Molten Chocolate Cakes
Molten Chocolate Cakes, also known as Lava Cakes, are warm individual-size chocolate cakes with oozing chocolate centres. Most recipes will simply have you undercooking a chocolate cake batter, so the outside is set like cake but the inside is raw batter that pours out like lava when you cut into it. Hence the name! But why settle for cake batter when you can have the real thing? I’ll take molten real chocolate over raw cake, thanks!
What you need for Lava Cakes
Here’s what you need to make Molten Chocolate Cakes:
Dark chocolate / semi-sweet chocolate chips – for both the cake batter and the chocolate ganache filling. Anything up to 50% cocoa will work here. Do not use chocolate with a higher cocoa %. The cake isn’t as soft and also it’s quite hard to make a small batch of ganache with a high cocoa % chocolate;Flour – A surprisingly small amount, just 2 tablespoons for 4 cakes! Are you shocked? 🙂 These babies are literally mostly chocolate – and we’re all very happy about that!!4 eggs – We’re using 2 whole eggs and 2 yolks;Sugar – White caster sugar / superfine sugar. The finer grains make it easier to incorporate into the batter;Butter – Unsalted; andCream – Heavy / thickened cream to make the ganache filling.
If you’re short on time, you can just use Lindt balls instead of making your own ganache!
How to make Molten Chocolate Cakes
You’ll need a few hours for the ganache to set so you can scoop up balls to drop into the batter. But once that’s done, the cake itself is a 10-minute hand-mixing job, and a 20-minute bake.
1. Ganache for molten chocolate filling
This ganache is thicker than traditional ganache. Ordinarily, a ratio of 1:1 chocolate to cream is used. For Lava Cakes, I use less cream so the ganache oozes more thickly and slowly. Otherwise it runs out of the cake too quickly. Remember: If you’re short on time, you can just use a Lindt ball instead of making ganache! For this recipe, we only need a small batch of ganache. This doesn’t work so well using the hot cream method. So we’re doing it the old-school way: put chocolate and cream in a bowl, microwave in 20-second bursts to melt, then stir until combined and smooth; and
2. Molten Chocolate Cake batter
Start the batter once the ganache is firm: And now, for that moment everybody been anticipating … when you crack into the cake and see that hot chocolate lava come pouring out. Ooof … Surely one of the greatest chocolate theatre moments in living history! No moulds? No problems! Just use ramekins or muffin tins. The puddings won’t stand as tall, but it will taste just as good! Bake times in recipe notes. Avoid vigorously mixing. There’s not much flour in this, but we can still over-work the gluten which will make the cake less tender. Once you can no longer see flour and the batter has come together and is smooth, stop mixing; Backtracking a bit now to plating up. 🙂 A scoop of ice cream or dollop of whipped cream is sensational here. The whole hot vs cold and creamy thing is amazing. Finish with a dusting of cocoa powder to pretty it up. A splash of colour and freshness is always nice, whether it be strawberries, raspberries or perhaps some little edible flowers for looks. Hmm, it looks like quite a frightful mess once you start digging in, doesn’t it? But a deliciously frightful mess, right?? – Nagi x PS Extra bonus: keeps 3 to 4 days and you still get the molten centre because reheating won’t cook the chocolate ganache inside! I just reheat in the microwave for 45 seconds, and it is as good as new. If you try reheating the raw cake batter Lava Cakes, the inside cooks.
Watch how to make it
Life of Dozer
Every year, I vow that this is the year I will teach Dozer to hold a rose in his mouth for a sweet Valentine’s Day photo! I continue to fail. Please just pretend I’m not there, holding his snout closed around what turned out to a rather thorny rose. Oops! 😂