Recipe – Chocolate and Courgette ‘Not Sure If Loaf Or Cake’

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Is it a loaf? Is it a cake? Is it a tree? 

Well, It’s not a tree, but it is the other things.

I ended up with a some of Mortimer Chocolate Company‘s chocolate powder mixes and promised we’d come up with something.

Cue many months of fucking about, eventually rummaging through a Morrison’s magazine and the discovery of a recipe that uses courgette in cake. Great idea!

With some slight modifications, here are the delicious results.

It’s only moderately chocolatey, the courgette adds an unfamiliar moistness, but no taste – it’s quite unlike any cake I’d ever tried before and you can even see the little courgette slivers in there.

FAO chocolate lovers: you may want to up your chocolate dosage from 100g to 120g or so. Or try a darker one, this was 70% but I think you could get away with 85% here. 

(PS: sorry for the crappy picture!)

 

Dark Chocolate Courgette Loaf
Serves 6
It looks gluten free but it isn't. Maybe it should be. Oh well, CHOCOLATE.
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Prep Time
10 min
Cook Time
1 hr
Total Time
1 hr 10 min
Prep Time
10 min
Cook Time
1 hr
Total Time
1 hr 10 min
Ingredients
  1. 175g unsalted butter
  2. 200g golden caster sugar
  3. 3 eggs
  4. 200g plain flour, sifted
  5. 1 tsp baking powder
  6. 200g courgette, grated finely
  7. 100g 'Ecuador' pure dark chocolate powder from The Mortimer Chocolate Company.
Instructions
  1. Before you begin, use a cheese grater to finely grate a courgette. Use one of the grater surfaces which has more numerous and smaller ridges.
  2. Keep the courgette gratings in a bowl ready for mixing later.
  3. Heat your oven to 180 C /160 F/ Gas Mark 4.
  4. Grease the base and sides of a 900g / 2lb loaf tin and line with baking parchment.
  5. Cream the butter and sugar together until pale and fluffy.
  6. Add the eggs and 2tbs of the flour and beat well.
  7. Stir in the chocolate powder.
  8. Sift in the remaining flour with the baking powder and fold together thoroughly.
  9. Now stir in the courgette, making sure it is well distributed throughout the mix.
  10. Spoon the mixture into the prepared tin, level the top with the back of a spoon and place in oven to bake for an hour until well risen.
  11. Check that it is cooked by inserting a metal skewer into the centre of the cake; if the skewer comes out clean it is ready, if it doesn’t, bake ten minutes longer and check again.
  12. Cool in the tin for about 15 minutes then remove the paper and cool completely on a wire rack
  13. Serve sliced and eat with extreme prejudice.
Notes
  1. We baked this using the ‘all in one’ method, where all the ingredients apart from the courgette are placed in a large mixing bowl and an electric beater is used to combine the ingredients quite quickly. The courgette is then beaten in at the end. It involves less cleaning :v
  2. The original recipe also called for ground almonds, but we skipped these in favour of a slightly lighter calorie option. As a chocolate cake I think it would have done better with hazlenuts anyway
Adapted from Morrison's Kitchen Baking Masterclass
Adapted from Morrison's Kitchen Baking Masterclass
Tasting Britain http://tastingbritain.com/
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