Red velvet cake
Bake a modern classic with this fabulous red velvet cake. With a light chocolatey flavour and bright red sponge, it’s both delicious and gorgeous to look at
- Prep:1 hrs 5 mins
Cook:1 hrs
Plus cooling - Serves 20
- More effort
Nutrition per serving
- kcal 656
- fat 31g
- saturates 11g
- carbs 86g
- sugars 66g
- fibre 1g
- protein 6g
- salt 1.5g
Ingredients
- few sweets to decorate, we used jelly hearts from a sweet shop (optional)
- 250g butter, plus extra for greasing
- 200g dark chocolate, broken into chunks
- 500g plain flour
- 500g golden caster sugar
- 2 tbsp cocoa powder
- 1 tsp bicarbonate of soda
- ½ tsp salt
- 2 large eggs
- 200g natural yogurt
- 400g cooked beetroot in natural juices (not vinegar)
- 4 tbsp or 2 x 28ml bottle red food colouring (optional- a natural liquid colouring will not work; we used Scarlett Langdale)
- 200g full-fat soft cheese, at room temperature
- 250g butter, softened
- 400g icing sugar, sifted
- 2 tsp vanilla extract
Method
Heat oven to 180C/160C fan/gas 4. Make the first batch of sponges by greasing and lining 2 x 20cm round tins. Gently melt half the butter and chocolate together in a saucepan. Mix half the flour, sugar, cocoa, bicarb and ¼ tsp salt in a large mixing bowl. Whizz one egg and half the yogurt and beetroot in a food processor or blender until fairly smooth. Put the kettle on.
Tip the beetroot mix into the dry ingredients along with the melted chocolate mixture and 150ml boiling water, then stir to combine. Stir in half the food colouring, if using, and divide the mixture between the tins. Bake for 25 mins until a skewer poked into the centre comes out clean. Leave the cakes on a wire rack to cool completely.
Repeat Steps 1 and 2 to make 2 more sponges or if you're lucky enough to have 4 x 20cm sandwich tins you can bake in a big batch all at once.
To make the frosting, briefly beat together the soft cheese and butter, then beat in the icing sugar and vanilla. Use a little to sandwich the cooled cakes together, then swirl the rest all over the sandwiched cakes and decorate with sweets, if you like. Sit the cake somewhere cool (not the fridge) to set a little before serving.