If you do a reasonable amount
of cooking or baking, it’s almost guaranteed that you will have the ingredients
to make this ridiculously satisfying cake on hand at any given time. The needed
equipment is even basic, with a cake pan being the most exotic requirement. It’s
also super quick to make with nothing difficult to do. It even has a fun little
trick to it.
This recipe is an adaptation
of a “6-minute” chocolate cake in Moosewood Restaurant Book of Desserts.
While the way I do it here, does take a bit longer than six minutes, I think it’s
the fastest cake I’ve even made. This can totally be your well-kept secret,
though, because the cake is fluffy and chocolaty and really much greater than
the sum of its parts. Even if you consider effort one of the parts.
I added a layer of rich but
equally simple peanut butter frosting to the top of this one-layer cake, which
makes it just a tad more celebratory. You could use your favorite chocolate
cake topping such as whipped cream, a classic buttery white frosting, cream cheese
frosting, or ganache. It is pretty terrific with nothing on it at all, though,
or just a dusting of powdered sugar for a finishing touch.
Without the frosting, this is
a vegan cake. Instead of the richness of butter or egg yolks, it just gets some
oil and a deep dark flavor from a cup of coffee. Instead of volume from egg
whites, the batter gets a quick poof from a couple tablespoons of vinegar
reacting to baking soda. It’s kind of neat to watch, actually, so if you’re a
science-y type like me, it makes for kind of a
grand finale. (That’s the fun little trick I mentioned above!)
Anyway, this cake is way more
deeply, darkly, satisfyingly delicious than it has any right to be. It’s a great recipe to have in your back pocket, and can make you a last-minute dessert hero.
Or you can just make it weekly to have on hand. Either way, it will be worth
keeping these basic ingredients around (including the frosting ingredients or not)
and a few minutes free. It's quick. It's easy. It's good.
Easy Chocolate Cake
with Peanut Butter Frosting
Adapted from Moosewood Restaurant Book of Desserts
1 ½ cups all-purpose flour
1/3 cup cocoa powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
½ teaspoon fine salt
1 cup granulated sugar
½ cup canola or other neutral-tasting
oil
1 cup cold coffee
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
2 tablespoons cider vinegar
For the frosting
½
cup creamy peanut butter
¼
cup (½ stick) unsalted butter, softened
1/3
cup powdered sugar
½
teaspoon vanilla extract
1.
Preheat oven to 375 F. Prepare a 9-inch cake pan by greasing it or spraying it
with cooking spray, and dusting with flour. Cut a parchment circle to fit the
bottom of the pan and place it in the pan. Spray or grease the parchment. Set
the pan aside.
2.
In a medium-size bowl, combine the flour, cocoa, baking soda, salt, and sugar.
Whisk together to combine well.
3.
In another medium-size bowl, or a large measuring cup, mix together the oil,
coffee, and vanilla. Pour into the flour mixture and whisk until smooth.
4.
Pour in the vinegar and stir very quickly just until the vinegar is evenly
distributed.
5. Immediately pour the batter into the prepared pan. Spread out to make even if needed. Bake
at 375 F for 25-30 minutes or until wooden pick inserted in the center comes
out clean.
6.
Cool the cake in the pan on a wire rack about 10 minutes. Carefully turn the cake
out of the pan, remove the parchment circle, and cool completely on the wire rack.
7.
To make the frosting, combine the peanut butter and butter in a medium-size
bowl. Beat together with a hand-held mixer at medium speed until smooth. Beat
in the powdered sugar and vanilla and continue beating until light in color and
fluffy, about 2-3 minutes.
8. Carefully transfer the cake to a serving plate. Spread the frosting just on the top of the cooled cake.
Makes
about 8 servings.
Other
recipes like this one: Chocolate Cupcakes with Peanut Butter Frosting, Chocolate Cake with Porter and Ganache Topping, Flourless Bittersweet Chocolate Torte, Mulled Wine Chocolate Cake
One
year ago: Savory Parmesan Zucchini Bread
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