Buttermilk Marble Cake

- Total Time
- 1½ hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
Advertisement
Ingredients
- ¾cup/170 grams unsalted butter (1½ sticks), softened, plus more for greasing the pan
- 2½cups/300 grams cake flour
- 1½teaspoons baking powder
- ½teaspoon baking soda, plus ¼ teaspoon, divided
- ½teaspoon salt
- 1⅔cups/334 grams plus 1 tablespoon sugar
- 1cup, plus 2 tablespoons/270 milliliters buttermilk
- 1teaspoon vanilla extract
- 3eggs, lightly beaten
- 1ounce/28 grams unsweetened chocolate
- 6ounces/170 grams cream cheese, softened
- 2ounces/57 grams unsweetened chocolate, melted
- 3cups/360 grams confectioners' sugar
- 2 to 3tablespoons whole milk, as needed
For the Cake
For the Chocolate Icing
Preparation
- Step 1
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Grease a 9-inch tube pan with butter and dust with flour.
- Step 2
Make the cake: In a medium bowl, sift together flour, baking powder, ½ teaspoon baking soda, the salt and 1⅔ cups sugar.
- Step 3
Put the dry ingredients in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Add the butter and mix on low speed until well blended; do not beat. Combine the buttermilk and vanilla and stir into the flour mixture, until just blended. Add the eggs and mix until just incorporated. Set aside.
- Step 4
Melt 1 ounce chocolate in a medium heatproof bowl set over a pot filled with a few inches of simmering water. Remove from the heat and add the remaining ¼ teaspoon baking soda, 1 tablespoon sugar and 2 tablespoons very hot water. Whisk together until just blended. Fold ¼ of the batter (about 1 cup) into the chocolate mixture, to create chocolate batter.
- Step 5
Pour the batter into the prepared tube pan, alternating the yellow and chocolate batters (two layers of each, beginning with the vanilla batter and ending with the chocolate batter), then run a knife through the batter to marble it. Bake for about 45 to 50 minutes. Start checking the cake after about 35 minutes; the cake should be a little soft in the middle, just barely bouncing back when touched. Remove from oven and let cool 30 minutes. Unmold onto a platter.
- Step 6
To make the icing: Melt the 2 ounces chocolate as described above. In a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, combine the cream cheese and sugar and beat until fluffy, about 2 to 3 minutes. Continue beating and add melted chocolate. If the mixture is too stiff, thin with milk, a tablespoon at a time, to bring it to a spreadable consistency. Spread the icing on the top and sides of the cooled cake.
Private Notes
Comments
Very moist and light cake! Reduced sugar to 300 g (1,5 cups) and it was perfect. I couldn't find unsweetened chocolate, so I used 50 g Valrhona Caraïbe (66%) and no additional sugar in the dark cake portion.
The batter is thinner than most marble cakes, so make sure to swirl VERY lightly, otherwise you'll end up with an all-chocolate cake.
Surprisingly a Bundt pan worked fine for this recipe. To convert my all purpose flour to a facsimile of cake flour I removed 5 T flour replacing them with 5 T of corn starch and the cake turned out light and delicious.
The 4th ingredient is not listed...Measurements are? Can this be corrected? Thanks!
After finding out we were to have impromptu house guests, I had to make a desert quick! This cake was excellent, and I only made the followings subs bc I had no time to plan ahead. No cake flour, so I used King Arthur's 105g all p + 14 g cornstarch per cup cake flour. No unsweetened chocolate, so I just skipped the 2 Tbs sugar and only added the baking soda to melted 72% chocolate I had on hand. No cream cheese, so I whipped up a quick ganache and spread it all over. Excellent cake!
Cooked as shown and it was very good. I did make it into two 9 inch cakes instead of a tube pan because my husband wanted it that way. Just adjusted the cooking time to 28 minutes and it turned out moist and yummy. Milk is a must with this one.
I'm deleting this from my saved recipes. The cake was dense and the chocolate not as chocolatey as I like. The frosting was too much like milk chocolate and wasn't very attractive. I've been using NYT recipes for a few years and this is the first one that I would consider a dud.
Advertisement