Thursday, January 03, 2008

life is better with cake & beer: red ale & chocolate cake


When I first spotted Nigella's recipe for Guinness cake I was excited. Surely this would be the cake to rival all cakes. But I kept putting it aside since I'm an IPA drinker and my husband will drink whatever is cheap (ie. pils). We just never have Guinness in the house. But then after a Boxing Day gathering, someone left a Chocolate Stout in our fridge. It was then I decided that I'd give that Nigella recipe a whirl as Cornelius' birthday cake. But then, that stout was taken to a friend's house for New Years and it was out of our life for good. So when yesterday rolled around, the illustrious day of my husband's birth, all I had in my fridge was some deep red Maple Cream Ale from a local brewer. Maple Cream had to do and I whipped up the cake lickety-split!

This recipe makes a lovely cake because it's tasty and it's one of those one-pot wonders. Dump everything into a pot and it turns out awesome. Yes, the cake is super delicious, uber-moist (I think Nigella sighs over the word "damp") and looked so frothy topped with a sturdy cream cheese-whipped cream head.

I've never really followed a Nigella Lawson recipe too closely. I've made her eggplant Involtini and a couple salad recipes, but I've never tackled a baking recipe. All of those grams and millilitres frighten even my metric ass! But I did purchase a kitchen scale last summer and decided to put it to use yesterday. Measuring out the ingredients was very satisfying and made me feel like the pro I'm not. The only thing that was a bit vague in her recipe was her directions for frosting. I don't think she mentions to whip the cream, but I did. I wanted to be sure that the frosting that topped this showpiece would stand proud and after a stiff beating, it did. I had achieved frosting perfection.


Some modifications, of course. Besides the beer switcheroo, I used yogurt instead of sour cream. I also didn't use the measurements for the frosting listed below. I used what I had....a 250 g tub of cream cheese, half of a large container of heavy cream and enough sugar to make it sweet but not too sweet. I also threw in some vanilla just to add a bit more flavour. For the cake pan, Nigella doesn't specify what size, but I used 1 kind of small and 1 medium sized spring form pan. They filled up nicely and having 2 different sizes is great because, Cornelius and I can share the small one and the larger one can be transported to a friend's house for a celebration there! 2 cakes for the price of 1!


red ale & chocolate cake
250 ml maple cream ale (or Guinness or another stout or deep coloured ale)
250 g unsalted butter, cut into cubes
75 g cocoa
400 g white sugar
142 ml yogurt
2 eggs
1 T vanilla extract
275 g flour
2 1/2 t baking soda

Frosting:
300 g cream cheese
150 g icing sugar
1 t vanilla
125 ml heavy cream

1. In a large pot, melt the butter in the beer. When it's all good and melted, add in the sugar and sift in the cocoa. Remove from head and let cool for a couple of minutes. In a small bowl, mix together the yogurt and eggs and vanilla and then dump into beer pot. Mix. Add in flour and baking soda, whisking well until combined.

2. Butter and flour a round spring form pan and pour in batter. Place in a preheated 350 degree oven for about 40 minutes or so. The size of pan you use will determine the baking time. Let cake cool for a bit before removing the spring form pan. Cool completely on a wire rack.

3. Combine cream cheese, vanilla, and icing sugar in one bowl. In a separate bowl, whip cream until stiff. Gently add the whipped cream to the cream cheese mixture and whip lightly until combined. Gob on frosting to the top of the cake. It should look like beer head so don't get fancy. Stick a candle in it, raise a glass and sing a song!

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48 Comments:

Blogger Claire said...

Oh hell yes. This looks awesome. I must make this. Thanks for sharing!

3:49 PM  
Anonymous Joanne said...

Come to mama! That cake looks so awesome...and yes I do not like beer at all, but in a cake well, that's a different story. The frosting looks amazing too. What did the cake taste like? Was it chocolaty? was it yeasty tasting like beer?

5:43 PM  
Anonymous Laural said...

This looks so exciting! I too am curious about what it tastes like. Does the beer just add moistness, or also flavour?

7:08 PM  
Blogger hag said...

I have had Guiness cupcakes, with guiness icing...and they were great! I bet this tastes great too...looks very impressive. YUM!

7:30 PM  
Blogger Gretchen Noelle said...

This sounds rather good. I am trying this the next time I need a chocolate cake fix.

8:18 PM  
Blogger Sara said...

I am a huge Nigella fan. Your cake looks perfect, totally perfect!

9:27 PM  
Blogger Katie said...

Your cake looks wonderfuly, very moist and fluffy. I have been put off trying this recipe as I'm not a fan of Guiness but I might try it now.

11:02 PM  
Blogger eatme_delicious said...

I took one of Nigella's books out of the library a while ago but got scared by the measurements she used. I will be getting a kitchen scale soon though so I too can feel like a pro! The frosting on that cake looks perfect. I must save this recipe.

11:06 PM  
Anonymous Jen said...

Looks fabulous! Curious to know if it tastes more like Guinness or chocolate - or maybe a bit of both?

2:27 AM  
Blogger lobstersquad said...

Nigella is simply the best, I´m sorry to be so bessoted but it´s just true. And I´m terrified of ounces and sticks of butter, too, so that helps.
Happy birthday to Cornelius.

2:28 AM  
OpenID kennymah said...

Love the deep red colour of the cake. Cornelius must have had a really happy birthday! :)

Happy 2008!!

3:08 AM  
Blogger Fiber said...

Mmmmm.....Guiness cake. I had it for the first time in Cleveland and it was absolutely FANTASTIC! This looks awesome.

4:26 AM  
Blogger Rachael M. said...

Now see...I think my husband would LOVE this cake, but OH NOES! We Americans don't know metric!!!

Someone be kind enough to point me in the direction of a fine conversion chart, please...

6:49 AM  
Blogger kickpleat said...

claire, it's true: beer cake = awesome

joanne, there is a slight tang to the cake, but it's not necessarily beer-y. it's just super delicious!

laural, the beer certainly adds moistness but the flavour isn't overwhelming. there is a slight delicious tang.

hag, this is a great cake! we took it over to friends and they couldn't get enough!! it was a hit.

gretchen, give this a try, it's amazing.

thanks sara, i think so too!

katie, i think even if you're not a guinness fan, you'll like this cake. plus you can sub in another good strong flavourful beer in it's place.

eat me, the scale is essential! you'll be feeling like a pro in no time :)

jen, definitely tastes more like chocolate!

lobstersquad, ounces and sticks of butter freak me out too!

thanks kennymah!

fibre, this is truely a fantastic, simple cake. perfection!

rachel, the link to the original recipe isn't so original. it's translated by the NY Times so that it's all in cups, so no conversion charts required!

7:12 AM  
Blogger Clumsy Cook said...

Your cake looks gorgeous! I'll have to try this one since I love cooking with beer and Guiness is always somewhere around my fridge, as it's the only beer that my bf Jim likes (I'm a fellow IPA fan though)

Cheers!

8:20 AM  
Blogger Cookie baker Lynn said...

This looks delicious! Good thing I'm not there or that frosting would have finger tracks all over it. I love your approach to baking - make it work for you with what you've got.

11:46 AM  
Blogger Veg*Triathlete said...

Oh my, this looks delicious! Beer + chocolate solves just about anything, no? I may have to add it to my list of recipes to veganize!

I've just discovered your blog recently, and I LOVE it—especially since you sometimes include vegan recipes :-)

-Jen

12:32 PM  
Blogger VeggieGirl said...

the cake turned out fabulously!! Nigella's recipes are quite stunning-looking.

2:07 PM  
Blogger Mallow said...

Looks delicious! I saw another Guiness-chocolate cake recipe (bundt) that I was always curious about. But I might try this one instead!

7:26 AM  
Blogger Lydia said...

Life is better with cake? I need to steal that for my motto...or blog name...or business one day...or something.

1:12 PM  
Anonymous sweetsalty kate said...

Alright, I could not resist: it's in the oven now, made for my son's third birthday party.

On second thought is that weird, for a roomful of toddlers, to make them a beer cake?

Hmmm. Actually it might be just the thing, mellow them out a bit. :) I'll let you know how it goes!

7:01 PM  
Anonymous Joanne said...

FYI - bon appetit magazine - February 2008 issue - get yourself a copy if you don't already have one - LOL - just thought I'd let you know it's full of culinary inspiration AND there's a section on Portland, Oregon eateries, and much more!

9:28 AM  
Blogger Cakespy said...

I have had a cake made with beer and found it beautifully moist and decadent tasting, not "beery". Very good. Yours looks gorgeous.

10:30 AM  
Blogger dynagrrl said...

I've been eyeing this cake in the cookbook for some time, I am definitely going to give it a go!

11:35 AM  
Blogger Rachael M. said...

Thank you for the heads-up on the original recipe. And thank goodness for the excuse to bake it for tomorrow!!! My husband came in while it was baking and said, "Ooo, that smells like brownie!"

Making it had me wondering, though, what this might be like with a cup of strong coffee added instead of the beer...

7:55 PM  
Blogger beth said...

Wow, I've got a great story to accompany this recipe: I asked for Nigella's Feast for christmas. I love Nigella, I love her simple, delicious cooking and I love her writing, and a I love her attitudes about food. Feast looked to be one of her best. I mean, the thing has a whole SECTION on chocolate cakes. How can you go wrong?
Unfortunately I did not receive it. As you could imagine, I was pretty disappointed (although I did get the French Laundry cookbook to console myself with).
Then, during my scavenging of the local thrift stores while visiting my boy's hometown, I looked up on a shelf, and sitting there was a pristine, hardcover edition of Feast. For five dollars. Score!
Needless to say, I was pleased.
I was also particularly intrigued by the idea of a beer cake during my first read through. Chocolate stout would be amazing, but I love Guinness, so I think I'll have to try out the original recipe.

8:13 AM  
Blogger Aimée said...

This looks like one chocolate cake that is not overrated. Fantastic! Happy birthday to your hubby!

11:47 AM  
Blogger Dawna said...

I've been keen to try this particular cake - and now even more so! It's nice to know it responds well to recipe-manipulation!

8:11 PM  
Blogger kickpleat said...

Clumsy Cook, I'm sure with Guinness, this would be very fab!

Cookie baker Lynn, you can hide the finger tracks!!!

Veg*Triathlete, this shouldn't be too difficult to veganize at all! Good luck!

It did, VeggieGirl. I'm pretty impressed with the turnout myself!

Mallow, ooh, a bunt version...I'm curious!

Lydia, I think that is a perfect motto :)

Awesome, sweetsalty kate!! How was the cake??? I'm sure it made a great cake for your 3 year old...you should make it again when he's older and I'm sure he'd appreciate it more! ha.

oooh, thanks for the tip, Joanne! I'll grab it at the library!

Cakespy, beer + cake...who knew!

Give it a try, dynagrrl, you'll love it I'm sure!

Rachael M., I think coffee would be a fine substitute...better yet, a coffee stout!

beth, great story! Finding a great thrift score is the best! Hooray.

Aimée, I know what you mean about chocolate cakes being overrated...this one certainly is not!

I think this is quite flexible recipe, Dawna!

10:56 PM  
Anonymous joey said...

I don't drink beer often, but when I do I like dark ones :) This cake sounds heavenly...must try! Thanks for sharing this...your's looks lovely with its white frosting standing high!

1:16 AM  
Blogger Rachael M. said...

This cake was a HUGE success! The cake is so rich and dense and moist and the icing is lovely and sweet without being sickeningly sweet...everyone raved over how well the hint of Guiness flavor complemented the chocolate.

Even my 3-year-old nephew said, "Thank you very much for the cake. It was delicious."

:-D

7:29 AM  
Blogger jenn said...

The cake looks fantastic! Bet it tastes fantastic too!!! Tell him happy birthday!!!

2:42 PM  
Blogger Brilynn said...

That cake looks huge!

I've also bookmarked guiness cakes to make in the past but still haven't gotten around to it...

4:44 PM  
Anonymous Aria said...

I made this yesterday. It is FABULOUS!!! Thanks for the cooking inspiration which I am always desperately in need of.

8:42 PM  
Blogger kickpleat said...

thanks joey, the frosting is pretty much perfect -- i'm amazed that it stood so tall!

rachael m, glad the cake was a hit!

thanks jenn!

brilynn, the cake pictured is actually the small cake! i made a larger version with the rest of the batter.

aria, glad you made the cake!

8:53 PM  
Blogger Grace said...

I came across this recipe and couldn't help but to try it out. Had a couple of friends over for some Guinness and cake, not an incredibly common combination in my kitchen, but perhaps one I'll come back to now.

6:09 PM  
Blogger Sharona May said...

Your cake looks fabulous. I love a good cream cheese icing.

MMMMM.

Thanks,
Sharona May
http://birdfood-sharona.blogspot.com/

10:39 AM  
Blogger Cooper said...

I love Guinness and I love Nigella - why had I not seen this before???? Thanx for posting...

7:43 AM  
Blogger Deborah Dowd said...

This sounds so delicious, and if it is as moist and rich as it looks... so much for the post-holiday diet!

5:37 PM  
Anonymous jules said...

I baked this cake this weekend. It is delicious. Everyone at the office loves it. The frosting is amazing, much better than other cream cheese frostings I have tried!

11:33 AM  
Blogger kickpleat said...

grace, glad you gave it a go! it's a pretty amazing cake.

sharona may, this cream cheese icing is the bomb. seriously! give it a try :)

thanks cooper! nigella and beer, a great combo, for sure!

yeah, you can forget that diet, deborah!!

jules, glad it worked out for you! mmm, that icing is amazing!

1:20 PM  
Anonymous jesika said...

im so psyched about this! my friends bday is next month and he is an irish boy who LOVES guiness. i am going to make this for him!!

3:40 AM  
Blogger susankellogg said...

Your cake looks so marvelous! Yummy-yummy. I wish I could make cakes!

5:49 AM  
Blogger Meghan said...

this looks awesome! i just want to bite a big piece out of it!

6:44 AM  
Blogger marcie c said...

this looks fanfriggintastic! can you make this in cupcake form?

5:48 PM  
Blogger kickpleat said...

jesika, your friend will love this cake!

susan, this recipe is pretty foolpoof...really!

thanks meghan!

marcie, i don't see why not. just make sure to reduce the baking time.

6:11 PM  
Blogger eggs mcgeez said...

This looks soooo good. I just came across your blog today (lucky me) and I am dying to try this recipe out with some Oregon porter.

Thank you so much for sharing!

3:09 PM  
Blogger Karen said...

I made this cake for a dinner party last night. This is my absolute favorite chocolate cake EVER. Damp is absolutely right. It is amazingly delicious. I also loved the frosting but I learned it's better not to explain to the french that secret ingredient of cream cheese, they are all for cheese just not in frosting. It didn't matter though they still loved it and I can't wait for another reason to make this cake again! Thanks so much!

2:47 AM  

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