That looks absolutely delicious although I can sort of get that this would be very heavy too..! Probably a good choice to not use the marshmallow (I am not a big fan of marshmallows either)
My cake turned out more dense than yours. I had a piece this morning and it was a little on the hard side, still good though. Your cake turned out really pretty,looks moist too!
You are right...this was a very divisive cake. But I think it made people think of some creative changes they'd make next time. And isn't that the point of trying out a new recipe? ;-)
Your cake looks so different than mine. Yours looks so light and fluffy and thick! I'm a little jealous. I really liked the fosrting and the marshmallows just didn't love the bottom layer.
I love the look of your cake and I almost left off the marshmallow too, but I really wanted to try out my new candy thermometer. You can count me in the "love" category, especially warm from the oven.
4 January 2013 at 05:13
[Image]This month we baked a Mississippi Mud Cake. Normally I think of mud cakes as being tall, dense, sticky cakes but this cake is quite different – a cross between rocky road and brownie. It consists of a chocolate pecan studded sponge, topped with mini marshmallows and drizzled with hot chocolate sauce. Rich, sticky and very indulgent!
This cake received mixed reviews in our group, people either seemed to love it or loathe it. Personally I was firmly in the ‘love it’ category. A lot of bakers complained it was far too sweet, I didn’t find this to be the case. It was still sweeter than your average cake, but not unpleasantly so. However, I didn’t use the mound marshmallows as part of the topping which probably reduced the sweetness level quite considerably. The reason I left out the marshmallows is that no one in my family are fond of them and I wanted people to eat the cake. [Image] I think brownie is a better description for this baked treat than cake. I consider cake to be soft, fairly light and spongy but this recipe resulted in a single layered moist, rich and sticky chocolate gooey brownie square. It was scattered with chunky pecans which added a nice textural contrast, were utterly delicious and made it seem even more brownie like. [Image] To really push this ‘cake’ over the edge the whole thing is drizzled in a gooey chocolate glaze that sets into a thin chocolaty sugary crust. Mmmm it was divine. Just look how moist and fudgy it was. I may even use this recipe next time I want a batch of brownies! I also halved the recipe and baked it in an 8inch tin, as the full recipe made quite a large amount. My advice would be forget the marshmallows and enjoy the rich chocolaty fudgy cakey-bronwieness YUM!
Mississippi Mud Cake (brownie) (Recipe from Southern Cakes by Nancie McDermott) [Image]For the Cake (brownie) 200g butter, cut into big chunks 55g cocoa powder 4 eggs, beaten well 1 tsp vanilla extract 450g caster sugar 180g plain flour ¼ tsp salt 115g chopped pecans or walnuts
Mississippi Mud Frosting 400g icing sugar 55g cocoa powder 100g butter, melted 110ml milk or evaporated milk 1 tsp vanilla extract 100g mini marshmallows or large marshmallows, quartered
Method – Cake (brownie) Heat the oven to 180C. Grease and flour a 13x9 inch pan. In a medium saucepan combine the butter and cocoa powder and cook over medium heat, stirring now and then, until the butter is melted and the mixture is well blended, about 3 – 4 minutes. Stir in the beaten eggs, vanilla, sugar, flour, salt and pecans and beat until the batter is well combined and the flour has disappeared. Quickly pour the batter into the prepared pan and bake for 20 to 25 minutes until the cake springs back when touched gently in the centre and is beginning to pull away from the sides of the pan. While the cake bakes, prepare the frosting so it is ready to pour over the hot cake.
Method – Mud Frosting [Image]In a medium bowl combine the icing sugar and the cocoa powder and stir to mix well. Add the melted butter, milk and vanilla and beat everything together well. Set aside until the cake is done.
To Serve Remove the cake from the oven, scatter the marshmallows over the top and then return the cake to the hot oven for about 3 minutes to soften the marshmallows. Place the cake, still in the pan, on a wire rack. Pour the frosting all over the marshmallow dotted cake and eat straight away or allow to cool to room temperature. Cut the cake into squares and serve.
Note: The recipe also works well when halved and baked in an 8inch square tin. [Image]
"The Cake Slice February 2010: Mississippi Mud Cake"
24 Comments -
Yum!!!! Putting on the pounds just looking at your photos.
20 February 2010 at 09:47
love that photo - mud never looked so good
20 February 2010 at 10:31
wow this cake looks so rich and yummy!
20 February 2010 at 14:41
Beautiful photos glad you liked it.
20 February 2010 at 18:16
just this once, i skipped out on making the cake, but yours looks so tasty, i may have to rethink that!
20 February 2010 at 23:30
mmmmm, yummy. makes me wish I would've tried the frosting.
21 February 2010 at 00:21
Fantastic job, Katie! And your cake looks so moist. I'm going to have to make this again! :D
21 February 2010 at 02:01
So glad you loved it too! Beautiful photos!
21 February 2010 at 03:38
The chocolate glaze looks devilish!
21 February 2010 at 11:18
That looks absolutely delicious although I can sort of get that this would be very heavy too..! Probably a good choice to not use the marshmallow (I am not a big fan of marshmallows either)
21 February 2010 at 11:46
Despite it not having marshmallows it screams chocolate!!!
21 February 2010 at 13:29
Katie, your mud cake looks really good and very fudgy as well. Great job!
21 February 2010 at 14:01
Sticky, gooey, rich, choclatey - you've sold it to me.
21 February 2010 at 21:08
My cake turned out more dense than yours. I had a piece this morning and it was a little on the hard side, still good though. Your cake turned out really pretty,looks moist too!
21 February 2010 at 22:15
Its simply mouth-watering!
22 February 2010 at 04:27
Oh wow, this cake has a perfect texture! I want a bite of it so badly! :)
22 February 2010 at 04:33
yeah it was more of a brownie for me but it is still good!
22 February 2010 at 05:23
Goodness me that looks yummo! Love the choccy topping oozing down the sides....big slice for me please!
22 February 2010 at 08:58
wow! this is just divine!
22 February 2010 at 19:49
You are right...this was a very divisive cake. But I think it made people think of some creative changes they'd make next time. And isn't that the point of trying out a new recipe? ;-)
23 February 2010 at 05:24
Your cake looks so different than mine. Yours looks so light and fluffy and thick! I'm a little jealous. I really liked the fosrting and the marshmallows just didn't love the bottom layer.
23 February 2010 at 05:36
You can definitely add me to the 'love it' category - I think this looks divine.
25 February 2010 at 11:18
Your glaze looks perfect! Mine was so thin and weird :( I left out marshmallows too, and loved it as well!
27 February 2010 at 06:00
I love the look of your cake and I almost left off the marshmallow too, but I really wanted to try out my new candy thermometer. You can count me in the "love" category, especially warm from the oven.
4 January 2013 at 05:13