Chocolate Dump-It Cake Recipe (2024)

Recipe from Judith Hesser

Adapted by Amanda Hesser

Chocolate Dump-It Cake Recipe (1)

Total Time
1 hour 45 minutes
Rating
5(7,343)
Notes
Read community notes

“A couple of years ago, my mother taught me to make her dense but moist chocolate birthday cake. She calls it 'dump-it cake' because you mix all of the ingredients in a pot over medium heat, then dump the batter into a cake pan to bake. For the icing, you melt Nestlé's semisweet-chocolate chips and swirl them together with sour cream. It sounds as if it's straight from the Pillsbury Bake-Off, but it tastes as if it's straight from Payard. Everyone loves it.” —Amanda Hesser

Featured in: FOOD DIARY; Personal Best

  • or to save this recipe.

  • Subscriber benefit: give recipes to anyone

    As a subscriber, you have

    10 gift recipes to give each month. Anyone can view them - even nonsubscribers.

    Learn more.

    Subscribe

  • Print Options

    Include recipe photo

Advertisem*nt

Ingredients

Yield:10 servings

  • 2cups sugar
  • 4ounces unsweetened chocolate
  • 1stick unsalted butter, plus more for greasing the pan
  • 2cups all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting the pan
  • 2teaspoons baking soda
  • 1teaspoon baking powder
  • 1teaspoon salt
  • 1cup milk
  • 1teaspoon cider vinegar
  • 2eggs
  • 1teaspoon vanilla
  • cups Nestle's semisweet-chocolate chips
  • cups sour cream, at room temperature

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (10 servings)

619 calories; 32 grams fat; 19 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 9 grams monounsaturated fat; 1 gram polyunsaturated fat; 81 grams carbohydrates; 4 grams dietary fiber; 57 grams sugars; 8 grams protein; 426 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

Powered by

Chocolate Dump-It Cake Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    Preheat the oven to 375 degrees and place a baking sheet on the lowest rack to catch any drips as the cake bakes on the middle rack. In a 2- to 3-quart pot, mix together the sugar, unsweetened chocolate, butter and 1 cup of water. Place over medium heat and stir occasionally until all of the ingredients are melted and blended. Remove from the heat and let cool slightly.

  2. Step

    2

    Meanwhile, sift together the flour, baking soda, baking powder and salt. In a small bowl, stir together the milk and vinegar. Grease and flour a 9-inch tube pan (Tip: Be meticulous, and really work the butter and flour into the crevices of the pan. This is a moist cake, so it really needs a well-prepared pan to keep it from sticking).

  3. Step

    3

    When the chocolate in the pot has cooled a bit, whisk in the milk mixture and eggs. In several additions, and without overmixing, whisk in the dry ingredients. When the mixture is smooth, add the vanilla and whisk once or twice to blend. Pour the batter into the tube pan and bake on the middle rack until a skewer inserted in the center comes out clean, about 30 to 35 minutes. Let the cake cool for 10 minutes, then remove from the pan and cool on a rack. (This can be tricky -- if someone is around to help, enlist him.) Let cool completely.

  4. Step

    4

    Meanwhile, melt the chocolate chips in a double boiler, then let cool to room temperature. Stir in the sour cream, ¼ cup at a time, until the mixture is smooth.

  5. Step

    5

    When the cake is cool, you may frost it as is or cut it in half so that you have 2 layers. There will be extra icing whether you have 1 or 2 layers. My mother always uses it to make flowers on top. She makes a small rosette, or button, then uses toasted slices of almond as the petals, pushing them in around the base of the rosette.

Ratings

5

out of 5

7,343

user ratings

Your rating

or to rate this recipe.

Have you cooked this?

or to mark this recipe as cooked.

Private Notes

Leave a Private Note on this recipe and see it here.

Cooking Notes

DHF

For true chocolate lovers, to improve this recipe immensely:

(1) Up the unsweetened chocolate in the cake recipe to 5 ounces and consider using a premium chocolate like Guittard, Scharffen Berger, or Valrhona instead of "any old" chocolate at the grocer's like Baker's or Hershey's.
(2) Similarly, for the icing, substitute premium 60% cocoa butter chocolate chips for the inferior Nestle's semi-sweet chips.

Susan M.

Instead of using flour to dust the cake pan, dust with unsweetened cocoa powder. Just adds a bit more chocolate!

Denis Pelletier

A trick I learned from a French pâtissier: When called to butter and flour a cake pan, replace flour with sugar. It makes for a sweet and slightly crisp outside and helps the cake rise (more to "grab" on to). Never failed me yet.

Adelita Nelson

Substitute the cup of milk with a half cup of coffee mixed with a half cup of milk.

Kristine

I've made this cake for years -- I love the texture and tangy frosting. I always feel confused, however, by the tube pan. So drippy! Use a bundt or regular cake pan.

hkjm

Saw this recipe and just had to make it! Based on many reviews I decided on 5 oz choc, buttermilk in lieu of milk/vinegar, 1 C. coffee in lieu of water, dust greased bundt pan w/cocoa powder, cool 20-25 min and it released beautifully, used a chocolate ganache based on very mixed reviews of frosting recipe. My ganache is bomb: 5 oz. MILK chocolate chips, 1 1/2 tsp. veg oil, 1/2 C. heavy cream...melt choc chips and oil, remove from heat and whisk in heavy cream until smooth. AH-MAZING CAKE!

Bernice Glenn

For history buffs: Sour cream chocolate frosting was originally published in 1952, in Helen Evans Brown's "West Coast Cookbook." Her friend, James Beard, included it in his James Beard Cookbook. It has been re-published by many sources varying proportions of chocolate to sour cream. Brown's recipe, uses only 1/2 cup of sour cream adding: "This consistency will allow fancy swirls that will stay for this icing neither runs nor hardens…." adding - when slightly cooled a pastry tube may be used.

Christine

I made this in a 13x9 pan, used half the icing. Everyone loved it. It really is best if you make it a day ahead of serving, the flavors have time to blend and mellow. Love the simplicity of the icing.

GSD

For those unaccustomed to tube pans and probably younger than 50 or so: the tube pan Hesser uses is not the big angel food pan where the tube part comes out. This would be a 9 or 10 inch one piece tube pan which may be unavailable now. That's why it requires careful prep. There's no forgiveness here if you forget an inside edge or corner. Do line the bottom with waxed paper. It was my mother's "go to"cake pan for everything in the 40's and 50's.

Golf Widow

Because I had to bring cakes to a special event, I did a test run, following the recipe to the letter. It was well received by my testers (my three children and a couple of friends).

On the big day, I made two changes:

1. Subbed buttermilk for the milk + vinegar
2. Used classic vanilla buttercream frosting between the layers

Very good results - buttermilk kept chocolate cake moist. Vanilla frosting was delicious and lightened & sweetened up an intense cake. Also - don't overbake!

Carmel

The directions call for a cup of water to be mixed in with the butter and sugar but there is no water listed in the ingredient list. Just wanted to make sure that was correct??

Leilani

A stick of butter is 4 oz or 113 grams.
Four oz chocolate is the same.
1 cup of sugar is ca 200 g
1 cup flour 130 g (a bit less if sifted)
1 cup milk, water, etc is 236 ml
1 teaspoon is 5 ml
2 teaspoons are a desset spoon), 10 ml
1 tablespoon is 15 ml
To measure chocolate chips, you'd treat them as a liquid, therefore 1-1/2 cups would be ca 354 ml.
Our measurements are often much less precise than metric measures would be. Good luck!

Expressmother

The accompanying photo does NOT show a tube cake as called for in the recipe - it's always odd when the picture doesn't match.

txmama

I didn't have the right kind of pan, so I cooked it in two regular cake pans, and it turned out beautifully - so don't worry if you don't have a bunt pan or tube pan. It did stick a little on the bottom when I turned out the pans, so be sure to really grease and flour them (I used Pam). I cooked them for about 20 minutes at 375; and they could have gone a couple minutes longer I think to help with the sticking.

Cwarriner

A tip I learned from Cooks Illustrated... when butter/flouring a pan for chocolate cakes, use melted butter and unsweetened cocoa mixed together and brushed into the pan. With this method, you don't get the white flour baked in to the surface of your cake. Works particularly well for bundt cakes.

Melissa G

I made this yesterday and per the comments, I split into 2 springform pans and buttered and sugared each. BIG mistake. The cake tasted great but it wouldn’t release from the pans. It was a big mess. I’ll make the cake again, but next time in a single buttered & floured pan.

BklnOh

I attempted to make this last night- we haven’t tasted it yet, but it’s not pretty. It is bubbly looking which fell. It looks like a soft brownie, not the pretty birthday cake look I was going for. I’m. Im not going to try this recipe again…

Hannah

I had major trouble with this. In my attempt to follow the directions to not overmix, I ended up with flour lumps that did not magically resolve in the oven. Plus it fell in the middle as it cooled and then stuck to the pan terribly, despite very thorough pan prep. Just a complete mess. Guess I haven’t found my new go-to recipe.

Adam

Made this yesterday. Added instant coffee powder to the water when making the batter but otherwise made as written. Had no trouble at all getting the cake out of the pan. Used a tube pan greased with a mix of melted butter and cocoa powder. Cake is very good, but the icing is not for me. Would make this again with a different icing. The sour cream “tang” is not what I was looking for.

Elena

I have made this cake for years, it’s a family favorite for birthdays. The tang of the sour cream frosting makes it so special and delicious! More delicious and irresistible than other chocolate cakes. The kids are very fond of it.

Susy

I’ve made this cake twice and love it. However, both times the top burned. I sliced off with a serrated knife and all was fine, but I wonder why this is happening? Followed recipe but used a Bundt pan.

liliane

I made exactly as per the recipe and it turned out great! My guests loved it !

katie

If I make this the day ahead, it needs to be refrigerated. Correct?

Elena

No it doesn’t, as long as the environment isn’t warm.

Leslie Smith

This is the most delicious cake I’ve ever made. Everyone at supper club had a second slice and I have bookmarked this to impress guests time and time again.I did follow a few of the upgrades recommended in the notes:buttermilk in place of milk ciderHigh end chocolate for the batter and frosting (dark chocolate melts for a more bitter offset) Sugar instead of flour for the pan and my cake slid right OUT.

Monica

I made this because of the reviews. The frosting seemed unusual, but I decided to trust the process. I feel like I’m the only one who didn’t like it. The frosting was too sour for my taste. I happened to have ganache in the fridge, so I melted it down and incorporated it into the frosting, which made it more palatable to me.

Jay

I don't have a ton of baking experience, so I appreciate how easy and forgiving this recipe is. I experimented by using coconut milk instead of regular milk and thought the end result was delicious. Also ended up using a combination of sour cream and greek yogurt for the icing since I didn't have quite enough sour cream on hand. Might just make a standard butter cream chocolate icing next time as the slightly sour vibe of the icing wasn't everyone's fave.

ME

As someone who is terrible at baking, this was a great recipe! Pretty straightforward and fairly forgiving. I just have a springform cake tin, but given how moist the cake was and the recipe calling for a tube pan, I thought it'd be raw in the center, so I placed a little oven-safe ramekin filled with beans for weight in the middle before pouring the batter, and it worked perfectly. Once it cooled completely I was able to cut it into 2 layers which worked well with the rich icing.

LL

Literally so delicious and so easy. Took some to work and there was nothing left by the end of the day.

laurencooks

Instead of water in the beginning I used leftover coffee from my French press. This recipe is flexible if you like salty sweet umami flavors. Subbed some of the milk/liquid with a bit of soy sauce for umami.

SSJ

There is a cup of water listed in the directions but not in the ingredient list. What is correct? Is there a cup of water in the batter or not?

Julie

the water is listed in Step 1

Private notes are only visible to you.

Chocolate Dump-It Cake Recipe (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Gregorio Kreiger

Last Updated:

Views: 6609

Rating: 4.7 / 5 (57 voted)

Reviews: 80% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Gregorio Kreiger

Birthday: 1994-12-18

Address: 89212 Tracey Ramp, Sunside, MT 08453-0951

Phone: +9014805370218

Job: Customer Designer

Hobby: Mountain biking, Orienteering, Hiking, Sewing, Backpacking, Mushroom hunting, Backpacking

Introduction: My name is Gregorio Kreiger, I am a tender, brainy, enthusiastic, combative, agreeable, gentle, gentle person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.