Black Forest Cake

Every year my family typically celebrates Father’s Day in conjunction with my grandpap’s birthday since it always falls within a few days of the holiday. Last year when I made dessert I wanted to make a cake that incorporated one of my his all-time favorite desserts/snacks: Oreo cookies. So, I served up the Cookies and Cream Oreo Cake to much fanfare. It was a huge hit and everyone loved it. This year I didn’t want to go the Oreo route again (after all, variety is the spice of life, right?), so I started thinking about the other sweets he enjoyed. A light bulb went off. He loves chocolate-covered cherries. And what fabulous cake combines chocolate and cherries? Black Forest Cake! Easy, done. Plus, I could cross it off of My 100 list. Gotta love when you can kill two birds with one stone! In all honesty, I am not a huge fan of the chocolate-cherry combination, but this cake was phenomenal! It had just the right balance of flavors and the whipped cream kept it from being too heavy-tasting.

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Once I decided to make Black Forest Cake, I set off to find some recipes. I immediately turned to both The Cake Bible and Baking Illustrated, and both had fabulous-sounding recipes for multi-layer, torte-style Black Forest Cakes. Those are the type of recipes that usually make me do a kitchen jig. But not this time. The problem? I had been under the weather (aren’t summer colds the worst?!), and had two cookie orders that needed to be finished. So, shockingly, I didn’t want to spend much more time in the kitchen. The bare minimum, actually. And while both recipes sounded insanely fantastic (and I will try at least one of them eventually), they were involved and time-consuming. So I used the general ideas of chocolate cake, cherries soaked in Kirsch, and whipped cream to create a much more time-friendly version that is pretty darn amazing, if I may say so myself.
Enjoy!

One year ago: Chocolate-Dipped Coconut Macaroons
Two years ago: Thick and Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookies

Black Forest Cake
Ingredients
For the cake:
- 2 cups (400 g) sugar
- 1¾ cups (218.75 g) all-purpose flour
- ¾ cup (64.5 g) cocoa powder
- 1½ teaspoons (1.5 teaspoons) baking powder
- 1½ teaspoons (1.5 teaspoons) baking soda
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 2 eggs
- 1 cup (244 ml) whole milk
- ½ cup (109 ml) vegetable oil
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- 1 cup (250 ml) boiling water
For the cherries:
- 20 ounces (566.99 g) cherries, drained
- ¼ cup (60 ml) Kirsch or other brandy
For the whipped cream:
- 1½ cups (357 ml) heavy cream, chilled
- ½ cup (60 g) powdered sugar
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
Instructions
- 1. Preheat the oven 350 degrees F. Grease and flour two 9-inch round baking pans.
- 2. Whisk together the sugar, flour, cocoa powder, baking powder, baking soda and salt in a large bowl. Add eggs, milk, oil and vanilla; beat on medium speed of mixer for 2 minutes. Stir in boiling water (batter will be thin). Divide batter between the two prepared pans.
- 3. Bake 30 to 35 minutes or until thin knife inserted into center comes out clean. Cool 10 minutes; remove from pans to wire racks. Cool completely.
- 4. Reserve 12 cherries for decorating. Combine the remaining cherries and the Kirsch; set aside.
- 5. To make the whipped cream, combine the heavy cream, powdered sugar and vanilla extract and whip until soft to almost-stiff peaks form. Refrigerate whipped cream until ready to use.
- 6. Once the cakes are cool, level the tops and place one layer on a serving platter. Using a slotted spoon, remove the cherries and place on the cake layer. Top with about ½ to ¾ cup whipped cream, spreading over cherries (that's an estimation, as I didn't measure, just covered the cherries and spread into an even layer). Place the second layer on top, and frost the entire cake with the remaining whipped cream. Decorate as desired. (I used a 1M tip to pipe on top and placed the reserved cherries on top of each decorative star, and then lined a bottom border with chocolate shavings.)
- * Note: If you do not have Kirsch or brandy, or would rather not use alcohol, reserve ¼ cup of the juice/syrup from the canned cherries before draining.
- * Note: To make chocolate shavings, scrape a melon baller across a block of chocolate (or back of a candy bar). To attach them to the cake, lift them with an offset spatula and gently touch them to the sides of the cake.
Did you make this recipe?
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I want a piece of this right now!!!! Yum
What a lovely cake! I’ve never seen such a gorgeous black forest cake before!
Out of all the cakes I learned how to make in school, black forest cake is my favorite. I cannot really eat it anymore, due to diabetic restrictions, but it still is my favorite.
I do have a tip for you if you don’t mind. When your cakes are cool, mix in a little kirsch with some simple syrup. Before you put the icing on them, dabble a bit of the kircsh simple syrup on the top of the cake. It will hold the moisture better and for longer, and really drive home the special quality of the black forest cake.
Hi Jason, Thank you so much for the tip on brushing the kirsch/simple syrup on the cake to keep it moist. Will definitely do that next time!
hello browneyedbaker, i am from india and am following your website for the past many months.
though, i kept away from commenting, enjoying your recipes and pictures rather; the black forest cake recipe broke my hiatus and am very happy about it. my sister is coming over from singapore and i was frantically searching for a black forest cake to welcome her. thank u so much for the timely post..
Sometimes I find black forest cake too heavy for my liking, so I really like the lighter frosting in your recipe.
This looks so good! I love black forest cake, and have never seen one so pretty!
This cake is absolutely STUNNING! Girl, you got mad skillz! :)
It amazing! I love how moist the cake layers look!
Yum! I’m dieting right now, and this picture is killing me. ;-)
Looks delish, and I LOVE choco cherries. Quick question – how do you keep your whipped cream ‘frosting’ from deflating? Usually when I make whipped cream at home to use on desserts or sundaes, it needs re-whipped the next day because it’s deflated and melted ice cream looking. Any hints or suggestions would help! thanks!
This looks amazing! Now I want to make a cake :)
Beautiful cake! Thanks for the tip on the liquor substitute.I was just about to ask you the same thing when I scrolled down and read that. You seem to know your readers well!!
Delish ! The Cake Bible is my go to book for cakes, her cakes are fool proof !
This cake is so beautiful, looks too good to be eaten! Bet it’s delicious!
Oh yes, best cake ever… This looks scrumptious!
that is a beautiful cake, so rich and moist!
I would love a big hunk of that….I bet your family loved it!
Oh, interesting that you put the cherries between the layers as well as on top. I bet that was a nice surprise for people when they got a slice.
Oh my gosh! Absolutely gorgeous!
I only have one word for this cake MMMMMmmmmmmm!!!!!!!
I haven’t made one of these in years. What a great motivator.
Multiple celebrations! Fantastic way to acknowledge with this cake (and Oreo ice cream – my favorite).
This cake takes me back to my childhood. My mom first made a Black Forest “torte” when I was about 8 years old. She made it for a dinner party she was having, but there were leftovers the next morning. I remember a thick butter cream laced with kirsch and cherries between dense, moist chocolate layers. It took so much work, that I don’t remember her ever making one again.
Ok, that cake is amazing!! Fantastic job! My brother loves black forest cake, I am going to make this one for him!
Thanks for the great recipe! I love black forest cake.
Wow, this looks simply amazing. What I wouldn’t give for a slice of that right now, yum!
This cake looks stunning Michelle. Wish I had a big piece to enjoy after my lunch right now.
Oh My ! YUM!
Did you use sweet or sour cherries? It looks incredible :)
Holy crap. I mean that in a good way. This looks friggin’ amazing.
And thanks for the idea of using the melon baller to create the chocolate shavings. Awesome.
That cake looks beautiful! I think I would definitely enjoy a slice of that!
I love a good black forest cake. This looks delicious!