Vegan Chocolate Cake Recipe (2024)

Vegan Chocolate Cake Recipe (1)

Did I ever tell you about the day that I was appointed chief of detectives of the egg police? No? It was a several years ago before the blog, on Mr NQN's birthday and we were having dinner with the Elliotts (cue the music to Jaws please Mr Music). I had organised his birthday at a Japanese restaurant and I was busy trying to negotiate a second language which I barely speak and people were asking me all sorts of questions about the cake, the food they were eating and just general daftness. Then,there was a loud, dramatic gasp and then a cry from Mr NQN's mother Tuulikki who was sitting next to me. I had apparently let her eat a piece of okonomiyaki, an egg omelette. "Lorraine! How could you let me do that?" she asked me looking at me accusingly and hurt.

"But, but it looks like a pancake or an omelette ... and they are two things that you can't eat as they both have eggs!" I spluttered, my energy completely sapped from the whole experience. Apparently, unbeknownst to me, I had been appointed the chief of detectives of the "Egg Police" and was expected to watch what she would eat and warn her accordingly. From that day on I resigned my position and she was on her own. It was up to her to ask whether an item had egg in it and if she ate it, it washer responsibility.

Vegan Chocolate Cake Recipe (2)

I know she and I have our moments where the vegan clashes with omnivore but we do get along well as long as we aren't talking about food. And apart from being an entertaining and charmingly eccentric artist, she also created Mr NQN who is the most wonderful specimen of humandom.Anyway it was Tuulikki's birthday and I decided to make her an eggless, vegan chocolate cake.

Except I wanted people to have no idea that it was a vegan, egg-less or dairy-less cake. I wanted it to be moist, gooey and rich with an "eat me" texture to it - not like some vegan cakes that I had eaten which would err towards hard and dry. I baked the cake and decided the best way to keep it moist would either be to poke holes in it while it was still warm and pour a rich chocolate syrup on top or spread the syrup once cooled as a thick icing. Either way I think after much experimentation, wefinally had a vegan chocolate cake that could pass as a regular chocolate cake. It was rich and it had a moist, tender crumb - everything you could want in a cake yet this one had no eggs or dairy in it.

So it came to serving the cake. I asked Tuulikki if there were forks for people to eat the cake. Her brow wrinkled and she put a finger to her chin thoughtfully. "I haven't been able to find my forks...." she mused before pausing for a second and then her hands sprung up into the air. "Eureka!" her expression said.

"Oh yes, the forks must be in the bedroom!!!" she said before scurrying off to look for them.

So tell me Dear Reader, do you have a good repertoire of vegetarian, vegan or allergy friendly recipes? And are there certain topics that you just can't discuss with some people like politics, relligion or food?

Chocolately Rich Vegan Chocolate Cake (Egg & Dairy Free)

Preparation time:

Cooking time:

An Original Recipe by Not Quite Nigella

  • 1.5 cups/225g/8ozs plain or all purpose flour

  • 1.5 cups/300g/10.6ozs brown sugar

  • 6 tablespoons/45g/1.6ozs cocoa, sifted

  • 1.5 teaspoons bi carbonate of soda

  • 1 teaspoon salt

  • 1.5 cups/375ml/13flozs water

  • 1/2 cup/125ml/4flozs mild flavoured vegetable oil (eg. canola oil)

  • 3 tablespoons white vinegar

  • 4 teaspoons vanilla extract

  • 75g/2.5oz dark chocolate (dairy free) finely chopped

Chocolate syrup or icing

  • 1/2 cup/125ml/4flozs water

  • 1/2 cup/75g/2.7ozs icing or confectioners sugar

  • 1 teaspoon cocoa

  • 100g/3.5ozs dark chocolate, roughly chopped

Vegan Chocolate Cake Recipe (3)

Step 1 - Line a 20cm round baking tin with parchment and preheat the oven to 180C/350F. Combine dry ingredients in a large bowl and mix together. In a jug mix the water, oil, vinegar and vanilla and then add to dry ingredients. Stir in chocolate and and then pour into the prepared tin. Bake for 25-30 minutes until a skewer inserted comes out clean.

Vegan Chocolate Cake Recipe (4)

Step 2 - While it is baking, prepare the syrup. Heat the water, icing or confectioners sugar and cocoa until boiling and syrup - this may take a few minutes but you do want this syrupy. When thick add the chocolate and then whisk to remove any lumps and melt the chocolate.

Vegan Chocolate Cake Recipe (5)

Step 3 - When the cake is ready, take out of the oven and leaving it in the tin, poke tiny holes with a skewer. While it is still warm, gently pour the syrup over the cake and allow to cool completely before taking it out of the tin. Alternatively, if you allow this to cool and partially set, it takes on the consistency of icing and you can spread it out over the top which is what I did (who knew that inattentiveness would pay off? ;) ).

Vegan Chocolate Cake Recipe (6)

Published on 2012-03-13 by Lorraine Elliott.

Vegan Chocolate Cake Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Why is my vegan cake not fluffy? ›

CAKE NOT RISING

This can be caused by a few things already mentioned such as using the wrong egg replacer or over mixing. I always recommend using fresh raising agents. Generally, baking soda and baking powder only stay active for 3 months after opening.

What is a vegan cake made of? ›

Vegan cake is cake made without eggs, dairy butter or dairy milk. Each of these standard ingredients is easily replaced by plant-based substitutes, such as banana or flaxseed for eggs, non-trans fat margarine or oils for butters and plant milks for milk.

Why are vegan cakes so dry? ›

Lack of Eggs: Eggs provide structure, moisture, and leavening in traditional cakes. Vegan cakes typically replace eggs with alternatives like flax eggs, applesauce, or mashed bananas, which may not provide the same lightness and binding properties.

What makes a cake dense and not fluffy? ›

There's a big chance your butter and sugar will over-cream, meaning the butter will trap more air than it should. As the batter bakes, that extra air will deflate and leave you with an overly dense cake. It's all science! For best results, cream butter and sugar together for about 1-2 minutes.

What is the secret to light fluffy cakes? ›

To achieve a fluffy cake, start by ensuring all your ingredients are at room temperature. This allows them to blend together more easily. Begin by creaming the butter and sugar until light and fluffy. This step helps incorporate air into the batter, which contributes to a lighter texture.

What is left out of vegan cake? ›

Vegan baking, on the other hand, omits all animal products. While baking without eggs and butter can seem daunting, it's not impossible. All it takes is getting familiar with the right substitutions, and you'll be whipping up cakes, cookies, cupcakes, and more in no time.

Do vegan cakes taste different? ›

Flavor Differences

Gluten-Free bakers have different flour types to experiment with, and vegan bakers now have new alternatives to dairy products. In addition, vegan and gluten-free cakes contain way more fruits than regular cakes; this gives them a unique flavor.

What do vegans use in place of butter? ›

What are good vegan butter substitutes? In baking, you can use vegan butter, applesauce, dairy-free yogurt, coconut oil, coconut butter, olive oil, nut butter, mashed banana and mashed avocado. In cooking, you can use olive oil, coconut oil, vegetable stock, or avocado oil to replace butter.

What to avoid when baking vegan? ›

Dairy, whether it's milk or yogurt or sour cream, helps keep baked goods moist. It's also unfortunately not vegan. But don't skimp on the creamy stuff—it really helps to make a dense and luscious-textured pastry. Experiment with alt-milks, like almond milk.

Why do vegan cakes need vinegar? ›

Vinegar works a little bit differently from flax and chia; it reacts with the baking soda in the recipe to create extra lift, resulting in the lightest, fluffiest vegan chocolate cake you'll ever have. And no, you won't taste the vinegar—it simply enhances the overall flavour of the cake without distracting from it.

Why does my vegan cake taste bitter? ›

Why does an eggless cake turn bitter? (It is mostly the overuse of baking powder/soda, but it has happened twice, even after reducing the baking powder.) Yes , usually its because of baking soda , but if you are making a chocolate cake and using cocoa powder , excess of same could cause the bitterness to occur.

What are fake cakes called? ›

Dummy wedding cakes, also known as faux or display cakes, are meticulously crafted, non-edible cake designs that resemble traditional wedding cakes. They are typically made of foam, Styrofoam, or other food-safe materials that simulate the appearance, texture, and decoration of real cakes.

What is a dummy cake? ›

What Is It? A dummy cake is a fake cake. It looks like a real cake, but it's actually just decorated polystyrene blocks. They are used as display cakes for wedding shows and photoshoots.

Can you put a picture on a chocolate cake? ›

What type of cakes to use for placing edible cake toppers? Place the edible photo on any type of cake (e.g this chocolate cake)that is frosted using butter cream or fondant. It is also important that buttercream cakes have developed a 'skin' and are not wet to touch.

Why didn't my eggless cake rise? ›

There are several reasons why your eggless chocolate cake might not have risen as expected. Let's delve into some potential culprits: Leavening: Insufficient leavening agents: Did you use the correct amount of baking soda, baking powder, or other leavening agents?

Why is my eggless cake rubbery? ›

The reason why a cake gets rubbery is that the overmixing of flour activates the gluten. It makes cakes hard instead of the lovely soft spongy texture we associate with a good cake. And the over mixing is usually caused from incorrectly creaming butter and sugar.

Why is my vegan cake gluey? ›

The ratio of wet ingredients (fat and vegan milk) to dry ingredients (flour, cocoa powder etc.) has to be in perfect balance. If you have too much fat and too little milk and/or flour, you'll get a greasy cake. If you have too much milk and not enough fat, you'll end up with a gummy, dense cake.

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