friedcabbage

July 24, 2007

Lisa’s Triple Chocolate Cake

Filed under: Cake, Chocolate, Dessert, Recipes — friedcabbage @ 6:48 pm

This chocolate cake is, quite frankly, the best cake I’ve ever had. The recipe was given to me by a friend of my mother after she made this cake for me on my birthday, some fifteen-odd years ago. I have never decided on a good name for this cake–every time I give it to someone it gets a new name…so I’ll just go with what was told to me.

Edit: July 25 – Realized I had the wrong number for the ounces of pudding in the recipe.
Edit: August 6th – Found out the nutritional value! (You don’t have to look though, really, you don’t)

At a glance…

Cake:
1 Duncan Hines Deluxe Devil Food Cake Mix (be careful with substitutes–they will cook differently)
6 ounce chocolate pudding mix (just the dry mix–the box I use is a 5.7 oz box)
1 1/4 cups of water
1/2 cup of veggie oil
4 eggs
2 cups of chocolate chips

Glaze:
1 cup of chocolate chips
1/2 cup of whipping cream
1 handful of powdered sugar (optional)

Blend those first five ingredients. Mix on medium speed for 2 minutes. Pour half of the batter into a greased and floured 10 inch tube pan. Pour on 1 cup of chocolate chips, pour on the rest of the mix, and pour on another cup of chocolate chips. Lightly swirl with a spoon or spatula. Cook at 350 for 50-60 minutes.

Cool 35 minutes. Remove from pan and cool an additional 35 minutes; start on glaze. Melt 1 cup of chocolate chips with whipping cream in medium saucepan on low-medium heat, stirring slowly. Cool glaze for 5-10 minutes to thicken. Drizzle or spoon onto cake after cake has cooled for about an hour. Sprinkle powdered sugar on top if you want. Serves 16.

Total time: 2 1/2 hours
Prep & Mixing: ~10 minutes
Cooking Time: ~1 hour
Cooling: 35 minutes
Glaze & Additional Cooling: 35 minutes

Nutrition Information (for 1 serving)

Calories Fat Sat. Fat Carbs Sugars Protein Fiber Sodium
420 21.4g 9.3g 57.5g 39g <5g <3g 454mg
I do not recommend substituting a different brand for the Duncan Hines box. I have tried it before and it just doesn’t turn out the same way.
Grease and flower the cake pan. I use a paper towel to grease the pan with and then toss in some flour and spin the pan around to make it stick to the sides. Lightly shake excess flour out of the pan when you’ve covered most of the inside surface.
Mix up the cake mix and other goodies.
Pour half of the batter into the pan. Spread one cup of chocolate chips around on top of the mixture. Spread the remaining cake mix.
Sprinkle one more cup of chocolate chips onto the cake mix. Pictured here is the highly nontechnical spatula technique where the goal is just to put a thin layer of batter over the chocolate chips. This is to make removal from the pan less messy and to make the glaze go on a bit more evenly.
After baking and cooling for 35 minutes, remove the cake from the pan. The easiest way to do this that I know of is to use a plate to dump the cake into and then (since it will be upside down) put it onto the dish you want to store it in or serve it on.
The glaze can be made either with direct heat or by heating water. Either way, heat and stir slowly until the glaze has a consistent look to it.
You can add some powdered sugar as decoration on top if you want. I rarely add any as I prefer the pure chocolate look.
Makes about sixteen good sized servings. Best served at 75 degrees or higher; any cooler and its consistency changes for the worse (due to the cooked chocolate chips). Goes great with a glass of cold milk. Also goes good with vanilla ice cream.

Enjoy!

~Veers

2 Comments »

  1. This looks so yummy and perfect when I have guests over to work on our scrapbooks. Could you tell me if there are any adjustments for high altitude? I live at 5,237 feet above sea level. Thank you.

    Comment by Donlyn — July 28, 2007 @ 10:18 pm

  2. Having never baked cakes at high altitude (Texas is quite flat!), I can’t say for sure.

    I think the thing to worry about would be drying the cake out. You might want to put a tad more water in it and be careful not to overcook it. The cake mix itself may also have some specific tips on it (I do not have a box with me at work or I would check!) that should be applicable.

    I gotta admit, one time I made this cake and only put in 1/2 cup of water and forgot the other cup…it was pretty dry, but still tasted pretty much the same. Eating it with ice cream saved it. ;] So it might just be a matter of experimentation for you?

    A Google search produced these relevant articles:
    http://www.ochef.com/327.htm
    http://www.crisco.com/basics/tips/high_altitude.asp
    http://www.thecookinginn.com/haltitude.html

    I hope this helped; I wish I could give you something more specific, though.

    Comment by friedcabbage — July 30, 2007 @ 11:19 am


RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

Blog at WordPress.com.