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Chocolate Mocha Cake

 This Chocolate Mocha Cake is the ultimate indulgence. A rich dark chocolate cake with a silky mocha Swiss meringue buttercream.

Close up of a cake.

This cake right here? It’s amazing. I mean, it knocked the Momofuku Birthday Cake right out of the #1 spot, and that was a damn good cake.

This Chocolate Mocha Cake is seriously. SO. GOOD.

Rich dark chocolate cake and a silky Mocha Swiss Meringue buttercream, topped with a dreamy chocolate ganache. Does it get any better? I don’t think so.

If you’ve been following Liv for Cake for a while, you know this is one of my oldest (and one of my favorite) recipes. If you haven’t tried it, you NEED to. You will not regret it.

The frosting is my favorite thing ever — you’ll be eating that with a spoon and thanking me later.

How to make this Mocha Cake

For the cake layers, I used my very favorite Chocolate Cake recipe modified slightly for the 6″ pans and I used hot coffee instead of hot water in the cake batter. You can’t really taste the coffee, maybe only slightly, but it does help the chocolate flavor stand out.

I like to use Dutch-process cocoa powder as it’s richer in flavor, but any regular cocoa powder will work just fine.

Mocha Buttercream

THIS, people, is honestly the best thing you’ll ever eat. Silky Swiss meringue buttercream with espresso and chocolate. It is pure heaven!

The recipe calls for instant espresso powder (not granules). This is a very fine powder and should dissolve perfectly into the buttercream.

Some people were having the issue of flecks of espresso powder in their buttercream because it didn’t dissolve fully. This may be due to the brand of espresso powder used. This is the brand I use and it works really well. However,  I’ve updated the recipe to include dissolving the espresso powder first in 1 tsp of hot water. It’s optional though.

Can I use Regular Espresso Or regular Coffee?

No, you must use instant coffee that dissolves completely in water.

You could use regular instant coffee vs instant espresso powder, but you’d want to make it quite strong to match the flavor. I haven’t experimented with this myself, but it would really be totally fine. You can add more or less to your liking. 

Ganache drip on a mocha cake

How to do a Drip Cake

I kept the cake decorating simple, as I wanted to do the drippy ganache technique. It’s surprisingly easy (I swear!), the key thing is to get your ganache to the right consistency which may require some trial and error.

Step #1 is to frost the cake evenly and smooth the sides and top. This is probably the most time intensive part if you want to get it perfect (which, obviously, I do).

I used a small offset spatula to roughly frost the cake and then a bench scraper to smooth everything out. This is the part that took the most time.

I had to patch some areas here and there, so it took a while to get it perfect. It really helps if you have a turntable to do this on, so that you can spin it while holding the bench scraper at an angle.

You don’t have to shell out a lot of money on a turntable, but I do not recommend getting a plastic one. They’re not super stable and don’t spin smoothly.

To get those smooth sides, you need a smooth spin! I use a lazy susan from Ikea that works great.

Profile shot of a mocha cake with ganache drip.

Once I got the top and sides mostly perfect, I popped the whole thing in the fridge and made the ganache.

Once the ganache cooled and thickened slightly, I took out the cold cake and used a teaspoon to drop dollops of ganache along the edges and let it drop down the sides.

I added more/less on certain areas to vary the drips a bit. You can also just pour a bunch of ganache on the top and use your offset spatula to nudge it over the sides, but I wanted a bit more control over the drips, and my research said that the spoon technique was a good approach.

I was worried that the ganache would harden quickly on the cold cake, but I had plenty of time to work with it. Once the drips were good, I poured a bit of ganache on the top to fill that in, and smoothed it with a small offset spatula.

Alice of Mocha Cake on a plate.

This Swiss meringue buttercream gets very firm in the fridge (like butter does), so you’ll want to leave the cake out for a couple hours before serving so that it can soften up.

When I took photos and cut the cake, it was still hard, so you can see that it’s not totally silky smooth between the layers.

Close up of a slice of Mocha cake with Mocha buttercream

This Chocolate Mocha Cake is insanely good. Like, ridiculous. It is my all-time favorite cake!

I mean, just LOOK at that piece! The cake is dense, moist, and ultra chocolatey. The buttercream is silky, smooth, and has the BEST mocha flavor ever.

You will not be disappointed with this cake. I promise!

More Coffee Flavored Cake recipes

Notes & tips for this Chocolate Mocha Cake

  • The recipe as-is will also work in two 8″ pans. For three 8″ pans, 1.5x the recipe.
  • To make cupcakes, all you need to do is reduce the baking time — start checking at 15mins or so.
  • You can use regular cocoa powder if you don’t have Dutch-process.
  • For the frosting, the coffee you use must be instant. See post for more details.
  • For the ganache, I let mine set overnight (with plastic wrap placed directly on the surface). It will be too thick at this point, so I microwave it for 10 secs and stir it until it’s the right consistency.
  • The drip technique works best on a chilled cake so that the drips set quickly.
  • Be sure to check my Swiss Meringue Buttercream post for tips and troubleshooting.
  • Learn how to keep your cakes moist using Simple Syrup.
  • To help ensure your cake layers bake up nice and flat, check out my How to Bake Flat Cake Layers post!

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