“Tunnel of Fudge Cake for the people you love” |
| Tunnel of Fudge Cake for the people you love Posted: 08 Feb 2011 01:46 PM PST Tunnel of Fudge Cake has a soft, gooey chocolate center. Before molten lava cake or chocolate fondants or fallen chocolate cake there was Tunnel of Fudge Cake. It's a classic recipe, and I am sure many people have their own version. Tunnel of Fudge Cake is possibly the recipe that I have been making longer than any other, and more often. My mother passed this recipe on to me; she'd gotten it from my cousin and kept it in her little tin recipe card box. I was what we now call a tween, and just getting into cooking. Chocolate cake, of course, was one of the reasons I was interested in cooking at all. And this version, with its soft, gooey chocolate center made me feel sophisticated and gourmet, like I really knew how to cook something special. I still use my mother's heavy Bundt pan that may well be older than me for this cake. It's the best cake pan ever, nothing sticks and it makes a lovely ridged and pointed cake. Anything that comes out of this pan is instantly beautiful to me. I have never been attracted to the new-fangled pans that make tree or castle or tower-shaped rings, because I am so attached to the old Bundt from mama's kitchen. Now that I think about it, I am a little worried she doesn't know I have it and might demand it back. Skip to next paragraphPerre Coleman Magness Perre Magness has studied food and cooking around the world, mostly by eating, but also through serious study. Coursework at Le Cordon Bleu London and intensive courses in Morocco, Thailand and France has broadened her own culinary skill and palate. The kitchen of choice is at home, cooking like most people, experimenting with unique but practical ideas. Recent postsRelated StoriesWhen I first started making this cake, chocolate only came in squares and chips, semisweet or "baking" chocolate. And that is certainly how I used to make it. Mostly with semisweet chips. And that works just fine. But I have moved on to the high-quality chocolate that is so readily available now. I love using bittersweet chocolate for the rich, deep flavor it creates – a really intense chocolatiness – but good semisweet works as well. I have also switched from mixing by hand to using the stand mixer. It gives the eggs and sugar a nice fluffiness that translates well in to the cake. Other than that, this is the same recipe I have been using for all these years. I know it by heart. Part of the beauty of this cake is its malleability. Tunnel of Fudge is gorgeous on its own, but drizzle a simple powdered sugar or chocolate glaze over it and take it up a notch. Sprinkle it with powdered sugar or cocoa powder to pretty it up. Add a little liqueur instead of the vanilla – amaretto, grand marnier, framboise – and it takes on another dimension. Serve it with sweetened whipped cream, ice cream, caramel or fruit sauce, whatever takes your fancy. I've been serving this to people I love for years. I hope you will, too. (See the recipe, next page) Page: 1 | 2 This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read our FAQ page at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php |
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