german chocolate cake + a wedding cake

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Let’s talk about GCC.

When I last made a wedding cake, the bride preferred vanilla, coconut, lime, and mango, while the groom preferred chocolate above all else.
Because the wedding was small (under 100 people), I decided to make both (the largest tier in chocolate and the smaller two in vanilla) so that everyone could sample both.
This time, one groom prefers peach and blueberry pie, while the other preferred chocolate and salted caramel; I couldn’t decide between the two either, but with a much larger guest list (180 invited), it had to be done.
It was made easier when they both said they liked German Chocolate Cake while we were brainstorming one night.
The crisis has passed.
Or, at the very least, this one.

I’d never made or eaten a German Chocolate Cake before, so I started by doing some research.
Did you know that German chocolate cake isn’t actually from Germany?
If I’ve spelled it correctly, it’s “German’s” chocolate cake, as in named after a guy (Samuel) with the surname German.
In 1852, he invented baking chocolate, which is now known as Baker’s German’s Sweet Chocolate.
According to Wikipedia, The Dallas Morning News printed a recipe for German Chocolate Cake created by Mrs. George Clay, a homemaker, in 1957, 105 years later.
General Foods, which at the time owned the Baker’s brand, took notice and distributed the cake recipe to other newspapers across the country.
The possessive (German’s) was dropped at some point.

It’s traditionally a mildly chocolate layer cake with a caramel-y custard filling studded with pecans and coconut.
While the “back of the box” recipes aren’t always the best in the category, in this case, the one on the Baker’s German Chocolate box is the original and gold standard.
So my investigation began there, as well as by purchasing slices from a couple of city bakeries…

I despised all of them.
True, it’s not my favorite (or even my tenth favorite) cake.
True, it’s not my wedding, so it doesn’t have to be my favorite cake.
Even though I knew a coconut pecan custard filling and a pale-ish chocolate cake would never make me swoon, I knew there had to be ways to amp up the flavor, and the grooms were all for it.
(I also invited my friend Molly for tastings because this is her favorite cake and I knew she wouldn’t mince words if my version deviated from the platonic ideal.)
The test version we liked best ended up with bittersweet chocolate instead of “German’s,” some hot coffee (instead of hot water) to give it oomph, and some cocoa powder replacing some of the flour to give it a little more chocolate gravitas.
To maximize the flavor impact of each component of the filling, I reduced the sugar, substituted brown sugar for white sugar, deeply toasted the pecans, lightly toasted the coconut, increased the salt, and then, I mean, of course I did, I browned the butter. Here, it makes everything better.

first whip the egg whitesadd liquid to butter-sugar-yolk mixture
folding in the egg whitesready to bake
domed from the oven layercooled, delated layer
making the pecan-coconut custardfilling german chocolate cake

Wedding cake-ing it

I’m not going to lie: it’s not the simplest wedding cake to make because there are so many steps involved, such as melting chocolate, separating eggs, whipping the whites separately, sifting cocoa (mine is always lumpy), and that’s just the cake.

The filling has a lot of extra steps, especially the way we liked it (toasting the butter, pecans, coconut, and more separated eggs, for example), plus it has to be cooked and cooled.

They had no wedding “colors,” and we all liked the rustic look of a “naked” (no frosting on the sides) cake.

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Inspired by Molly Yeh’s stunning buttercream flower gardens, I reasoned that the lack of another decor would give me plenty of time.

After endless staring at wedding cake guides, measuring my oven, and weeks of boring hemming and hawing, I concluded that the best way to serve the 140 guests (although this technology could serve 170, I wanted to play it safe because this is not a cake that would cut cleanly plus you lose slices to dowels and more) was with a 14, 12, and 10-inch tier. This was exactly 48 hours before I began baking the cake. Are you getting stressed out reading this yet?

The schedule

Herein lies my best-laid plan:

Saturday: Hit up the baking supply store for cake pans, boards, a cake box, dowels, extra piping bags, a few extra piping tips, and a bunch of floral-ish food colors.
Sunday: Lay out the recipe in a spreadsheet to scale it up and finish buying groceries.
Monday and Tuesday: Bake cake layers, freeze them off, and wrap them in plastic.
Wednesday: Make the filling
Thursday: Fill layers and dowel cake, and begin decorations.
Friday: Stack cake, finish decorating, and go go go.

It sounds so organized, right?

Here’s what actually went down:

Saturday: Nailed it. See? We’ve got this.

Sunday: My oven, which hasn’t been great at holding temperatures consistently over the last six months (basically an oven’s job, you could say) seemed to be on the verge of a full meltdown, and thus, so was I. I might have thrown a hissy. Plus: Groceries or as much as we could schlep and stuff under the stroller, which is to say, not all of them.

Monday morning: Back to the grocery store with a rather cranky toddler on a hot rainy day. When we returned, wet, sweaty and already exhausted, a guy was waiting outside my apartment to wheel an old (well, 2 months but it was ugly, dirty and smelled like onions and basically made me want to cry) oven from another apartment that was empty into mine. I glared at it. I resented it. I was so scared I’d be in for another dud but it turns out to work great and I kind of want to give it a biscuit for being such a good boy last week.

Monday afternoon: Baking actually begins. I get the 10-inch tier baked, frozen, then wrapped in a couple of layers of plastic. Now that I’m in the swing of things, I’ll be faster tomorrow I told myself.

Tuesday morning: I decide I have time to go to the gym. I do not have time to go to the gym.

Tuesday afternoon: I only have time to bake the 14-inch tier. Each layer’s batter fills a full Kitchen Aid bowl, so I basically have to make the cake twice for each tier. I tried to combine what processes I could but it more often than not led to extra, not less, work such as when I had to then re-divide the buttermilk-chocolate-coffee mixture or re-whip whites because of course they half deflate in the time one layer bakes.

Wednesday morning and afternoon: I bake the 12-inch tier. Very behind schedule, I decided that if the filling for all three tiers will fit in one pot, I’ll make it all at once. 26 egg yolks, 1.5 pounds of brown butter, 2 quarts of half-and-half, and 2 children hungry for dinner later, I got impatient for this 6-quart pot to cook and cranked it up. I scrambled the whole thing. It went in the garbage. I went back to the store.

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Wednesday night: I made the filling in three batches, one for each tier, as slowly and carefully as a human has ever made anything. I finished up before midnight.

Thursday morning: Baby wakes up at 5 because of course she does. I get a late, sluggish start — but hey, filling cakes doesn’t take long, right? I take the cakes out of the freezer, hoping to work with them semi-defrosted (i.e. sturdier than room temperature but not too icy to cut).

Thursday late morning and afternoon: While trying to divide each of the cake layers into two thinner layers, I remembered why I absolutely hate splitting cake layers and almost always prefer to just bake them up thinner. This tender, soft, fluffy cake was a nightmare; it broke and broke. The filling for the bottom tier kept running out because I hadn’t dam-ed my layers. Jeez, it’s almost like this is why people leave wedding cakes to the professionals.

building a florals-not-found-in-nature garden

Thursday, 40 minutes before the kids get home: I decide it’s time to see if I still know how to make buttercream roses, my single piping skill. I watch a bunch of videos, realize there’s no way I’m going to learn anything new at this point, and decide to pipe a collection of Florals Not Found In Nature, i.e. various piles of bloops and dollops and spirals in random colors. Possibly for the first time all week, it goes better than I expect. I freeze them on a tray overnight.

Thursday, 11 p.m.: We’re about to go to bed and we realize that I might have some trouble doweling and stacking the cake — which has got to be 50 pounds — by myself the next day and do it right then. Remember when Thursday night was date night? Me neither.

Friday morning, somehow it’s 11 am and I’m just getting started and we want to leave at 1, and also of course my weekend bag isn’t packed yet either: I arrange the pre-piped flowers all over and basically came up with a frosting hack I’ll now want to do forever involving one frosting bag and multiple tips to make pretty much every color and shape you see on the cake. Should I write it up sometime? I’m thinking about it, but this is already running very long.

Friday, 1 pm: I totally botched this quote on Instagram Stories but I’ve always loved this line from Tina Fey about lessons she’d learned from Lorne Michaels in her SNL years:

The show doesn’t go on because it’s ready; it goes on because it’s eleven-thirty.

This is just to say that while I wondered if I should trim or frost the sides where the filling was leaky or add some chocolate frosting, as it’s traditional too, the cake was declared done because it was time to go. I think it was the right choice.

german chocolate wedding cake from above

What I’d do differently next time (just kidding, honey):

• Um, start a little earlier
• Um, probably not curdle the filling
• I’d pipe a ring around the filling in buttercream or more likely use this fudge buttercream and put the cake’s soft filling inside. It prevents leakage. I knew this technique 9 years ago but somehow forgot it until it was a bit too late.
• I don’t want to bore you with even more details, but when you’re baking a cake that’s 12″ or larger or deeper than 3″, it’s usually recommended that you do something to help distribute the heat. There are many techniques and tools (here’s a rough list); I picked a cake heating core. It was all wrong for this cake, I felt like the core never fit properly back in the cake or looked even. I would absolutely skip it next time, trying something else.
• Not cut the cakes into two thinner layers: While totally doable for this cake in a 6- or 9-inch size, it was bonkers to take on in 12″ and 14″ sizes. I would simply bake them up in thinner layers — it always looks nicer, anyway.

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What I wouldn’t change at all

Last week, I shared my process as “live” as possible on Instagram, something that isn’t my usual thing but I needed some other people to talk to about the mess I’d gotten myself into and you came through by the truckload. I loved all the messages I received and your cheering and excitement for the project, just like last time, plus sharing all of your own wedding cake stories made this 500 times more fun. Seriously. You are, as always, the very best part of this gig.

german chocolate (baby) cake

When I want to scale a cake from, say, a 6-inch round to a 9-inch round or a 6-inch round to 10-, 12- and 14-inch rounds, I do it by the bottom area of the cake pan, not the volume of the batter, because my goal is to keep the cake thicknesses the same.

For example, a 6-inch cake has a bottom area of 28.3 square inches, a 9-inch (63.5), 10-inch (78.5), 12-inch (113), and 14-inch (153.9). Want to turn a 6-inch cake into a 14-inch cake? You’re going to want to multiply every ingredient by 5.4. [Except for the baking time. It’s often closer to the original than you’d expect, and rarely more than double.]

I then use those numbers to figure out how many full and partial batches of my recipe I’ll need. If you’re good with spreadsheets or married to someone who is, this can make it easy.

I know what you’re going to ask next: Deb, what do I do with 2.86 egg yolks? And the answer is, you go with your gut. I actually leave my recipes in weird fractions so I don’t overthink it before I start. For 2.86, I’m going to round up. But if I need .55 cups of flour, I’ll probably just heap the 1/2-cup slightly. (Or use weights, of course. With weights, this stuff is 10 times easier and there’s no such thing as a weird number.)

But to make things even more complicated, the cake as written is a 3-inch tall cake, a perfect size for a rich layer cake. But wedding cake tiers should generally be at least 4 inches tall. To get this to 4-inches tall, before I did any other math, I increased the cake recipe by 1/3. But not the filling. Because the filling already covered 4 cake tops, and I only needed it to cover 3 for the final cake, as I planned to use buttercream for the decorations, I didn’t increase the filling by 1/3 before scaling up the recipe to the other cake sizes. I just redistributed the 4 layers of filling over 3.

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