Admittedly we're suckers for any kind of bundt. We love the festive shape and the reaction one will normally garner from a crowd. The problem is that all of our recipes are complicated and rely on a mixer and a lot of eggs. What's great about this one is you don't need a mixer and you can basically throw the ingredients together at the last minute and come out with an impressive and delicious cake.
Recently we stumbled on a great blog that inspired us in the realm of home decor, The Marion House Book. So when they posted gorgeous images of a Root Beer Chocolate Bundt cake and claimed that it was quick and delicious, we had to try it out for ourselves.
It was just as quick and delicious as they had claimed. The best part is that because you melt the butter on the stove, you don't have to worry about getting it to room temperature first (and if you cheat the eggs, then you really can decide to make the cake at the last minute). Remembering to take the butter and the eggs out of the fridge ahead of time is one of the most major stumbling blocks we have around making cakes. With this recipe you can assemble and mix all the ingredients quickly and get it right into the oven.
The hardest ingredient to find was the root beer made with sugar and not corn syrup. We ended up using Trader Joe's brand, but you could use anything (we're curious about using cream soda, too). The result of the root beer plus the brown sugar is a cake that is moist, dense and has a richness to its sweetness that is more complex than a regular cake. It doesn't necessarily taste of root beer, but the caramel tones definitely shine through.
For the frosting you could also throw the melted chocolate and the rest of the ingredients into a food processor instead of melting and then cooling it all, but we were going for a cake that didn't involve plugging anything but the oven in.
Root Beer Chocolate Bundt Cake
10 inch Bundt Cake
Adapted from Baked: New Frontiers In Baking by Matt Lewis and Renato Poliafito via The Marion House Book.
Ingredients
Cake
2 cups root beer (we suggest Trader Joe's Old Fashioned Root Beer, or any root beer made with cane sugar)
1 cup dark unsweetened cocoa powder
1/2 cup unsalted butter
1 1/4 cups granulated sugar
1/2 cup firmly packed dark brown sugar
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 1/4 teaspoons baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
2 large eggs
Frosting
2 ounces dark chocolate melted and cooled slightly
1/2 cup unsalted butter, softened
1 teaspoons salt
1/4 cup root beer
2/3 cup dark unsweetened cocoa powder
2 1/2 cups confectioners’ sugar
For the cake:
1. Preheat the oven to 325 degrees F. Butter and flour the bundt pan.
2. In a small saucepan, heat the root beer, cocoa powder, and butter over medium heat until the butter is melted. Add the sugars and whisk until dissolved. Remove from the heat and let cool.
3. In a large bowl, whisk the flour, baking soda, and salt together.
4. In a small bowl, whisk the eggs until just beaten, then whisk them into the cooled cocoa mixture until combined. Gently fold the flour mixture into the cocoa mixture. The batter will be slightly lumpy–do not overbeat, as it could cause the cake to be tough.
5. Pour the batter into the prepared pan and bake for 35 to 40 minutes, rotating the pan halfway through the baking time, until a small sharp knife inserted into the cake comes out clean.
For the frosting:
1. Melt the chocolate over low heat on the stove. Add the rest of the ingedients and stir.
2. Take the mixture off the heat and allow to cool. (We put it in the fridge for about 2 minutes).
3. Whisk the cooled mixture to make sure it's mixed well and stiff enough to frost.
(Images: Laure Joliet)





Linen Napkins from ...

You all had me earlier with the green grape pie but chocolate and rootbeer? I dunno about that....
I want that cake, right now.
Whole foods sells all kinds of root beer made with real sugar.
http://thesweetest3.com/
Hmm. If I don't have a bundt pan, what would work instead? I have 9 inch cake pans, casserole dishes, cupcake dishes, but no bundt pan.
Maybe use sprechter root beer or cream soda. It's made with honey. And delicious.
pixierae--use any pan you have. the cake is so rich and moist that it would make a great regular cake and would be fun to try as cupcakes!
Hansen's makes a very tasty root beer with sugar. The wintergreen flavor is a little more pronounced than with other brands, so very tasty to drink and would probably be lovely in this cake.
Looks yummy!!!! f you live in CA or AZ check out the root beer selection at BevMo. They have all kinds of root beer and old time sodas. http://www.bevmo.com
Wow- a whole cup of cocoa powder?
that seems like A LOT of sugar. any way that could be cut?
@the polish chick--the cake and the frosting in particular are very sweet, you could definitely experiment with cutting it down. I normally go lighton the sugar, but decided to go full boar with this recipe. it's indulgent and delicious.
Yum. This looks awesome. If only it weren't 100 degrees here, I'd make it tomorrow!
I made this last year, from the Baked cookbook. If you can sub some cake flour, I would. The recipe also suggests using root beer schnapps, and we did and it seemed to add a lot of flavor. Thought it tasted awesome but was a little tough/heavy even though we didn't overmix it, so cake flour could help that.
The frosting makes too much also (hence all the sugar and cocoa) but I froze the leftovers, and we use it to make little sundaes (ice cream, some of the leftover root beer schnapps, and some of the leftover frosting). Very tasty :)
I've got an alternate, heatwave-appropriate recipe:
1 chilled bottle of root beer, poured into chilled glass.
1 scoop chocolate ice cream, dunked into root beer.
Desert is served, y'all!
(Chocolate Root Beer= Delicious)
I've been drinking root beer floats quite a bit this summer and the thought of adding that concept to a cake makes me so happy! Now I just want a prettier bundt pan.
Made this cake after bookmarking it ages ago. Make it!! It's easy and delicious!! A few tips: without time to order online and after searching high and low in stores for dark cocoa powder, I used regular and it worked fine; I substituted cake flour for 1/2 c of all purpose flour and would use even more cake flour next time; the frosting turns solid if made in advance and stored in the fridge, but it's fine when melted again over low heat.