1970s Moms’ Double-Chocolate Bundt Cake
Every Mother’s Day, I like to put something on the menu in honor of my own mother. Since my mother’s busy career left little time for baking, coming up with a dessert that represents her is sometimes challenging. One Mother’s Day, in need of help, I turned to Caroline, my business partner, and pastry chef Kimberly Sklar for inspiration. They both began to reminisce about a moist chocolate-chip Bundt cake their mothers used to make when they were little. As they compared notes other staff joined in, starting a passionate debate about whether it was best made with mayonnaise or sour cream. Soon they had all worked themselves into a Bundt cake frenzy. With all this emotional attachment to a cake, you’d think that someone out of the group would have a recipe. Alas, no one did, and we were forced to start from scratch. After lots of trial and error with sunken cakes, soggy cakes, and just plain bad cakes, Kim and I managed to re-create a stellar version of the dessert, using only the very best chocolate and substituting rich crème fraîche for sour cream. Even if this decadent dessert wasn’t part of your childhood, once you taste it, it could become a favorite, maybe even something worthy of being passed down to your own children.
The only tricky part about baking this cake is deciding when it’s done. Unlike<br/>most cakes, the top won’t bounce back and the clean-toothpick test doesn’t apply. Press gently on the top to see if the inside is still soupy: though it will be very soft, it should not be liquidy or shifting from side to side when you move it. In truth, this cake sinks every time. While it’s not the glamourpuss of the pastry kitchen, it’s so rich and delicious you won’t care!