
A gooey, chocolate deliquesce that's truly multidimensional. First you taste the chocolate, then the stem ginger and then arises the sensation of cayenne pepper.
I’ve been wanting to use cayenne pepper in a chocolate dessert for almost two years now. I just never got around to it. It’s obvious to anyone who follows my blog that I think almost anything taste better with ginger, so it’s probably no surprise that I chose stem ginger in syrup to accompany the cayenne. This is truly a multidimensional dessert.
First you taste the chocolate, then the ginger and as you swallow, the sensation of cayenne arises in your palate, slightly warming your tongue. This recipe has a lot more flour than I usually use in a moelleux. A moelleux is slightly less fluid in the center than a fondant but it should always be gooey in the middle with a bit up crunch on the outer top. As for why I call it a “deliquesce”…
Here’s the recipe:
1/2 cup all purpose, self-rising flour
3/4 cup sugar
1 tsp baking powder
1 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
1 tsp cayenne (two if you’re brave)
1/2 tsp real vanilla either in powder form or scraped from a pod
6 ounces (170 grams) semi-sweet bakers chocolate chips
1 1/3 cup melted, unsalted butter - If you are in the USA, try to use European butter. It has a higher fat content than American butters and yields a better moelleux.
Large pinch of salt
Stem ginger in syrup
Pre-heat oven to 180°C (350°F)
NOTE: For the baking time to be equal to mine, it’s important that you make your deliquesce in the same size molds that I used. I used muffin trays of this size
Cut up the stem ginger so that you have about one tsp of ginger per cake (this recipe yields 10 moelleuxs), set aside
Sift flour, cocoa, cayenne, baking powder and a pinch of salt in a mixing bowl
In another bowl, mix the sugar and eggs with an electric mixer for about 3 minutes until smooth and pale. Then add the vanilla.
Fold in 1/3 of the butter and 1/3 of the dry ingredients at a time until all of it is incorporated. Mix well with a hand mixer but do not over mix
Fold in the chocolate chips
If you are not using a silicone muffin tray, you will need to grease your muffin tin
Divide the batter evenly among in each cup, careful to fill each cup only half way at first
Spoon 1 tsp of stem ginger in the center of each cup (after you have filled it half-way with the batter). Then spoon about 1/3 (max!) of the ginger syrup on top of the ginger.
Spoon the rest of the batter on top of each of the cups to completely cover the ginger in the center
Put in the oven with the rack slightly below the center of the oven
Bake for precisely 20 minutes. You may bake for only 18 if you want an even softer center but *never bake for more than 20 minutes*
Makes 10 cakes
Copyright secured by Digiprove © 2012
© 2012, Epicure on a Budget. All rights reserved.






