Valentine's Day = time for molten chocolate cake! With 6 ingredients & 20 minutes, you'll have the perfect treat to share with someone you love.
Happy almost-Valentine’s Day! Jack here reporting on my first baking love – molten chocolate cake. See, way before this blog, I pretty much had one staple “date night” dish. That dish was seared scallops and it was always a hit. Well, one Valentine’s Day, I decided to kick it up a notch and shoot for the moon… by trying out molten chocolate cakes.
I had never made anything like a molten chocolate cake before, and for those unfamiliar, it’s a cake that spills out chocolate sauce when you cut into it. It’s a great show when it works. My first time making the cakes, I pulled them out of the oven, flipped the pan and a gush of chocolate sauce poured out. So what did Jeanine and I do? What anyone would do – licked the plate clean and tried again.
On the second try, I flipped the pan, plated the cakes, we cut in and PERFECTION. Chocolate oozed out, and we ate our second set of molten cakes for the night. Seeing how impressed Jeanine was made all of the effort worth it.
So it’s Valentine’s Day – go for it. It’s a blast when you get it right, it’s still fun when you don’t, and no matter what you’re still eating chocolate with the one you love. There are worse ways to spend a night.
Anyway, on to the making…
Avid readers may notice that this is similar to another molten chocolate cake post. Well it’s the same. But with new photos and better instructions.
The prep for this recipe is super simple. The first step is tempering the chocolate and butter on a double-broiler.
After that, you simply whisk the eggs, incorporate sugar, then chocolate (cooled to room temp – you don’t want to cook the eggs!), then flour, one thing at a time until it’s all mixed. Then you pour the mixture into your oiled muffin tin, 3/4 full for each cup.
Cook times can be a bit all over the place (depending on your oven) – it can be anywhere from 5-8 minutes. You’ll know when it’s done when the middle of each cake starts to puff up at the end. (Don’t cook it much longer than that or your molten center will over bake).
After removing the tin from the oven, you need to flip it, and here’s the easiest way: Place the muffin pan on a cookie sheet, put another cookie sheet on top, grab both sides (squeezing the muffin pan) and flip it.
You want to lift the muffin pan and try to tap out the cakes as you go. Note that a few cakes may not come out. Ignore those and concentrate on the ones that do drop. Transfer them to a plate, put ice cream on top, cut them open and enjoy!
For more Valentine’s recipe ideas, check out this post!
Valentine's Molten Chocolate Cakes
- 1 stick + 3 tablespoons butter (non-dairy earth balance works fine too)
- 5 ounces bittersweet chocolate (70% cacao recommended)
- 3 egg yolks
- 3 whole eggs
- 1.5 cups powdered sugar, sifted
- ½ cup all purpose flour (we’ve also used spelt)
- Preheat oven to 450 degrees F.
- Melt the chocolate and butter together in a double boiler over the stove (or place a glass bowl on top of a (smaller) saucepan filled with a little boiling water. Once your chocolate is melted, let it cool to room temp before adding the mixture to the eggs. (Pop it in the fridge for a few minutes if you want).
- With an electric mixer, whisk the eggs, then slowly add the sugar, then the chocolate mixture, then gradually add the flour. Mix until smooth.
- Pour into a greased muffin tin - filling muffin cups about ¾ of the way full.
- Bake for 5-8 minutes or until the middle puffs up but the cake inside is still underdone.
- Remove from the oven and place the muffin pan on a cookie sheet. Place another cookie sheet on top. Hold it all together and gently (but quickly) flip it so the muffin tin is now upside down. Carefully lift up the muffin tin, give it a shake and a tap to get the cakes to drop down.
- Serve with a scoop of ice cream.
If you have a flexible silicone muffin pan - use that - it's the easiest pan to get the cakes to pop out of.
Products used in this post:
Filomena Muffin Pan from Anthropologie
KitchenAid Artisan Series Mixer
recipe adapted from Food Network
Theres nothing better than molten chocolate pouring out of a cake. PERFECT for valentines day!!
Will the chocolate set up in the center if I make them 1day ahead of time and store them in an airtight container in my kitchen-not in fridge?? I need to make 200 and want to prep in advance.
i made these just now! the cake is soft with a nice airy crumb and the sauce is decadent. my brother enjoyed them greatly. i enjoyed half of mine only because its very rich and chocolatey. too much for me. if you enjoy lots and lots of chocolate or want to treat a chocolate lover, this is an easy recipe to try.
also for people who are confused, you add the yolks to the cooled chocolate and butter mixture and you whisk the whites with the sugar and then the chocolate and flour.