Beatty’s Chocolate Cake with Chocolate Buttercream
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This chocolate cake, made with buttermilk and oil — no butter — and exclusively cocoa — no melted chocolate — is incredibly light and moist and stays this way for days. It’s an Ina Garten recipe, one she begged for from a friend, the grandson of Beatty, after taking one bite. It has become a family favorite — a real crowd pleaser with adults and children alike.
Earlier this month, upon realizing that I had officially become my mother, not only in my preferences, but also in how I impose my preferences on others — dark meat chicken, cakes without frosting — I decided it might be wise to branch out a bit, to bake a cake with not one but two layers and to guild it not with a delicate dusting of powdered sugar but with a slathering of silky frosting.
It was a healthy exercise. You see, I didn’t know that frosting — chocolate buttercream in this case — has the ability to silence a table surrounded by both toddlers and adults and afterward to elicit unprompted comments such as: “You are such a good cooker.” This cake, made with buttermilk and oil — no butter — and exclusively cocoa — no melted chocolate — is incredibly light and moist and stays this way — tasting freshly baked — for days. It’s another Ina Garten recipe, one she begged for from a friend, the grandson of Beatty, after taking one bite.
I’m so happy I branched out. Because while I am completely embracing that I am my mother’s daughter, adoring almond tortes and torta capreses, I understand there is a time and a place for layers of cake and frosting. A silent table is always (or almost always) a sign of success.
How to Make Beatty’s Chocolate Cake, Step by Step
First, sift the dry ingredients together: flour, cocoa, sugar, baking powder, baking soda, salt:
Next combine the wet ingredients: buttermilk, oil, eggs, vanilla, coffee:
Add the wet ingredients to the dry and stir to combine.
How to Make a Parchment Paper Circle Cake Bottom:
Transfer the batter to two buttered and parchment-paper-lined baking dishes.
Bake until done.
How to Make Chocolate Buttercream:
Frost the cake by spreading just under half of the frosting over one layer. Top with the other layer; then spread the remaining frosting over the cake and on the sides.
PrintBeatty’s Chocolate Cake with Chocolate Buttercream
- Total Time: 1 hours 45 minutes
- Yield: 8 servings
Description
Adapted from: Barefoot Contessa at Home
This chocolate cake, made with buttermilk and oil — no butter — and exclusively cocoa — no melted chocolate — is incredibly light and moist and stays this way for days. It’s an Ina Garten recipe, one she begged for from a friend, the grandson of Beatty, after taking one bite. It has become a family favorite — a real crowd pleaser with adults and children alike.
A few notes:
- Ina uses the stand mixer, but I find it works great just by mixing with a whisk and spatula.
- I now make this in one bowl: whisk together the dry ingredients; then add the wet one by one, being sure I beat the eggs prior to adding them to the bowl.
- I’ve added weight measurements, because that’s how I prefer to bake.
- The original frosting recipe calls for a raw egg yolk, but I omit it and don’t notice a difference.
Ingredients
For the Cake:
- Butter, for greasing the pans
- 1 3/4 cups (225 g) all-purpose flour, plus more for pans
- 2 cups (418 g) sugar
- 3/4 cups (66 g) good cocoa powder
- 2 teaspoons (10 g) baking soda
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- 1 teaspoon (5 g) kosher salt
- 1 cup (225 g) buttermilk, shaken
- 1/2 cup (108 g) vegetable oil
- 2 extra-large eggs (98 g) at room temperature
- 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract or vanilla bean paste
- 1 cup (227 g) freshly brewed hot coffee
For the Chocolate Buttercream:
- 6 ounces good semisweet chocolate (Ina recommends Callebaut.)
- 1/2 pound (2 sticks) unsalted butter, at room temperature
- 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
- 1 1/4 cups (152 g) sifted confectioners’ sugar
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Butter two 8-inch x 2-inch round cake pans. Line with parchment paper, then flour the pans.
- Sift the flour, sugar, cocoa, baking soda, baking powder, and salt into a large mixing bowl. Whisk until combined. In another bowl, combine the buttermilk, oil, eggs, and vanilla. Add the wet ingredients to the dry. Add the coffee and stir just to combine. Batter will be really thin. Pour the batter — if you feel like being really precise, pour about 690g of batter into each pan — into the prepared pans and bake for 35 to 40 minutes, until a cake tester comes out clean. Cool in the pans for 30 minutes, then turn them out onto a cooling rack and cool completely.
- To make the frosting: Chop the chocolate and place it in a heat-proof bowl set over a pan of simmering water. Stir until just melted and set aside until cooled to room temperature. Alternatively: Melt in the microwave at 30 second to 1-minute intervals until spreadable.
- In the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, beat the butter on medium-high speed until light yellow and fluffy, about 3 minutes. Add the vanilla and continue beating for 3 minutes. Turn the mixer to low, gradually add the confectioners’ sugar, then beat at medium speed, scraping down the bowl as necessary, until smooth and creamy. On low speed, add the chocolate to the butter mixture and mix until blended. Don’t whip. Spread immediately on the cooled cake.
- Place 1 layer, flat side up, on a flat plate or cake pedestal. With a knife or offset spatula, spread the top with frosting. Place the second layer on top, rounded side up, and spread the frosting evenly on the top and sides of the cake.
- Prep Time: 20 minutes
- Cook Time: 40 minutes
- Category: Cake
- Method: Mix
- Cuisine: American
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
301 Comments on “Beatty’s Chocolate Cake with Chocolate Buttercream”
That cake looks so good to my first trimester preggo eyes (little else does…). This year I’m looking forward to dusting off my German grandmother’s stollen recipe. German baking is the only kind of baking around the holidays. Oh, and I can’t wait for the yearly delivery of Lebkuchen from Nuremburg!
My favorite is a rice dish my grandma makes for Thanksgiving with ground lamb and pine nuts. It’s amazing and she really only makes it for the holidays, so I look forward to it all year.
My mom’s sage sausage stuffing, by far and away. Best thing ever. 🙂
My family is Caribbean so our Thanksgivings are not the typical turkey and stuffing menu. We eats lots of foods from our homes countries such as oxtails and curried goat. I LOVE IT. My daughter is 17 months and has grown up eating the same dishes that I did as a child. It warms my heart and I hope she has the urge to learn all of these family recipes.
My Mama’s turkey stuffing. Also all the pumpkin food. Yumm!!!
I look forward to green bean casserole every Thanksgiving. We are traveling this year for the holiday so we are doing our Thanksgiving dinner on Halloween instead.
Besides the leftovers, I love the perfect bite of fried turkey, dressing, gravy & sweet potatoes that goes together so well- oh and with a little tart cranberry sauce on the side. Chased down with my mom’s fabulous yeast rolls!
I was going to write stuffing, since I love it but seeing another comment reminded me that I LOVE fruitcake. I make my own and it doesn’t have any storebough candied fruit, just homemade. Soooooo good. And I love that a loaf will give me a couple of weeks worth of small slices for breakfast. Yum!
My favorite holiday tradition is the thrill of trying new recipes and having some of them work out really great.
I also want to take this opportunity to thank you for a beautiful website and helpful instructions. I have learned so much from reading your posts and everything I have made from here has turned out really great.
I love cooking apple pie for my family on Thanksgiving.
I love making dinner for my friends that don’t have family nearby. I do most of the meal and others bring dessert, wine and appetizers. We always have a blast and everyone has food to take home.
This looks fantastic! I crave Thanksgiving cooking all year long. But to be honest with you the things I look forward to most are a pancetta wrapped turkey and sweet potato casserole! Oh and pies… always a variety of pies!
We just moved back to the East Coast, within driving distance of my family, so I’m really excited to be spending Thanksgiving with them. I think I most look forward to my mom’s sausage and apple stuffing–I can never get mine to turn out like hers.
Well I’m Hmong and my hometown always celebrates the Hmong New Year during Thanksgiving weekend. That’s what I look most forward to each year. This is the one time where I can wear my traditional clothing and celebrate my culture with my family and friends and the Hmong community. The best part is that we provide food to the entire community, Hmong or not, for free and this brings us all closer together.
i can’t wait for my mom’s cereal snack!
I look forward to our Minnesotan family’s much-loved “Governor’s Carrots,” an unthinkably delicious mess of butter, Velveeta cheese, sautéed onions, dill, and (oh yeah) sliced carrots! I keep promising/threatening to make it for my East Coast friends — so much doubt, but it only takes one bite to be a believer.
Christmas dinner was always a big deal in our house. My mom obviously loved to do it, because every year she wowed us. The table was always decorated nicely with the Christmas tablecloth, napkins and the special dishes and cutlery. There were Christmas crackers and yes we did wear those silly paper hats. When I look back at our Christmas photos we were always wearing them: my Dad’s always looked especially nice contrasted against his white hair. One food that always makes me remember those Christmas dinners is brussel sprouts. We always had them and they were always moist and delicious.
Thanksgiving, holidays, and festivities make me look forward to the people I will be spending them with. I love cooking and eating together with friends and family – especially the cooking. The more we are in the kitchen, the merrier; no matter what we cook.
That’s the brand of vanilla extract I use, too. My favorite dish is chipotle candied twice baked sweet potatoes.
I can, and do, make pies year round. But there’s something about apple and pumpkin pie this time of year. I love having them during the holidays.
I’m looking forward to my daughter coming home from CA and making all her childhood Thanksgiving favorites including a yummy apple squash casserole, rutabagas and of course apple and pumpkin pie.
Fresh pressed apple cide and doughnuts. The ultimate autumnal experience!
apple pie for thanksgiving, chocolate roulade for christmas!
My favorite dish to make at Thanksgiving is a sweet potato pie. I have been making this pie for at least the 33 years of my marriage, every Thanksgiving. Although I grew up in New Jersey, my parents are both from the deep South, and sweet potato pie is one of those dishes my mother would always talk about. I learned to make it because of this and it always gives me a great feeling of connection to my southern roots and relatives, and to the wonderful stories my mother would tell me about the dishes she would eat, many of which I was brought up on as well. My mother would have been 90 years old today, in fact, and she almost made it. Every year I would make her a sweet potato pie and baking powder biscuits, both of which she would savor, making them last as long as she could (which usually wasn’t very long). I will always think of her, the wonderful heritage of Southern cooking and every Thanksgiving that has come before when I make my sweet potato pie. Another one is coming along soon!!
Thanksgiving is my favorite holiday! I love baking desserts for it. I usually do a pumpkin pie, a pecan pie, and something chocolate (try my best to use fair trade).
Favorite Thanksgiving dish? roasted sweet potatoes with chipotle honey syrup
Wow this cake looks so delicious! For Thanksgiving, I look forward to the traditional turkey, mashed potatoes and gravy, all mixed together… especially if it’s dark meat turkey that has been properly brined and roasted. My husband makes an amazingly moist and flavorful turkey and I look forward to it every year!
We don’t celebrate Thanksgiving where I live, but if we did I am certain I would look forward to pumpkin everything! And cider, of course.
I like spending time in the kitchen with my 3 daughters.
Pick a favorite?! Impossible! I do love that sweet potato casserole that is drenched in butter and sugar. Yum!