Chocolate Dump-It Cake
Updated June 28, 2015
- Total Time
- 1 hour 45 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
2 cups sugar
4 ounces unsweetened chocolate
1 stick unsalted butter, plus more for greasing the pan
2 cups all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting the pan
2 teaspoons baking soda
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
1 cup milk
1 teaspoon cider vinegar
2 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 ½ cups Nestle's semisweet-chocolate chips
1 ½ cups sour cream, at room temperature
Preparation
- Step 1
Preheat the oven to 375 degrees and place a baking sheet on the lowest rack to catch any drips as the cake bakes on the middle rack. In a 2- to 3-quart pot, mix together the sugar, unsweetened chocolate, butter and 1 cup of water. Place over medium heat and stir occasionally until all of the ingredients are melted and blended. Remove from the heat and let cool slightly.
- Step 2
Meanwhile, sift together the flour, baking soda, baking powder and salt. In a small bowl, stir together the milk and vinegar. Grease and flour a 9-inch tube pan (Tip: Be meticulous, and really work the butter and flour into the crevices of the pan. This is a moist cake, so it really needs a well-prepared pan to keep it from sticking).
- Step 3
When the chocolate in the pot has cooled a bit, whisk in the milk mixture and eggs. In several additions, and without overmixing, whisk in the dry ingredients. When the mixture is smooth, add the vanilla and whisk once or twice to blend. Pour the batter into the tube pan and bake on the middle rack until a skewer inserted in the center comes out clean, about 30 to 35 minutes. Let the cake cool for 10 minutes, then remove from the pan and cool on a rack. (This can be tricky -- if someone is around to help, enlist him.) Let cool completely.
- Step 4
Meanwhile, melt the chocolate chips in a double boiler, then let cool to room temperature. Stir in the sour cream, ¼ cup at a time, until the mixture is smooth.
- Step 5
When the cake is cool, you may frost it as is or cut it in half so that you have 2 layers. There will be extra icing whether you have 1 or 2 layers. My mother always uses it to make flowers on top. She makes a small rosette, or button, then uses toasted slices of almond as the petals, pushing them in around the base of the rosette.
Private Notes
Comments
A trick I learned from a French pâtissier: When called to butter and flour a cake pan, replace flour with sugar. It makes for a sweet and slightly crisp outside and helps the cake rise (more to "grab" on to). Never failed me yet.
For true chocolate lovers, to improve this recipe immensely:
(1) Up the unsweetened chocolate in the cake recipe to 5 ounces and consider using a premium chocolate like Guittard, Scharffen Berger, or Valrhona instead of "any old" chocolate at the grocer's like Baker's or Hershey's.
(2) Similarly, for the icing, substitute premium 60% cocoa butter chocolate chips for the inferior Nestle's semi-sweet chips.
Instead of using flour to dust the cake pan, dust with unsweetened cocoa powder. Just adds a bit more chocolate!
This is my favorite chocolate cake to make! I really like to make the cake but instead of frosting, I make a ganache and tip it with ganache and raspberries! Literally my favorite dessert it’s so rich and yummy! Highly recommend for a party or if you just want some cake :)
Made this as a Mother’s Day treat, cake was great but the icing needed some help. I added 1/2 c powdered sugar 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract and 1 melted mini Hershey bar. Turned out great and I highly recommend the cake.
Easy. Followed recipe. Guittard chocolate for cake, Nestle's semi-sweet for frosting. Very moist, more than my preference, but not mushy. Frosting tastes just like Nestle's semi-sweet chocolate chips. Family comments: (1) too basic (didn't finish slice), (2) didn't like frosting/too rich (didn't finish slice), (3) nice, moist chocolate cake (finished slice), (4) frosting flavor too strong dark chocolate but then blends with cake, nice blend bitter/sweet

