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”
The holiday ‘s mean buckeyes and cream cheese mints!
I lurve Lake Champlain Chocolate (and vanilla lip balm)! I look forward to stuffing made with some homemade bread, kale and sausage. Mmmmm tastes just like the holidays.
For Thanksgiving look forward to roasted parsnips, rutabaga & sweet potatoes. At Christmastime love making cookies with my family.
Thanks!
I wait all year for my Mom’s pumpkin pie! It’s wonderful! I would love to win the hot cocoa’s – they sound delicious! Thank you.
Looking forward to a day of cooking with family – stuffed turkey breast is our tradition!
The best Thanksgiving treat in my family is definitely the chocolate pecan pie that my mom makes. I have a monopoly on most baking projects in the household, but I can’t compete with this one. My mom has the magic touch when it comes to her candy-bar dressed in pie clothing.
Speaking of Ina and the holiday season, her Spinach Gratin has become a stable on our T-Givs menu. It’s utterly decadent with Parm, Gruyere, and heavy cream–and perfect as a special dish to be served once a year.
My sweet potato casserole and my special 4 cheese macaroni and cheese are the most requested items at Thanksgiving. The mac and cheese is made often, but the sweet potato casserole is reserved for Thanksgiving only. There are also the desserts….that’s my favorite part!
Every Thanksgiving I cook a turkey and my Dad’s stuffing recipe which I have been cooking for the past 20+ years. Thanks for the giveaway.
I love cookie and candy making at Christmas. My favorite things to make and eat are Pumpkin Cheesecake bars with salted caramel swirl & a delicious white chocolate, cranberry & pecan tart.
Stuffing is and always will be my downfall. Carbs forever!
my favorite thanksgiving tradition is gathering with family and friends and eating lots of sides and dessert…and just little bit of turkey 🙂
I look forward to Christmas the most because my great aunt makes the BEST Christmas candy in the world – thick caramel poured over chopped pecans. The best.
my favorite tradition is gathering around at my family’s early morning and making turkey congee. it is the best thing ever! if you don’t know what congee is, it’s basically rice pouridge. overcooked rice with lots of water that can be flavored any way you like. in this case, we like to use turkey on thanksgiving. it gives it extra seasoning and this smoky flavor.
We always have a seafood pasta on Christmas Eve and it takes me right back to my Italian roots.
We love cornbread-sausage stuffing for Thanksgiving and then having it again with a poached egg for breakfast the next day!
I most look forward to my mom’s southern cornbread dressing. Yum! Wish I had some right now!
I could just eat stuffing and be happy! I have an old recipe off a Bell’s Stuffing Mix box that has cranberries, apples, and walnuts! The best!
This cake looks amazing! The thing I look forward to the most at Thanksgiving is my Mom’s dressing. These days I’m actually the one who makes it, but somehow it always tastes the best when it’s made in her kitchen, using her bowls, and with her looking over my shoulder.
Cannot wait for Suzanne Goin’s pecan pie! If there was ever a dessert to die for, this is the one.
I love me some pumpkin pie – can’t wait to churn out a few for the various family functions!
my favorite thanksgiving tradition is when my family heads to my aunt’s house in the mountains and it’s cold outside, but warm inside and we drink wine and laugh and nibble and much and are so full by the time the food is ready but it’s all so delicious (and a bit on the non-traditional side) so we stuff ourselves anyway and we don’t regret a minute of it because it’s so wonderful!
i always adore making tons and tons of christmas cookies!
I always make corn pudding (corn from the garden) for thanksgiving
My family does a large fondue dinner (cheese, meat, and chocolate!) every year on Christmas Eve. I look forward to it all year long. Because you’re only eating one bite at a time, and have to wait to cook many of those individual bites in the hot oil, it’s a slow luxurious dinner filled with lots of conversation.
I’m not sure whether your giveaway is open to Canadians (just in case, my favourite tradition is playing crokinole with family and friends over the holiday season), but your cake looks delicious even without the baking soda.
I love stuffing! I just just stuff myself with stuffing and not eat anything else. 🙂
I always look forward to making a pumpkin cake roll
Thank you for the nice giveaway!
lola_violets_2010{AT}yahoo{DOT}com
I’m just going to say it…I make THE best stuffing…ever. It’s the best because it’s simple and just the way I like it, bread, butter, onion and lots and lots of fresh sage. I do it first thing in the morning and I feel overly accomplished. Also, I’ve been to Lake Champlain chocolates….fantastic place!!
I don’t have one particular component that I love about Thanksgiving dinner – I’m looking forward to experiencing a whole plate of delicious flavors!! Our family combines traditional American dishes with some Asian favorites i.e. dumplings, ginger scallion salmon etc – the only time all of these different favorites comes together!
My husband makes the turkey for Thanksgiving and I SO look forward to the stuffing he makes. It’s old-fashioned, with bread and herbs, and it it amazing!