This Red Eye Devil’s Food cake is a riff on an American classic takes its name from the coffee in the batter. “Like the Red Eye coffee drink in espresso bars that’s punched up with an extra shot of espresso,” explains its creator, former White House Executive Pastry Chef Bill Yosses. “Here, coffee gives the chocolate cake a lightly bitter edge that cuts the sweetness of the chocolate. The coffee-enhanced cocoa layers sandwich a surfeit of fudgy, bittersweet ganache. If this is not the ultimate birthday cake, I can’t imagine what is.” Actually, it’s the ultimate cake for any occasion. Including no occasion other than a craving for chocolate cake.–Renee Schettler Rossi

A 16-layer red-eye devil's food cake--alternating layer of chocolate cake and chocolate frosting.

Red Eye Devil’s Food Cake

5 / 5 votes
This red-eye devil’s food cake has all the requisite ingredients of a hellacious chocolate cake: cocoa, sugar, dark chocolate, a ganache filling, and frosting. And there’s more—the addition of coffee gives the cake a jolt of caffeine and flavor.
David Leite
CourseDessert
CuisineAmerican
Servings12 servings
Calories862 kcal
Prep Time50 minutes
Cook Time1 hour 40 minutes
Total Time2 hours 30 minutes

Ingredients 

For the chocolate cake

  • 3 cups all-purpose flour
  • 2 teaspoons baking soda
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1 cup Dutch-processed unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 2 cups strongly brewed coffee
  • 2 (4-ounce) sticks unsalted butter, softened, plus more for the pans
  • 3 cups granulated sugar
  • 4 large eggs, at room temperature

For the ganache

  • 14 ounces coarsely chopped dark chocolate (minimum 70% cacao content)
  • 3 cups heavy cream

For decorating and serving

  • 1/2 pound block bittersweet chocolate for chocolate curls for decorating, optional
  • Whipped cream for serving, optional
  • Fresh berries for serving, optional

Instructions 

Make the chocolate cakes

  • Preheat the oven to 350°F (176°C). Position a rack in the center of the oven. Butter two 9-inch round cake pans with unsalted butter. Line the bottoms of the pans with parchment or waxed paper rounds and butter the rounds.
  • Sift the flour, baking soda, baking powder, and salt onto a piece of parchment paper or into a large bowl.
  • Place the cocoa in a small bowl and whisk in the coffee, a little at a time, until smooth.
  • In the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat the butter until fluffy and then beat in the sugar. Mix on high speed until very light and fluffy, 6 to 8 minutes.
  • Add half the flour mixture to the butter mixture and mix on low speed just until incorporated. Add the eggs, 1 at a time, beating to incorporate after each addition. Add the cocoa-coffee mixture and beat to incorporate. Add the remaining flour mixture and mix just until incorporated.
  • Divide the batter evenly between the 2 pans and bake on the center rack, turning the pans from back to front during the baking, until a cake tester inserted into the center of the cakes comes out completely clean, about 45 minutes.
  • Let the cakes cool in the pans on racks for about 30 minutes.
  • Slide a thin knife or offset spatula around the sides of the pans and gently turn them over onto the wire racks to unmold the cakes. Carefully peel the paper rounds from the bottoms and let the cakes to cool completely, at least 30 to 40 minutes more. Cover and refrigerate the layers to make the cake less crumbly and easier to slice when cutting the layers.

Make the ganache

  • While the cakes cool, place the chocolate in a heatproof bowl.
  • In a medium saucepan over medium-high heat, bring the cream to a boil. Pour the hot cream over the chocolate and let it sit for 3 minutes.
  • Whisk until the cream and chocolate are thoroughly combined and smooth and slightly cooled. Cover tightly with plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least 4 hours. Once the ganache is chilled, whisk just until fluffy.

Assemble the cake

  • Using a long serrated knife, cut each cake horizontally into 4 thin layers. To do this, place 1 hand flat on top of a cake. Slice into the cake about 1/2 inch from its top and use a sawing motion to slowly move the knife into the cake about 1 inch. Then, still slicing back and forth, turn the cake (counterclockwise if you are right-handed, clockwise if you are left-handed) on the table, going around the circumference of the cake but not cutting into its center. After the first full outer circle is complete, hold the knife level, dig into the cake another inch, and turn the cake again in the same direction. Repeat until you have sliced all the way through the cake. Carefully remove this top layer and repeat to obtain 4 layers from each of the 2 cakes.
  • Place 1 of the bottom cake layers on a platter or cake stand and spread a thin layer of ganache over the top. Repeat with the rest of the layers. Use some of the remaining ganache to apply a very thin coat on the sides of the cake, giving it a “crumb coat” that seals in the crumbs and prevents them from appearing on the outside of the finished cake. Refrigerate the cake with its crumb coat for 1 hour. Then slather the cake with the remaining ganache.
  • Sprinkle the chocolate curls on the top of the cake and gently press them against the sides. Voila.

Notes

What You Need To Know About Making This Cake Simpler

Before you get all scared off by this chocolate cake’s stunning and slightly imposing countenance, let’s discuss its darn near countless layers. Impressive, are they not? They’re accomplished by slicing two round chocolate cake layers into several layers each. But honestly? The cake tastes just as swell if you forego all the slicing and layering and instead slap one round layer cake on top of the other, slather them with ganache, and call it a day. The chocolate curls are still a nice touch, though, if you ask us. Which you didn’t. But we tend to have an opinion on most things.
The Perfect Finish cookbook

Adapted From

The Perfect Finish

Buy On Amazon

Nutrition

Serving: 1 sliceCalories: 862 kcalCarbohydrates: 105 gProtein: 12 gFat: 46 gSaturated Fat: 27 gMonounsaturated Fat: 14 gTrans Fat: 1 gCholesterol: 146 mgSodium: 338 mgFiber: 8 gSugar: 65 g

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Tried this recipe?Mention @leitesculinaria or tag #leitesculinaria!
Recipe © 2010 Bill Yosses. Photo © 2010 Marcus Nilsson. All rights reserved.

Recipe Testers’ Reviews

If you love chocolate, then you’ll love this red eye devil’s food cake. It’s moist and full of great chocolate flavor. Yes, it took time and was labor intensive. But it was so worth the work. It’s a delicious cake and my family loved it!

Making the chocolate curls as suggested was also a bit of a problem: I tried with a vegetable peeler, and then with a cheese shaver, and nothing worked. Next time, I’ll go back to my old ways of making chocolate curls by melting and spreading a thin layer on waxed paper and then peeling it off in strips.

I did have a problem with the ganache—it was a bit stiff.

This red eye devil’s food cake is delicious! I didn’t go through the work of making 4 layers and frosting them all, but the 2 cake layers were absolutely perfect. Not only was it dark, moist, and full of flavor, but the cake settled into flat layers—no slicing off the hump.

It does take a bit of work, though, with the coffee/cocoa mix, then the creaming and mixing here and there, but the end result is worth it. You’ll never look at a devil’s food box mix again.

The only problem I had was with the ganache: I couldn’t get it thick enough to spread or hold up to the weight of a layer of cake on top of it. Maybe too much cream? I ended up whipping it and it became mousse-like, but with just enough heft to frost the cake. The flavor was great, though.




About David Leite

I count myself lucky to have received three James Beard Awards for my writing as well as for Leite’s Culinaria. I’m the author of The New Portuguese Table and Notes on a Banana. For more than 25 years, I’ve been developing and testing recipes for my site, my books, and publications. My work has also appeared in the New York Times, Martha Stewart Living, Saveur, Bon Appétit, Gourmet, Food & Wine, Yankee, Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, Washington Post, and more. I’m also a cooking teacher, memoirist, and inveterate cat lady.


Hungry For More?

Flourless Chocolate Cloud Cake

This lofty cake is so crammed full of chocolate and butter and air, there’s no room for flour–although we made sure to leave space for ample swoops of softly whipped cream.

1 hr 15 mins

Chocolate Caramel Cake

For this stunning dessert, rich chocolate cake and salty-sweet caramel frosting collide to make a magnificent masterpiece.

6 hrs

Hershey’s Chocolate Frosting

Sometimes simpler is better. Proof? This classic chocolate frosting from the back of the tin of Hershey’s cocoa. We dare you to not just eat it straight from the spoon.

10 mins


5 from 5 votes (1 rating without comment)

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating





39 Comments

  1. 5 stars
    I needed a ladder to eat it but this cake was wonderful. I only got 3 layers but then I was cutting with dental floss. Maybe I should up my cake slicing game. Terrific recipe.

    1. Hah! I am grinning and imagining you climbing a ladder leaned against the cake, Maureen. An alternative to slicing the cake, if you’ve got a morning or afternoon to hang around the house, is to bake super skinny cakes, using just 1/6 or so of the batter for each cake. Clearly the timing will be less, and you’ll be moving pans in and out of the oven, but it saves you from having to slice, and it also makes for easier frosting since you don’t need to deal with all the crumbs that ensue from slicing. Anyways, lovely to hear how much you loved this, thanks so much for saying so. Look forward to hearing what you make next….

  2. 5 stars
    Hi, the cake is delicious. (But you already knew that.) When I made the 9-inch layers, the cake domed and needed to be evened out, and I didn’t see how I could get 4 layers out of it, even with a cake slicer. I could only get 3 layers. Even if it had domed a little less–and I think this cake will need some leveling, no matter what I do to minimize doming–I don’t see how to cut what remains in four. My first thought is to transfer the batter to an 8-inch pan so as to get a higher cake and more slices. Do you think that would work? I’ve read that moving to a 8-inch cake pan can negatively affect texture and am unsure.

    Alternatively, I guess I could make 1 1/2 times the recipe, i.e., an extra 9-inch layer and use some of it to arrive at 8 layers total.

    I am now wondering if the cake pictured here was made via this second alternative – the cake looks terrific, of course, but some layers, like the very top one, are quite thick, the bottom ones quite thin, and the middle ones intermediate. Unless the cake slices are stacked out of order, I can’t figure out how that is from two 9 inch layers – as the bottom four slices add up to much less thickness than the top four slices…..and I’m wondering now if whoever produced the cake in the picture had the same problem I did and landed up slicing 3 cakes? (I intend no insult here, just trying to grasp how this cake is best made.)

    1. Our testers were able to sneak four layers out of a 9-inch cake, AJ. I think you could, as you suggest, try the batter in 8-inch cake pans as well. Or you could take a cue from this lovely chocolate torte recipe and simply bake a number of super skinny layer cakes, thereby dispensing with having to slice the cakes evenly. Sorry you had a little trickiness, here’s hoping it goes easier next time around….do let us know which tactic you take.

    2. aj, I believe part of the difference in the cake layers in the picture is a result of them not being reassembled in the order they were cut, but rather in an order that created a level cake. I often do that when baking cakes.

      Regarding a doming cake, I’d suggest cake strips. I use them all the time, and they make a huge difference. All that extra batter will be distributed evenly around the pan, making for a higher layer.

      Last, always make sure you thoroughly cream the butter and sugar as well as beat the batter for the full time. That creates structure as well as incorporating air into the batter, making for a fuller cake.