Chocolate Cake recipie
# | Post |
---|---|
1 | Chocolate Cake I had a recipe and seem to have lost it :(( grrrrrrrrr was made with boiling water oil and looked like soup when one poured it into pan use to make a roasting dish size and was so easy and remember thinking first time I made it, it's far too wet and will not work. Did and it was yummy how I have misplaced recipe is beyond me. Must have given main copy to some one :(( Anyone know the one I mean was around as a big thing just over a year ago? Thanks anne1955 - 2013-10-27 20:18:00 |
2 | "I make this once a week makes a small rosat pan size cake 3.5 c flour Put all ingredients (except for the water) in a large bowl mix well to a batter. add boiling water and mix till smooth bake in the over at 160 for 1hr. you can split the mix and make two smaller cakes or make 1 smaller cake and put the rest into muffin tins the choice is completely up to you. this is an excellent cake if you have a large family or just want to impress people. gets moister by the day so stays nice and fresh very simular to mud cake. unknowndisorder - 2013-10-27 20:40:00 |
3 | Almost most sounds like it I'll try it tomorrow Thanks anne1955 - 2013-10-27 20:52:00 |
4 | cookessentials wrote: * Quote melissa411 (223 ) 8:06 pm, Tue 9 Feb #2 :-) Quote BOILED CHOCOLATE CAKE Place sugar, water, butter, cocoa & baking SODA into a saucepan and stir over a low heat until butter has melted Bring to boil and simmer for 5 minutes When cool, mix in beaten eggs & flour sifted with baking POWDER Beat well Turn into greased & lined 20 cm tin & bake at 180*C for one hour Edited to add: Reason for the upper case letters - with both baking powder and baking soda in a recipe it's easy to mix them up. Edited by elliehen at 1:06 pm, Sun 21 Apr Quote Edited by unknowndisorder at 9:02 pm, Sun 27 Oct unknowndisorder - 2013-10-27 21:00:00 |
5 | The above boiled recipe is the only one I make now its so good. Keeps well and makes a ring tin size although I always double it. samsnan - 2013-10-27 21:05:00 |
6 | The member deleted this message. malcovy - 2013-10-29 16:35:00 |
7 | unknowndisorder wrote: anne1955 - 2013-10-29 23:51:00 |
8 | recycling bev00 - 2014-10-30 00:17:00 |
9 | unknowndisorder wrote:
does it freeze well slimgym - 2014-10-30 06:35:00 |
10 | Yes it does freeze well slimgym - I love this recipe :-) mooshiesmum - 2014-10-30 13:09:00 |
11 | This is the chocolate cake recipe that I've been using for the last 10 years. It all goes into one bowl and is very runny but turns out to be a really moist and firm cake. misash - 2014-10-30 23:21:00 |
12 | Hmmm interesting to find these recipes. I had given up trying to make 'regular' chocolate cake as, to my belief, it is really only ever any good when it has chocolate in it; how wrong was I. I really hate that whacky/cockeyed cake. Tough call which one to try first, as they are all similar recipes; I think I will try them all, over time. I just made Mel's secret chocolate cake, (as supplied by cooksessentials) and it is 'muchness of yum'. I made a half recipe, used light muscovado sugar and half ground almonds, in place of flour; being a very wet mixture they floated to the top and made a slight crust. Versatile recipes which could be used as the basis of desserts; would be great in black forest cake, filled with cream (/ice cream?) and/or slathered with ganache. Edited by trigal1 at 1:10 pm, Sun 2 Nov trigal1 - 2014-11-02 13:02:00 |
13 | recycling .. bev00 - 2015-11-01 23:57:00 |
14 | and again .. bev00 - 2016-10-31 23:47:00 |
15 | again bev00 - 2017-11-01 00:59:00 |
16 | anne1955 wrote:
I believe it was called boatboys chocolate cake recipe. Here it is 2 cups Sugar 1 3/4 cups Flour 1 cup Milk Procedure 1. Line a 23cm tin or a 20 x 30cm slice tin. Oven at 180c (I have mine at 160c as fan forced) marcs - 2017-11-01 01:04:00 |
17 | check out www.justamum.co.nz - kay34 - 2017-11-01 21:13:00 |
18 | The above link doesn't work... wheelz - 2017-11-01 23:05:00 |
19 | marcs wrote: nanee2jlp - 2017-11-02 16:50:00 |
20 | Nanee2jlp I have never had issues with this recipe. Hopefully you didn't use a lamington slice tin that doesn't have high sides. My 20 x 30 cm tin is at least 2 inches high. I have made this cake in a normal 23cm tin and even a 20cm tin with very high side and it has not spilt over the sides. A 23 cm tin is smaller than 20 x 30 cm tin. Did you measure your raising agents using teaspoons, used plain flour? There is also baking powder and baking (Bi Carb) soda in this recipe. This cake does rise but it does not over flow if put in a correct tin. I put 1 and half times this recipe in a 24 x 34 cm tin that has 1.5 inch sides and it does come up to the top but does not spill. I make this cake every week at work so not sure what happened with your mix. Cake is beautiful and keeps moist for days and freezes well and I have 15, 16, 17 year olds making this with me and for me every week. Edited by marcs at 12:15 am, Fri 3 Nov marcs - 2017-11-03 00:12:00 |
21 | Here is a video of the same cake. http://allrecipes.com/video/3503/one-bowl-chocolate-cake-iii I must have very high sided tins. Edited by marcs at 1:20 am, Fri 3 Nov marcs - 2017-11-03 01:19:00 |
22 | These sound fantastic. Great excuse to work my way through them all. bella95 - 2017-11-04 22:59:00 |
23 | Marcs - thank you for your response. Yes I did use a lamington tin as the recipe did say a slice tin ( and I use that for all my slices and the measurements are 20x30cm). The recipe did not say a deep sided tin so that was the problem. I will definitely try it again in a deep sided tin as the taste was wonderful and it does keep very moist. No harm done I will try again I just didn't want other bakers making the same mistake as I did. . nanee2jlp - 2017-11-04 23:41:00 |
24 | bump bev00 - 2018-11-02 23:53:00 |
25 | bump bev00 - 2019-11-03 00:04:00 |