I'm not sure where I got the idea to turn a normal chocolate mud cake into something more boozy with the edition of mulled wine, but it has been floating around in my head for a while now! So I decided to give it a whirl for New Year's Eve and, even if I to say so myself, it is a triumph, the wine isn't too overpowering and the boozy sultanas are deliciously squidgy.
Mulled wine chocolate mud cake
Ingredients
Mulled wine:
- 600ml red wine
- 100g sugar
- 60g sultanas
- 6 cardamon pods
- 6 cloves
- 1 stick cinnamon
- freshly squeezed juice of an orange
Cake:
- 230g good quality dark chocolate
- 150g unsalted butter
- 400 ml mulled wine
- 2 large eggs
- 160g sugar
- 260g self raising flour
Ganache:
- 200ml mulled wine
- 400g good quality dark chocolate
Method:
- Add all the mulled wine ingredients into a saucepan and gently simmer for 30 mins. Strain the wine keeping the sultanas but discarding the cloves, cardamons and cinnamon.
- Grease and line a 7" cake tin.
- Preheat the oven to 170C/325F
- Place 400ml of the mulled wine, the chocolate and the butter into a saucepan and gently heat until the chocolate and butter have melted. Leave to cool slightly.
- In a bowl lightly beat the eggs, slowly add the melted chocolate mixture beating well.
- Beat in the flour and sugar.
- Pour the mixture into the tin and bake for 40-45 mins until a skewer inserted into the middle comes out clean. Leave to cool in the tin.
- Melt the chocolate and beat it as you slowly pour in the wine, (which should also be hot.) Beat until they are combined.
- Take half the ganache and stir in the sultanas.
- Cut the cake in half and pour over the ganache with the sultanas. Put it into the fridge to harden.
- Place the other half of the cake on top (I turn the cake upside down so the top becomes the bottom as you may find it cracks a little) and pour over the rest of the ganache.
- Decorate by splashing the cake with edible gold paint.
I wanted to decorate the cake in quite a simple manner, as you want to be able to spend most of the day primping and preening yourself and not a cake. Fortunately I always have some spare cookie dough in the freezer, so I decided to use that rather than messing about with fondant. You will need to use a fairly stiff dough so that it keeps it shape, of course you could spell out the new date rather than a countdown, or even make a Valentine's Day version with your initials.
Decorating
I hope you have a lovely celebration tonight and that there is a wonderful, cake filled year to come for you.
You can download a pdf of the recipe here.
xxx
That looks like a very yummy cake - I might try it for my birthday. Wishing you a very happy New Year. Betty x
ReplyDeleteVery good. Have a nice New Year.
ReplyDeleteKisses.
Olga
What a fun cake for the new year! Happy New Year Natasha and keep posting those lovely creations!
ReplyDeleteThat's a super cute cake! I love your photography.
ReplyDeleteThat looks divine! ^_^ xx
ReplyDeletehttp://rainingcakeandcookies.blogspot.co.uk/
Looks and sounds so yummy!
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year! May all your dreams come true...
Thanks - these are some ideas I hadn't thought of before: using mulled wine in a baked item and decorating with counting down numbers. Very clever.
ReplyDelete