Devil’s-Food Cake With Toasted-Marshmallow Frosting

- Total Time
- 1 hour plus baking/cooling
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1½cups (340 grams/3 sticks) butter
- 1½cups (354 milliliters) black coffee
- 1cup (85 grams) Dutch-processed cocoa powder
- 1¼cups (170 grams) finely chopped dark chocolate (about 72 percent)
- 2packed cups plus 1 tablespoon (453 grams) light-brown sugar
- 1tablespoon vanilla extract
- 1teaspoon Diamond Crystal kosher salt
- 6large eggs
- 3large egg yolks
- 2cups (255 grams) all-purpose flour
- 1tablespoon baking soda
- 1cup (226 grams) egg whites
- 1¾cups (340 grams) sugar
- ½teaspoon Diamond Crystal kosher salt
- ¼teaspoon cream of tartar
- ¼teaspoon vanilla extract
For the Chocolate Layer Cake
For the Marshmallow Frosting
Preparation
- Step 1
Place oven rack in the middle position, and heat the oven to 350 degrees. Line 3 8-by-3-inch anodized-aluminum cake pans with parchment paper, and grease them.
- Step 2
Combine butter and coffee in a 5-quart saucepan, and set over low heat to melt. Remove from heat, and whisk in the cocoa, chocolate, brown sugar, vanilla and salt, until there are no lumps of cocoa or unmelted chocolate. After mixing, add the eggs and yolks, and whisk well to combine. Sift flour and baking soda right into the pan, then whisk thoroughly to combine, making sure there are no pockets of flour. Divide batter among the three cake pans (about 23-24 ounces each).
- Step 3
Bake for 30 minutes, or until the cakes are firm, but a light touch with a finger still leaves an impression, and a few crumbs cling to a toothpick inserted into the center of the cake.
- Step 4
Set aside on a wire rack until the pans, and the cakes, are completely cool to the touch, about 90 minutes.
- Step 5
Fill a 3-quart pot with 1½ inches of water, and place over medium-low heat. In the bowl of a stand mixer, combine the egg whites, sugar, salt, cream of tartar and vanilla. Place the bowl over the steaming water bath, and use a spatula to stir and scrape down the bowl, keeping the mass moving over the steam for about 10 minutes, or until a digital thermometer inserted into the mixture reads 175 degrees.
- Step 6
Place the bowl in the stand mixer with the whisk attachment, and whip on high speed until it quadruples in volume and turns thick and glossy, about 5 minutes.
- Step 7
Loosen the sides of the cakes with a knife and invert them onto a wire rack. Peel away the parchment paper, then flip cakes right-side up again. Use a long serrated knife to evenly trim the puffy tops off the cakes (set these aside for snacking).
- Step 8
Place one cake, cut-side up, onto a serving plate. Top with a cup of frosting, and spread it into an even layer with a small palette knife or the back of a spoon. Repeat with the second and third layers, placing these cut-side down. Finish the sides of the cake with remaining frosting, then lightly torch with a blowtorch, so the frosting turns golden brown.
Private Notes
Comments
I sure would love to try this. Sounds and looks lovely. But I don't have an extra blowtorch hanging around and don't intend to spend money on a new one. Any other suggestions?
Best directions I have ever read in a recipe: "set these aside for snacking."
Helpful hint to those without a blowtorch -- which as we know, is not standard equipment (btw: I am without both a microwave AND a food processor, and cook everything from scratch) -- you don't have to torch the icing. It's for cosmetic purposes only, and does nothing to "cook" or further enhance the taste of the frosting. It's the equivalent of a really good mascara on blonde eyelashes.
This seemed like a lot of work to me (and a lot of eggs!) but I made it exactly as the recipe suggested and it was delicious!! FWIW, I stirred the marshmallow mixture in a double boiler with a whisk (instead of a spatula), and it only required about 4-5 minutes before reaching 175.
This cake is amazing. I followed the recipe, bought a blowtorch, and it was beautiful and delicious. Everyone was very impressed with the appearance and taste. The marshmallow frosting is also so delicious and beautiful.
Huh? This is not Marshmallow frosting. It's Swiss meringue. And the most likely reason that some attempts failed to attain stiff peaks is grease in the egg whites. I tell my students that even the slightest speck of egg yolk, butter, etc., will prevent meringue from whipping to stiff peak. Rubber or plastic utensils are notoriously difficult to rid of grease, so the suggestion of a spatula here is suspect. Only glass or metal should touch egg whites to be whipped. Use a clean wire whisk.
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