Sweets

The Tastiest Tuesdays of 2015 · Chocolate Mudcake with Ganache and Fresh Berries

Every January it is our annual tradition to revisit our most popular Tasty Tuesday recipes from the past 12 months, they fly by so quickly, we are amassing quite an archive!

First up, we revisit this delectable cake from Melbourne’s cake queen, Cassy Morris of Fig & Salt. Cassy creates all kinds of treats, both savoury and sweet, but her cakes are seriously something else. Her decadent layered desserts, piled high with ganache, cream, toffee shards, meringue, fresh berries and flowers have made her pretty famous on Instagram. This rich mud cake with dark chocolate ganache is a perennial crowd pleaser.

 

Written
by
Cassandra Morris of Fig & Salt

Mud Cake with frosting crushed meringue and fresh berries. Marigolde linen throw as tablecloth from Safari Living, Tyler Hays large plate from BDDW. Recipe by Cassandra Morris of Fig and Salt. Styling – Lucy Feagins, styling assistant – Nat Turnbull, photo – Eve Wilson for The Design Files.

 

Mud cake ingredients. Small dish in foreground by The Fortynine Studio. Recipe by Cassandra Morris of Fig and Salt. Styling – Lucy Feagins, styling assistant – Nat Turnbull, photo – Eve Wilson for The Design Files.

Cassandra Morris of Fig and Salt with her decadent chocolate mud cake. Black rimmed plate by Shiko, Marigolde Linen Napery from Safari Living and Tyler Hays large plate from BDDW. Recipe by Cassandra Morris of Fig and Salt. Styling – Lucy Feagins, styling assistant – Nat Turnbull, photo – Eve Wilson for The Design Files.

Icing the mud cake. Marigolde Linen Napery from Safari Living, cake sits on Tyler Hays large plate from BDDW, smaller black rimmed plate by Shiko. Recipe by Cassandra Morris of Fig and Salt. Styling – Lucy Feagins, styling assistant – Nat Turnbull, photo – Eve Wilson for The Design Files.

 

 

Writer
Cassandra Morris of Fig & Salt
12th of January 2016

I am a country girl at heart. I have the fondest memories growing up of staying with my Nan at her farm, and as soon as I stepped foot in her house I would be hit with the sweetest smelling aroma of her baking. I loved watching her in the kitchen, it was her happy place and to this day her jelly lamingtons are one of my favourite sweet treats. Without a doubt, my passion for food comes from her and my mum. They are the best cooks I know, they cook from the heart and I guess I have them to thank for my love affair with food!

I still remember my first official cake order, it was for a close friend’s birthday and it was a disaster (the cake not the birthday)! I learnt many things that afternoon: firstly make sure you have all the ingredients before baking; don’t ever ice a cake warm (it’s just messy), and don’t turn your back on toffee as it burns badly! Her cake was a culmination of many errors, but it was edible and she loved it! That’s all that matters, right?

I like to think of Fig & Salt as a bit of this and that, combining the yin and yang of food and bringing it all together. Whether it be a grazing table, a modern take on a trail mix bar, corporate food box, gatherings to celebrate an important occasion or a spectacular cake – there’s nothing like real food to bring people together.

This mud cake with chocolate ganache, crushed meringue and fresh berries is a family favourite. My aunty gave me this recipe many years ago and it has been a staple of mine ever since. It’s a super easy and quick cake to make. It’s rich and super delicious. I highly recommend using a good quality chocolate (my favourite is the Belgian brand Callebaut). I think it makes such a difference. A few months ago I did a wedding dessert bar, and this is one of the cakes I did for the bride. Topped with lashings of chocolate ganache, crushed meringue and fresh berries it’s always a crowd pleaser!

Note: I doubled the recipe below to create the large cake as seen in this shoot.

Writer
Cassandra Morris of Fig & Salt
12th of January 2016

Method

For the mud cake

Preheat oven to 170°C.

Grease, line and flour the side of a 22cm round cake tin.

In large saucepan place butter, chocolate, sugar and boiling water. Gently combine over low heat until all ingredients are melted completely. Let cool.

Place flour, cocoa, eggs, buttermilk, vanilla and vinegar in the bowl of a freestanding electric mixer with paddle attachment, and pour cooled chocolate mixture on top. On low speed, beat until all combined and there are no pockets of flour through the mixture.

Pour mixture into the greased and lined cake tin, and bake for 40 minutes. Let cake cool in tin for 10 minutes before transferring to wire cooling rack.

For the ganache

Add the cream to a saucepan and bring to the boil, then lower heat.

Add the chocolate and stir until melted and combined with the cream. Cool slightly and fold through the butter. Let cool and thicken before icing your cake.

To decorate

Make sure your ganache or icing is light and fluffy. This is really important as it makes it easier to ice.

Technically I will ice the cake twice when decorating. Firstly ice your cake by spreading ganache over the top of your cake, and if desired bringing down the sides of your cake.

Then I ice the cake by making decorative ganache droplets that sit on top of the cake. If you’re game to attempt this (it’s not too hard!), fill a piping bag half full with the icing – definitely not more than two thirds full. Twist and hold the end of the piping bag with one hand, and rest the tip of the bag in your other hand.

Squeeze the icing at the top of the bag very gently to loosen any air bubbles. Do a few test runs to get some confidence.

When you feel comfortable, hold the bag vertically with the nozzle close to your cake, squeeze the icing out gently to make a dot the desired size, stop squeezing, release some pressure and draw up sharply to make your tip.

Lastly, top the cake with crushed meringues (you can buy these at your local cake shop or even grocery store) and fresh berries.

A slice of Mud Cake with frosting crushed meringue and fresh berries. Marigolds linen throw as tablecloth from Safari Living and Tyler Hays small  plate from BDDW.  Recipe by Cassandra Morris of Fig and Salt. Styling – Lucy Feagins, styling assistant – Nat Turnbull, photo – Eve Wilson for The Design Files.

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