Top 100 Cake Blog

Top 100 Cake Blog
Showing posts with label broiled cocoa frosting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label broiled cocoa frosting. Show all posts

Sunday, June 30, 2013

The (Park Slope) Miracle Cake



If New York is a collection of neighborhoods, then each neighborhood is a collection of blocks -- each with its own traditions.  One of ours (on Park Slope's 11th Street) is an annual summer party in a neighbor's garden, where the alcohol flows freely and the food is a potluck affair.  This year, I was going to contribute Sure Thing Cake (but upon closer reading of the vintage recipe card, I realized it lacked enough butter to make it a "sure thing"), so I opted for Miracle Cake with ("chewy chocolaty") Miracle Frosting.  Not sure if it's a true miracle, but it's a delicious easy-to-make cake and one that proves that good fences cakes make good neighbors.

This confectionery miracle calls for cutting the butter into the flour, a technique more common in pie crust than cake.  It's easy to do with cold butter and a food processor (or a pastry blender or two knives, if you want to do it old-school). When it's "fine as corn meal," add the rest of the ingredients, mix and put into an 8 x 8 inch pan that you've greased and floured.


The batter is quite thick; it's best to spread it around with a knife before baking.


Pull it from the oven when a cake tester comes out clean and begin the frosting immediately.


The miracle frosting is a broiled frosting, with butter, brown sugar, cocoa, nuts and "top" milk (which I took to mean cream, but since I didn't have any, I used half-and-half).


Mix all the frosting ingredients together and spread on the cake.


Put the frosted cake in the broiler until the frosting bubbles.



Let it cool, then cut.


Recipe card below.  I used unsalted butter for the shortening, and greased and floured the cake pan for easy release.  I also never sift the flour, as that tradition dates from a time when flour was less pure and it had to be sifted to remove impurities like insects.



The 11th Street garden party.