Devil’s Food Cake With Hazelnut Praline
Published Dec. 15, 2021

- Total Time
- 1½ hours, plus cooling
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 5⅓ounces/150 grams sunflower oil (by weight not by volume), plus more for greasing the pan
- ¾cup/75 grams unsweetened Dutch-processed cocoa powder
- 1½cups/192 grams all-purpose flour (plain flour)
- 1teaspoon baking powder
- 1teaspoon baking soda (bicarbonate of soda)
- 1teaspoon salt
- 1cup/200 grams superfine sugar (caster sugar) or granulated sugar
- ½lightly packed cup/100 grams dark brown sugar
- 2large eggs
- ½cup plus 1 tablespoon/150 grams plain kefir (or buttermilk)
- ¾cup plus 3 tablespoons/220 grams very hot coffee, plus 1 tablespoon/14 grams at room temperature, for brushing
- 1½cups/200 grams blanched hazelnuts
- ¾cup plus 2 tablespoons/180 grams superfine sugar (caster sugar) or granulated sugar
- ¼teaspoon salt
- 1¼cups/300 grams cold heavy cream (double cream)
- ⅓cup plus 1 tablespoon/95 grams mascarpone
- 2tablespoons malted milk powder, such as Horlick’s
- ¼cup plus 2 teaspoons/30 grams confectioners’ sugar (icing sugar)
- Tiny pinch of salt
For the Cake
For the Hazelnut Praline
For the Mascarpone Cream
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat the oven to 200 degrees Celsius (nonfan)/375 degrees Fahrenheit. Line the bottom of 2 (20-centimeter/8-inch) cake pans (tins) with a removable base with parchment paper and grease the sides. Alternatively, grease the bottoms and sides of 2 (20-centimeter/8-inch) regular cake pans, line with parchment, and grease the parchment.
- Step 2
In a large bowl, whisk together cocoa, flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt and sugars. In a separate bowl, add the oil, eggs and kefir, and whisk just to combine. Add to the dry mixture and use a spatula to gently fold through. Add the ¾ cup plus 3 tablespoons/220 grams hot coffee and mix gently to combine. It’ll look very runny at first, but will soon come together into a glossy, pourable batter.
- Step 3
Divide the batter evenly between the two cake pans, about 21 ounces/600 grams per pan. Bake for 30 minutes or until a skewer inserted into the middle comes out clean. Set aside to cool for about 30 minutes, then slide a butter knife along the sides to help release the cake. Brush the tops lightly with the remaining 1 tablespoon/14 grams extra coffee (discard any extra).
- Step 4
Invert one cake onto a board, remove the parchment, then invert it again onto a cake stand or the platter you intend to serve it on (domed side up now). Invert the other cake onto a board (don’t remove the paper). Invert it again, onto a plate, so that it’s paper side down. (This will help prevent it from sticking.) Set both cakes aside to cool completely.
- Step 5
Make the praline: With the oven still at 200 degrees Celsius/375 degrees Fahrenheit, spread the hazelnuts onto a parchment-lined medium baking sheet (tray) and bake for 12 to 15 minutes, or until deeply golden, shaking the pan halfway through baking. Set aside, keeping the tray and parchment paper. You’ll use them again later.
- Step 6
Place a large saucepan over a medium-high heat and, once quite hot, sprinkle in a third of the caster sugar to cover the base. It should immediately start to melt at the sides but not brown too quickly. Swirl the sugar in the pan a little, then add another third of the sugar, allowing it to melt a little before adding the remaining third. Turn the heat down to medium and cook until the sugar is an amber caramel, stirring with a spatula just a couple times (but not much more). Add the hazelnuts and ¼ teaspoon salt, stirring to coat, then quickly transfer the mixture to your parchment-lined tray and leave to cool completely.
- Step 7
Once cool, roughly break apart the praline and add it to a food processor. Pulse a few times until you have very coarse crumbs, then measure out about ½ cup/75 grams of the mixture and transfer to a bowl. Blitz the remaining mixture in the food processor for about 5 minutes or until it turns into the consistency of a smooth nut butter, stopping to scrape the inside of the bowl as necessary. Transfer this to a separate bowl.
- Step 8
Make the mascarpone cream: Add all the ingredients to a stand mixer and beat on medium-high speed for 1½ to 2 minutes, or until you have medium peaks. Refrigerate if not assembling right away (you want it nice and cold).
- Step 9
When ready to assemble, top the cake on your cake stand with half the cream mixture. Spoon over about 2 tablespoons of the smooth praline and gently swirl it through the cream with your spatula. Top with another 2 tablespoons of the praline, this time without swirling. Sprinkle with half the praline crumble. Carefully invert the other cake on top now, removing the paper. Top with the remaining cream and repeat the same process with the smooth praline and praline crumble. Serve right away, or refrigerate overnight to firm up the cream before serving. (The cake will keep refrigerated for up to 3 days.)
Private Notes
Comments
For everyone who doesn't keep kefir around and who doesn't want to buy buttermilk for ONE TBSP, do keep powdered buttermilk on hand. It lasts a very long time on the shelf. Or, I suppose you could use a TBSP of Greek yogurt. Recipes that require a tiny amount of something I rarely use frustrate me a lot. So I have a packet of powdered buttermilk in my baking cabinet.
King Arthur has a fantastic pancake recipe that uses malted milk powder. Stella Parks also wrote a great article at Serious Eats about some great uses for it in desserts, including a tasty chocolate chip cookie recipe. A bottle of the Carnation brand is about $4 at my local grocery store - I find it near the ovaltine/hot cocoas.
The recipe calls for 1/2 plus 1 TB, not just one TB. Buttermilk keeps quite a long time in the refrigerator and is used in many recipes for cake, waffles, pancakes.
Absolutely a delicious dessert! Making for a second time tonight. Simple to make cake ( wrapped overnight in refrigerator) and praline the day before serving, preparing whipped cream and mascarpone topping is quick and assembly is easy on the day of as it needs to chill in refrigerator for a few hours before serving.
I have made this four times, as written, always using weight measurements. It is gorgeous and delicious, and it’s a bit unique in my opinion when it comes to the contrast of sweet and salty, soft and crunchy. Take your time with each step and take extra care when you are pulsing the hazelnut brittle- it can go very quickly to dust and you want to have some good sizeable crunchy bits for the top. (I’ve been known to make an extra quarter batch just to get the right texture. Too much in this case is not a bad thing.)
The cream is delicious. Definitely double it so you can coat the whole cake. I found the instructions for making the caramel a bit unclear and wound up burning it twice. If you’re not used to making caramel and working with sugar like that, I’d suggest watching a video on making a caramel praline first.
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