Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Devil's Food Cake for Cake Slice Bakers....



The cake slice bakers baked Mile High Devil's Food Cake this month. A lovely moist chocolate cake and a lovely buttercream makes this one of my favouites in the book,  Sky High:Irresistible Triple Layer Cakes  by Alsia Huntsman and Peter Wynne. 

The difference of this cake from the others is the use of baking soda. Cocoa is used instead of chocolate to impart the flavour.

The cake was absolutely divine and so was the buttercream. .I baked my cake in three 5" loaf pans. The cake rose well and the aroma was divine. I chose to do the buttercream hoping it would stiffen. It did until I slathered it on the layers. Soon after the buttercream melted iinto the layers, on my serving platter. I thrust it in the refrigerator and frosted it bending into the refrigerator. Can't help the weather in the city I live. I let the cake remain in the refrigerator a day hoping to settle the buttercream between the layers. The frosting hardened although the buttercream between the layers was absorbed by the layers leaving a vey faint trail! However it added to the flavour of the chocolate layers, so no complaints!


Here's the recipe (I suggest all of you give it a try, it tastes lovely!)


Makes an 8-inch triple layer cake:

  • 1 cup of unsweetened cocoa NOT DUTCHED PROCESSED

  • 1 and ¼ cups of hot water

  • 3 cups of light brown sugar; packed

  • 2 and 2/3 cups cake flour*

  • 1 and ½ teaspoons baking soda

  • ¾ teaspoon of salt

  • 9 ounces of unsalted butter at room temperature [2 sticks plus 2 tablespoons]

  • 3 large eggs

  • 1 and ½ teaspoons of vanilla extract

  • ¾ cup of cold water

{*1 cup of cake flour is equal to ¾ cup of flour plus 2 tablespoons of cornstarch}


Preheat the oven to 325 degrees F. Butter the bottoms and sides of three 8-inch round cake pans. Line the bottoms of the pans with parchment paper and grease the paper as well.


Place the cocoa in a medium bowl and add the hot water. Whisk until smooth and let it cool to room temperature.


In the bowl of an electric mixer, combine the sugar, flour, baking soda, and salt. With the mixer on low blend to combine. Add the butter and the dissolved cocoa. Then raise the mixer to medium speed and beat for 2 minutes until light and fluffy.


In a medium bowl whisk together the eggs, vanilla, and cold water until combined. Add this liquid to the batter in three additions scraping down the sides of the bowl between additions. Divide the batter among the three pans.


Bake for 35-45 minutes or until a cakes tester inserted into the almost comes out clean. There should be a few crumbs attached still. Cool the cakes in the pans for 15 minutes. Then invert and remove parchment paper and cool completely on a wire rack.


Bakers’ choice of: Brown Sugar 7-Minute Frosting or Brown Sugar Buttercream


Brown Sugar 7-Minute Frosting

  • 6 egg whites

  • 1 and ½ cups of brown sugar

  • ¼ cup light corn syrup*

  • 2 tablespoons of water

  • ½ teaspoon of cream of tartar

{*corn syrup can be substituted with equal parts of treacle OR liquid glucose OR light colored honey}


Do not try to make this frosting on a rainy day or if you live in an extremely humid area. The humidity will make it impossible to work with the egg whites.


Place all the egg whites in a bowl and set them aside while you make the syrup.


In a small heavy saucepan, combine the brown sugar, corn syrup, and water. Bring to a boil over medium-low heat, stirring to dissolve the sugar. Continue to boil washing down the sides of the pan with a wet pastry brush. Boil until the syrup reaches 238 degrees F (softball stage) on a candy thermometer. Immediately remove from heat.


Add the cream of tartar to the egg whites in the bowl and beat just to combine. With the mixer on medium speed gradually add the syrup in a thin stream taking care not to hit the beaters. Beat until fairly stiff peaks form but the frosting is still spreadable. If the frosting is too stiff it will be hard to work with. Use immediately.


Brown Sugar Buttercream

  • 5 egg whites

  • 1 and ¼ cups of packed brown sugar

  • ¼ cup of water

  • 1 pound of unsalted butter (16 ounces) at room temperature


Place all the egg whites in the bowl of an electric mixer; set aside.



In a heavy medium saucepan combine the sugar and water. Cook over medium heat stirring to dissolve the sugar. Then bring to a boil without stirring and cook until the syrup reaches 238 degrees F on a candy thermometer.


Begin beating the egg whites on medium low speed. Slowly pour in the syrup making sure not to hit the beater. Increase the mixer speed to medium high and beat until the meringue has cooled to body temperature.

With the mixer on med-low add 1-2 tablespoons of butter at a time. When all the butter has been added increase the mixer’s speed to medium and beat until the mixture looks curdled or separated. Continue to beat until the icing comes together again looking like soft smooth whipped butter.


Assembling the cake:

Place one layer flat side down and cover it with 2/3 cup of the frosting. Top with second layer and repeat process. Top with third layer and frost the sides of the cake.


My substitutions/changes

1. I don't get cakeflour out here, hence used a mix of  Flour and Cornstarch.

2. I ran out of brownsugar for the frosting, hence used white sugar mixed with molasses.


I am sending this cake to the Let's Celebrate event hosted by Ria.


My fellow bakers at Cake slice have some awesome Devil's food cake to show too! Do visit them to read about their cakes....


And yes, Bread Baking Day and MEC (rules have been updated) are hosted here. So do remember to send in your entries.

31 comments:

  1. woww...rachel..its lookin delicious...yummy.. :)

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  2. This looks very yummy and so rich and moist! Great job!

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  3. Ooo!!It is absolutely devlish!! :)Feel like diving straight into it!! How did u make those blue flowers? I haven't done much of icing with an icing bag nd nozzles... so no idea!

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  4. wow..Thats a lovely cake...

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  5. Ria-these are flowers cut out from fondant using small cookie cutter. They last a couple of months.

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  6. No complaints from me either. I'd stil eat it. This cake was delish!

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  7. awesome looking cake..love the preety flowers too

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  8. Looks lovely, it is blue flowers season? saw some blue flowers on some other blog! :)

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  9. Delicous cake and i love the blue flocers in them too.

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  10. Awesome cake with cute and pretty flowers!!

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  11. Great job on your cake and the decoration looks so pretty. It's added some colour to the white frosting as well.

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  12. First time here Rachel...looks wonderful.Irresistible and sinful cake:)

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  13. Looks yummy and I always wonder how you could make such delicious and a long process receipes.Click here for a surprise http://fusion-rg.blogspot.com/2009/05/another-award.html

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  14. Your cake looks wonderful. I bet all the buttercream make the cake lovely and moist

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  15. Mmm I bet your cake was super moist with the melted frosting in the layers. Yum! :D

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  16. The fondant flowers are really pretty!

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  17. Great decorations! Lovey cake.

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  18. Wow Rachel....the pic is enough to make me drool! The cake looks so moist and tempting...truly devils cake :) I wish I was staying close to you...I would have come uninvited :)

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  19. O.K. so we know you're a DB... and now a CSB too? :D

    How have you been, Rachel?

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  20. The cake really sounds amazing and lovely decoration as well.

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  21. Your cake look so cute, love the flower decorations. The layers soaked up the frosting? No problem, it must have made it extra moist.

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  22. Looks inviting! Lovely cake with a beautiful decoration!

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  23. Wow that cake looks so rich and moist..Never tried buttercream with brown sugar,sounds good...

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  24. Oh wow awesome......well decorated cake.....Blue daisy look pretty on the cake....Cake looks soft and yum....

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  25. now i know why its called Devil's cake!!! Its so sinful for humans... gorgeous cake rachel!

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  26. Nice cake recipe. Looks so good. My fav. YUM!

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  27. It looks so good - moist and fudgy, the way I like it!

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  28. I love the blue daisies. Really cute!

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  29. Chocolate cake, of course it has to be good. I can see you're using all those lovely flowers you made.

    I know, it's so hot here. It rained for the first time last night. I'm just waiting for the monsoons. :D

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  30. so glad you enjoyed the cake, i love to see the different posts each month from the cake slice bakers. i never dreamed that so many different people all over the world would use the recipes and have success. it is so much fun to find the blogs and read about the experiences. even more fun is knowing that i bake/blog about something each month with so many of those bakers! Keep up the great baking and thanks for the kind words about my book!
    Alisa Huntsman

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