Been a little quiet on the blog this week - I've been busy: traveling for work last week, trying to catch up and just not online as much. But I'm planning a bakefest shortly so I will have more recipes to put up. Thanks for all the comments and invites to new link parties. If I don't respond or don't respond right away, it's because of time and how it seems to fly by (OMG, it's June already) but I do read them all and do my best to keep up. But sometimes it's all I can do just to find new recipes, type them up (and hope for no mistakes/typos but they do get through - sorry), bake them and blog about them. Ack, I'm even running out of ingredients because I haven't had time to go grocery shopping. A Costco run is in my future - I'm down to my last 2 pounds of butter, lol.
But there's always time for chocolate cake. The ideal time to make chocolate cakes is generally before it gets too hot, especially if it's frosted. Otherwise it just melts. While the taste might still be the same, it doesn't look as pretty. At least that's my excuse for making a chocolate cake while we're still having spring weather, before summer heat arrives.
This is a very good, very easy chocolate cake to make with a great "cakey" texture. For once I didn't underbake (or overbake) it so the texture came out as it should. The original directions called for making it as a round, 2-layer cake but I opted for simple and made it as a 9 x 13 cake. I'm glad I did because the frosting made only enough for a thin layer of frosting on top of the cake. I don't think it could've stretched to cover a 2-layer cake, top, middles and sides. So if you do make it as two layers, you might want to double the frosting recipe for it. Although avoid my mistake and (cough) sift the powdered sugar to get rid of the lumps or they'll appear in your frosting. Ask me how I know.
A few little powdered sugar lumps in the frosting - oopsie |
¾ cup
plus 3 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa, sifted
1 ¼
teaspoon baking soda
1/8
teaspoon salt
¾ cup
unsalted butter, room temperature, cut into pieces
2/3 cup
granulated sugar
2/3 cup
firmly packed dark brown sugar
2 large
eggs
2
teaspoons vanilla extract
1 ½ cups
buttermilk
Chocolate
“Gloss”
½ cup
unsalted butter, room temperature, cut into pieces
1 cup
confectioners’ sugar, sifted
2
teaspoons vanilla extract
3 ounces
unsweetened chocolate, melted and cooled
1. Heat the oven to 350⁰F. Grease 2 9” round cake pans and cover pan
bottoms with a round of parchment paper. Or else line a 9 x 13" baking pan with foil and spray lightly with nonstick cooking spray.
2. In a medium bowl, whisk
together the flour, cocoa, baking soda and salt.
3. In a large bowl of an
electric mixer, cream the butter with the white and brown sugars on medium
speed until light and fluffy. Scrape
bowl.
4. Add the eggs, one at a
time, beating well after each addition.
Stir in the vanilla.
5. With the mixer on low, add
the dry ingredients alternately with the buttermilk, beginning and ending with
the dry ingredients. Mix just until
blended.
6. Spread batter into
prepared pan(s) and smooth the top(s).
7. Bake until a toothpick
inserted in the centers comes out clean, about 20 to 25 minutes.
8. Cool in pans for 10
minutes. Invert onto plates lined with
waxed paper. Peel off parchment or foil and
reinvert cakes onto cooling racks. Allow
to cool completely on wire racks.
9. For the chocolate “gloss”:
in a large bowl of an electric mixer, cream the butter with the confectioners’
sugar until very light. Add the vanilla
and melted chocolate, beating until glossy and smooth.
10. Place one cake layer on a
cake stand or serving plate. Spread with
a small amount of the gloss. Top with
the other layer and frost the sides and then the top, swirling the gloss.