Passover Chocolate Pistachio Cake with Chocolate Glaze

cake gf passover choc1aPassover is essentially a gluten free holiday. With the absence of wheat, rye, barley, spelt, and oats for 8 nights, creates limited choices. Protein and veggies are easy. It’s the carbs, the desserts, actually the stuff that most of us crave, thus find satisfying become absent. What I have found in creating a gluten free household is that mealtime as well as snack time is every bit as tasty, if not tastier than how we previously ate.

For my kids, Passover elicits emotions of dread and doom. However, this past week, as I tested and retested recipes, the kids were quite emotional about what was coming out of our kitchen. Even a failed attempt at a gluten free passover doughnut this morning, were gobbled up. Eli coined it a “makee” – a cross between a muffin and a cake and one of the best gluten free treats to date!

So, in testing recipes for the first night of Seder, I started with this Amaranth, Quinoa and Dark Chocolate Cake from La Tartine Gourmande. The first go around, I made it exactly according to the recipe. Delicious! Perfect! And it disappeared within minutes. But with 14 adults and 9 kids, sitting down to dinner, this wasn’t going to go very far.

So, I turned this recipe, with a few tweaks, into little cakelettes. Although the cake itself was delicious dusted with powdered sugar, I wanted even more chocolate. Making a very simple chocolate glaze and adding some toasted pistachios for some crunch was a great call.

The original cake recipe was made in a 4″ x 7 1/2″ loaf pan. Swapping out the pistachios for the pecans in the original recipe and adding mini bittersweet chocolate chips gave me 22 bite sized cakelettes. The kids snagged a few before frosting them and were every bit as good without the glaze.

This cake is going to become a household staple. Using both amaranth and quinoa flour which not only makes it the perfect gluten free dessert, but it also creates endless options for our Passover dessert table.

Passover Chocolate Pistachio Cake with Chocolate Glaze
For a kosher version of this cake, replace the butter with parve margarine and the Valhrona chocolate with this chocolate. This cake is every bit as good dusted with confectioner’s sugar but adding the rich, chocolate glaze puts it over the top.

Original recipe here

Yield: 1 7 3/4″ loaf or 22 mini cakelettes 

Ingredients:
for the cake:
4.5 ounces | 125g  dark chocolate (Valhrona)
3.5 ounces | 99 grams | 7 tablespoons unsalted butter
3.5 ounces | grams | 1/2 cup organic, pure cane sugar
1 ounce | 30 grams | 3 tablespoons amaranth flour
1 ounce | 28 grams | 3 tablespoons quinoa flour
1 teaspoon espresso powder
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
1.5 ounces | grams | 1/3 cup pistachios, chopped (plus extra to sprinkle on top)
1 ounce | 29 grams mini bittersweet chocolate chips
3 large, organic eggs, separated
1/8 teaspoon Celtic sea salt

For the chocolate glaze:
3/4 ounces | 21 grams | 3 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder
1 1/2 ounces | 42 grams | 3 tablespoons boiled water
6 ounces | 173 grams | 12 tablespoons unsalted, organic butter
2 3/4 ounces | 77 grams | 1/2 cup confectioners’ sugar
8 ounces | 229 grams bittersweet chocolate
pinch of Celtic sea salt

Instructions:
for the cake:
• Preheat oven to 350°F
• Butter a 4″ x 7 3/4 ” loaf pan and then line with parchment. or line a mini muffin tray with 2 ounce muffin liners (or these paper cups) and spray with cooking oil.
• Set a glass bowl over a pot of simmering water (don’t let the water touch the bottom of the bowl). Add the chocolate, butter, and espresso powder. stir occasionally until combined and smooth.Let cool slightly.
• In another bowl, combine the egg yolks, sugar, and vanilla and whisk until light in color.
• Add the cooled chocolate to the yolk mixture. mix to combine. Add the flours, pistachio nuts, and mini chips. Fold until just combined.
• In a clean bowl of a standing mixer, with the whisk attachment attached, beat the egg whites and the salt until firm and light. Fold the whites into the chocolate mixture.
• If making the cake pour the batter into the loaf pan and bake for 35-40 minutes or until a wooden skewer inserted in the center comes out with a bit of crumbs on it. Let cool on wire racks.

For the glaze:
• Combine the cocoa and the boiled water and whisk until a thick paste forms.
• In a glass bowl, set over a pot with simmering water, place the chocolate and stir occasionally until melted. Let cool.
• In the bowl of a standing mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, cream the butter and confectioners’ sugar, until combined.
• Add the cooled, melted chocolate and beat until you do not see any white streaks. Beat in the cocoa mixture until combined.
• Use immediately or can be stored in the refrigerator for up to 5 days. If storing, when ready to use, bring to room temperature, beat for a few minutes until smooth.

 

Susan Salzman writes The Urban Baker blog to explore her dedication to good food in the hope of adding beauty to the lives of her family and friends.