I redefined all the hearts and chocolates of Valentine's day with this cadaver quality dessert! Sure it looks like a bloody, gory mess but it is actually a decadent heart-shaped red velvet cake. Dense and moist like a large cake pop with chocolate buttercream frosting mixed in and drizzled with a deep scarlet berry sauce! Scary enough to chase the faint of heart away. If he doesn't run, you've found yourself a keeper! Happy Valentine's Day.
My Bloody Valentine Cake
(Red Velvet Cake with Berry Sauce)Serves 4
1 box Red Velvet Cake mix
3 T chocolate frosting*
1 heart-shaped Jello Mold
a smidge of purple gel food coloring
Bake cake according to package directions. Cool completely. In a large bowl, crumble cake and add about 3 Tbsp chocolate frosting and mix until incorporated.
*I made my own Chocolate Buttercream (recipe below), but feel free to use ready made frosting if desired.
Chocolate Buttercream Frosting
1/2 cup butter, room temperature
1 cup powdered sugar
2 T cocoa powder
1-2 T whipping cream
Cream butter, sugar and cocoa with a hand mixer. Add whipping cream and whip until smooth.
Place 1 cup of prepared cake/frosting mixture in a separate bowl and add a small amount of purple food coloring to darken the cake slightly. The darker cake mix will be used to make the veins of the heart.
Using you hands roll small thin tubes of cake mix and place in the contour of the veins of the jello mold. Refrigerate veins for about 30 minutes to harden a bit before topping with more cake mixture.
To remove from the mold, place a plate over the mold and gently squeeze the mold until the cake releases. Now prepare the berry sauce.
Mixed Berry Sauce
1 cup frozen mixed berries (strawberry, blackberry, raspberry, blueberry)
1/2 cup sugar
1/4 cup water
Other recipes to try:
Black Magic Spellcakes |
Valentine Peppermints |
Red Velvet Brownies with Cookie Crumble Frosting |
Does the mold have to be greased or does the cake release pretty easily? Any special tips on how to remove the cake easily without it falling apart?
ReplyDeleteI didn't grease the mold before adding the cake and frosting mixture, but if you're worried about it sticking you can spray it. The frosting has a lot of fat in it so it comes out pretty easily with a squeeze and a tap of the mold. But if it sticks, let it sit to soften the butter a bit and releases from the mold. Hope that helps.
ReplyDeleteLori