holes in the bottom of each cake. Wiggle the tip of the chopstick to make room for the filling. Transfer the frosting to a pastry bag fitted with a ¼-inch round tip. Pipe frosting into the holes in each cake, taking care not to overfill, until it gently expands. Unlike real Twinkies, these won’t last indefinitely. They’re best served still slightly warm.
- Adapted from leitesculinaria.com
Private Notes
Comments
interested in finding out a way to make this with a choc sponge and mocha filling.
The recipe actually yields 24 cakes if you use the silicone twinkie pans available at your megamart retailer.
Also, the recipe doesn't adequately explain that you cannot see if butter lingers in the bottom of the bowl once you add it to the whipped yolks, whites, and flour mixture.
Baking them now. Not sure whether they will turn out ok.
These were good, but I bought mine at the store.
Filling is very, very sweet. 10 year old soon thought they didn’t have much flavor. 16 year old daughter liked the cake part. 62 year old husband was bummed they weren’t filled with whipped cream.
The filling made as written was not fluffy for me. It was very runny. I scrapped it and made an Ermine Buttercream, and it was superb, both in flavor and texture. No grit whatsoever.
As the author of "Twinkie, Deconstructed" I quite appreciate this recipe! I made some myself as research, and my 8 year old and friends devoured them. I wrapped one in plastic and put it aside, for research of course, and it was solid green within a week! It is sponge cake, so the crumb will absorb the cream filling pretty quickly, which is why there's no cream in the 'creme' filling in the commercial product. Frankly, I think the shape and size of Twinkies are a major part of their appeal.
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