Chocolate Cake with Strawberries & Whipped Cream
04 Saturday Jul 2009
Happy Birthday Alan! Thursday was my husband’s birthday and I wanted to make something extra special. Since I have moved up here I’ve heard about his Aunt’s Chocolate Strawberry cake topped with whipped cream frosting. I’ve tried to get the recipe from her but it’s never happened. I finally figured I’d just wing it, using a great chocolate cake recipe, some fresh strawberries and whipped cream. I found a recipe for white chocolate whipped cream and figured I’d use that for the layers and the top of the cake as well.
As with anything in the kitchen, sometimes best laid plans don’t work out. I spent the entire morning baking the cake. The cake takes a while to bake but it’s so worth it. I hadn’t tried the Cook’s Illustrated chocolate cake until today but heard great reviews from it. I’ve made the Hershey’s “Perfectly” Chocolate Cake but wasn’t happy with the taste and texture. Of course everything was going smoothly until I tried to take the cakes out of the pans. I had greased, I had floured and I had run a knife around the edges, nothing! My husband came up with the idea to put them in a cold bath. I was frustrated so I told him to go ahead. Nope, just lodged them more! Of course it did, had I gone on the Internet and done some research before trying desperate measures! I read that sometimes leaving them in the pans for too long to cool and cause them to stick so I warmed them in the oven. By this time one cake was already a little disfigured but I finally got them out of the pan. They were too crumbly to attempt to cut them in half to create four layers so I just went with the standard two-layer cake. I used the excess whipped cream to mold broken pieces of the cake back together to cover up any mistakes. No one knew the difference and I should have kept my mouth shut to family!
The end result was a delicious cake and a happy husband but I’m still going to attempt to do the four-layers in a couple of week so it doesn’t get the best of me 🙂 I didn’t get to take a picture of the cake until it was half gone, so another reason to bake another cake!
Old-Fashioned Chocolate Layer Cake
12 tablespoons unsalted butter (1½ sticks), very soft, plus extra for greasing pans
1¾ cups unbleached all-purpose flour (8¾ ounces), plus extra for dusting pans
4 ounces unsweetened chocolate, coarsely chopped
¼ cup Dutch-processed cocoa (¾ ounce)
½ cup hot water
1¾ cups sugar (12¼ ounces)
1½ teaspoons baking soda
1 teaspoon table salt
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2 teaspoons vanilla extract
4 large eggs
2 large egg yolks
Pre-heat oven to 350 degrees. Grease two 9-inch-round by 2-inch-high cake pans with softened butter; dust pans with flour and knock out excess. Combine chocolate, cocoa powder, and hot water in medium heatproof bowl; set bowl over saucepan containing 1 inch of simmering water and stir with rubber spatula until chocolate is melted, about 2 minutes. Add ½ cup sugar to chocolate mixture and stir until thick and glossy, 1 to 2 minutes. Remove bowl from heat and set aside to cool.
Whisk flour, baking soda, and salt in medium bowl. Combine buttermilk and vanilla in small bowl. In bowl of standing mixer fitted with whisk attachment, whisk eggs and yolks on medium-low speed until combined, about 10 seconds. Add remaining 1¼ cups sugar, increase speed to high, and whisk until fluffy and lightened in color, 2 to 3 minutes. Replace whisk with paddle attachment. Add cooled chocolate mixture to egg/sugar mixture and mix on medium speed until thoroughly incorporated, 30 to 45 seconds, pausing to scrape down sides of bowl with rubber spatula as needed. Add softened butter one tablespoon at a time, mixing about 10 seconds after each addition. Add about one-third of flour mixture followed by half of buttermilk mixture, mixing until incorporated after each addition (about 15 seconds). Repeat using half of remaining flour mixture and all of remaining buttermilk mixture (batter may appear separated). Scrape down sides of bowl and add remaining flour mixture; mix at medium-low speed until batter is thoroughly combined, about 15 seconds. Remove bowl from mixer and fold batter once or twice with rubber spatula to incorporate any remaining flour. Divide batter evenly between prepared cake pans; smooth batter to edges of pan with spatula.
Bake cakes until toothpick inserted into center comes out with a few crumbs attached, 25 to 30 minutes. Cool cakes in pans 10 minutes, then invert onto wire rack. Cool cakes to room temperature before frosting, 45 to 60 minutes.
Whipped Cream Frosting
1 cup cold heavy cream
4 tbsp. confectioners’ sugar, sifted
1 tsp. vanilla extract
Chill your mixing bowl and whisk attachment in the freezer for a few minutes. It’s always best to start with a cold bowl to ensure the cream whips nicely. Beat the cream, sugar and vanilla extract until the cream starts to thicken. Always start on a lower speed and increase the speed as you go, but be careful to not over beat. Beat until stiff peaks form.
To assemble the cake cut each 9in cake in half, horizontally. Take one of the cakes and place it on your plate, cut side up. Spread whipped cream and fresh sliced strawberries on top. Repeat this until your final layer. Place the last cake layer on top cut side down and spread your whipped cream frosting on top, garnish with fresh strawberries.
Source: Old-Fashioned Chocolate Layer Cake, Cook’s Illustrated, Whipped Cream from Baking:From My Home to Yours
20 comments
Katie said:
July 4, 2009 at 6:23 pm
Oh my goodness YUM! That looks like the PERFECT cake to me!
Jen @ MaplenCornbread said:
July 4, 2009 at 9:08 pm
GREAT cake! My husband is the same…you can buy the way to his heart with goodies!!!
angela said:
July 10, 2009 at 11:42 pm
hi, i was online looking for a white chocolate whipped cream recipe and i was lucky enough to find your recipe here :). i was wondering if you could tell me how much cake that recipe covered? i’m going to make a 10″ round and i think i’ll need to at least double that recipe if not triple it, but anyways. i’d appreciate any information you may have. thanks a bunch. angela
(p.s. your cake looks lovely)
maeghan said:
July 11, 2009 at 8:36 am
Hi and thanks for finding my blog! For the white chocolate whipped cream it covered the middle layer in between my 9 inch cake and covered the outside for the first coat with a little bit leftover. Keep in mind the outer layer was just a rough coat. If you are just frosting the outside I would think doubling the recipe would be fine but if you are also doing a middle layer you may have to triple it. It’s definitly worth it though, very tasty!
angela said:
July 11, 2009 at 7:12 pm
thank you very much :), i’m making a cake for a guy at work and he wants a white chocolate whipped cream frosting, orange pastry cream, and grand marnier soaked white cake… i’m so happy i found this, i’ll probably double it, maybe 2 1/2 times just on the safe side. i was thinking of folding a bit of the whipped cream in with the pastry cream for a little more chocolate flavor. anyways, thank you very much again!
Michelle said:
February 13, 2017 at 11:12 am
I dont think I’ve got the exact recipe for ya… but I do know this cake is YUMMY! I made it a while ago with my sister.
pilatesb said:
May 4, 2010 at 9:17 am
Hi! I did a google search for chocolate cake with strawberries and whipped cream. It’s my boyfriends favorite cake and is something he had for his birthday every year during his childhood. I had never heard of this cake so was worried I wouldn’t find a recipe. I’m so glad I found your blog! I’ll be using your recipe :). Also, your other recipes look delicious! Congrats on your new baby!
maeghan said:
May 4, 2010 at 9:47 am
Thank you! Must be something about these guys and their chocolate strawberry cake 🙂 Hope you enjoy!!
jessica said:
August 12, 2010 at 11:56 am
I know this blog is old, but I thought I’d give you some advice regarding your cake sticking to the pan. My aunt showed me a great trick a couple years ago. Grease and flour as normal, but also take your cake pans, and trace the bottom of them onto wax paper and cut out the circles. Place them in the bottom of the cake pan. Run a knife along the edge of the cake and it will come out extremely easily. Then all you have to do is peel off the wax paper. Comes out perfectly every time.
tomy said:
October 27, 2010 at 11:28 pm
just canceled my diet. will start next week.
—energy drink
Lindsay said:
January 28, 2011 at 8:59 am
Do you put this cake in the fridge until you eat?
maeghan said:
January 28, 2011 at 9:51 am
Yes, definitely put it in the fridge before and after. The cake itself stays pretty moist so you wont have to deal with that dry, crumbling issue that happens a lot when you refrigerate a cake.
Summer said:
March 13, 2011 at 10:25 pm
Cakes in the oven…really looking forward to seeing how it turns out! Hubby is going to be over the moon! Thanks for sharing! Xx
venomxbrothers said:
July 7, 2011 at 5:02 pm
Hello! I loved this recipe and so did my family. I only had one problem. My white chocolate whipped cream didn’t come out at all! After I added the white chocolate/cream mixture to the cream in my mixer, it turned into this strange looking moosh! It was clumpy and liquidy and not usable at all! What could I have done wrong? I had to set my mixer on a medium high because the high setting sends liquid everywhere! Could that have been the problem? Or maybe it has something to do with my chocolate mixture needing to be even colder first? The cream was whipping fine until I added my chocolate mixture. 🙁
maeghan said:
July 7, 2011 at 7:39 pm
It sounds like the white chocolate/cream mixture wasn’t at room temperature before you added it to the cream that was whipped. Whipped cream is temperamental and if you under whip, over whip, or add something too warm it will flop very quickly. I’m sorry you didn’t have any luck with it.
venomxbrothers said:
July 7, 2011 at 9:10 pm
Thanks for the tip! I’ll be more patient and wait longer next time. XD
Dianne said:
March 17, 2012 at 6:25 pm
Could you use semi-sweet chocolate to make it a darker chocolate for the recipe?
maeghan said:
March 17, 2012 at 6:33 pm
I think the unsweetened chocolate along with the cocoa powder gives it a rich flavor, but you can definitely give it a try. It’s not going to hurt the recipe at all.
allison lindsay said:
August 26, 2017 at 9:36 am
Chocolate strawberry cake
cake lover said:
January 28, 2019 at 12:18 am
awesome cake with strawberries…. i like it