Chocolate Malt Cake with Malted Milk Frosting

Chocolate Malt Cake with Malted Milk Frosting RecipeI was betwixt and between, one foot lingering in San Francisco, while the other was inching its way back into my kitchen some 350 miles away.  I attended a conference in the City by the Bay this past week,  and as I sat taking notes during the final session, I found myself more and more distracted by the longing to get back to baking.  San Francisco is not lacking in fabulous bakeries, and I certainly sampled a few of them during my stay.  I wasn’t in need of a cupcake, tart, or eclair.   What I needed was to sate my creative soul, something that baking satisfies so well.
Chocolate Malted Milk BallsChocolate Covered Malted Milk BallsI get fidgety when I am absent for too long from the kitchen, and by the final day of the conference I found myself getting lost in daydreams about the first thing I would make when I returned home.  A misunderstanding between myself and an ice cream scooper at the infamous Bi-Rite Creamery heavily influenced that decision.  Due to an over-stuffed tummy acquired at Tartine Bakery, last summer I passed up an opportunity to visit Bi-Rite Creamery.   This time, I made it my first stop.  After just one swipe of my tongue across a scoop of Malted Vanilla with Peanut Brittle and Milk Chocolate Pieces and I knew just why people wait in seemingly endless lines to taste of these fine ice creams.  If any doubt lingered as to its superiority, it was doused with the second scoop of Coffee Toffee. Coffee is the benchmark by which I judge all ice creams.  It passed with flying colors.

It came as no surprise to the Hubs that the following day I requested pleaded we return for more.  It was during my second addiction feeding frenzy that the misunderstanding took place.  I asked for Malted Vanilla with Peanut Brittle and Milk Chocolate Pieces but apparently the server only heard the word vanilla.  Working my way down the cone, scoop by scoop, I kept hunting for that familiar malted milk flavor I had enjoyed the day before.  Eventually I realized that the vanilla on my cone was, well, just that – plain vanilla.  Frustrated and too far away to go back, I turned my frown upside down.  After all, if not the flavor I had ordered, it was delicious nonetheless.

Chocolate Malt Cake with Malted Milk Frosting Recipe

A botched attempt at a second fix of that scrumptious malt ice cream led me to this “Whopper”of a recipe  (Pun intended.)  Subtlety flavored with milk chocolate, this cake appears much more chocolatey than it tastes, which suited me fine since it was the flavor of malt I was longing for.  Containing four sticks of butter, it fits squarely in the pound cake category.  Nothing light and fluffy about it – but everything wonderful.  And yes, it absolutely satisfied my need for a malt fix.

 

Source:  Adapted from Real Food Magazine




16 thoughts on “Chocolate Malt Cake with Malted Milk Frosting

  1. I am fond of the flavor pairing of malted milk and chocolate; rich with a scoop of nostalgia always catches my attention. The Chocolate Malted Cake is impressive!
    Chocolate, more chocolate and malted chocolate candy would make my family very happy!

  2. This cake is very seductive. Was this your inspiration for the Handle’s Ice Cream Chocolate Malt with extra malt last night?

    H

  3. I live in Southern California, so I’m also sad when I realize I can’t visit Bi-Rite Creamery, or other delicious food stops in San Francisco. This cake looks amazing! I have so much leftover malt powder, I`m not sure what to do with it all. This recipe seems perfect. 😀

    • I can suggest that you buy Bi-Rite’s Ice Cream book and try making a few of their flavors assuming you have an ice cream maker. If not, Milk on Beverly Boulevard in Los Angeles has some awesome flavors as well.

  4. Hey Mary,is there a possibility of the cake being made sooner,cause I think mine was done in less than an hour,like 45 mins, the tooth pick came out clean,and well the cake also seemed to get back into shape after a teency weency jiggle that happened when I inserted the tooth pick,the sides also started coming out.I’m using a black tube or bundt pan,maybe that has something to do with the heat? The only difference I made to the recipe was I used less sugar,only a bit more than a cup,maybe a cup and a tablespoon
    Cheers

    • Definitely could have baked in less time depending on your individual oven and the reduced amount of sugar. I always start checking cakes for doneness at least 5 minutes before expected, and using the toothpick or cake tester method is the best.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *