Peanut Butter Cup Cake

Today, I turn 34 years young, and I have the most serious of serious questions to ask. Does this mean I’m now in my mid-30’s? If the answer is yes, don’t tell me. It dumbfounds me to think that at 34 years old, my mom already had a 9-year-old and a 7-year-old. I barely feel like a grown-up, save for the mortgage payments and general responsibilities that come with not being 18 anymore.
If time is going to keep on moving, we might as well welcome it with open arms and some phenomenal cake, right? I have had this cake on the brain for months, but decided to shelve it and save it for my birthday. I couldn’t think of anything more perfect for me than an overdose of chocolate and peanut butter to the highest degree.

I basically took my favorite chocolate cake, my favorite peanut butter frosting, tons of peanut butter cups, and smooshed it all together into one of the most fabulous cakes I have made to date.
For someone who could eat chocolate and peanut butter for breakfast, lunch and dinner, this cake is a dream come true.

The cake is the same one I used for my Snickers cake last year; do you remember how much I went on and on about how it’s the best chocolate cake ever?
Well, it’s still the best chocolate cake ever.
Case closed.
Save This Recipe

The peanut butter frosting is a double batch from my chocolate-peanut butter cupcakes, and I love it because it’s silky smooth, super peanut butter-y and not at all too sugar-y. I would love to just eat it from a bowl with a spoon. However, I’ll settle for it on this cake along with tons of chopped peanut butter cups, because, of course, there needs to be peanut butter cups.

I plan to spend my birthday relaxing, going to a hockey game, and eating a ridiculous amount of dessert.
That’s what birthdays are for, right?

One year ago: Italian Easter Pie
Three years ago: Tiramisu Cupcakes
Four years ago: Easy Vanilla Bean Buttercream
Six years ago: Slow Cooker Beef Burgundy
Watch How to Make the Peanut Butter Cup Cake:

Peanut Butter Cup Overload Cake
Ingredients
For the Cake:
- 2½ cups (312.5 g) + 1 tablespoon all-purpose flour
- 3 cups (600 g) granulated sugar
- 1 cup (86 g) + 1 tablespoon Dutch-process cocoa powder
- 1 tablespoon baking soda
- 1½ teaspoons (1.5 teaspoons) baking powder
- 1½ teaspoons (1.5 teaspoons) salt
- 3 eggs, at room temperature
- 1½ cups (360 ml) buttermilk, at room temperature
- 1½ cups (355.5 ml) strong black coffee, hot
- ¾ cup (163.5 ml) vegetable oil
- 4½ teaspoons (4.5 teaspoons) vanilla extract
For the Peanut Butter Frosting:
- 2 cups (240 g) powdered sugar
- 2 cups (516 g) creamy peanut butter
- 10 tablespoons unsalted butter, at room temperature
- 1½ teaspoons (1.5 teaspoons) vanilla extract
- ½ teaspoon (0.5 teaspoon) kosher salt
- ⅔ cup (158.67 ml) heavy cream
For the Chocolate Ganache:
- 8 ounces (226.8 g) semisweet chocolate, finely chopped
- ¾ cup (178.5 ml) heavy cream
- 30 miniature peanut butter cups, coarsely chopped, divided
Instructions
- Make the Cake: Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Grease three 8-inch round cake pans, line the bottoms with rounds of parchment paper, grease the parchment, then flour the insides of the pans, tapping out excess; set aside.
- In the bowl of an electric mixer (or large mixing bowl if you’re using a hand mixer), sift together the flour, sugar, cocoa powder, baking soda, baking powder and salt. In a medium bowl, whisk together the eggs, buttermilk, coffee, oil and vanilla.
- Add the wet ingredients to the dry ingredients and mix for 2 minutes on medium speed. Scrape the sides and bottom of the bowl and mix for an additional 20 seconds (the batter will be very thin).
- Divide the batter evenly among prepared pans. Bake for 20 minutes and rotate the pans in the oven. Continue to bake until a toothpick inserted into the center of one of the cakes comes out almost clean (with a few moist crumbs), about 12 more minutes. Cool the cakes (in the pans) on wire racks for 20 minutes, then carefully turn them out onto cooling racks to cool completely.
- Make the Peanut Butter Frosting: Place the powdered sugar, peanut butter, butter, vanilla and salt in the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with a paddle attachment. Mix on medium-low speed until creamy, scraping down the bowl with a rubber spatula as needed. Add the heavy cream and beat on high speed until the mixture is light and smooth (do not overbeat).
- Assemble the Cake: If your cakes baked up uneven or have domed on top, level off the tops. Place one cake layer on a serving plate. Cover with 1 cup of the peanut butter frosting and sprinkle 10 of the chopped peanut butter cups over the frosting. Top with a second cake layer and cover with another 1 cup of the peanut butter frosting, and top with another 10 chopped peanut butter cups. Place the final cake layer on top face-down. Frost the cake with the remaining peanut butter frosting, finishing it as smoothly as possible. Refrigerate the cake for at least 1 hour, until the frosting is set.
- Make the Chocolate Ganache: While the cake chills, make the chocolate ganache. Place the chocolate in a 4-cup measuring cup; set aside. Place the cream in a small saucepan over medium heat and warm until it just comes to a boil. Pour the cream over the chopped chocolate and let sit for 2 minutes. Begin whisking the mixture in the center, gradually working your way outward until the ganache is completely smooth. Set aside to cool, whisking occasionally, until it has thickened slightly, yet still a pourable consistency.
- Garnish the Cake: If the ganache was mixed in a bowl, transfer it to a 2-cup measuring cup. Slowly pour the chocolate ganache into the center of the cake, letting it push itself outward and flow over the sides of the cake. Top with the remaining 10 chopped peanut butter cups. Refrigerate the cake for at least 30 minutes, giving the ganache a chance to set up. Keep the cake refrigerated, removing it from the refrigerator about 20 minutes prior to serving.
Notes
Did you make this recipe?
Leave a review below, then snap a picture and tag @thebrowneyedbaker on Instagram so I can see it!



I made this for my daughter-in-laws birthday and it was Yummy! I found I didn’t use all the peanut butter cups ( I used less than half and will only make half of the ganache the next time) Everyone loved it.
Hi, If I dont have heavy cream? what can I substitute that? Izzit a must to have the heavy cream?
Hi Annie, You can use whole milk in the frosting (might need less of it), although I really recommend heavy cream. However, you definitely need to use heavy cream for the ganache or it won’t set up properly.
Thank you. I followed ur recipe and it taste very nice. Awesome ! =D
made this for my husbands birthday 4/6 to good to be true!
This cake is absolutely beautiful. I hope you enjoy your mid-thirties as much as I have.
is there a substitute for the coffee? we dont have or drink coffee and didnt know what you would recommend. thanks
Hi Nikki, I really do not recommend making a substation, as the coffee is important for both texture and flavor. You cannot taste the coffee flavor, but it enhances the chocolate and keeps the cake moist. I am not a coffee drinker myself, but it’s vitally important in some chocolate recipes.
Why can’t this cake be really? I might start nibbling on my computer!!!!
I made this cake from your blog this weekend. Oh.My.Goodness. My family could not stop going on and on about it. It was a huge hit! I think the chocolate cake part was the best chocolate cake I’ve ever had. I plan to reuse that recipe to make cupcakes and other cakes from now on. Yum yum yum!!
I made this cake today – I’m not an expert at all and I found this so stressful! But I’m sure it’ll be so worth it! I did accidentally buy half and half cream, seemed to work fine, and forgot to layer in the pb cups… Whoops! Oh we’ll. thanks for the recipe and happy birthday!
Happy Belated Birthday.. This cake looks so delicious and stunning.. Awesome job! :)
Happy birthday!! Your cake looks amazing! Thanks for the recipe :)
Happy birthday, Michelle! This looks like an awesome cake to celebrate with!
This looks AMAZING. Yum!!!
Just made this, but all three of my cakes sunk in the middle. Why does this happen?
Not sure if you copied this from Birdonacake.blogspot.com, or if the 2 of you had exactly the same idea. Either way, it is a fabulously delicious cake.
just wondering how you came up with 2 l/2 cups, PLUS 1 TABLESPOON?
Really, one T makes a difference?
This cake and I are meant for eachother.
I was wondering about a substitute for the coffee ingredient. I would LOVE to make this for my husband for our anniversary but we aren’t coffee drinkers. I’m assuming it’s added for flavor and moisture; could i just use more milk or water in place of the coffee? Would you mind emailing me and letting me know? Thanks!
Cami Smith
Shimmy2thebeat@gmail.com
Hi Cami, I really do recommend sticking with the coffee, it’s a key ingredient in developing the chocolate flavor. If you don’t want the caffeine, using decaf is fine. Water would definitely dilute the flavor, I don’t recommend that. Milk would add more fat, which could affect the final texture.
Happy belated Birthday! Somehow I missed that part on Tuesday. I love reading your posts & checking out your recipes, too. I especially like your “Friday things” posts….they’re always entertaining & a joy to read. You are definitely talented in so many ways! Do you do your own food photography? The pictures are always amazing! Hope your birthday was wonderful & keep being the special person that you are! :)
Hi Lynn, Thank you so much! I do all of the photography for the site, thanks so much for the kind words :)
Hi Michelle I really want to make this cake next month for my tio’s (uncle) birthday but he hates coffee I was just wondering if you can really taste it in the cake
Hi Marissa, You can’t taste it at all!
I’m wondering if the cake batter makes the same amount of batter that a box mix does. I would make this batter but my daughter has celiacs disease and can not have wheat. There is a gluten free chocolate box mix that is fantastic and thought I would try this cake using that instead.
Ok, you’ve ruined me. I’ve been wanting to bake a cake for best male guy friend and then I was going to make Smitten Kitchen’s cake: http://smittenkitchen.com/blog/2008/08/chocolate-peanut-butter-cake/
AND THEN YOU POSTED THIS!!! Now I’m going to have to make 2 cakes.
One for him, and one to celebrate your belated Bday. Happy Birthday! I turn 34 this yr too. And I’ve got no kids. I better get started (on this cake) huh?
Happy Birthday, Michelle!!! This cake looks amazing. I just HAVE to make it now. Haha. Thanks so much for this recipe!!
Happy Birthday! You’re definately still in your early thirties.
This looks sensational!
http://www.myownbakeoff.blogspot.co.uk
Enjoy your birthday week! This cake is a fantastic way to celebrate. And haven’t you heard 34 is the new 24.
Happy Belated Birthday. Delicious looking cake
Happy, Happy Birthday!!! This is a cake I would so make for my birthday too. Nothing beats this combo and chocolate cakes all the way!! Hope you had a great day!
Awesome Cake! Happy Birthday!
It almost hurts to look at this beautiful piece of art! It’s simply exquisite!
Happy Birthday! I can’t think of a better way to spend a birthday than with this cake, fantastic!