Chocolate Vanilla Strawberry Jelly Cavity Cake… just the kind of cavity you will ♥
Eggless Chocolate Vanilla Strawberry Jelly Cavity Cake … as promised last week, here it is, the recipe for this stunning cake. There are cakes and there are cakes, then there are special cakes. This is one of the special ones. They might look like a ton of work, but hey, read on…
Last week I shared the Secret To My Cavity Cake, the how to make it video. Here’s a delicious version of the cavity cake, three layers fill the cavity – dark chocolate, vanilla bean white chocolate and strawberry jelly from scratch. I always have frozen berries in my freezer but you could use fresh ones too. The recipe is a simple one bowl eggless sponge, and the way to make the cavity is as simple as it looks.
WHAT IS A CAVITY CAKE?… you might ask! It’s a cake with a cavity in the middle filled with all sorts of deliciousness. I’ve written a post about it last week, and it’s quite favourite kind of cake at my place. It was also an original idea that came to me one day while playing with cakes and steel cake/cookie cutters!
The steel baking molds I use are from my first visit to Old Delhi, a little shop I found tucked away behind a banyan tree. I returned to that shop in Lal Kuan several times over the years picking up more bakeware, each time making better choices I think! Old Delhi with all its madness and mayhem, the crowds and cacophony, the dusty old buildings, the colour and the energy has always pulled me in.
That was a time almost 20 years ago when vintage food styling props and collectibles, cookie and cake cutters, mousse rings and more meant a trip into Old Delhi, but now good old Amazon brings everything home!
Baking tins, dessert rings, bread knives, bread molds, muffin trays, icing sets, pastry bags … and lots more in a little shop in Old Delhi. Take the Metro to Chawri Bazaar, and a rickshaw from there. {They seem to have a website too now.}
Matchless Machine Tools, 1730/B, Bazar Lal Kuan, Delhi 110006. Mohd Kashif, Ctc 011 4909 8499 | 093111 50022 | 098213 41808
{Deals in bakery ware, cake mould, bread mould, muffin tray, pizza tray, cake stand, halwai ware, kitchen ware}
And so with my vast collection of cake and cookie cutters, one lazy summer afternoon, the cavity cake was born! Some things just work out well and keep getting reinvented in sooooo many different forms. This Chocolate Vanilla Strawberry Jelly Cavity Cake is just one of them. I’ve made many versions of the cavity cake, in different flavours and shapes as well! They’re always a hit. With a little prior planning, you are going to love making these on a roll!
Do tag me on Instagram at Passionate About Baking if you make this, or any other recipe from the blog. I’d love to see it!
Chocolate Vanilla Strawberry Jelly Cavity Cake
Ingredients
6″ eggless sponge
- 220 g buttermilk/plain chaach
- 60 g light oil
- 130 g sugar
- 1 tsp apple cider vinegar
- 1/2 tsp baking soda
- 1 tsp baking powder
- Pinch salt
- 40 g whole wheat flour
- 160 g all-purpose flour
Chocolate layer
- 75 g cream
- 50 g dark chocolate chopped
Vanilla white chocolate layer
- 100 ml cream
- 15 g sugar
- 1/4 tsp agar agar
- 1/2 vanilla bean scraped {save shell for strawberry jelly}
- 20 g white chocolate
Strawberry jelly
- 100 g frozen strawberries {or fresh}
- 100 g water
- 40 g sugar
- 1/2 vanilla bean shell
- 1/2 tsp agar agar
Instructions
6″ eggless sponge
- Preheat the oven to 180C. Lightly grease and line a 6″ dessert ring lined with foil or a loose bottom baking tin
- In a large bowl, add all the ingredients and whisk until smooth.
- Turn into the prepared tin and bake for 40-45 minutes until the tester comes out clean.
- Cool completely and level the cake.
- Take a 4″ dessert ring, centralise it and few push it all the way through. Gently remove the cut out, transfer the ring gently to your serving platter. Slice one 1 cm layer from the cut out and return to the cavity and push into place to make the base.
- Moisten the sponge if desired.
- Pour over the chocolate layer. Place in freezer for 30 minutes to set.
- Next pour the vanilla layer. Place in freezer for 30 minutes to set.
- Lastly pour the strawberry jelly layer. Refrigerate for a couple of hours. Pipe the top if desired.
Chocolate layer
- Heat the cream and pour over the chocolate. Let it soften, then stir until smooth. Cool to room temperature.
Vanilla white chocolate layer
- Whisk together the cream, sugar and agar agar and simmer in a saucepan for 3-5 minutes
- Take off heat, whisk in the scraped vanilla bean and white chocolate. Leave to cool to room temperature, about 30 minutes.
Strawberry jelly
- Place everything in a saucepan and simmer until the berries soften and become mushy, pressing the berries on and off. It should take 10-15 minutes. Strain & cool until the jelly begins to thicken but is still pourable.
Will this work with any cake?
It will work with a cake which has a tight firm crumb, with eggs or eggless. It’s best to let the cake cool completely. If in doubt, perhaps freeze it for an hour to get a neat cut. Handle with care since once you cut the cake, you are dealing with a fragile cake ring, so GENTLY does it!
Where can I find the steel cutters from?
Browse Amazon and you will find a selection of steel cutters. I have some on my Amazon shop here. Make sure you use good quality rings. They work best and last the longest!
Can I use gelatine instead of agar agar?
Yes, definitely though for the jelly I always find agar agar works best. I always do a dry run with a small portion of the filling to check on the setting properties so we don’t have surprises later. A runny cavity filling will spoil all the fun! Since every brand has a different set, it’s best to do a dry run.
Can the cake be made in advance?
Yes, certainly. The cake will keep well refrigerated and covered for 2-3 days. If you intend to use fresh garnish, please do so before serving/delivering the cake.
What is the size of this cake?
This is a 6″ cake and will serve 6 slices.
Do I have to moisten the sponge?
I always like to moisten sponges gently as it makes them taste better, but that also depends on how long you need to keep it in the fridge, storage conditions etc. Go by your instincts and generally, practice is the best way to learn what works for you!
5 Comments
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Muthammal
Can you provide more info on the agar agar ratio for filling vs frosting.
Deeba @ PAB
Sorry, I didn’t understand.
Did you take a look at the recipe?
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