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A chocolate cake dusted with icing sugar and decorated with Easter eggs and flowers
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5 from 3 votes

Chocolate and Ricotta Cake

This Combi Steam Chocolate and Ricotta Cake recipe calls for nothing more than a dusting of powdered sugar to make it fancy enough for Easter dessert.
Prep Time15 minutes
Cook Time1 hour 30 minutes
Total Time1 hour 45 minutes
Course: Afternoon Tea, Dessert, Morning Tea
Cuisine: Italian, Western
Keyword: chocolate ricotta cake, ricotta cake
Servings: 10
Calories: 675kcal

Ingredients

For the chocolate batter:

  • 1/2 lb dark chocolate 250 (I used Callebaut 54% but a 70% variety would make it richer)
  • 1 stick unsalted butter cubed
  • 3 eggs large
  • 1 cup superfine sugar caster sugar (the original recipe called for 1 1/2 cups, I find the lesser amount perfect)
  • 2 cups self raising flour
  • ¼ tsp salt

For the ricotta filling:

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 170⁰C/340⁰F, combination steam setting. If your oven has variable steam settings, use 50-60% humidity. If not, don't worry! Just set to combi steam and the oven will figure out the humidity for you. Grease a 26cm/10” round cake tin and line the base with parchment paper.
  • Start the chocolate batter: melt the chocolate and butter together until smooth, either in a double boiler or using short, low power bursts in the microwave, stirring in between to ensure it doesn’t burn. Set aside to cool slightly while you start the ricotta filling.
  • Start the ricotta filling: put the ricotta, butter and vanilla into the bowl of a stand mixer and mix on low speed until it’s well combined (you aren’t looking for super light and fluffy here, so don’t let it go too long). Add the sugar and mix until it’s not grainy anymore, then add the eggs one by one, mixing well after each addition. It will probably look curdled by this stage, but don’t worry. Remove the bowl from the mixer and gently fold in the flour. Scrape into another bowl, set it aside and rinse your mixer bowl so you can return to the chocolate batter.
  • To finish the chocolate batter: put the eggs and sugar into the mixer bowl and beat on medium speed until they’re thickened and creamy. Add the melted chocolate/butter and mix on low until it’s just incorporated. Remove the bowl from the mixer and gently fold in the flour and salt. It will be fairly stiff - don’t overmix here or it will become thick and tough.
  • Put two thirds of the chocolate batter into the base of the prepared tin and spread it out with the back of a spoon. Put all the ricotta filling on top of this, spreading it right to the edges. Dollop spoonfuls of the remaining chocolate batter on top, very gently pressing them down so they are fairly level with the ricotta filling. Take a butter knife and gently drag it through the chocolate and ricotta mixtures to marble them together a bit.
  • Bake the cake until it tests clean with a skewer, approximately an hour and a half. Allow to cool for an hour or two in the tin, then turn out onto a plate. You can serve it slightly warm or at room temperature, dusted with powdered sugar and decorated with Easter eggs if that’s your thing.

Notes

  1. Makes one 26cm/10” cake, to serve 8-12.  
  2. Adapted from The Passionate Pantry, who in turn got the recipe from Despina Tanner of Boucla Cafe.
  3. This is the dessert which started me down the path of all other cakes involving ricotta, and it’s not an exaggeration when I tell you I’ve been thinking about making it for years - it well and truly pre-dates my steam oven baking obsession. Some people use their brains for complex intellectual things. Me? Cake. I’m glad though, because it led us here.
  4. You’ll need a 26cm/10” tin for this cake. I used a springform tin but it’s sturdy enough when baked that you could turn it out of a regular tin just fine. If you only have a smaller tin, say 20cm/8”, I would recommend reducing the recipe quantities by a third and adjusting the baking time down to around an hour (I have not tried this yet but will the next time I make it).
  5. Use a fairly wet ricotta cheese for this recipe rather than the firm/drained variety cut from the wheel. It needs the extra moisture to make the texture right.
  6. If you can’t find self raising flour where you live, you can use plain/all purpose flour. Add 2 ½ tsp baking powder to the chocolate batter and 1 tsp baking powder to the ricotta filling to substitute for the raising agent in the flour.

Nutrition

Calories: 675kcal | Carbohydrates: 69g | Protein: 15g | Fat: 38g | Saturated Fat: 22g | Cholesterol: 173mg | Sodium: 146mg | Potassium: 288mg | Fiber: 3g | Sugar: 36g | Vitamin A: 938IU | Calcium: 146mg | Iron: 4mg