I’ve
never baked (or indeed seen, or eaten) a chocolate carrot cake before. It
seemed the perfect cake given the increasingly autumnal feel in the air – soft
sponge with chocolate and spice; it would be a good Bonfire Night cake
too. Funny how we associate flavours with seasons/events.
Being
a carrot cake this is a very light sponge. The brown sugar adds a caramel
sweetness which always works well with spice. The cocoa adds a
chocolately depth. The sultanas are entirely optional but, in my world,
always make everything better so I added some! I ‘ummed and aaaaahed’
over whether to make this as a single sponge or to make as a sandwich style
cake. In truth, I think it would work as either, but I was in the mood
for a little cream cheese frosting so whipped up an orange one to compliment
the zest in the cake.
I
like it when bakes evolve like this, with a series of little decisions being
made along the way to create the finished item. This was a very popular
cake and something a little bit different which, 8 years into my blog, feels
increasingly difficult to achieve!
The flavours of this cake work well together but all remain identifiable because they hit your palate at different times. The initial hit is the chocolate sweetness; this is cleaned away by the sharp cream cheese frosting and you are left with a fruit orange spice flavour. It comes in three distinct waves. Once I spotted this I took my time over each mouthful (unlike me) and ticked the stages of flavour off each time...this is how I entertain myself!
Mr CC was very sceptical about this cake initially. When I said to him I was making a chocolate orange carrot cake he gave me a look which I can only describe as a ‘what you talking bout Willis?’ look (a reference that you will need to be a certain age to get!) but, when he tasted it, he really liked it!
Ingredients
For
the sponge:
280g soft light brown sugar
200g self raising flour
80g cocoa powder
½ teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
1 teaspoon mixed spice
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
Optional: 50g sultanas
zest of 1 orange (save the rest of the orange for the buttercream)
4 eggs
200ml sunflower oil – or any flavourless oil, I used light olive oil suitable for baking
100ml milk
200g carrots, grated – this equates to approx 3 medium carrots
200g self raising flour
80g cocoa powder
½ teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
1 teaspoon mixed spice
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
Optional: 50g sultanas
zest of 1 orange (save the rest of the orange for the buttercream)
4 eggs
200ml sunflower oil – or any flavourless oil, I used light olive oil suitable for baking
100ml milk
200g carrots, grated – this equates to approx 3 medium carrots
For
the buttercream:
350g cream cheese – I used Philadelphia
50g unsalted butter, at room temperature
160g icing sugar
1 -2 tablespoons orange juice
350g cream cheese – I used Philadelphia
50g unsalted butter, at room temperature
160g icing sugar
1 -2 tablespoons orange juice
To
decorate: chocolate sprinkles
Method
Preheat
the oven to 180C/fan oven 160C/350F/gas mark 4.
Line
two 20cm loose bottomed round sandwich tins with baking paper.
Place
all the dry ingredients in a bowl and mix together e.g. light brown sugar, self
raising flour, cocoa, bicarb, mixed spice, cinnamon and – if using - sultanas.
Place
all the wet ingredients in a large jug e.g. orange zest, eggs, oil, milk and
carrots and beat together.
Pour
the wet ingredients into the dry and mix together.
Divide
equally between the cake pans.
Bake
for approximately 40 minutes (start checking after 30 minutes) or until a
skewer inserted into the cake comes out clean.
Leave
to cool in the tins, on a wire rack, for about 30 minutes before turning out
and leaving to cool completely.
Now
make the filling: Beat the cream cheese and butter until soft, light and
whippy.
Add
the icing sugar and beat well.
Add
the orange juice – start with just one tablespoon – and beat until you have a
light, spreadable buttercream. Add more orange juice if required.
Place
one sponge on the serving plate and spread about 1/3 of the buttercream over
the top.
Place
the remaining sponge on top.
Cover
the top and sides with the frosting.
Cover
the top with chocolate sprinkles.
Refrigerate
until about 20 minutes before serving.
Serve
in generous slices with a cup of tea.
Bask
in the glory of the wonderful thing you have created.
Eat.
I love the smooth and light crumb of your chocolate cake and I always have a weakness for cream cheese frosting. A perfect combo for a chocolate treat.
ReplyDeleteI've not had a chocolate carrot cake either and it sounds delicious.Definitely bookmarking to try!
ReplyDeleteWow this is impressive. And I love your description of the different flavours hitting the palette at different times. Sounds lovely.
ReplyDeleteGosh that's terrible, how come I've never made a chocolate carrot cake before? I just had to go and check and I was right. I've made mini carrot cakes with chocolate chips, but that is not at all the same thing. You beat me to it CC ;)
ReplyDeleteYum, Jaffa carrot cake sounds devine to me.
ReplyDeleteI too have never come across a chocolate carrot cake before but that's the great thing about blogging we learn new things everyday!
ReplyDeleteHow unusual; it looks and sounds delicious.
ReplyDeleteI would never have thought of a chocolate carrot cake it doesn't sound like something that would mix. But saying that I tried a chocolate cinnamon cake once and found it to be amazing after I thought it could be iffy. Carrot cakes generally have cinnamon so I can see where this cake is going!
ReplyDeleteIt is funny how we associate smells and flavors with different seasons and holidays!
The cake looks amazing, I would dig in right now! And chocolate flavour in a carrot moist sponge… plus cream cheese frosting! I don't think it can get better. It goes straight to my to-do list!
ReplyDeleteGreat combo! New one on me, but sounds like it is delicious! Would happily devour a few slices if it came my way x
ReplyDeleteCarrot cake, spices and cream cheese frosting all seem to be big at this time of year.... I wonder how many of us would make the same cake in June?
Looks and sounds amazing!
ReplyDeleteI would never have thought of combining those flavours CC - but they do sound rather good together!
ReplyDeleteThat's a great cake and I love a cake with good texture too. This cake has a great combination of really yummy ingredients.
ReplyDeleteRowena
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