
Yesterday my daughter turned two, which was an excuse for me to make yet another silly birthday cake. In the past I've made: a kitty, a Death Star, Thomas the Tank Engine, a sea turtle, a birthday train, and a flower pot with bug cupcakes. I don't think I'd ever be confused with a professional cake decorator, but I have a lot of fun doing them, and my kids have a lot of fun eating them, and that's really good enough for me.
Actually, that's not quite good enough for me. In my book, though presentation is important, a cake has got to taste good, really good, for me to be happy with it. This particular cake was made using one of the easiest, tastiest chocolate cake recipes that I know of.
This is not an uber-dark, uber-chocolate-y cake; it's just very moist, simple, and uncomplicated. Regan Daley writes of it, "the result is nothing short of your childhood memory of real chocolate cake," and I think she's right. If you don't frost it, it has the added benefit of having no dairy ingredients, which means it's great for vegans and kids with milk allergies.
Although I referenced the recipe from In the Sweet Kitchen, I've also seen it many times in other cookbooks and cooking magazines. It's always credited to an older, female relative, and I think that it would be an interesting project to try to find out where all these women originally got the recipe, way back when.
