Chocolate Triple Layer Cake with Fluffy Chocolate Frosting
Submitted by 1rapthyme
Triple layer chocolate cake with cocoa, unsweetened chocolate, and coffee in the batter, topped with a fluffy Italian meringue chocolate frosting. Lower in fat than classic recipes thanks to yogurt and egg whites.
YIELD
12 servingsPREP
45 minCOOK
25 minREADY
180 minThis three-layer chocolate cake gets its depth from a triple hit of chocolate: unsweetened baking chocolate, cocoa powder, and brewed coffee that amplifies every cocoa note without tasting like coffee. Nonfat yogurt replaces most of the butter, keeping the layers moist and tender with less fat than a traditional recipe.
The frosting is an Italian meringue base. You boil a sugar syrup to firm-ball stage, stream it into whipped egg whites, then fold in melted chocolate, cocoa, and instant coffee. The result is billowy, glossy, and deeply chocolatey without the heaviness of buttercream.
This is a project cake, not a weeknight bake. Block out an afternoon and enjoy the process.
Pro Tips
- Melt chocolate on the lowest heat possible. Unsweetened chocolate scorches in seconds. Stir constantly and pull it off the burner the moment it’s smooth.
- Fold the dry ingredients in by hand. A mixer at this stage overdevelops the gluten. A rubber spatula and a gentle touch keep the crumb soft.
- Use a candy thermometer for the frosting. The syrup needs to hit 244-245°F (118°C). Too low and the meringue won’t hold. Too high and the sugar hardens into threads.
- Pour the hot syrup down the bowl’s side, not onto the beaters. Syrup that hits the whisk splatters and hardens on the bowl walls instead of incorporating.
- Frost immediately once the meringue is ready. It begins to set as it cools and becomes harder to spread.
Variations
- Mocha layer cake: Increase the coffee in both the batter and frosting for a stronger coffee-chocolate combination.
- Raspberry filled: Spread seedless raspberry jam between the layers before frosting for a fruity contrast.
- Simple buttercream swap: If Italian meringue feels intimidating, frost with a basic chocolate buttercream instead.
Ingredients
Directions
Preheat oven to 350℉ (180℃).
Grease (or spray with non-stick cooking spray) three 8 inch or 8½ inch round cake pans.
In a small, heavy saucepan over lowest heat, melt chocolate, stirring constantly until smooth; be careful not to scorch.
Set aside.
Sift together flour, cocoa powder, baking powder, baking soda and salt onto a sheet of wax paper.
In a large mixer bowl, with mixer set on medium speed, beat oil, butter and sugar until very well blended and fluffy.
Beat in chocolate.
One at a time, beat in egg, then whites, coffee and vanilla until smoothly incorporated.
Gently stir half of the dry ingredients, then yogurt into the mixture just until mixed.
Stir in remaining dry ingredients just until well blended and smooth.
Divide batter among pans, spreading in edges.
Bake in the middle of the oven for 23 to 28 minutes, or until tops are almost firm when tapped and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out moist but clean.
Transfer pans to racks and let stand until completely cooled.
Layers may be wrapped airtight and frozen for later use.
Let return to room temperature before using.
Or frost cake and serve immediately, if desired.
FLUFFY CHOCOLATE FROSTING: Place egg whites in a large mixer bowl.
Set the bowl in a large bowl of very hot tap water and let stand for 10 minutes, stirring occasionally.
In a small heavy saucepan set over low heat, melt chocolate, stirring constantly, until smooth; be very careful not to scorch.
Set aside to cool slightly.
Combine the corn syrup, ¼ cup water and the sugar in a 2- quarter saucepan, stirring until well blended.
Bring to a simmer over medium-heat heat.
Cover and boil for 2 minutes to allow steam to wash any sugar from pan sides.
Uncover and continue simmering, without stirring, until mixture bubbles loudly and reaches 244 to 245 F on a candy thermometer (about 8½ minutes).
(To test without a candy thermometer, drop a teaspoon of syrup into ice water; when cooked to the proper temperature the syrup will form a firm ball that holds its shape when squeezed).
Immedately remove pan from heat and set aside.
With mixer set on medium speed, beat egg whites until very frothy and opaque.
Raise speed to high and beat until whites just begin to stand in soft peaks; be careful not to overbeat.
Meanwhile, return syrup to burner and reheat just to boiling.
Beating whites on high speed, immediately begin pouring boiling syrup in a stream down the side of the bowl (avoid beaters or syrup will stick to them or be thrown onto bowl side), pouring rapidly enough that all the syrup is incorporated in about 15 seconds.
Add salt and continue beating on high speed untl mixture is stiffened, glossy and cooled to barely warm. Beat in vanilla and coffee mixture until evenly incorporated.
Sift powdered sugar and cocoa onto a sheet of waz paper.
A little at a time, whisk it into the egg-white mixture. Whisk in melted chocolate just until smoothly incorporated.
Frost cake immediately, or store frosting air-tight up to 48 hours.
Frosting may soften and gradually deflate upon longer standing.
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