
My Secret Love and yes his name is Chocolate, part II of III.
Now that our raspberry filling is cooling, and being stirred occasionally, lets get started on that cake!
Dark Chocolate Cake
inspired by Marg (CaymanDesigns), modified and improved by yours truly
Makes enough for 1 9x13 or 2 9" rounds or #? cupcakes
Recipe designed for creation in stand mixer
Ingredients:
2 cups white sugar
1 3/4 cups sifted all purpose flour
3/4 cup organic dark baking cocoa unsweetened (I used Scharffen Berger Natural Cocoa Powder)
1 1/2 tsp baking powder
1 1/2 tsp baking soda
1 tsp salt
2 large eggs, room temperature-gives you 30 min to get everything else out and measured
1 cup milk, 2%
1/2 cup vegetable oil
2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract, pref Mexican
3/4 cup boiling water- I just zapped ~1 cup water in pyrex measuring cup in the microwave to boiling and then measured.
Directions:
1. Preheat oven to 350F, sit eggs on counter for 30 min. Also set out 1/3 cup butter for the frosting.
2. Grease and flour your pan(s) of choice, use baking cocoa instead of flour if you don't want white showing on your cake.
3. In large mixer bowl, stir together your dry ingredients with mixing paddle.
4.Add eggs, milk, oil, vanilla and beat on medium speed, or 4, for 2 minutes. Please be sure to not over-beat the cake batter! Time it!
5. Stir in boiling water, recipe says by hand, I did it on stir and setting 2. Cake batter will thin out and should be homogeneous in color. Now you can scrape the sides down and make sure everything is incorporated.
6. Pour your batter into your prepared pan(s).
7. Bake 30-35 min for 9" rounds or 35-40 min for a 9x13.
Tip: whenever baking someone else's recipe always start check the cake 10 min before it is supposed to be done. Everyone's oven is different and it would be a tragedy to get this far and burn it! So babysit it! One of my quick tips for checking cakes without poking a million holes in them is to wiggle the rack they are baking on. When the middle is set you won't see it jiggle. When your cake pan(s) are jiggle free, pull them out and then test with toothpick, cake tester, or knife.
8. Set pans on wire cooking rack for 10 minutes to cool. Take a plastic knife or very thin hard plastic spatula-I use the plastic one that came with my food processor its PERFECT for this as its very thin, blade is perfect size and it won't scratch your pan-and carefully run it around the side of your cake pan to free up the borders. Scrape the side of the cake pan, not the cake, when you do this. Then flip the pan upside down on the wire cooking rack. Try a test lift of the pan. The cake should plop out onto the cooling rack. If it doesn't you can A. rescrape the sides or B. wait another five minutes and try again. Sometimes you might need to give that pan a gentle shake. Mine however plopped out rather nicely after just a side scrape so let's hope thats the trend.
9. Cool cakes completely on wire cooling racks. While cakes are cooling, along with raspberry filling, we will get started on our frosting!
That is in part III :D.