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Rich coffee chocolate cake
Preparation Time
20 minutes
Ingredients (serves 25)
- Melted butter or margarine, for greasing
- 400g good quality dark cooking chocolate,
chopped
- 375g unsalted butter, chopped
- 330g (1 1/2 cups) caster sugar
- 310mls (1 1/4 cups) freshly brewed strong
coffee
- 3 large eggs, lightly whisked
- 375g (2 1/2 cups) plain flour
- 2 tsp baking powder
-
chocolate glaze
- 300g good quality dark cooking chocolate,
finely chopped
- 125g unsalted butter, chopped
Method
- Preheat oven to 160°C. Brush a 22cm round or
20cm square cake pan with the melted butter or
margarine to grease. Line the base of the pan
with non-stick baking paper.
- Combine the chocolate, butter, caster sugar
and coffee in a large saucepan and stir over
medium heat until the chocolate and butter have
melted and mixture is well combined (see
microwave tip). Remove from heat, add the eggs
and stir with a whisk until combined. Sift
together the flour and baking powder, add to the
chocolate mixture and stir with the whisk until
smooth.
- Pour the mixture into the prepared pan and
bake in preheated oven for 1 1/2 hours or until
cake crumbs cling to a skewer inserted into the
centre of the cake. Stand in pan for 10-20
minutes before turning onto a wire rack to cool.
- To make the chocolate glaze, combine the
chocolate and butter in a medium heat-resistant
bowl and stir over simmering water until the
chocolate melts and the mixture is smooth and
well combined. Remove from heat.
- Trim the top of the cake to form a fiat
surface if necessary. Turn the cake upside down
and place on a tray. Pour the chocolate glaze
evenly over the cooled cake and spread with a
spatula. Set the cake aside ill a cool place
(but not the fridge as the glaze will lose its
gloss) for about 20 minutes or until the glaze
has set. Transfer cake to a platter and decorate
as desired. For our cover shot, we've tied a bow
around the candle to give the cake a festive
look.
Notes & tips
Suitable for a birthday, father's
day, wedding or any special occasion honouring a
chocoholic. This cake gets better with age, becoming
more fudgy as the days pass. Serve a sliver with
coffee or a larger portion for dessert with fresh
berries and thick cream or vanilla ice-cream. It
will keep in an airtight container at room
temperature for up to 1 week.
Source
Supplied by: Australian Good Taste - July 1997
Recipe by: Anneka Manning
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Specialty
Coffee Recipes and Instructions
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Be
creative when preparing and serving specialty coffee.
Add toppings such as whipped cream, cinnamon, chocolate, nutmeg,
caramel etc.
Create exciting drinks by adding flavoured syrups.
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Espresso
Doppio: Also known as a
"Double Espresso".
Double the volume of
Espresso and double to volume of water (2 oz.)
Espresso Ristretto: Also
known as a "Short Espresso". Prepare espresso as you
normally would, however shorten the extraction time so there is less
water dispensed.
Espresso Lungo: Also
known as a "Long Espresso". A long espresso is
a single shot espresso topped up with 1 oz of water. For a
Double Lungo use a double shot of espresso topped with 2 oz of
water.
Americano: Prepare
espresso as you normally would, then top up with 5 oz of hot
water .
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Made
from dark roasted coffee beans. A single Espresso
usually measures approximately 1 oz. The espresso
should be crowned with a gold coloured froth called "crema".
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Basic
Cappuccino: This
variation is most common in North America. Consists of 1/3
Espresso, 1/3 steamed milk and 1/3 foamed milk. Foam milk as
per proper foaming technique. Use spoon to hold foam in
foaming g pitcher and pour steamed milk in your serving glass.
Then spoon milk foam on top. Then brew the espresso
directly into the serving glass. This creates a layered effect
. If your serving glass is too large to fit underneath your
brewing head, brew espresso into a separate vessel , then pour into
the serving glass. Many garnish with Cinnamon, powdered
or shaved chocolate.
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A
Classic Cappuccino is made with 1-1/2 oz of Espresso
topped with 2-3 oz of foamed milk. The "Basic
Cappuccino" is more common in North America.
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The Café Latte is of Italian origin. Do not mistake it for
Café Au Lait which is the French version using strong drip brewed
coffee and steamed milk.
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Basic
Café Latte: Steam milk
and fill a latte mug. (Preferably glass). Prepare the Espresso
as you normally would and dispense into the steamed milk. If
your serving cup does not fit under your brewing head, brew espresso
into a separate vessel and then pour into the steamed
milk. Many garnish with a Cinnamon stick or Chocolate.
Adding flavour syrups is also popular.
Also known as Café Con Leche
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Prepare espresso as you normally would. Foam milk using proper
technique. Spoon a dollop or two of foam onto the top of the
espresso.
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Latte
Macchiato: Pour 1/3
cold milk into a tall glass. Pour 1/3 hot milk into
glass and top with hot foamed milk. Slowly pour fresh brewed
espresso through the foam. If you cannot brew directly into
the glass, brew espresso into a separate vessel and pour into the
glass.
Espresso Con Panna: Prepare
espresso as you normally would. Top with a dollop or two of
whipped cream. Garnish to taste.
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Originated
in France. Milder version of the Café Latte from
Italy.
Brew half cup of strong coffee
into an open-mouthed mug and add half cup of steamed milk.
You may top with foamed milk.
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Due
to brewing under high pressure, only aroma is extracted leaving
behind unwanted acids in the grinds.
The gold coloured crema preserves the aroma and holds all the aroma
(oil).
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