Chocolate Little Layer Cake Recipe (2024)

By Martha Meadows

Chocolate Little Layer Cake Recipe (1)

Total Time
2½ hours
Rating
4(483)
Notes
Read community notes

This recipe came to The New York Times in 2009 from Martha Meadows of somewhere between Slocomb and Hartford, Ala., where the worth of a cook can be measured in cake layers. In this corner of the country, everyone knows whose cakes are tender and whose consistently reach 12 thin layers or more. Ms. Meadows learned to bake 15-layer cakes from her mother, who cooked each layer one at a time in a cast-iron hoe-cake pan. The cake is frosted with warm boiled chocolate icing. Here is our tribute to that.

Featured in: Festiveness, Stacked Up Southern Style

Learn: How to Frost a Cake

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Ingredients

Yield:One 12-layer cake

    For the Cake

    • 2sticks butter, more to grease pans
    • cups sugar
    • cup shortening
    • 5eggs
    • 2teaspoons vanilla
    • 5cups cake flour
    • 1teaspoon salt
    • 2teaspoons baking soda
    • 5teaspoons baking powder
    • 2cups milk

    For the Icing

    • 5cups of sugar
    • cup cocoa
    • 1stick butter, cut into pieces
    • 115-ounce can evaporated milk
    • ½cup whole milk
    • 2teaspoons vanilla

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Preparation

Make the recipe with us

  1. For the Cake

    1. Step

      1

      Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Grease three 9-inch cake pans and line with rounds of parchment or waxed paper.

    2. Step

      2

      In a mixer, cream together butter, sugar and shortening until fluffy, about 3 minutes. Beat in eggs one at a time and continue to mix on medium until eggs are well incorporated. Stir in vanilla.

    3. Step

      3

      Sift flour, then add salt, baking soda and baking powder. Sift a second time. With mixer on low, alternately add flour mixture and milk in about 4 additions, then increase speed to medium. Beat until smooth, about 4 to 5 minutes, scraping down sides of bowl.

    4. Step

      4

      Spread ¾ cup batter in each pan. Bake 6 to 8 minutes, or until cake springs lightly when pressed with a finger. Flip cake out of pan onto paper towels or cake rack while still very warm. Repeat with second set of layers.

    5. Step

      5

      When first layers go into oven, start to make icing. Put sugar and cocoa in a deep, heavy-bottomed saucepan and mix well. Turn heat to medium-high and add butter and milks, bringing to a boil. Boil for about 4 minutes, stirring continually, careful to watch that it does not boil over. Lower heat to simmer, add vanilla and stir occasionally for another 7 to 10 minutes. If using a candy thermometer, cook to the point just before soft ball stage or about 230 degrees.

    6. Step

      6

      Begin icing first layers, still warm, when second batch is in the oven. Flip layers over so that top side faces up. Use about 4 tablespoons of icing per layer. Icing will be thin but will firm up as it cools. Stack layers, then continue icing and stacking as layers are baked.

    7. Step

      7

      When all layers are iced and stacked, glaze top and sides of cake. Contours of layers will be visible through icing. If icing hardens too much while frosting cake, set back on low heat and stir until it is spreadable.

Ratings

4

out of 5

483

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Cooking Notes

BettyDukes123@hotmail.com

I have tried to make this cake and failed. Always in the back of my mind was, I am going to accomplish this cake before I pass away. Thank this beautiful lady for her generous gift.

Debbie

Never ice warm layers. Try this and see if your luck is any better. I will find my recipe and send to you. Too much milk is a no no too. I make 20 to 22 layers.

Pairs4life

I finally made this!I had stored it forever after reading the story.I made it for my birthday. I am not the biggest lover of chocolate so changed it to caramel frosting.I would make it again.Why didn't the Times, or someone, suggest weighing the batter and divide by 12!? It's the easiest way to make certain the layers are level and you have enough batter for these super thin cakes.Oh and borrow some cake pans, at least 4 so that it cuts down on the washing.

Shannon

I made this last night, and it turned out amazing!!! The icing was perfect. The cake was sweet, light and fluffy. This was my first time making a southern layer cake, and it was pretty easy! I'll be using this recipe for years to come! Thanks for sharing!!

Maia

This reminds me (and looks very similar to) Baumkuchen, which is a German cake made out of very thin layers. Usually it's made on a spit, but to make it at home, the thin layers are cooked one on top of the other under the broiler.

Jim Morrison

Thank you for making an effort to preserve some of these old time recipes and share them before they are lost to history. Sometimes I wonder how many wonderful things from the past we've already lost that no one will ever see or taste again.

Angela

I have made this cake several times, and it is always perfect. This cake is part of growing up in the south. The layers are not supposed to be uniform. Yes- you do ice layers warm. No- you do not let the icing cool. It is supposed to be thin. Once you start baking layers, it goes super fast. I prefer the taste of all purpose flour, so I never use cake flour. Also, you do not have to wash the pans in between layers. You need to get layers in oven as quickly as possible.

Mama Chef

See Dobos Torte recipes, which classically have a caramel top, but my grandmother covered with more chocolate frosting.

Dina Marie

I followed the directions as written except that I used non-fat milk instead of whole milk and a 12 oz can of evaporated milk + an extra 3 oz of non-fat milk (since my can was 12 ounces and not the 15 ounces). Regardless, the cake turned out perfect. It took me about 20-25 minutes to make the boiled icing so I wasn’t ready to start assembling until half the layers had finished cooking. The assembled cake is very tall so be sure you have a way to store if not eating that day!

Kim

My great grandma my grandma and my mom all made this cake throughout my entire life. I'm 62 I think it's time I learned to make it. My great grandma would cut it into four pieces wrap it and wax paper and then tin foil and put it in the freezer for when we came up to visit from Florida

Melissa

This will be my first attempt making this cake any good recipes out there that are help me out? This cake looks very hard to make but I really want to try it. Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Margie

How does one get 15 layers? Three cake pans, twice in the oven, per instructions is only 6 layers. Does one slice each layer crosswise to make 12 layers? I find this recipe very confusing.

pattymc12

This cake and a caramel version have been staples at my husband’s family reunion for the 50 years we have been married. It’s not uncommon for people to make their first stop the dessert table.

pattymc12

Southern cooks would probably use White Lily flour.

zoby

If you substitute flour for cake flour what’s the ratio? Is it the same?

Matthew

Note, this was the first cake I ever baked. And I had the chance to try it with my 6 year old (we are not even home cooks, at least not yet). We read and followed the recipe to the best of our abilities to build a 7 layer (not ready for 12 or 15 yet) lopsided fugly looking cake. And at the same time, it was so much fun to bake with my daughter. To tell you what, I think we did a good job following along for our first time baking. Nothing beats having fun in the kitchen with your family.

Mary Beth

I first encountered this type of cake about a decade ago at Ditch Day in Dudley, GA, an annual gathering where people gather to do maintenance work on a small, family cemetery. I live in Atlanta. Several extended families are involved and I never tracked down the baker of the cake. I've been looking for a recipe ever since. I found this cake remarkably doable....and very close to the one I encountered in the wild....spare your icing...I did run out on the sides and might do a recipe and a half.

So Good. Memories

Living in the county east of Geneva County, AL growing up I would have this cake at my friend's house when her mother would make it. (My mother being from Philadelphia could never have made this) I was afraid I would never have it again after she died and was so happy to see the recipe here. I tried it for Thanksgiving this year and it was so good. Thank you. My only note would be to make absolutely sure you have a pot that you feel is just too large to make the icing. It won't be.

lisa rothman

Ok so i made this cake today(11-25-2020) and it tasted really good but did not look pretty. I had a time with the boiled frosting. I gotten to 226deg not to 230. I boiled it for at least 15 minutes on the lower temp then raised the stove setting to try to get the temp higher. any suggestions?

Kaylee

I’ve made this a few times and it’s always amazing. It’s exactly like the little layer cakes that my grandmother’s neighbor made in my childhood in southwest Georgia.

Angela

I have made this cake several times, and it is always perfect. This cake is part of growing up in the south. The layers are not supposed to be uniform. Yes- you do ice layers warm. No- you do not let the icing cool. It is supposed to be thin. Once you start baking layers, it goes super fast. I prefer the taste of all purpose flour, so I never use cake flour. Also, you do not have to wash the pans in between layers. You need to get layers in oven as quickly as possible.

Rolnrn

Made the cake without issue. Cooled layers. Made frosting with KAF black cocoa. Whipped it as it cooled. Disaster to frost with cooled frosting. Cake ugly, but tasty. Hacked cake to bits , layered it with bourbonny whipped cream and lots of summer berries. Concoction loved by all. Will try again with a different boiled chocolate frosting.

Meeka

Is there a substitution possible for the shortening in the cake? We don't use it at all.... thanks.

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Chocolate Little Layer Cake Recipe (2024)
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