Best 6 Double Chocolate Marble Cake Recipes

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DOUBLE CHOCOLATE MARBLE CAKE



Double chocolate marble cake image

Moist, chocolatey and luscious

Provided by mazzyb

Time 55m

Yield Serves 10

Number Of Ingredients 7

200g butter
200g caster sugar
4 eggs
225g self-raising flour
85g white chocolate, melted
75g dark chocolate, melted
1 tbsp cocoa powder

Steps:

  • Butter and line a round baking tin. Preheat the oven to gas mark 5/180C.
  • Beat the butter, sugar, and then gradually the eggs, one at a time.
  • Split the mixture between two bowls. Add the white chocolate to one bowl, and dark to the other. Then, mix the cocoa powder in the dark chocolate mixture, but not the white chocolate mix.
  • Fold in half the flour for each bowl, and pour into the baking tin.
  • Bake for 25-40 minutes.
  • Enjoy!

JANE HORNBY'S DOUBLE CHOCOLATE MARBLE WEDDING CAKE



Jane Hornby's Double chocolate marble wedding cake image

Make this dazzling layered celebration cake for a big occasion. It has white chocolate and coffee liqueur buttercream, coloured decorative icing and a sleek pastel finish

Provided by Jane Hornby

Categories     Dessert

Time 4h45m

Yield Serves 100 in total (30cm cake serves 50, 23cm cake serves 30, 18cm cake serves 20 when cut into a grid to make rectangular 2.5 x 5cm pieces)

Number Of Ingredients 60

2m pale blue ribbon , 15mm wide
60cm darker blue ribbon , 15mm wide
1 can pink food colouring spray (optional)
2 cans gold food colouring spray
flower tape or kitchen foil
string , for measuring
flowers (we used peonies and vuvuzela roses)
small paintbrush
dusky pink food colouring paste
500g plain flour
1 ½ tsp baking powder
1 ½ tsp bicarbonate of soda
½ tsp salt
300g light muscovado sugar
300g white caster sugar
7 large eggs
400g soured cream
225g butter
200g chocolate , 70% cocoa, broken into chunks
1 tsp vanilla extract
2 tbsp coffee (made with 1 tbsp espresso powder and 1½ tbsp boiling water)
175g butter
225g white chocolate , broken into chunks
1 tsp vanilla extract
2 tbsp Irish cream liqueur or other coffee liqueur
650g plain flour
2 tsp baking powder
2 tsp bicarbonate of soda
1 tsp salt
400g light muscovado sugar
400g white caster sugar
10 large eggs
550g soured cream
300g butter
250g chocolate , 70% cocoa, broken into chunks
1 ½ tsp vanilla extract
3 tbsp coffee (made with 2 tbsp espresso powder and 2 tbsp boiling water)
225g butter
250g white chocolate , broken into chunks
1 ½ tsp vanilla extract
3 tbsp Irish cream liqueur or other coffee liqueur
100ml double cream
3 tbsp Irish cream liqueur or other coffee liqueur
200g white chocolate , finely chopped
350g butter , softened
800g icing sugar
150ml double cream
3 tbsp Irish cream liqueur or other coffee liqueur
250g chocolate , 70% cocoa, finely chopped
400g butter , softened
800g icing sugar
4 ½kg ivory sugarpaste (using 800g for the board, 500g for the 18cm cake, 1kg for the 23cm cake, and 1.7kg for the 30cm cake, and an extra 500g for the chevrons)
icing sugar , for dusting
500g royal icing sugar
15cm, 23cm and 30cm deep round cake tins
thick 35cm diameter silver cake drum
thin 15cm, 23cm and 30cm diameter silver cake board
6 standard plastic dowelling rods
1cm plain piping nozzle (or snip end off the bag)
no.2 writing nozzle and disposable piping bags

Steps:

  • First make the cakes. Heat the oven to 160C/140C fan/gas 3. Make the 18cm and 23cm cakes first. Butter then line the base and sides of both a 23cm and an 18cm round, deep cake tin. Have two large bowls ready, then put 250g flour, ¾ tsp each baking powder and bicarbonate of soda, and ¼ tsp salt into both bowls. Add the muscovado to one, the caster sugar to the other, then stir. Break up any muscovado lumps with your fingers.
  • Put the butter, chocolate, vanilla and coffee in a saucepan and heat very gently until melted and smooth. In another pan, do the same with the white chocolate ingredients. This white chocolate mix will look buttery and separated, but that's fine. While you wait, put a large jug onto your scales, crack in the eggs and add the soured cream. Make a note of the weight (it should be about 800g in total). Beat to combine.
  • When the chocolates are melted, tip the dark mix into the bowl that has the muscovado in it. Tip the white chocolate mixture into the other. Pour half of the egg and soured cream mix into each bowl (do this on scales to be sure).
  • Beat each bowl with a spatula or balloon whisk to make a smooth, runny batter. Leave it to sit for a few moments to thicken a little, then spoon alternate blobs of the batters into the tins, until they are filled to two-thirds full and all of the mix has been used. I find an old-fashioned ice cream scoop really useful for this. Using a skewer, swirl the two mixes together just a few times, to marble the mixtures.
  • Bake the cakes together on the same shelf, in the middle of the oven, for 1 hr 30 mins or until risen and crusty-looking on top, and a skewer inserted comes out clean. Leave to cool in the tins for 30 mins, then turn onto a wire rack and cool completely.
  • To make the 30cm cake, butter then line a 30cm round cake tin with baking parchment, then wrap the outside with a couple of layers of newspaper, securing with string (as you might a Christmas cake). Repeat the recipe as above, dividing the quantities for the 30cm cake in half between two bowls, as before. Bake the cake for 1 hr 45 mins and test as before.
  • Make the buttercreams. Follow this method for both buttercreams and keep them separate. Heat the cream and coffee liqueur in a small pan until steam rises. Put the chocolate in a smallish bowl and pour over the hot cream. Leave to melt for a few mins, stirring until smooth. Leave to cool completely.
  • In a large bowl, beat the butter with a pinch of salt with an electric whisk until pale and smooth. Gradually beat in the icing sugar to make fluffy buttercream. When all the sugar is in, gradually add the cooled ganache and beat together well. The white chocolate mixture will be whipped and very pale, while the dark chocolate mixture will be a milk chocolate colour when finished.
  • Split and layer the cakes. Once each cake is completely cool, level off its slightly chewy, brownie-ish top using a long serrated knife. Spread a little dark chocolate buttercream over the thin cake board that matches the cake you're working on. Turn the cake upside-down onto the board, then sit this on a sheet of baking parchment, so you can spin the cake around.
  • Split cake into three layers using a length of cotton or, as this is a fairly sturdy cake, simply cut using a long serrated knife, if you prefer.
  • Now you can start to fill the cake. If you've made the buttercreams in advance and they have hardened slightly, warm in the microwave on defrost for 10 seconds and beat well. Half-fill a piping bag with the dark chocolate buttercream, either with a wide nozzle or just the end snipped off. Pipe a ring of buttercream around the inside edge of the bottom cake layer. This is going to keep the white and dark frostings separated and neat.
  • Spoon some of the white chocolate frosting into the middle of the cake and spread it out to meet the dark frosting at about the same thickness. Stack the middle layer of the cake back on top and repeat until the cake is rebuilt. Chill for 10 mins. Ensure any crumbs are cleaned away, then cover the top and sides of the cake with an even coating of dark chocolate buttercream, paddling it out over the top and down the sides using a palette knife. Smooth the top as best you can. Repeat with all three cakes.
  • Chill the cakes for at least 30 mins to allow the buttercream to firm up before covering in sugarpaste. Can be done up to three days ahead.
  • Cover the cakes in sugarpaste. Starting with the small cake, transfer the cakes to new sheets of baking parchment, as any blobs of buttercream could get into the sugarpaste.
  • Knead the sugarpaste until pliable, then shape into a smooth ball. Lightly dust the work surface and the top of the icing with icing sugar, then use a large rolling pin to roll a circle large enough to cover the entire cake and for the icing to be about 5mm thick. If you're not sure, roughly measure the cake with a piece of string from one side to the other (don't get it chocolatey). Using your rolling pin to help, or just lifting it with your hands, lift the sugarpaste over the cake.
  • When the icing is in the right position, drop it onto the cake. Smooth it over the cake with your palms, working from the top down, until there are no wrinkles or folds. Push the excess in towards where the cake meets the board.
  • Using a small sharp knife, trim the excess sugarpaste away from the cake. Keep the cake on the work surface for this, don't be tempted to lift it up as if you're trimming a pie, as the sugarpaste can rip.
  • Using your palms or a plastic cake smoother, polish the sugarpaste to make a smooth, silky surface. Slide the cake somewhere it won't be disturbed and leave to dry overnight, if possible. Repeat for all of the cakes. Brush a little cooled boiled water over the 35cm drum and cover that in sugarpaste, too.
  • Dowel the cake and decorate each tier. Now you need to insert dowels into the cake, which act like internal scaffolding. Starting with the 30cm cake, push three dowelling rods in a triangle into the middle of the cake - they should be set apart no wider than the base of the 23cm cake. Lightly mark where the top of the icing comes to on the dowel.
  • Carefully pull out the dowels and line up on the work surface. Then, using a ruler, re-mark each rod to the highest point. Score the dowels with scissors around the marks and snap the plastic.
  • Re-insert the rods in their original holes, rounded-end down.
  • Make the royal icing, following pack instructions, to a fairly thick icing. Put a no.2 nozzle into a piping bag, then fill with some of the icing; cover the rest with cling film. Pipe random dots over the 18cm cake, from pea-sized to pinhead-sized. To make a large blob, squeeze continuously, rather than trying to draw a circle and fill it in. As you near the base, make the dots more sparse, eventually fading to nothing where the ribbon is going to sit). Leave to dry. The icing needs to be the right consistency, so that it pipes but doesn't drip.
  • For the chevrons, knead a little of the colouring into the sugarpaste until evenly pink. Split into two; keep one half covered with cling film. Using a little icing sugar, roll the other half to about £1 coin thickness, and in a rectangle just bigger than A4 size. Starting from one of the short edges, cut into ribbons 2.5-3cm wide. Carefully lift the strips onto a piece of parchment on a board and take them outside, out of the wind. Spray with pink spray, then take back indoors and leave to dry for couple of mins. Repeat with the second piece of paste.
  • Positioning the pink strips. Brush a little cooled boiled water in a diagonal stripe up the side of the 23cm cake, then position one of the pink chevrons up against it, letting it overlap at the bottom and curve around to meet the middle of the cake at the top. Press into position, cut away the excess flush to the cake and leave to dry. Do this with each of the chevrons, spacing them evenly. Go easy with the water and try to keep your hands clean and dry.
  • For the gold cake, take it outside as well, then spray liberally to create a shimmery gold effect. Don't waste the spray on the middle of the cake where the next cake will sit. Leave to dry.
  • Stack and complete the cake. To stack the cakes, spoon a little of the leftover royal icing over each of the dowel holes on the 30cm cake (bottom layer). Carefully lift the 30cm cake onto the covered board, then stack the remaining cakes on top of one another, positioning each cake and gently lowering the back edge of the cake onto the cake below. Make sure it's central, then slide a palette knife under the cake and gently lower the cake down. Slide the knife out at the last minute.
  • Run a thin line of royal icing around the edge of the base board and attach 110cm pale blue ribbon. Fasten ribbon around the base of the gold cake and the white dotty cake, then finish with fresh flowers (wrap stems in flower tape or foil first).

DOUBLE CHOCOLATE MARBLE CAKE



Double Chocolate Marble Cake image

This is a fudgy cake that is very rich and there is more work involved than the usual marble cake.

Provided by Carol

Categories     Desserts     Cakes     Chocolate Cake Recipes

Yield 14

Number Of Ingredients 12

6 eggs
1 cup butter
1 cup white sugar
1 cup packed brown sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup sour cream
2 ½ cups all-purpose flour
½ cup unsweetened cocoa powder
¼ teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking soda
⅓ cup unsweetened cocoa powder
½ cup white sugar

Steps:

  • Preheat oven to 325 degrees F (165 degrees C). Grease an flour one 10 inch tube pan.
  • To make marbling mixture: Combine 1/3 cup of the coca and 1/2 cup of the white sugar and mix well.
  • In a large bowl, beat the egg whites until stiff, and set aside.
  • In another bowl, cream the butter with 1 cup of the sugar and the brown sugar. Beat in the egg yolks, then the vanilla and sour cream.
  • In another bowl, stir together the flour, cocoa, salt, and baking soda. Beat into the creamed mixture. Stir about 1/3 of the egg whites into the batter to lighten it and then fold in the rest gently but thoroughly. Spread about 1/4 of the batter into a greased and floured tube pan and sprinkle with about 1/3 of the cocoa-sugar mixture. Continue repeating layers, ending with the batter. With a knife, lightly swirl the batter and cocoa mixture together
  • Bake at 325 degrees F (175 degrees C) for 1 3/4 hours, or until it tests done with a toothpick. Let cool on a rack. Makes 16 to 20 servings.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 418.6 calories, Carbohydrate 57.6 g, Cholesterol 121.8 mg, Fat 19.6 g, Fiber 2.3 g, Protein 6.7 g, SaturatedFat 11.6 g, Sodium 269.5 mg, Sugar 37 g

CHOCOLATE MARBLE LOVE CAKE



Chocolate Marble Love Cake image

Provided by Valerie Bertinelli

Categories     dessert

Time 1h40m

Yield 6 to 8 servings

Number Of Ingredients 12

Unsalted butter, for the pan
All-purpose flour, for the pan
One 16.5-ounce box vanilla cake mix (plus ingredients called for on the box)
32 ounces part-skim ricotta
3/4 cup sugar
1/4 cup cocoa powder
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
4 large eggs
16 ounces mascarpone
One 3.4-ounce box vanilla instant pudding mix
1 cup whole milk
2 ounces bittersweet chocolate (in a block or bar)

Steps:

  • Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Grease and flour a 9-by-13-inch baking pan.
  • Prepare the cake batter according to the package directions. Spoon evenly into the prepared pan and set aside.
  • Combine the ricotta, sugar, cocoa powder, vanilla, eggs and 4 ounces of the mascarpone in a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Beat until smooth. Gently scoop the filling onto the cake batter and spread, so the top is completely covered. Bake until a skewer inserted into the center of the cake comes out clean and the vanilla cake layer has risen to the top, 50 to 60 minutes. Let cool completely in the pan on a cooling rack.
  • Combine the instant pudding, milk and the remaining 12 ounces mascarpone in a stand mixer and beat until thick and smooth. Spread the frosting evenly over the entire cake. Use a peeler to shave chocolate curls to garnish the cake.

DOUBLE-CHOCOLATE CAKE



Double-Chocolate Cake image

You can have your cake and eat it too. In this exceptionally rich, moist dessert, eggs and butter are replaced by oil and water, resulting in a cholesterol-free cake that tastes just like traditional devil's food.

Provided by Martha Stewart

Categories     Food & Cooking     Dessert & Treats Recipes     Cake Recipes

Number Of Ingredients 13

Vegetable-oil cooking spray
1 cup warm water
1/2 cup unsweetened natural cocoa powder
1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 cup granulated sugar
3/4 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 cup sunflower oil
1 tablespoon pure vanilla extract
2 teaspoons distilled white vinegar
2 ounces dark chocolate (preferably at least 70 percent cacao), finely chopped
1/2 cup confectioners' sugar, sifted
2 tablespoons water

Steps:

  • For the cake: Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Coat an 8-inch round cake pan with spray.
  • Whisk water and cocoa in a small bowl until smooth. Combine flour, sugar, baking soda, and salt in a large bowl, and make a well in center. Add cocoa mixture, oil, and vanilla. Whisk until smooth. Whisk in vinegar. Pour into pan.
  • Bake until a toothpick inserted into center comes out clean, 30 to 35 minutes. Let cool on a wire rack for 20 minutes. Run a knife around edge of cake, invert it onto rack, and turn cake right side up. Let cool completely. Transfer cake to a serving plate or a cake stand.
  • For the glaze: Melt chocolate in a heatproof bowl set over simmering water, stirring until smooth. Let cool slightly.
  • Whisk together sugar and water until smooth. Add melted chocolate in a slow, steady stream, whisking until thickened, about 1 minute. Immediately pour glaze onto center of cooled cake. Using an offset spatula, gently spread glaze over top and sides.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 261 g, Fiber 1 g, Protein 3 g, SaturatedFat 2 g, Sodium 125 g

DOUBLE CHOCOLATE CAKE II



Double Chocolate Cake II image

If you have a sweet tooth or are a chocoholic, this is the cake for you! Make this cake, and it will not stay long in your house!

Provided by Sally E. Forsythe

Categories     Desserts     Cakes     Chocolate Cake Recipes

Yield 16

Number Of Ingredients 11

⅓ cup vegetable oil
2 (1 ounce) squares semi-sweet chocolate
1 egg
1 cup white sugar
¾ cup milk
1 ¼ cups all-purpose flour
½ teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon vanilla extract
½ teaspoon baking soda
1 cup semisweet chocolate chips
½ cup chopped walnuts

Steps:

  • Combine oil, unsweetened chocolate, egg, sugar, milk, flour, salt, vanilla, and baking soda in a 9 inch square pan. Mix until smooth. Sprinkle with nuts and chocolate chips.
  • Bake at 350 degrees F (175 degrees C) for 30 minutes. Cool on wire racks.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 226.7 calories, Carbohydrate 29.7 g, Cholesterol 12.5 mg, Fat 11.9 g, Fiber 1.4 g, Protein 3 g, SaturatedFat 3.6 g, Sodium 122.5 mg, Sugar 20.7 g

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