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Today I was on a chocolate baking frenzy. I woke up early, too early. My body has an internal alarm clock that usually goes off around 4 am. So I took advantage of my time this morning and baked two different chocolate desserts. I needed on for our Bible study, and my oldest daughter was scheduled to bring “something sweet” also.
I spent a lot of time trying to decide what kind of cake I would make. Finding that I was completely out of powdered sugar pretty much sealed the deal on this cake. I would definitely make it again. It was easy to prepare and quite impressive! The cake is from the Eagle Brand milk people. The recipe call for sweetened condensed milk, hence, the reason they have it on their site! (duh!)
I was hesitant about how the “swirl” would take place with the described preparation. I was amazed though at how the cream cheese mixture dispersed all the way through the cake batter to the top of the cake (i.e. the bottom of the pan). There was a nice 1/2″ or so “tunnel” on the top of the finished product. Kudos to the Eagle Brand company for good directions!!!
The changes I made to the recipe were: 1) I used a dark fudge cake mix, and 2) The ganache… remember, I didn’t have any powdered sugar, so I had to compromise. I used a recipe from Anna over at Cookie Madness, one of my favorite daily blog visits. Check her blog out!
Fudge Ribbon Cake (via Eagle Brand Milk)
Cake Ingredients
- 1 (18.25 oz.) box chocolate cake mix, plus ingredients called for on box
- 1 (8 oz.) package cream cheese, softened
- 2 tablespoons butter, softened
- 1 tablespoon cornstarch
- 1 (14 oz.) can Sweetened Condensed Milk
- 1 large egg
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Chocolate Ganache (from Cookie Madness)
- 3 oz bittersweet chocolate (I used Ghirardelli Bars)
- 1/3 cup heavy cream
- 1/2 tablespoon corn syrup
- 1/2 tablespoon unsalted butter
Heat oven to 350ºF. Spray 10-inch fluted tube pan with flour no-stick cooking spray.
Cake Directions:
Prepare cake mix according to package directions. Pour batter into prepared pan.
Beat cream cheese, butter and cornstarch in medium bowl until fluffy. Gradually beat in sweetened condensed milk, egg and vanilla until smooth. Pour evenly over cake batter. Bake 50 to 55 minutes or until toothpick inserted near center comes out clean. Cool 15 minutes; remove from pan. Cool. Drizzle with Chocolate Glaze or sprinkle with powdered sugar.
Ganache Directions:
In a small saucepan, bring the cream to a boil. In a heatproof bowl, combine the remaining 3 ounces of chopped chocolate with the corn syrup and butter. Pour the hot cream over the chocolate and let stand until melted, about 5 minutes. Whisk until smooth. Let the ganache glaze cool until thick but still pourable, about 5 minutes.
Pour the ganache over the cooled cake.Let the cake stand until the glaze is set, at least 30 minutes, before serving. I set some of the ganache aside and once the first layer cooled, I topped it with some re-headed ganache lending a more decorative look.
**Looking back over this post, I noticed that I made an intial mention of sweets for my daughter… but didn’t mention what it was. I threw together a (lazy) Duncan Hines brownie mix together. It’s nice to have from scratch brownie recipes, but it’s also nice to have a quick fix that tastes great!
I’ve never heard of powdered sugar being used in ganache. The recipe you ended up using looks better anyway! What a lovely cake!!!! YUMM! I could use my favorite Hershey’s recipe to make this. I wonder how that would turn out. Bookmarked!
Actually, I didn’t do the icing the original recipe called for, because of not having powdered sugar. I am happy though and very pleased with the ganache instead.
That picture looks do good against the dark background.
Thank you, and thanks for the recipe. The topping was fabulous. Love your site!
That is such a cool cake!! I’m so making this! I think it’s so coll how the top layer just fell to the bottom of the pan like that. And it’s a really cool surprise for someone when they cut into it!
Im confused, does the cake batter go in first of the cheesecake batter? You say the cake batter, but it looks like the cheesecake is what goes in first.
The cake batter DOES go in first. That is what amazed me. During the baking process, the cream cheese mixture sinks to the bottom of the pan… making it be on top once you flip the cake.
So yes, put the cake mix in the pan first. Prepare the cream cheese mixture and then pour that over the cake mixture.
…The cream cheese mixture is denser than the cake batter, so it sinks as it bakes…
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Wow….that looks fabulous and delicious. I’m drooling!
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Yum for this post! It looks so decadent!You did a pretty great job with this
This recipe was absolutely delicious. However, my cheesecake did not fall the whole way and it ended up being somewhat of a marbled cake. What did I do wrong?