No-Measure Chocolate Cake (Make Cake without Weighing Scales) Recipe on Food52 (2024)

Coffee

by: Grant Melton

September11,2017

3.7

10 Ratings

  • Makes one 10-inch round cake

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Author Notes

Not only does this cake come together in one bowl, but you also don't have to fuss around with measuring cups or spoons. All you need is a 7-ounce, individual-sized yogurt container. —Grant Melton

  • Test Kitchen-Approved

What You'll Need

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No-Measure Chocolate Cake (Make Cake without WeighingScales)

Ingredients
  • 1 7-oz container plain, full-fat Greek yogurt
  • 1 container canola oil
  • 1 container sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 2 containers self-rising flour
  • 1 container cocoa powder (unsweetened)
  • 1 container coffee or warm water
  • Salt
  • Powdered sugar, for dusting
Directions
  1. Preheat oven to 350° F.
  2. Empty the Greek yogurt container into a large mixing bowl. Now, using the container as your measuring device, add one yogurt container full of sugar and one yogurt container full of canola oil to the bowl. Then, add in two large eggs. Using an electric hand mixer, beat mixture until smooth.
  3. Now, still using the empty yogurt container to measure, add in two container-fulls of self-rising flour and one full container of cocoa powder. Beat on a low speed until lump free, and slowly add in a full container of warm water (or coffee, for intensified chocolate flavor) and a pinch of salt. Mix until smooth. Once smooth, pour the batter into a prepared 10-inch spring-form pan. Bake for 35 minutes or until a toothpick, when inserted into the middle of the cake, comes out clean. Let cool.
  4. Release the cake from the spring form pan and dust with powdered sugar, if desired. The cake goes well with a dollop of whipped cream.

Tags:

  • Chocolate Cake
  • American
  • Coffee
  • Dessert

See what other Food52ers are saying.

  • Eric Muscatell

  • Pat

  • FrugalCat

  • MONICA

  • Judy Sennesh

Popular on Food52

99 Reviews

Honestly after following all the instructions correctly.I do not recommend this recipe,it is a waste of ingredients.It is tasteless.Please food52 remove this recipe ! :(

Eric M. December 12, 2020

Food52 should really remove this recipe from its site as it tarnishes their good reputation. It’s a truly awful cake that is very dense and gluey and not very sweet. I’d really urge you not to waste your ingredients. I followed the recipe exactly and was so disappointed.

Pat March 8, 2018

Wanted a quick ,easy dessert. I had saved this recipe to my favorites & thought I would give it a try. Followed the recipe exactly using KA triple cocoa & KA self rising flour and strong coffee. Buttered my 10" springform pan and dusted with the cocoa. Best cake ever !! Not sure if this is good thing as I always have these ingredients on hand. :-)

FrugalCat February 22, 2018

I used coconut oil (its a liquid at room temp here in the tropics), turbinado sugar and decaf coffee. It came out fantastic. Coconut flavor was subtle.

MONICA February 4, 2018

No me gustó, es poco dulce, vamos que no lo haré de nuevo...

amy January 19, 2018

I'm an experienced baker. Made this and followed all directions. Used hot water rather than coffee, and Droste cocoa powder. I had to throw it out. I've never had to do that before. It was totally tasteless.

Kathy January 20, 2018

We, too, ended up throwing it our. Realized that we were putting ice cream on it to make it palatable. Don't need the extra calories. Opted to enjoy the ice cream.

Kathy January 13, 2018

Sadly, this cake just wasn't "it" for us. We did not like the texture, too dry. Also, I wish I had thought of it when I was putting it together to add a teaspoon of vanilla which I always do in chocolate recipes. I used coffee for the liquid.

Judy S. November 25, 2017

Most yogurt containers I see now are less than 6 ounces (often 5.3 ounces). What to do about the eggs? Still use 2.

LPS November 3, 2017

I love this easy recipe! Instead of coffee, I used Scottish Breakfast tea and added a teaspoon of freshly ground cardamom. I've also used good quality vanilla and English Breakfast tea. It's moist and not overly sweet!

Barbara R. October 14, 2017

I finally tried this recipe. Sadly, it did not rise. I could not get my hands on self-rising flour, so I tried the substitute suggested in palyn hart's comment (1 container cake flour and one container AP flour.). The taste is delicious and it's certainly edible, but not something I would serve to guests.
Oh, well. Guess I'll have to eat it all by myself. ; ) And next time I'll wait until I have the self-rising flour on hand.

Steve October 15, 2017

As you may already realize, self-rising flour has a leavening agent in it whereas cake or AP flour does not.

Jennalynn October 15, 2017

The difference is: baking soda or baking powder. you needed to add that.

Barbara R. October 15, 2017

Yep, realized I was missing the leavening agent in hindsight. Thanks (and Jennalynn).

palyn H. October 9, 2017

One of my favorite pleasures in life is a rich, moist, not-too-sweet, naked, single-layer chocolate cake topped with generous scoops of good vanilla ice cream. This cake fit the bill perfectly, and will now be my go-to cake recipe. I made it using a 7-ounce container of full-fat fa*ge Greek yogurt, noting the yogurt level in the cup, and using that same level as the fill point (not quite all the way to the top) for the other ingredients. The only changes I made were to replace one cup of the flour with King Arthur unbleached cake flour (for extra tenderness), and King Arthur organic AP flour for the remaining cup. I also added one teaspoon of vanilla and used slightly watered-down coffee for the liquid. For the cocoa, I went basic with regular Hershey's cocoa, but in future will try other premium cocoa brands to see if it makes a difference. I baked the cake in a regular 9-inch cake pan lined with parchment, and used not quite all of the batter (for fear of overfilling). The cake required just a few minutes over the recommended bake time, and came out slightly domed, with just a few surface cracks. When cool, the cake was tender, moist, not too sweet or overly dense, with well balanced flavors. Absolutely delicious. Topped with vanilla ice cream, it was heavenly. Was equally tasty the next two days, enjoyed with just a glass of cold milk. So grateful for this recipe!

Juli January 25, 2019

How did you get it to rise without any leavening? You replaced the self-rising flour — that has baking soda and salt added — with flour but no baking soda or powder.

robinorig October 9, 2017

I used part black cocoa from King Arthur, too. For some reason, mine fell in in the center and didn't totally cook in the center. I baked it longer and was afraid it would burn if I left it in longer. I might try it in a Bundt pan next time to solve that problem. I'm thinking it could be because it's been extremely humid lately from all the hurricanes. Otherwise I don't know as I haven't had this problem before. I'm an experienced baker.

Cooking I. October 9, 2017

I made this using coconut oil and a combination of King Arthur triple cocoa blend and King Arthur Black cocoa(purchased at Food52). Adding coffee is a must, brings out the chocolate flavor.
Reminds of an old fashion Devil's Food cake.

Colleen L. September 30, 2017

It would be helpful to know what size of containers you are talking about!! We all live in different locations. You can get different size containers of all those ingredients.

Steve September 30, 2017

Hi Colleen- he mention the First listed ingredient. 7 oz. container. Then, the whole point of the recipe is to use just that same container to measure all the other ingredients.

John A. September 22, 2017

Oh, nevermind. A pinch!

John A. September 22, 2017

How much salt?

Ruti September 21, 2017

I made this recipe with very slight changes. I used regular a 7 oz container of plain yogurt, (no Greek yogurt in Argentina), 1/2 a cont. of sunflower oil, and half a cont. of unsweetened cocoa powder, the other half of finely chopped 70% cocoa chocolate, because I have a lot and I love it and didn't feel like melting it, which would be the other option. It's really good, and no doubt the original version must be too, but with half the oil, in my opinion.

Ruti September 21, 2017

"a regular 7 oz container"

Kelly O. September 23, 2017

Totally agree. I used a whole co trainer of oil and I think you can definitely taste it. I balked at using a whole container, and I should have gone with my gut and cut it in half.

Amy September 21, 2017

I made this recipe tonight for my son and daughter-in-law's anniversary celebration. It was a fun recipe - a nice change from the usual. I used a full 7 ounce freshly brewed Americano in place of the water, along with 2 teaspoons vanilla. Hindsight, this may have been too strong a coffee to use, and I may have been a bit careless and not leveled off the unsweetened cocoa, perhaps adding a bit more than it called for. This added a lot of intensity, and when I tasted the finished batter it did not taste nearly sweet enough. I ended up adding another almost 1/2 cup of sugar to get it to the right sweetness for our personal taste. So in effect, I pretty much doubled the sugar. This made it take longer - almost 45 minutes to bake - which was fine. After it had cooled, I poked holes in the cake with a bamboo skewer and poured a homemade salted caramel sauce over top, again to balance out the intensity of the chocolate. We had it with vanilla ice cream and it was delicious. Everyone loved it. If anyone wants the homemade caramel sauce recipe, I'm pasting the link below. We thought it went quite well with the cake.
http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2016/09/print/easy-caramel-sauce-recipe.html

Jennalynn September 20, 2017

I'm surprised at all the craziness in the comments.
It's just a fun way to put together a cake quickly/easily.
There are a ton of chocolate cake recipes if you want to use measuring cups/spoons/ other ingredients.
Let this be what it is.

denni September 21, 2017

:)

robinorig September 20, 2017

BTW, the fa*ge small yogurt containers here are now 6 oz. I think maybe they were 7 oz originally but have been shrunk down to 6. Also, liquid and dry measurements are totally different and volume is different than weight.

No-Measure Chocolate Cake (Make Cake without Weighing Scales) Recipe on Food52 (2024)

FAQs

How do you bake without weighing scales? ›

If a recipe asks specifically for 1 cup (135 g) sifted flour, then you should sift the flour into a bowl and then use a spoon to scoop it into the measuring cup. If it asks for 1 cup (135 g) flour, sifted, then I would measure out 1 cup (135 g) of flour and then sift it before proceeding with the recipe.

What happens when you bake a cake without sugar? ›

Sugar helps cakes stay moist after baking. A completely sugar-free cake will dry out quickly, so wrap cooled cakes in cling film to prevent moisture loss.

What happens if you reduce the amount of sugar in a cake? ›

In some baking, such as quick breads and cake, sugar is an essential ingredient for providing the right moisture and texture. The chemistry of sugar attracts water molecules, so cutting it out can make your baked goods too tough and dry.

Can I bake a cake without scales? ›

This is how i would do it. Measure the butter geometrically (i.e. butter whole weighs 250g, so if recipe says you need 125g then that's half a piece). For flour, 1 heaped tablespoon is the same as an ounce. No measure for butter but grated cheese -5 !!

How do you weigh something if you don't have a scale? ›

Balance a balance with lightweight, identical cups at both ends. This can be a ruler balanced on an object, or a string over something with little friction with cups tied at both ends. Place the object at one end, and fill the other cup with pure water until it balances with the object.

Can you bake without measurements? ›

It really depends on what you bake. For pizza for example you can just eyeball the ingredients and mix them up in a bowl. For other things that require precise measurements, such as bread, cookies, and cakes, you do need measuring tools.

What is 1 cup without measuring cup? ›

Measure with tablespoons or teaspoons instead. 16 tablespoons equal 1 cup, and 48 teaspoons equal 1 cup. Alternatively, use a kitchen scale. 1 cup of liquid equals 240 grams on a scale.

How many minutes does it take to bake a cake without oven? ›

When the batter is smooth and has no lumps in it, pour it in the baking pan and shake it gently. 4. Now, place the pan carefully over the sea salt inside the pressure cooker and put on the lid. Keep the flame at a low setting and bake for 40 minutes.

Are there any cakes that diabetics can eat? ›

Sugar-free victoria sponge

A modern take on a timeless classic, this victoria sponge recipe has plenty of fruity flavour without the sugar. Both the sponge and the double cream topping are made with xylitol, to keep this cake diabetic-friendly.

How much sugar should be in a cake? ›

Much like pound cake, the 1-2-3-4 cake gets its name from the proportions of its base ingredients: one cup of butter, two cups of sugar, three cups of flour, four eggs.

What cancels sugar out? ›

Hydrate. Flush out all that sweet stuff from your system by hydrating ASAP with water or other low-sugar fluids, and foods high in water content. "Drink plenty of water and go for foods like watermelon, cucumbers, strawberries and yogurt," Seaver says.

What cancels too much sugar? ›

The Fix: Tone down an overly sweet dish by adding a sour, salty, or bitter ingredient to it. Sour fruit (such as blackberries or cherries), cooling herbs such as mint, and chopped nuts work well in sweets such as cakes, cookies, and pies.

What if you put too much sugar in a recipe? ›

If your dish is a little too sweet, try rounding out the sweetness by adding flavors or ingredients that are sour, bitter, or spicy. It may be obvious not to add more sweet ingredients, but you should also stay away from salty ones since they actually bring out the sweetness in food.

What can I use instead of a scale? ›

A see-saw acts as a makeshift balance scale to measure your weight. Sit on one end of the see-saw and have a friend load weights or gallons of paint onto the other end. Once the see-saw is parallel to the ground, then the weight on the side is the same as your bodyweight.

What to do if you don't have a scale? ›

To monitor whether you are losing or gaining weight or staying the same, a tape measure is as good or better than a scale. Measure your waist, the widest part of your hips, and your chest or breast line. Take your measurements at the same time of day, preferably first thing in the morni...

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