HELLO HUMANS. Boy, am I excited to share this beauty with
you today.
If you follow me on Instagram (and
if you don’t—well, I’ll wait for you!), you may recall the strange-looking cake I posted few weeks ago with the
caption “Yeah I got some weird hobbies”. And that, I think, summarizes the
motivations behind this creation of mine: the desire to be weird and creative
through the medium of cake.
Basically, I want to be Katherine Sabbath. I mean, those skills, man! *shakes head sadly*
So it was inevitable that someday, I attempted to make a
KS-inspired cake of my own. Because she doesn’t have a blog or publish recipes
(which, TBH, is probably for the best because if she did have a blog we’d all
be out of a job), I went off of the photos and the accompanying descriptions to
design the cake.
Starting with this photo. “Layers of
double chocolate brownie, filled with cookie dough, Turkish delight and peanut
butter fudge. Covered in raspberry rose buttercream and dark chocolate ganache.”
Clearly, “restraint” would have to be banished from my vocabulary if I was
to succeed with this cake.
I toned it down a
little, choosing to make a cake with a brownie base, rose-scented cookie dough stuffing, simple
chocolate ganache, and raspberry rose frosting. I also drew on this photo, making
raspberry chocolate bark for a colorful topping. For additional delicious
toppings—because of course you need more toppings for a true KS cake!—I baked
up some mini cookies (pinched off of the cookie dough filling) and got me some
fresh raspberries.
The result?
Nailed it. |
To be totally honest, my frosting job wasn’t exactly
perfect. Nor did my ganache come out flawlessly smooth—I might have to start using an immersion blender for that. But
overall, I was pretty proud of myself.
Close up of that swirly bark. |
This being my first tiered cake—meaning, having layers of
different sizes—I was a little nervous about the whole stacking thing. Would
the 6-inch cake cause the 8-inch cake to buckle? Would it slide off? Did I need
skewers of some sort to keep them together? How the hell would we even eat the
thing?
I needn’t have worried, because it all came together without
a hitch. Not knowing what the hell I was doing, I just frosted each set of
layers separately, as if it were a separate cake, and placed the smaller one on
top using a couple of spatulas. Nothing disastrous occurred, so I can only
assume that method works.
I wouldn't lie to you, would I? |
And although “nothing disastrous occurred”, I must admit
that this was a very stressful project. Especially since I made in the week
prior to the beginning of school, a very stressful (and tragic, seeing as it is
the end of summer vacation) week already without having to put together a
six-layer cake with seemingly hundreds of components (make that five). But through
the power of Earth Balance and chocolate, June prevailed, miraculously. Woo.
I have but one regret to confess about this—I did not taste
a bite of this cake. Nay, as it was for someone from my mother’s church, through
an auction, yadda yah I didn’t really care, I was just sad to see this cake go.
But I heard it got rave reviews at the woman’s party. So I’m assuming they were
able to cut it decently well. Without total tragedy / chaos occurring. I did
recommend that they remove the decorations on top before slicing the cake
(which is a little sad to watch from the baker’s perspective, but hey at least I
didn’t have to watch it happen in person).
Besides, I know what all of the components taste like
(through sampling and previous experience, etc.). Surely they were lovely together.
Even if...rosewater, and...cookie dough...don’t exactly sound like
the perfect pairing.
Flavor compatibility isn't exactly the top priority here. |
So that’s all, folks. Here is the recipe for that huge, gauche,
ridiculous, undeniably mega cake you
see in those lovely photos.
__________
Brownie mega cake with raspberry, rosewater, and cookie dough
Ingredients
Brownie
cake
3 6-inch brownie layers
3 8-inch brownie layers
Cookie
dough filling
336 grams • vegan butter, room
temperature • 1 1/2 cups
150 grams • granulated sugar •
3/4 cup
330 grams • light brown sugar •
1 1/2 cups
90 grams • nondairy milk •
1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons
2 grams • rosewater • 1/2
teaspoon
510 grams • all-purpose flour •
3 3/4 cups
9 grams • salt • 1 1/2
teaspoons
3 grams • baking soda •
3/4 teaspoon
7 grams • freeze-dried
raspberries, ground into a powder • 1/4 cup
240 grams • chocolate chips •
1 1/2 cups
Raspberry
rose frosting
336 grams • vegan butter, room
temperature • 1 1/2 cups
540 grams • powdered sugar •
4 1/2 cups
60 grams • nondairy milk •
1/4 cup
7 grams • freeze-dried
raspberries, ground into a powder • 1/4 cup
4 grams • rosewater • 1
teaspoon
Chocolate
rose ganache
224 grams • dark chocolate, finely
chopped • 8 ounces
244 grams • coconut milk,
full-fat • 1 cup
2 grams • kosher salt •
1/2 teaspoon
1 gram • rosewater • 1/4
teaspoon
Raspberry
chocolate bark
142 grams • vegan white chocolate, chopped • 5 ounces
142 grams • semisweet chocolate, chopped • 5 ounces
Handful of freeze-dried raspberries
Directions
First make your brownie layers. You will need 3 batches of
brownie batter; divide evenly between baking pans and bake as directed in the recipe. Let cool completely
before using.
To make cookie dough, start by placing vegan butter,
granulated sugar, and brown sugar in the bowl of an electric stand mixer. Cream
until light and fluffy. Add vanilla and milk and mix to combine. Spoon in
flour, salt, baking soda, and freeze-dried raspberries and mix just until a
dough forms. Fold in chocolate chips.
Divide cookie dough between two 8-inch round baking pans and
two 6-inch round baking pans, reserving some dough to make mini cookies. Press
dough into an even layer. Chill until firm.
To make the mini cookies, preheat oven to 350 degrees F and
line a baking sheet with parchment paper. Roll the extra cookie dough into
marble-sized balls. Bake for 8 to 10 minutes, until the tops are dry and the
edges are golden-brown. Let cool on a wire rack completely.
Make the frosting. Place vegan butter in the bowl of an
electric stand mixer and beat until smooth. With mixer on low speed, spoon in
powdered sugar a little bit at a time. Then slowly pour in milk and mix until
incorporated. Add raspberry powder and rosewater. Increase speed to medium-high
and beat until light and fluffy, about 2 to 3 minutes.
To make the chocolate ganache, place chocolate and salt in a
large bowl. Heat coconut milk in a small saucepan over low heat until steaming.
Pour milk over chocolate and let sit for a minute. Whisk until smooth, about 2
to 3 minutes. Whisk in rosewater.
To make raspberry chocolate bark, simply melt your two
chocolates in separate bowls in the microwave (not at the same time, mind you)
in 20-second bursts, stirring in between. Be sure not to over-heat the chocolate.
Pour the melted chocolates on a greased quarter sheet pan
and swirl together with a butter knife or fork. Sprinkle freeze-dried
raspberries on top to taste. Chill bark until firm, then break into pieces.
Finally, assemble your cake. Remove one 8-inch cookie dough
layer from the baking pan and place on top of one of the brownie layers. Stack
another brownie layer on top. Repeat so you have a three-layer 8-inch cake.
Repeat with the 6-inch brownie and cookie dough layers.
Frost both the 8-inch and 6-inch stacked cakes with
raspberry rose frosting. Carefully stack the 6-inch cake on top of the 8-inch
one and smooth out the frosting if necessary. Drizzle chocolate rose ganache on
top of the cake. For the finishing touches, decorate cake with the mini cookies
you made and raspberry bark, plus fresh raspberries if desired.
____________
Yo, I made dis. |
For more glorious layer cakes,
check out the following posts.
Chocolate hazelnut cake with praline chocolate crunch.
Calling all Nutella lovers.
Maple gingerbread cheesecake-stuffed cake. I have no
idea what I was thinking when I made this cake. Pure ridiculousness
deliciousness.
Momofuku carrot cake. God bless Christina Tosi.
Momofuku apple pie cake. An attempt was made.
Whoa... this is so fancy!! I have never made a tiered cake before, but it looks amazing!
ReplyDeleteThanks Cathleen! It was pretty amazing :)
DeleteLooks great! This surely is mega cake :)
ReplyDeleteThank you Maikki! :D
DeleteHoly smoke! That cake looks out of this world :D Fancypants ;) I bet it was delicious! Love the garnish, so pretty :D x
ReplyDeleteHaha this is totally fancypants, I agree! :)
DeleteI want to marry this cake!
ReplyDeleteLol me too! :D
DeleteOh, my gosh, this is one stunning, impressive cake! Well done, June!!!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much! :)
DeleteHoly Cow, how do you come up with such amazing creations? This sounds and LOOKS heavenly. BEAUTY-FUL!!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much! Glad you like it :)
DeleteWow your cakes are epic. Thankyou for your comment on my blog so glad you did now I found this awesome cake blog.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much Rebecca! :D
DeleteWhat a beautiful cake! I wouldn't have been able to resist taking a giant slice for myself!
ReplyDeleteThank you! Wish I could have got a slice myself :P
DeleteOh my Gosh!!! That looks incredible! I'm in love with the unfinished look of the frosting and the dripping chocolate ganache! Not to mention the crazy topping as well :)
ReplyDeleteThanks Tasbih! Covering it all with chocolate ganache was my favorite part :)
DeleteThis cake is insane, I love it! Brownie is so much better than chocolate cake ANY day, so great idea to use brownie for the layers. Love that you used coconut milk in the ganache too :)
ReplyDeleteYes, brownie cake is truly a treat! Makes a nice sturdy layer cake too :) Thanks Claudia!
DeleteYour cake turned out really well! You should always make extra layers for yourself lol! I'm sure you know this now, but just in case I thought I might make it a bit easier next time; when making a tiered cake you want a cake board (heavy enough to support the weight of the final cake, or it can crack your icing when lifted) as well as dowels (some people use thick straws-just some kind of internal support) between each tier that will have another cake on top, this helps the weight so your cake doesn't collapse. Your tiers were smaller and you used a dense cake/brownie so you were lucky ;) Hope that makes sense, so baseboard, cake layer, BC/filling, cake layer, etc. I put each tier on its own board regardless so I can move them in & out of the fridge easier (these are thin boards that are typically the same size as your cake layers or a bit smaller depending on your preference & these set on your dowels for support). Then I'd ice the cake, add your dowels then repeat for the 6' cake, the cake rounds underneath also help you move your layers easier without messing up your BC. The 6' obviously doesn't need dowels since nothing's going on top of that one besides your yummy toppings ;) hope that makes sense! So awesome, I can't believe that's your first tiered cake!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the tips! I figured I didn't need dowels since the brownie cake is pretty sturdy on its own. Plus in lieu of the cake board I think the platter we got was pretty good--held up to the weight of the cake pretty well, but I'll have to look into getting a cake board specifically next time! It was a lot of fun so I'll definitely be making tiered cakes in the future :) Thank you for the comment!!
Delete