Ice Cream Cake Recipes

Author: ms highlight // Category: ,


"Tasty treat with perfect blend of rich and creamy flavor for all OCCASIONS!"

Thank heavens for small blessings like ice cream and huge thanks for ice cream cakes. Yippeeee!!

Also, let's face it, in the heat of summer, what's better than this delightful dessert? more of it of course!

Cakes can be many different flavors from chocolate with chocolate icing to white cake with butter cream frosting and many others. So choose your own that is unique to your taste and flavor.

As you may know by now, cake is always a delightful treat no matter what the occasions and these cakes are always something special.

They are suitable and great for your kid's birthday party and believe us on that; children really love cake. Just imagine how much they would like both desserts together on one plate. Simply irresistible!

Always remember that they are always very tasty and they are a perfect blend of rich and creamy cake with moist cake and smooth frosting.

Simple and delicious; these recipes will most definitely become part of your cooking collection.

If you're in the mood for one, but don't want to spend a lot of prep time in the kitchen, these recipes really take the cake!


Ice Cream-Cookie Cake Recipe

1 cup heavy cream

1/3 cup granulated sugar

2 tbsp orange liqueur

2 cups vanilla ice cream, softened

1 cup graham crackers crumbs, crushed

3/4 cup miniature semisweet chocolate chips

1/2 cup raisins

1 cup heavy cream

2 tbsp icing sugar

1 tsp vanilla extract

1. Line a 2 qt metal bowl with plastic wrap. Beat the cream, sugar and orange liqueur in a large bowl with an electric mixer at high speed until stiff. Use a large rubber spatula to fold in the ice cream, crumbs 1/2 cup chocolate chips and raisins.

2. Spoon the mixture into the prepared bowl, pressing down firmly. Freeze for 3 hours. With mixer at high speed, beat the cream, icing sugar and vanilla in a medium bowl until stiff.

3. Turn out onto a serving plate. Remove the wrap. Pipe the cream on top in a decorative manner. Sprinkle with the remaining 1/4 cup chocolate chips.

4. Enjoy!


Source: deliciouscakerecipes.com


Making The Perfect Chocolate Cake

Author: ms highlight // Category: ,
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Finding the perfect chocolate cake recipe was always going to be a tough mission. Should it be light or dense? Iced or drizzled? Made with melted chocolate or good cocoa? Ask anyone about their idea of a perfect chocolate cake and you’ll get a completely different answer. But whichever camp you’re in, we hope you’ll find your idea of perfection below…


A Chocolate Cake Journey

If you’re anything like me, you’ll have tried many chocolate cakes in your time. Some disappoint and some enthral. Where to start? The River Café’s Chocolate Nemesis is legendary among chocoholics. Unfortunately, not only is the recipe extremely difficult to master, it also contains two bars of butter! So perhaps Nigella Lawson, modern-day queen of cakes, should provide the first recipe. “If you’re going to get started, this is the cake you should begin with,” she asserts in the Chocolate Cake chapter of Feast. And her signature chocolate cake, featuring sour cream, butter and melted chocolate, certainly produces a rich, intensely chocolatey result. It’s generously filled and topped with a sour cream and chocolate icing. But is it the definitive cake?

Seeking opinions it becomes clear that, although people want it to be satisfying, the perfect chocolate cake shouldn’t be so dense and rich that they can’t bear another slice. I wanted to find a lighter alternative: something in between the thick, heavy, sour-cream cake and a simple chocolate sponge. I asked around. I gathered recipes from professional chefs and family friends. And I soon discovered that there are two basic templates for the chocolate cake.

The first is a traditional method: at its simplest, an all-in-one sponge with cocoa substituted for some of the flour. Recipes vary, but the basic idea is to use equal amounts of flour, butter and caster sugar, blended with eggs and cocoa. This offers a light, springy texture. Perfect for those who like their chocolate cake fluffy.

The second is a modern chocolate cake method, which features a different type of fat to create a richer cake. Nigella swaps half her butter for sour cream; others dispense with the butter altogether in favour of vegetable oil and/or yoghurt or crème fraiche. Variations on this recipe produce a denser crumb and richer chocolate flavour.

What About The Topping?

Below you’ll find two classic toppings: a chocolate ganache and a chocolate butter icing. The dark ganache has a bitter, adult flavour so, if you’re making it for children, try using milk chocolate. You can, of course, fill and top your chocolate cake with jam (try apricot or cherry), cream, grated chocolate, or chocolate chips (sprinkle over the cake in the tin, hot from the oven).

The Perfect Rich Chocolate Cake

We want it rich, but not belt-busting. Nigella’s sour cream brings a certain creamy taste, but it’s a high-fat concoction. This rich chocolate cake is made using a mixture of half-fat crème fraiche and vegetable oil, giving a moist cake that won’t break the calorie bank.

You can make it richer or simpler by topping it with a rich ganache, or just dusting it with icing sugar. Choose from the Topping suggestions below.


Ingredients:

  • 8oz self-raising flour, sieved
  • 3tbsp cocoa
  • 0.5tsp bicarbonate of soda
  • 6oz caster sugar
  • 3 eggs
  • 150ml crème fraiche
  • 150ml sunflower oil
  • 3tbsp golden syrup

Method:

  • Tip the dry ingredients into a bowl or food processor and mix to combine.

  • In a jug, whisk the eggs until pale, then add the crème fraiche, sunflower oil, and golden syrup. Whisk together thoroughly, then tip the mixture into the dry ingredients and beat or blend to combine.

  • Pour the batter into a greased 8” round tin, and bake at 140 degrees C for 40 mins-1 hour. Cool on a wire rack.

The Best Chocolate Cake Ever

This is our perfect chocolate cake. It’s light enough to take a buttery filling, or – for a change – cherry jam, and a ganache topping. It’s also fluffy and charming enough to convert the anti-chocolate cake league.

Ingredients:

  • 8oz self-raising flour
  • 3tbsp cocoa
  • 2tsp baking powder
  • 8oz margarine
  • 8oz caster sugar
  • 4 eggs, beaten
  • 10tbsp milk

Method:

  • Sieve the first three ingredients into a bowl (or processor bowl), then add the margarine, caster sugar, beaten eggs, and milk, and beat until combined.

  • Tip into two well-greased 8” round baking tins, and bake at 160 degrees C for about 50 minutes.

  • Test with a skewer – when it comes out of the cake clean, the cake is done.

  • Cool on a wire rack, and finish with icing of your choice.

Toppings

Each topping recipe makes enough to top one 8” cake. To make enough to fill and cover, double the quantities.

Chocolate ganache:

Pour 4floz double cream into a saucepan, and add 4oz of broken dark or milk chocolate. Allow to melt, whisk to blend, and then refrigerate until it reaches spreading consistency. Spread over the cake.

Chocolate butter icing:

Beat 3oz butter until soft. Sift in 6oz icing sugar and up to 1oz of cocoa, depending how strong you want the icing. Add 1tbsp boiling water and beat until well blended.


Source : www.cakebaker.co.uk

White chocolate & ricotta cheesecake

Author: ms highlight // Category: , , ,
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This mouthwatering cheesecake is the perfect way to finish a large Sunday lunch, as it's incredibly light despite being made with chocolate


Ingredients

FOR THE BASE
* 50g butter , melted
* 150g digestive biscuits
* 50g amaretti biscuits
* sunflower oil , for greasing

FOR THE FILLING
* 200g white chocolate , chopped
* 5 leaves gelatine
* 6 tbsp milk
* 500g tub ricotta
* 300ml pot double cream
* 50g icing sugar
* 2 large eggs , separated

TO DECORATE
* white chocolate curls
* pomegranate seeds
* icing sugar , for dusting (optional)


Method

1. Heat oven to 200C/180C fan/gas 6. Melt the butter in a pan or microwave. Very finely crush the biscuits together, stir with the butter, then press very firmly into the base of a 20cm round loosebottomed cake tin. Bake for 6 mins. Cool, then wipe around the inside of the tin with a little oil on kitchen paper.
2. Soak the gelatine in water while you make the filling. Tip the chocolate into a bowl over a pan of simmering water, then add the milk. Gently heat until melted, then stir together. Squeeze the gelatine dry, add to the chocolate mixture and stir to dissolve.
3. Beat the ricotta, cream, sugar and egg yolks together. In a separate bowl, whisk the egg whites.
4. Stir the chocolate and ricotta mixtures together, then gently fold in the egg whites. Carefully pour onto the cooled biscuit base. Cover the tin with cling film, then chill until firm, preferably overnight.
5. To decorate, very generously top the cheesecake with the white chocolate curls, then remove from the tin, scatter with the pomegranate seeds and dust all over with icing sugar, if you like.

Prep 30 mins

Cook 6 mins

Prepare ahead

The cheesecake can be made up to 2 days ahead. Keep in the tin and cover with cling film. The chocolate curls will keep in a cool place in a plastic container for up to 2 days.


Recipe by Good Food

Ultimate chocolate cake

Author: ms highlight // Category: , , ,
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  • Ingredients
  • 200g good quality dark chocolate , about 60% cocoa solids
  • 200g butter , cut in pieces
  • 1 tbsp instant coffee granules
  • 85g self-raising flour
  • 85g plain flour
  • 1⁄4 tsp bicarbonate of soda
  • 200g light muscovado sugar
  • 200g golden caster sugar
  • 25g cocoa powder
  • 3 medium eggs
  • 75ml buttermilk (5 tbsp)
  • grated chocolate or curls, to decorate

FOR THE GANACHE
  • 200g good-quality dark chocolate , as above
  • 284ml carton double cream (pouring type)
  • 2 tbsp golden caster sugar

Method

  1. Butter a 20cm round cake tin (7.5cm deep) and line the base. Preheat the oven to fan 140C/conventional 160C/ gas 3. Break the chocolate in pieces into a medium, heavy-based pan. Tip in the butter, then mix the coffee granules into 125ml/4fl oz cold water and pour into the pan. Warm through over a low heat just until everything is melted - don't overheat. Or melt in the microwave on Medium for about 5 minutes, stirring half way through.
  1. While the chocolate is melting, mix the two flours, bicarbonate of soda, sugars and cocoa in a big bowl, mixing with your hands to get rid of any lumps. Beat the eggs in a bowl and stir in the buttermilk.
  2. Now pour the melted chocolate mixture and the egg mixture into the flour mixture, stirring just until everything is well blended and you have a smooth, quite runny consistency. Pour this into the tin and bake for 1 hour 25- 1 hour 30 minutes - if you push a skewer in the centre it should come out clean and the top should feel firm (don't worry if it cracks a bit). Leave to cool in the tin (don't worry if it dips slightly), then turn out onto a wire rack to cool completely.
  3. When the cake is cold, cut it horizontally into three. Make the ganache: chop the chocolate into small pieces and tip into a bowl. Pour the cream into a pan, add the sugar, and heat until it is about to boil. Take off the heat and pour it over the chocolate. Stir until the chocolate has melted and the mixture is smooth.
  4. Sandwich the layers together with just a little of the ganache. Pour the rest over the cake letting it fall down the sides and smoothing to cover with a palette knife. Decorate with grated chocolate or a pile of chocolate curls. The cake keeps moist and gooey for 3-4 days.

Prep 30 - 40 mins

Cook 1 hr - 1 hr 30 mins Without icing mins

Plus baking and cooling time




by Angela Nilsen