Black Brushstroke Cake for Halloween

Black Brushstroke Cake for Halloween

Welcome to the dark side. But don’t worry, there’s cake! Black brushstroke cake, to be exact. Earlier this year, in my monthly baking column for Food24, I wrote about how darkness was going to descend on baking and treats were going to go gothic. Sometimes trends are silly and sometimes they can be fun – especially when they tie in with a celebration. And while I definitely don’t celebrate Halloween, it does give us bakers a fantastic excuse to get super creative. When the folks over at Food & Home Entertaining Magazine asked me to create a gothic food feature for their October issue, it was like putting me in a candy store! This Black Brushstroke Cake was the result and it is one heck of a showstopper – a jet-black velvet cake is sandwiched together with burnt vanilla buttercream and decorated with black chocolate brushstrokes. What is burnt vanilla, I hear you ask? Well, by baking the vanilla, the sugars in the bean caramelise giving it a more intense, toasty flavour.

If you haven’t yet tried the chocolate brushstrokes – check out my tutorial here – it’s a lot easier than it looks!

Black Brushstroke cake with layers of black velvet sponge, burnt vanilla buttercream and chocolate brushstrokes

 

BLACK BRUSHSTROKE CAKE WITH BURNT VANILLA FROSTING 

Makes 1 x 20cm cake, serves 6-8

 

240g cake flour

490g Natura Sugars Golden Caster Sugar

100g The Kate Tin Cocoa Powder

10ml (2 tsp) bicarbonate of soda

5ml (1 tsp) baking powder

large pinch salt

2 large eggs

180ml (¾ cup) strong coffee, cooled

320g buttermilk

125ml (½ cup) canola oil

black gel food colouring

 

BURNT VANILLA FROSTING

1 vanilla pod, halved

125g butter, softened

60g The Kate Tin Cocoa Powder, sifted

300g Natura Sugars Demerara Icing Sugar, sifted

45 – 60ml (3 – 4 tbsp) milk

black gel food colouring

 

BLACK BRUSHSTROKES

black powder food colouring

100g The Kate Tin Dark Baking Chocolate, melted

 

For the cake, preheat the oven to 180˚C. Grease and line 3 cake tins (20cm diameter) with baking paper.

In a large bowl, sift together the dry ingredients and make a well in the centre. In a separate bowl, whisk together the eggs, coffee, buttermilk, canola oil and a few drops black gel food colouring.

Pour the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients and whisk until just combined. Divide the batter among the tins and bake in the preheated oven, 30 – 40 minutes or until springy to the touch and a skewer inserted in the centres of the cakes comes out clean. Allow to cool in the tins, 5 minutes, before turning out onto a wire cooling rack to cool down completely.

To make the icing, place the vanilla pod on a baking sheet in the oven and roast, 5 minutes, until fragrant. Scrape the seeds from the pod and discard the pod. Place the seeds in a blender or pestle and mortar and blitz or pound to form a fine powder. Cream the butter until light and fluffy, then add the vanilla powder, 60g cocoa, the icing sugar, milk and enough gel food colouring to make a black icing. Beat until smooth and completely combined.

For the brushstrokes, line a baking sheet with baking paper. Mix the powder colouring into the melted baking chocolate. Drop a teaspoonful coloured chocolate onto the baking sheet, then use the back of a spoon to smear the chocolate like a brushstroke over the baking sheet. Repeat until all of the chocolate has been used up. Allow to set before peeling off the brushstrokes.

Assemble the cake by layering the sponges with burnt vanilla buttercream icing between each layer. Cover the entire cake in icing and smooth out with a palette knife. Using dollops icing, stick the brushstrokes on the front of the cake to decorate.

 

Death By Chocolate Freakshakes for Halloween

Death By Chocolate Freakshakes for Halloween

Chocolate freakshakes loaded with a sinful amount deliciousness? Oh hell yes! If I had to choose a way to go, I’d definitely choose death by chocolate! I created these Death by Chocolate Freakshakes for my foodie friends over at Food and Home Entertaining Magazine last year for their spooky Halloween issue and while, since then, everyone has jumped on the Freakshake bandwagon and, to be honest, I’m a little over it, I still think they make a very witty Halloween dessert! This milkshake features espresso syrup, chocolate Halloween bark, chocolate ice cream and is topped off chocolate whipped cream – sinfully delicious! I think it would be super fun to set up a Freakshake bar and let everyone create their own – especially if you put all the ingredients in science beakers and viles – add a little dry ice and you have an idea that’s so good, it’s scary! 😉

If you’re looking for some more Halloween desserts – these are some of the treats I’ve made before:

 

DEATH BY CHOCOLATE FREAKSHAKES

Makes 2

 

Espresso Syrup

½ cup freshly brewed espresso

¼ cup sugar

¼ cup water

 

Chocolate Halloween Bark

100g The Kate Tin Dark Baking Chocolate, melted plus extra to decorate

50g The Kate Tin White Baking Chocolate, melted

Orange powder colouring (optional)

Variety of Halloween-coloured sprinkles, to decorate

 

Chocolate Whipped Cream

50g The Kate Tin Dark Chocolate, melted

125ml cream, whipped

 

Milkshake

4 scoops chocolate ice cream

1 cup milk

 

To serve

2-4 white marshmallows

Chocolate vermicelli

Mini doughnuts

 

To make the syrup, bring espresso, sugar, and water to a boil in a saucepan, stirring to dissolve sugar. Remove from the heat and allow to cool. To make the chocolate Halloween bark, spread the melted dark chocolate thinly onto a sheet of greaseproof paper with a palette knife. Colour the white chocolate orange then drizzle and swirl that over the dark chocolate. Scatter with the Halloween sweets and sprinkles and allow to set completely. Break into shards. Make the chocolate whipped cream by mixing a third of the whipped cream into the melted chocolate and fold the rest in until combined. For the glass; dip the rim of the glasses in the extra melted chocolate and roll it in vermicelli. Divide the espresso syrup amongst the glasses, keeping a little for garnish. Toast the marshmallows using a blowtorch or place them on a tray in the oven under a preheated grill until golden brown. To make the milkshake; blitz the ice cream and milk in a blender until smooth and pour it into the glasses on top of the espresso syrup. Pipe the chocolate cream over the top. Pierce the doughnut onto a straw and place that inside of your milkshake. Top with the toasted marshmallows, broken up chocolate bark and drizzle with espresso syrup.

Toffee Apple Cake with Caramel Peanut Buttercream

Toffee Apple Cake with Caramel Peanut Buttercream

Halloween isn’t really a big deal here in South Africa, I mean there are a few spooky decorations and the odd ghost-shaped sweet in the supermarkets but definitely not as big of a deal as it is in America. BUT let me just warn you, ‘cos it seems to gradually becoming a thing. Last year? Kids came trick or treating at my door and I had NOTHING to give them! The horror! And before you go and say I was tricking them – how could THE biggest dessert-o-holic NOT have sweets in her house, let me just say that it’s because I’m an all or nothing kind of gal. Meaning, I eat them all so there’s nothing left. But I digress. This year the lovely folks over at Food & Home Entertaining Magazine asked me and my ridiculously talented sister to do a little something for Halloween. Scary tales was the brief – the spooky side of fairy tales (which frankly are bloody terrifying). This cake is an evil (but delicious) spin on Snow White and the poison apple; layers of spiced apple cake, toffee buttercream, peanut brittle and some snow white apples on top. Sugar, sugar and more sugar – basically, if the poison apple hadn’t done the job, this cake certainly would’ve!

Halloween Poison Toffee Apple Cake with Caramel Peanut Brittle Buttercream and Snow White Apples

Serves 8-10

 

210g salted butter, softened

270g Natura Dark Demerara sugar

3 eggs

1 tsp (5ml) vanilla extract

200g self-raising flour, sifted

½ tsp (2.5ml) bicarbonate of soda

1 tbsp (15ml) cinnamon

½ tsp (2.5ml) nutmeg

80ml (1/3 cup) milk

145g finely grated Golden Delicious apples, squeezed well

75g flaked almonds, toasted

 

TOFFEE BUTTERCREAM

240g Natura Light Demerara Sugar

250ml (1 cup) water

360ml (1 ½ cups) cream

250g salted butter, softened

 

SNOW WHITE APPLES

8 small lunchbox apples

8 wooden skewers or clean sticks

200g white chocolate, chopped

Peanut brittle, crushed, to garnish

 

Preheat the oven to 180C (conventional) and grease and line 3 x 20cm sandwich cake tins.

Cream the butter and sugar until very light and fluffy (about 8-10 minutes). Add the eggs one at a time, beating well in between each addition. Beat in the vanilla. Combine the flour, bicarbonate of soda and spices and stir into the cake batter alternating with the milk. Stir in the squeezed apple and flaked almonds then divide between the 3 tins and bake for about 40 minutes or until a skewer inserted into the middle of the cakes, comes out clean. Allow the cakes to cool, upside down, completely then remove from the tin.

To make the buttercream, place the sugar and water in a pan and heat gently until the sugar is dissolved. Bring to the boil and simmer, without stirring, until the mixture begins caramelizing. Once the syrup reaches a dark toffee-colour (137 degrees celcius on a sugar thermometer), pour in the cream and swirl to combine. Allow to cool completely and divide the mixture in half. Cream the butter until very white and fluffy (about 8-10 minutes) then add one half of the toffee sauce and whip to combine – the buttercream should be very light and fluffy.

To assemble, slice each cake in half to create 4 layers. Sandwich the layers together with the buttercream, sprinkling a little of the peanut brittle in between each layer, then cover the top and sides with the remaining buttercream.

To make the snow white apples, insert the sticks into the apples then set aside. Melt the white chocolate gently over a double boiler then dip each apple into the chocolate. Allow to drip thoroughly before placing on a lined baking sheet to set completely.

Place the apples on top of the cake then drizzle with the rest of the toffee sauce, to serve.

 

 

 

TIP If the buttercream gets stiff while assembling the cake, simply whip again until fluffy.

Ghostly Meringues | Whoopie Pie Spiders | Bleeding Brownies

Ghostly Meringues | Whoopie Pie Spiders | Bleeding Brownies

Honestly, I’m not the hugest halloween fan BUT any excuse to tuck into dessert has my vote! Also, death by chocolate? Sounds like a pretty good way to go! These are a few of my favourite treats – they’re easy to make and more importantly – look just the right amount of creepy without being gross. Afterall, we still actually WANT to eat them.
These bleeding black bean brownies are deliciously deceptive in two ways – when you stab them with your fork a tangy bright red pool of raspberry puree bleeds all over your plate. AND of course, they have vegetables hidden in them; the black beans make them perfectly fudgy and moist – and I promise they don’t taste like beans!

Black Bean Bleeding Heart Brownies

Makes 10 EASY 1 hr

 

175g frozen raspberries

15ml (1 tbsp) sugar

squeeze fresh lemon juice 200g dark chocolate, chopped 150g butter

10ml (2 tsp) vanilla extract

150g castor sugar

3 large eggs

290g cooked black beans, puréed (you can substitute these with tinned butter beans, drained)

75g cake flour

30ml (2 tbsp) The Kate Tin Cocoa Powder + extra, to dust

pinch salt

 

Preheat the oven to 180 ̊C and grease a silicone heart-shaped muffin tray. Make the raspberry filling by placing the raspberries, 15ml (1 tbsp) sugar and lemon juice in a small saucepan over medium heat and simmer until reduced by half. Allow to cool completely. Make the brownies by melting the chopped chocolate, butter and vanilla extract together in a heatproof bowl set over a saucepan of barely simmering water, making sure the surface of the water does not touch the bowl. Remove from heat, stir in the 150g castor sugar, then leave to cool for a few minutes. Beat in the eggs and beans, then sift in the our, cocoa and salt and fold until the mixture is smooth and glossy. 5 Pour the mixture into the prepared tin, filling the muffin wells halfway. Make a dent in the middle, ll with the raspberry purée then top with more mixture and level the top. Bake in the oven until the top starts to crack but the centre remains gooey, 15 – 20 minutes. Remove from oven and allow to cool slightly before unmoulding the brownies and serving dusted with cocoa powder.

Ghostly meringues are probably my favourite trick or treat – they’re easy to make and when you take them out the oven you’ll find yourself giggling ‘cos they all look EXACTLY like Fatso from Casper The Friendly Ghost. Add some eyes using a toothpick and black gel or black sprinkles and voila!
Pop the ghosts onto a creepy graveyard of death by chocolate mousse, some edible tombstones and dirt and you have a heart-stopping show-stopping dessert!

Ghostly Meringues with Death By Chocolate Mousse and Peanut Butter Tombstones 

Serves 6 – 8 A LITTLE EFFORT 3 hrs

 

MERINGUE GHOSTS

2 large egg whites

110g castor sugar

drop vanilla extract

 

DEATH-BY-CHOCOLATE MOUSSE

300ml water

60ml (1⁄4 cup) espresso/strong coffee 460g good-quality dark chocolate, finely chopped

500g ice cubes

500ml (2 cups) fresh cream, whipped to stiff peaks

1 x 175g packet dark chocolate biscuits, crushed

 

PEANUT-BUTTER TOMBSTONES

250g smooth/crunchy peanut butter

175g brown sugar, firmly packed

1 large egg

5ml (1 tsp) bicarbonate of soda

50g dark chocolate, melted, to pipe

 

Preheat the oven to 120 ̊C and line a large baking sheet. For the meringues, place the 2 egg whites in the bowl of an electric mixer and whip to stiff peaks. Gradually start adding the castor sugar, little by little, continuing to whip, until the meringue is very thick and glossy. Whisk in the vanilla then place the mixture in a piping bag. Snip off the end and pipe ghostly blobs onto the baking sheet. Place in the oven to dry (wedge a wooden spoon between the oven and the oven door to keep it ajar) and the meringues are crisp but still soft in the middle, 1 – 2 hours. For the chocolate mousse, place the water, coffee and 460g dark chocolate in a saucepan and heat gently over medium-low heat, while stirring, until melted. Once smooth, pour the coffee chocolate into a glass or metal bowl, which ts over another bowl. Fill the bottom bowl with the ice cubes and place the other on top. Using an electric hand mixer, beat the mixture until it starts to thicken and forms soft peaks. Gently fold the whipped cream into the chocolate mixture and pour the mousse into a serving dish or individual bowls and refrigerate until set. Preheat the oven to 180 ̊C. Line a baking tray with baking paper. For the tombstones, cream together the peanut butter and brown sugar until light and fluffy. Add the egg and bicarbonate of soda and mix for another 2 minutes. Roll teaspoonfuls of mixture into 7cm logs then flatten and place on the lined baking sheet, allowing enough space for spreading. Bake in the oven until lightly browned, about 10 minutes. Remove from oven and allow to cool. Pipe ‘RIP’ onto each biscuit using the melted 50g dark chocolate. To assemble the dish, sprinkle the biscuit crumbs on top of the mousse for the soil, then insert the tombstones and position the meringue ghosts.

These whoopie pie spiders are perfect for spreading on your table – they double as creepy decor – and guests can eat them! If you can’t find tahini, swop it out for peanut butter or any other nut butter.

Black Sesame Cemetery Spiders

Recipe adapted from Donna Hay

Makes 20 EASY 1 hr

 

125g butter, softened

85g brown sugar

80g caster sugar

3 eggs

few drops black gel food colouring

185g cake flour, sifted

60ml (1⁄4 cup) cocoa powder, sifted

2,5ml (1⁄2 tsp) baking powder

black sesame seeds, to sprinkle

FILLING

60g butter, softened

30ml (2 tbsp) tahini (sesame) paste

15ml (1 tbsp) milk

140g icing sugar, sifted

few drops black gel food colouring

liquorice cables, to assemble

 

Preheat the oven to 150°C and grease and line two large baking sheets. Cream the 125g butter and sugars together until pale and creamy. Add the eggs, one at a time, and beat until combined. Add the black gel food colouring to your preference and mix to combine. Add the our, cocoa and baking powder and mix until combined. Spoon teaspoonfuls of the mixture onto the baking sheets, then sprinkle with black sesame seeds. Flatten slightly and bake in the oven, 15 – 20 minutes. Remove from oven and place on wire racks to cool. For the lling, place the 60g butter, tahini, milk and icing sugar in a mixer and whip until light and uffy. Add the black gel food colouring to your preference. Place the frosting in a piping bag, snip off the tip and sandwich the whoopie pies together. Cut the liquorice into strips and insert the legs into each spider while the buttercream is still soft.

Recipes and images originally created for Food and Home Entertaining Magazine