Saturday 30 March 2013

Death by chocolate cake


Happy Easter! If you haven't noticed, it is Easter weekend. The clocks go forward tonight and the easter bunny will skip merrily through our gardens/window boxes/plant pots/house tomorrow. It is this time of year where I usually wish I were a child again and had an elaborate egg hunt ahead of me in the morning. However, this year I wish I was planning the egg hunt for children. It seems my body clock is also going forward. To cope with this I made the biggest and most wicked cake I could muster. Here is Mary Berry's death by chocolate cake. It is delicious but not for the faint hearted. The texture is incredibly moist and surprisongly light. The next time I make it, I'll alternate the layers of dark chocolate ganache with white chocolate or add in some sliced strawberries in the layers.


 


For the cake you will need:
2 8 inch/20cm round loose bottomed cake tins. Grease and line them.
275g plain flour
2 tsp cocoa powder
1 1/2 tsp bicarb of soda
1 1/2 tsp baking powder
215g caster sugar
3 tbsp golden syrup
3 large eggs, beaten
225ml sunflower oil
225ml milk
For the icing you will need:
450g chocolate (up to you what you use but in this case I used 70 per cent choc which makes the filling set as firm as the outside)
200g butter
If you want a squidgy filling instead use a buttercream or ganache made with double cream instead. 
To decorate:
Shavings of different chocolate, raspberries, malteasers, etc! 


Preheat the oven to 140 degrees C for fan assisted or 160 if no fan. Grease and line your tins.
In a large bowl sieve in your flour, cocoa, bicarb and baking powder. Mix together. Add the sugar and mix again. Make a well in the middle and add your oil, milk, beaten eggs and golden syrup. Beat the mixture really well with a wooden spoon until it is very smooth. 
Pour into the tins and place on the middle shelf. 
Bake for 35-40 minutes until well risen and springy to the touch.  


Leave to cool for a few minutes then turn out and leave to get completely cold. When cold, cut each cake in half horizontally. I find a bread knife is easiest for this.                                                               


To make the icing, break the chocolate up into small pieces and place in a heat proof bowl over a gently simmering pan of water. Make sure the water does not touch the bowl. Stir occassionally and melt the chocolate gently. Be careful not to do this too quickly or the chocolate will split. Take the melted chocolate off the heat and add in the cubed butter. Leave to melt, then stir in. 
Place the wire rack on a baking tray to catch any drips. Start to sandwich the layers together with the ganache. Pour the remaining over the top of the cake and smooth over the whole cake with a pallette knife or any smooth edged knife. Leave to set completely, then add any decoration if you want to.

 Serve as it is or (as suggested by my uncle in California) with clotted cream for extra naughtiness. Enjoy! x

 

No comments:

Post a Comment