Vegan Chocolate Cake - Eat Well Recipe - NZ Herald (2024)

Vegan Chocolate Cake - Eat Well Recipe - NZ Herald (1)

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NZ Herald

This recipe came about after much time looking for baking recipes that use no eggs or dairy to make for someone with a dietary intolerance. I also wanted to avoid the need for "substitute" products. The initial idea came from an obscure recipe found on an American vegan website. This recipe is so easy, and has become such a favourite, that I now bake it for people without allergies.

- Felicity O'Driscoll from Cook the Books, *

Ingredients

2 ¼ cupsFlour
3 TbspCocoa powder
1 tspCinnamon
1 tspGinger
1 ½ tspSalt
1 ½ cupsSugar
1 ½ tspBaking soda
1 cupCanola oil
1 ¼ cupsWater
3 TbspRed wine vinegar
1 ½ tspVanilla essence/extract
1 sprinkleChocolate bits

Directions

  1. Heat oven to 180C. Line the base and sides of a 23cm ring tin or 20cm round tin. This makes quite a tall cake - use a larger tin if you like.
  2. Sift the flour, cocoa, cinnamon, ginger and salt into a bowl big enough to mix the cake in. Thoroughly mix through the sugar, and form a well in the centre. Put the baking soda in the well.
  3. Combine all liquid ingredients in a jug. Pour liquids into the well, so the baking soda fizzes up and dissolves. Mix with a whisk until combined with no lumps but do not over mix.
  4. Pour the mixture into the prepared tin. Bake for 35-45 minutes until a skewer comes out clean. It pays to turn the cake once during cooking. If you are not baking the cake for someone with egg/dairy intolerance, you can stud the top with about 25g of chocolate pieces before baking.
  5. Once cooled, remove from tin and dust with icing sugar. Serve with fresh berries.

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Vegan Chocolate Cake - Eat Well Recipe - NZ Herald (2024)

FAQs

Why is my vegan cake not fluffy? ›

CAKE NOT RISING

This can be caused by a few things already mentioned such as using the wrong egg replacer or over mixing. I always recommend using fresh raising agents. Generally, baking soda and baking powder only stay active for 3 months after opening.

How do you keep a vegan cake from crumbling? ›

To prevent your vegan cake from crumbling apart, use binding ingredients like flax eggs or applesauce, measure your ingredients accurately, avoid overmixing the batter, and bake at the correct temperature for the recommended amount of time.

What is left out of vegan cake? ›

A vegan cake contains no ingredients from animals. So there's no eggs, and no dairy. A vegan cake is either designed to not need these ingredients, or it will contain comparable plant based ingredients, like soy yogurt instead of dairy yoghurt, or a margarine made from vegetables oils instead of butter.

What is the difference between a vegan cake and a regular cake? ›

To put it simply, a vegan cake is a cake that doesn't contain any animal-derived ingredients, most notably eggs, milk, and other dairy products. In 'regular' cakes, eggs and dairy products are among the key ingredients used to create the sponge and icing, and often decorations, too.

What is the secret to light fluffy cakes? ›

The most crucial tip? Instead of buying an entire box of cake flour, simply incorporate two tablespoons of cornstarch into 3 1/2 cups of all-purpose flour. This blocks the formation of gluten in the flour, which produces a lighter, fluffier cake.

Why are vegan cakes so dry? ›

Lack of Eggs: Eggs provide structure, moisture, and leavening in traditional cakes. Vegan cakes typically replace eggs with alternatives like flax eggs, applesauce, or mashed bananas, which may not provide the same lightness and binding properties.

What to avoid when baking vegan? ›

Dairy, whether it's milk or yogurt or sour cream, helps keep baked goods moist. It's also unfortunately not vegan. But don't skimp on the creamy stuff—it really helps to make a dense and luscious-textured pastry. Experiment with alt-milks, like almond milk.

Why is my vegan cake so gummy? ›

This can happen for a few reasons, but the biggest reason is that your ingredients weren't room temperature. If your ingredients, even vegan ingredients, aren't all room temperature (i.e. some are cool, some are warm, some are hot), the cake will come out gummy.

Why do vegan cakes need vinegar? ›

I know it may seem strange to add vinegar to baked goods, but just think of it as a chemical reaction. The baking soda in your recipe needs a little acid to help it start reacting (bubbling). That's why recipes will call for things like lemon juice or buttermilk.

What seasonings are not vegan friendly? ›

Spices are generally plant-based. However, some seasonings aren't. Dried shrimp, anchovy paste, and bonito (fish flakes) are both directly sourced from animals. Stepping a little further away from the strict definition of spice, fish sauce, oyster sauce, and worcestershire sauce are also typically not vegan.

What seasonings are not vegan? ›

The good news is that most dried herbs and spices are vegan (even things like steak seasoning). However, there are a few you should avoid (mostly obvious ones), including bonito flakes, dried shrimp, and most meaty stock cubes.

Is vegan cake healthier than regular cake? ›

Because the ingredients of vegan cakes contain fewer calories than those of regular cakes, you have a lower tendency to gain weight while eating them. However, this depends on your amount of consumption. Like any other thing, eat vegan cakes in moderation.

What do you use instead of eggs in a vegan cake? ›

What are the best egg substitutions?
  1. Aquafaba. That's right, you can make an impressive egg white substitute using the water from a drained can of chickpeas. ...
  2. Ground flax seeds. ...
  3. Apple purée. ...
  4. Yogurt (regular or dairy-free) ...
  5. Mashed banana. ...
  6. Silken tofu. ...
  7. Chia seeds. ...
  8. Coconut oil.

What cake brands are vegan? ›

Since most boxed cakes require that you add eggs, milk and butter after, most major brands such as Duncan Hines or Betty Crocker are already vegan!
  • Duncan Hines Decadent Carrot.
  • Duncan Hines Red Velvet.
  • Betty Crocker Super Moist French Vanilla.
  • Betty Crocker German Chocolate.

Why is my cake dense and not fluffy? ›

Your cake is too dense A cake that is overly dense typically has too much liquid, too much sugar or too little leavening (not excess flour, as is commonly thought).

Why is my cake flat and not fluffy? ›

If you end up with a flat cake, there are a few possible causes. Overbeating the flour will overwork its gluten, so fold in dry ingredients with a light hand. Remember to add the raising agent – self-raising flour already contains this, but if you use any other flour you need to mix in baking powder.

Why didn't my eggless cake rise? ›

You used too much fat

Fats such as oil or vegan butter help to make cakes soft and moist but you can have too much of a good thing! If you use too much fat, the batter will be too heavy to rise and your cake will end up flat and greasy.

Why is my eggless cake rubbery? ›

Your Eggless Cake can be rubbery for two main reasons: overmixing the batter and using too much flour. Overmixing develops tough gluten (elastic protein in flour), while too much flour adds density.

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