Chocolate Guinness Cake

Updated May 1, 2024

Chocolate Guinness Cake
Sang An for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.
Total Time
1 hour 15 minutes
Rating
5(7,985)
Notes
Read community notes

For me, a chocolate cake is the basic unit of celebration. The chocolate Guinness cake here is simple but deeply pleasurable, and has earned its place as a stand-alone treat.

Featured in: AT MY TABLE; A Feast for a Holiday, Or Everyday Exulting

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Ingredients

Yield:One 9-inch cake or 12 servings

    For the Cake

    • Butter, for the pan
    • 1cup Guinness stout
    • 10tablespoons (1 stick plus 2 tablespoons) unsalted butter (see Tip)
    • ¾cup unsweetened cocoa
    • 2cups superfine sugar
    • ¾cup sour cream
    • 2large eggs
    • 1tablespoon vanilla extract
    • 2cups all-purpose flour
    • teaspoons baking soda

    For the Topping

    • cups confectioners' sugar
    • 8ounces cream cheese at room temperature
    • ½cup heavy cream
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (12 servings)

512 calories; 26 grams fat; 15 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 7 grams monounsaturated fat; 1 gram polyunsaturated fat; 66 grams carbohydrates; 3 grams dietary fiber; 46 grams sugars; 6 grams protein; 345 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    For the cake: Heat oven to 350 degrees. Butter a 9-inch springform pan and line with parchment paper. In a large saucepan, combine Guinness and butter. Place over medium-low heat until butter melts, then remove from heat. Add cocoa and superfine sugar, and whisk to blend.

  2. Step 2

    In a small bowl, combine sour cream, eggs and vanilla; mix well. Add to Guinness mixture. Add flour and baking soda, and whisk again until smooth. Pour into buttered pan, and bake until risen and firm, 45 minutes to 1 hour. Place pan on a wire rack and cool completely in pan.

  3. Step 3

    For the topping: Using a food processor or by hand, mix confectioners' sugar to break up lumps. Add cream cheese and blend until smooth. Add heavy cream, and mix until smooth and spreadable.

  4. Step 4

    Remove cake from pan and place on a platter or cake stand. Ice top of cake only, so that it resembles a frothy pint of Guinness.

Tip
  • The recipe for this cake in Nigella Lawson's cookbook "Feast: Food to Celebrate Life" (Hyperion, 2004) calls for 18 tablespoons (2 sticks plus 2 tablespoons) unsalted butter.

Ratings

5 out of 5
7,985 user ratings
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Cooking Notes

By volume, a 9" springform pan is 10 cups. You can use 2 "standard" 8" or 9" pans instead. Or make 18-24 cup cakes.

I used a 9" square pan and made 6 cupcakes as well (the 9" square has a volume of about 8 cups). I baked the cupcakes for about 25 minutes and the cake for 45.

Love this cake. I do think a little Bailey's in the frosting does wonders.

We make this cake one day in advance. It tastes better and it's a little more moist. We release the spring form after about an hour in the cooling process so the sides don't stick the next day. We prepare the frosting the day we plan to serve.
In a side by side taste test with my family of 19 tasters... this was a clear winner over the epicurious three layer Guinness cake.

It's better with 1) a half-teaspoon of kosher salt added to the dry ingredients, and 2) a better stout than Guinness - preferably a chocolate stout.

Made this cake for the folks. They loved it! Didn’t notice the Guinness in the cake, but I noticed there was leftover beer in the bottle, so it was a win for the cook.

Please list ingredients by weight, not by volume.

For those of you asking for weight. You can find it on Nigella's website
http://www.nigella.com/recipes/view/chocolate-guinness-cake-3086

Made cake as stated. I used about 3 oz. of goat cheese in the topping in place of cream cheese. To accompany the cake I use a jar of Morrelo cherries simmered in a bit of sugar and ruby port. Served it on a plate and put the cake on top. It was a warm syrupy mixture that set off the deep chocolate cake. It was awesome and pretty.

This was superb and so easy to make! Not too sweet (I used ordinary sugar, not superfine, and didn't adjust quantity). Came out perfectly. Icing was easy too, and frosted beautifully. My husband loved the deep flavor of chocolate with a hint of bitterness. Looked gorgeous as well! Did I mention how easy it was to make? :)

I make this with the above-noted changes (salt, a better stout) in a Bundt pan, rather than a springform, and don't frost it at all. Dusting with a mix of confectioner's sugar and cocoa is all it needs, not a thick gloppy frosting.

I made it in Denver (5280', folks, if you had forgotten!) and it didn't fall! Changes:
9oz stout
6.25 oz sugar: 2cups minus 2T
10.25 oz flour: added 2T to the 2cups
2 tsp baking soda (not 2.5)
Baked at 375 (actually in my convection oven, 350 which is 375 in normal ovens) for 35 mins. I should have checked at 30 mins.
Also, I food-processed the sugar and cream cheese, then added the whipping cream just until I liked the texture.
Quite yummy

I made this recipe into cupcakes, adjusting the cooking time downwards and just using a cake tester to figure out when they were done. I also used the food processor to make superfine sugar out of white granulated sugar with no problems. The cupcakes were a hit!

I have made this over and over since it was first published and think it is the best in the world! Last one I used a cherry ale instead of Guinness. Also tossed in a coupla handfuls of frozen Bing cherries and added more chopped cherries to the frosting and a bit more powdered sugar to thicken. The cake was grand and gone in one day. I am going to keep experimenting with the recipe as my go-to base for chocolate cake.

My go-to chocolate cake, always wins raves. It's what I think a chocolate cake should be: intensely chocolate-y, not overly sweet, and fairly dense. Occasionally I save other chocolate cake recipes but then I think, "Why bother?"

And a few more notes on making and baking the cake:
I let the butter-Guinness-sugars-cocoa mixture cool to room temp before adding to batter.
After filling the pan, I rapped it on the counter a few times to shake out any air pockets.
I used an instant-read thermometer to check for doneness: 200 degrees F in center (don't start testing too early and deflate the cake).

I tried making 24 cupcakes as one other commenter noted, but using all the batter (I hate to waste any) they were on the full side. As others have mentioned, this isn't a cake that rises very well, so instead of rising out of the paper into a dome, they seeped over and stuck to the pan. I wouldn't make them into cupcakes again. This is my second time with the recipe because the cake itself went over like gangbusters.

Attempted a gluten-free version for my Mom's birthday. I have made this with great success many times. This was a disaster. I subbed 1 C coffee concentrate ( cold brew made in a toddy using Cafe du Monde), 1 3/4 C GF AP flour and 1/4 C almond flour ( was short on the GF)- added 1/4 t baking powder and tried to cook in our countertop oven- which stopped mid-bake. I tried to get it back. Not sure if it would have turned out without the oven fail. Any suggestions?

Try 50 mins. Remember comments re adding dalt.

Try 50 mins Remember comments re adding salt.

both times i have made this it sinks in the middle? it’s still very tasty but disappointing looking

Does anyone else have trouble knowing when it’s done baking?

Prepared as written with the addition of 1 tsp of fine ground dark roast coffee. Following another suggestion added Irish Creme to the frosting. Can't beat it with a stick!

Cakes are difficult for me so I stick to the most simple recipes. This one is a winner! no alterations except addition of 1/2 tsp kosher salt as someone in the Notes recommended. Served at birthday dinner the day after it was baked: delicious. Leftover cake the following day: sublime.

Perfect. Fun. Joy.

Changed the icing but I also made the icing per instructions, to give it a try. Thankfully we had the alternate icing because the cream cheese tastes like cream cheese.

A phenomenal cake!! I put regular granulated sugar through a food processor as a work around for the super fine sugar (2 1/3 cups granulated yielded slightly more than 2 cups). Used 3/4 teaspoon salt and Dutch processed cocoa powder. Also followed the tip and used 9 ounces butter. The center did sink as it cooled. But since it's not a layer cake, it makes a delightful hole to fill in with the frosting. Mixed the frosting by hand, slowly adding the whipped cream a tablespoon or so at time.

A great chocolate cake…so simple and yet so satisfying. I made it for a friend’s birthday…all in attendance were enthralled. From the profusion of comments, I made some adjustments…1 1/2 sticks of salted Irish butter, 1 1/2 Tbsp. of baking soda, Droste cocoa and 1 teaspoon of expresso powder, which provided a lovely bit of bitterness. The icing had only 2 Tbsp. of cream and a shot of whiskey.

This was terrible and I had to go back to Nigella to figure out why: her recipe calls for 250 g butter, 8.8 ounces -- almost twice as much as NYT conversion.

second time making this cake. both times the middle sunk in (i'm in denver >5,000ft). isn't too sweet as is but i did reduce slightly in the frosting and added a splash of whiskey. also add a pinch of salt to dry ingredients as others recommended. next time will try reducing the baking soda to 2tsp or less for better aesthetic result.

This cake was perfect using the exact recipe. The frosting just adds that extra sweetness.

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