A true southern chocolate pound cake recipe that’s moist and fudgy and packed with rich chocolate flavor.
JUMP TO RECIPEOf all the recipes I’ve created over the years, I think my original pound cake is one that I’m most proud of. It took me years and a ton of “not quite right” cakes to perfect it but I finally got there.
I’m not a baker by nature. I prefer savory recipes that I can tinker with and tweak as I go (baking requires science and stuff) but since I’d figured out the original pound cake, I wanted to create the perfect chocolate pound cake.
Because I love chocolate but also because, in all my life, I’ve never run across a chocolate pound cake I liked.
They’re usually low on chocolate flavor and too pale in color – like the cake isn’t totally committed to being chocolate. And most chocolate pound cakes are dry and almost chalky. Or they’re not pound cake at all, just regular chocolate cake someone baked in a loaf pan and called it a pound cake.
So I put on my baking hat this summer and decided to go to work on this unicorn and create the impossible: a rich and moist, actually chocolatey chocolate pound cake.
I won’t take you through every failed recipe attempt, but I will tell you some of the key things I learned (some of which I’d already figured out when making the original pound cake which was the recipe I started with to craft this one).
You can’t just add cocoa powder and call it a day. If you add enough to get the flavor you need, the cake will be way too dry (and decreasing flour isn’t the answer because cocoa powder serves no structural purpose in baking). Others have already figured this out which is why there are so many pale colored, bland chocolate pound cakes out there; they just used less cocoa powder so the cake wouldn’t dry out as much.
I had no interest in melting actual chocolate so I had to figure this cocoa thing out. I remembered Mama’s chocolate sheet cake, which is so super chocolatey and moist and that there’s a step to boil the cocoa powder with liquid.
Several articles and cookbooks later I learned about blooming cocoa. Blooming "opens up" the cocoa powder. Cocoa powder contains ground endosperm of the cocoa bean, many particles of which are still enclosed in pieces of membrane and seed coat which act like a barrier between the cocoa solids and our taste buds. Boiling liquid releases the cocoa and enhances the flavor by almost double.
I decided to bloom the cocoa in hot black coffee since the two flavors compliment each other so well and because it would help get that rich color I was after.
I played around with measurements and liquids (and even one version with sour cream which doesn’t work because unsweetened cocoa powder plus black coffee plus sour cream is just too much bitter and sour even for 3 cups of sugar). I added an extra egg to make up for the richness lost between the original recipe’s buttermilk and this one’s black coffee.
I added a bit of brown sugar and a skosh more salt but other than that, the key here was substituting the buttermilk with the blooming liquid.
So, I’m delighted to tell you that my summer of not-so-good chocolate pound cakes lead to this one great recipe… the thing I was starting to believe really didn’t exist and couldn’t be done, the unicorn itself: a moist, tender, chocolate-flavor-packed chocolate pound cake!
NOTES ABOUT MAKING CHOCOLATE POUND CAKE
- When baking chocolate cakes that require the pan(s) to be greased and floured, I use a combo of half flour and half cocoa powder. This prevents any white clumps from blemishing your gorgeous cake and it adds flavor.
- You will not be able to use most bundt pans with this recipe as it makes a LOT of batter. You will need to use a 10-12 inch tube pan. You could also divide the batter between two pans.
- I prefer Hershey’s Special Dark cocoa powder in this recipe for the darker color and deeper flavor but regular Dutch-processed cocoa powder is totally fine.
- You don’t have to use coffee if you absolutely hate it but I promise the cake will not taste like coffee. Substitute boiling water for coffee if needed (boo).
- Pound cakes are done when the internal temperature reaches 205-210 degrees. Because pound cakes are so easy to over-cook, I use an instant-read thermometer to check mine (they’re under twenty bucks and worth every penny) but the toothpick test works too.
- Darker pans cook much more quickly than lighter metal pans (especially aluminum) so the time needed to bake the cake will vary. With my dark, non-stick pan this cake takes 62-65 minutes to cook.
- It will be HARD to do but the cake will taste better and be moister if you wait until the following day to cut into it. Strength to you, friend.
Recipe for Chocolate Pound Cake
Chocolate Pound Cake
Ingredients
- 1 1/4 cups (10-oz) hot black coffee
- 3/4 cup cocoa powder
- 1 cup (2 sticks) real, salted butter
- 1/2 cup shortening
- 3 cups sugar
- 6 large eggs
- 1 tablespoon vanilla extract
- 1/4 cup brown sugar
- 3 cups all-purpose flour
- 2 teaspoons baking powder
- 1 1/2 teaspoons salt
Instructions
- Read all recipe notes before starting recipe.
- Bring butter and eggs to room temperature. Grease and flour a 10-12 inch tube pan (not bundt pan). Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
- Whisk cocoa powder with hot coffee in a medium-sized bowl until smooth. Set aside to cool a bit.
- In a large bowl or stand mixer beat butter and shortening at medium speed for 1 minute. Gradually add sugar, beating at medium speed until light, fluffy and very pale yellow in color (about 5 minutes).
- Add eggs, one at a time, mixing until just combined after each.
- Whisk brown sugar and vanilla extract into the cocoa/coffee mixture until smooth.
- Sift together flour, baking powder and salt in a separate bowl. Gradually add flour mixture and cocoa mixture to creamed butter/sugar, alternating each, beginning and ending with flour mixture, mixing at low speed until combined.
- Pour batter into prepared pan then bake at 350 degrees for 60-75 minutes or until done. Cool in pan, then plate top-side up. Store at room temperature in an airtight container.
Notes
- When baking chocolate cakes that require the pan(s) to be greased and floured, I use a combo of half flour and half cocoa powder. This prevents any white clumps from blemishing your gorgeous cake and it adds flavor.
- "Creaming" is a very important step in most cakes, especially pound cakes, so take care to follow the instructions in Step 4 carefully.
- I prefer Hershey’s Special Dark cocoa powder in this recipe for the darker color and deeper flavor but regular Dutch-processed cocoa powder is totally fine.
- You don’t have to use coffee if you absolutely hate it but I promise the cake will not taste like coffee. We need to bloom the cocoa powder (see article above) in hot liquid so coffee is perfect since it accents the taste of chocolate so beautifully, it gives the cake a richer chocolate color and, well, it’s piping hot! Substitute boiling water for coffee if needed (boo).
- Pound cakes are done when the internal temperature reaches 205-210 degrees. Because pound cakes are so easy to over-cook, I use an instant-read thermometer to check mine (they’re under twenty bucks and worth every penny) but the toothpick test works too.
- Darker pans cook much more quickly than lighter metal pans (especially aluminum) so the time needed to bake the cake can vary. With my dark, non-stick pan this cake takes 62-65 minutes to cook.
- This makes a lot of batter so you will not be able to use most bundt pans. You will need a large tube pan. See notes in my traditional pound cake recipe for more info.
This looks DIVINE. I am 100% making this over the weekend. Do you think adding a drizzle of something over the top would be too much? Like a ganach or a glaze?
ReplyDeleteThere's no such thing as too much chocolate! I would have considered doing the same thing but I wanted y'all to see what it looks like without.
DeleteLordy... this is the be all and end all of chocolate pound cakes! Ganache is my choice for a glaze. If you are going to hell, make it a sweet ride. LOL.
ReplyDeleteI just took this out of the oven and if it takes as good as the batter off the beaters did, then it's going to be divine! It also smells wonderful-I'll let you know!
ReplyDeleteIs the brown sugar packed?
ReplyDeleteYep!
DeleteDo you use light or dark brown sugar?
DeleteServed this with powdered sugar - divine!
ReplyDelete7am waiting on little one 5yrs old wake up And we going make this on this rainy day in GA.
ReplyDeleteIt looks like you made magic here! I love how deep the chocolate color is!!!
ReplyDeleteYou are a God send!!! I have been looking for a recipe that speaks to my heart!!! I wonder could you put chocolate chunks in it?
ReplyDeleteProbably, though I don't know how much they'll sink in the batter before the cake cooks enough to support them. If you try it, let us know!
DeleteMade this tonight. Didn't think about that I was using a bundt pan...a 9.75 inch one at that. So I expected overflow. And I got it. But I was also noticing some falling in the middle. Any thoughts on that? Anyone with thoughts? It doesn't have to be just Mandy with input. I do have a tube pan or at least I did at one point. I may try again with a tube pan.
ReplyDeleteIt either sunk because of the overflow or because it cooked too fast in the smaller pan. Likely the overflow. Think of it like building a house... if the walls aren't holding, the roof will fall.
DeleteYes! The shortening just helps it rise a little higher, hold its shape and makes the cake a little more tender.
ReplyDeleteCan I substitute Amaretto for the coffee?
ReplyDeleteThis cake is excellent! I followed the recipe closely, used Hershey's Special Dark cocoa, the mix of butter and shortening etc. I had to sub in 1 cup of organic whole wheat pastry flour for 1 of the cups of white AP flour because I ran out of white flour but with such a dark, dense cake no one could possibly detect it. My son jokes that it makes the cake health food. And you are right - it smells like coffee when it's baking, but no coffee flavor is detectable in the cool cake the next day. I accidentally cooked mine to 220 degrees internal temp, but it is still dense and moist. Thanks for such a good, classic chocolate pound cake.
ReplyDeleteLordy, Lordy, Lordy! This cake is DELICIOUS! I used Nespresso (Starbucks coffee) and all I can say is, WOW!!!!
ReplyDeleteCan you use unsalted butter?
ReplyDeleteCertainly :)
DeleteVery good!
ReplyDeleteThis cake is moist and delicious! The best chocolate pound cake ever!
ReplyDeleteCake looks delicious but we are diabetics. Three cups of sugar won't work for us.
ReplyDeletehas anyone used splenda instead of the sugar?
DeleteSo, I wanted to find a good recipe to make a chocolate pound cake. I usually make lemon or plain from my moms recipes but didn’t have a good chocolate one so when I found yours and read the reviews I decided to give it a whirl. First off I sat out all my ingredients a couple hours ahead to come to room temp like I always do. I realized then I was out of brown sugar! Google search told me I could sub regular sugar/molasses mixture at a 2:1 ratio so decided to try that. I got the cake mixed and thought it looked a little thick when I saw the 6 eggs still sitting on the counter! So, I added those, one at a time, then started pouring the batter into my greased and cocoa/floured tube pan and I realized my new mixer wasn’t adjusted properly and hadn’t quite reached all the ingredients! So I mixed them by hand and poured in the bowl and hoped for the best. I just took it out of the oven and it looks and smells wonderful! I’ll try my best to wait to cut it tomorrow but not sure if I can convince hubby. I’ll let you know how it turned out!
ReplyDeleteI set my timer for 55 minutes but could tell by the smell it was done before my timer went off. Mine was a little burnt in some areas on the top. Has anyone else had that problem? I cut away the burnt parts and will flip it over. It was 216 degrees when it came out of the oven.
ReplyDeleteOh, that's strange. Hmmmm.... It sounds like the oven was too hot somehow. If you make it again, I'd set the oven to 325. I hate that happened to you!
DeleteI thought pound cakes start in a cold oven
ReplyDeleteI think some folks do that but I've never tried it.
DeleteThis cake looks AMAZINGLY delicious. It is called a pound cake. When i think of pound cake. I think of loaf pan.But made in a tube pan. My question is. Because of the amount of batter. Can this be made in 2 loaf pans? I don't have a tube pan unfortunately. TIA.
DeleteI imagine this would do great in two loaf pans but I'm not sure about cooking time. You'll just have to test it and see. Let us know if you figure out the best baking time so others will know too!
Delete