Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (2024)

By:Nagi

163 Comments

What’s the one thing that makes these Molten Chocolate Cakes stand out from the crowd? The oozing chocolate centre. It isn’t raw cake batter, it’s chocolate ganache. No more stressing about overcooking and losing the chocolate lava – because melted chocolate will always ooze!

Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (1)

Molten Chocolate Cakes

Molten Chocolate Cakes, also known as Lava Cakes, are warm individual-size chocolate cakes with oozing chocolate centres.

Most recipes will simply have you undercooking a chocolate cake batter, so the outside is set like cake but the inside is raw batter that pours out like lava when you cut into it. Hence the name!

But why settle for cake batter when you can have the real thing? I’ll take molten real chocolate over raw cake, thanks!

Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (2)

What you need for Lava Cakes

Here’s what you need to make Molten Chocolate Cakes:

Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (3)
  • Dark chocolate / semi-sweet chocolate chips – for both the cake batter and the chocolate ganache filling. Anything up to 50% cocoa will work here. Do not use chocolate with a higher cocoa %. The cake isn’t as soft and also it’s quite hard to make a small batch of ganache with a high cocoa % chocolate;

  • Flour – A surprisingly small amount, just 2 tablespoons for 4 cakes! Are you shocked? 🙂 These babies are literally mostly chocolate – and we’re all very happy about that!!

  • 4 eggs – We’re using 2 whole eggs and 2 yolks.

    Leftover egg whites–Here’s my listof what I do with them and all my egg white recipes can be foundin this recipe collection;

  • Sugar – White caster sugar / superfine sugar. The finer grains make it easier to incorporate into the batter;

  • Butter – Unsalted; and

  • Cream – Heavy / thickened cream to make the ganache filling.

If you’re short on time, you can just use Lindt balls instead of making your own ganache!

How to make Molten Chocolate Cakes

You’ll need a few hours for the ganache to set so you can scoop up balls to drop into the batter. But once that’s done, the cake itself is a 10-minute hand-mixing job, and a 20-minute bake.

1. Ganache for molten chocolate filling

This ganache is thicker than traditional ganache. Ordinarily, a ratio of 1:1 chocolate to cream is used. For Lava Cakes, I use less cream so the ganache oozes more thickly and slowly. Otherwise it runs out of the cake too quickly.

Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (4)
  1. Ganache – First, make the ganache. Traditionally ganache is made by pouring hot cream over chocolate, letting it stand to make the chocolate melt then stirring until it’s smooth and combined.

    For this recipe, we only need a small batch of ganache. This doesn’t work so well using the hot cream method. So we’re doing it the old-school way: put chocolate and cream in a bowl, microwave in 20-second bursts to melt, then stir until combined and smooth; and

  2. Chill ganache – Once melted, refrigerate until it’s firm enough to scoop into balls. For a small bowl, it shouldn’t take longer than 2 hours or so.

Remember: If you’re short on time, you can just use a Lindt ball instead of making ganache!

2. Molten Chocolate Cake batter

Start the batter once the ganache is firm:

Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (5)
  1. Grease & dust moulds: Grease 4 x 170ml / 5.75 oz dariole or pudding moulds with butter then dust inside with cocoa powder. This ensures the cakes slip right out. You’ll see me demo how I do the dusting in the recipe video below.

    No moulds? No problems! Just use ramekins or muffin tins. The puddings won’t stand as tall, but it will taste just as good! Bake times in recipe notes.

Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (6)
  1. Melt chocolate: Melt the chocolate and butter in the microwave in 30-second bursts, stirring in-between. Then leave to cool for 5 minutes to ensure it doesn’t cook the eggs!

  2. Finish Batter: Whisk the eggs and sugar first, then add the chocolate mixture and finally fold through the flour.

    Avoid vigorously mixing. There’s not much flour in this, but we can still over-work the gluten which will make the cake less tender. Once you can no longer see flour and the batter has come together and is smooth, stop mixing;

Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (7)
  1. Fill moulds: Fill the prepared moulds ⅓ of the way with the batter;

  2. Drop in ganache: Drop in one generously-heaped teaspoon of ganache and cover with more batter until it reaches 1.5cm below the rim;

Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (8)
  1. Bake for 20 minutes, feeling confident in the knowledge that you needn’t worry about an overcooked molten centre that doesn’t ooze! Because ganache will always ooze!

  2. Turn out: Stand for 2 minutes to let the cake stabilise a bit so it won’t collapse when you turn it out. Then place the mould upside-down on a plate. Give the base a solid tap with a spoon, and gently slide mould off. Voila!

Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (9)
Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (10)

And now, for that moment everybody been anticipating … when you crack into the cake and see that hot chocolate lava come pouring out. Ooof … Surely one of the greatest chocolate theatre moments in living history!

Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (11)

Backtracking a bit now to plating up. 🙂 A scoop of ice cream or dollop of whipped cream is sensational here. The whole hot vs cold and creamy thing is amazing. Finish with a dusting of cocoa powder to pretty it up.

A splash of colour and freshness is always nice, whether it be strawberries, raspberries or perhaps some little edible flowers for looks.

Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (12)

Hmm, it looks like quite a frightful mess once you start digging in, doesn’t it? But a deliciously frightful mess, right?? – Nagi x

PS Extra bonus: keeps 3 to 4 days and you still get the molten centre because reheating won’t cook the chocolate ganache inside! I just reheat in the microwave for 45 seconds, and it is as good as new. If you try reheating the raw cake batter Lava Cakes, the inside cooks.

Watch how to make it

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Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (13)

Molten Chocolate Cakes

Author: Nagi

Prep: 10 minutes mins

Cook: 20 minutes mins

Ganache chilling: 3 hours hrs

Dessert, Sweet

Western

4.97 from 26 votes

Servings4

Tap or hover to scale

Print

Recipe video above. The one thing that sets these Lava Cakes apart from the rest? The molten centre isn't just raw cake batter, it's melted chocolate. No more stress about overcooking the molten centre – because chocolate will always ooze. And chocolate trumps raw cake batter in the texture and taste test, always!

Shortcut tip: Use a Lindt ball in place of the ganache. I'd use the dark chocolate balls (blue wrappers). Readers have tried and LOVE this!

Ingredients

Molten Chocolate Ganache Centre:

  • 1/2 cup dark chocolate chips or melts/ semi sweet chocolate chips (Note 1)
  • 4 tbsp cream , heavy/thickened

Cake Batter:

  • 1 cup dark chocolate chips or melts/ semi sweet chocolate chips (Note 1)
  • 100g / 7 tbsp unsalted butter , cut into 1cm / ½" cubes
  • 2 eggs , at room temperature
  • 2 egg yolks , at room temperature (Note 2)
  • 1/2 cup caster/superfine sugar (sub ordinary white sugar)
  • 2 tbsp flour , plain / all purpose

To Serve:

  • Ice-cream or cream (highly recommended!)
  • Cocoa or icing sugar / powdered sugar , for dusting
  • Strawberries , raspberries or edible flowers, optional decoration

Instructions

Molten chocolate ganache:

  • Place chocolate and cream in a microwave-proof bowl. Microwave on high for three 20-second bursts, stirring in between, until chocolate is melted and smooth.

  • Let cool on the counter for 10 minutes, then refrigerate for 3 hours or until firm enough to scoop into balls. (Note 3)

Cake:

  • Preheat oven to 200°C / 390°F (180°C fan).

  • Grease & dust moulds: Grease 4 x 170ml / 5.75oz dariole or pudding moulds with butter then dust insides with cocoa powder, tapping out excess. (Note 4)

  • Melt chocolate and butter: Place chocolate and butter in a bowl. Microwave in 30 second bursts, stirring in between. Stir well until smooth, then leave to cool for 5 minutes.

  • Whisk eggs and sugar: In a separate bowl, whisk together the eggs, egg yolks and sugar.

  • Combine with chocolate: Add the melted chocolate into the eggs, and mix until combined.

  • Fold through flour: Add flour and fold through until just combined. Do not over-mix.

  • Fill moulds: Pour or scoop the batter into prepared moulds until it reaches ⅓ of the way up.

  • Drop in ganache: Place one generously-heaped teaspoon of ganache into middle of batter. Top with more batter until it reaches 1.5cm / ⅗" from the top rim. Repeat for remaining moulds.

  • Bake 20 minutes: Place the moulds on an oven tray and bake for 20 minutes, or until the pudding tops spring back when gently touched.

  • Turn out: Stand for 2 minutes, then turn onto plate. Tap base then gently remove each mould.

  • Serve with ice-cream or cream, dusted with cocoa powder. Decorate with strawberries!

Recipe Notes:

1. Chocolate – Use dark chocolate chips or melts, aka semi-sweet chocolate chips (US). Do not use a dark chocolate with more than 50% cocoa, as it changes the texture of the cake batter and makes it too firm (as I found out first hand!). Also, the ganache will not be molten enough.

2. Egg yolks – Separate the eggs while the eggs are fridge-cold because it’s easier. But then cover and leave separated eggs for 15 minutes to take the fridge chill out of them so they incorporate more easily with the other ingredients.

Leftover egg whites–Here’s my listof what I do with them and all my egg white recipes can be foundin this recipe collection.

3. Chocolate ganache firming – Do not be tempted to shortcut by freezing it! To speed things up, transfer the mix into a shallow dish so it cools faster.

Note: This recipe makes more ganache than you need, as it’s hard to make less. I’m sure you don’t need me to tell you what to do with the ganache!

4. Moulds – Muffin tins or ramekins work fine too, they just won’t come out as tall as pictured. A standard muffin tin makes seven to eight cakes, fill to 1cm from the rim and bake 17 minutes. A large muffin tin could also be used – this will make four and take 20 minutes to bake.

5. Storage and reheating – keeps 3 to 4 days and you still get the molten centre because reheating won’t cook the chocolate ganache inside! (If you try reheating the raw cake batter Lava Cakes, the inside cooks). I just reheat in the microwave for 45 seconds. Haven’t tried freezing – only concern is whether than makes the ganache seize so it won’t ooze when reheated, it will be more like a thick chocolate paste instead.

6. Nutrition per lava cake, assuming ⅔ of the ganache is used (see Note 3 re: makes more than you need).

Nutrition Information:

Calories: 695cal (35%)Carbohydrates: 58g (19%)Protein: 8g (16%)Fat: 48g (74%)Saturated Fat: 28g (175%)Trans Fat: 1gCholesterol: 244mg (81%)Sodium: 46mg (2%)Potassium: 374mg (11%)Fiber: 5g (21%)Sugar: 46g (51%)Vitamin A: 984IU (20%)Vitamin C: 1mg (1%)Calcium: 69mg (7%)Iron: 4mg (22%)

Keywords: lava cake, molten chocolate cake

Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

Life of Dozer

Every year, I vow that this is the year I will teach Dozer to hold a rose in his mouth for a sweet Valentine’s Day photo!

I continue to fail.

Please just pretend I’m not there, holding his snout closed around what turned out to a rather thorny rose. Oops! 😂

Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (14)
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163 Comments

  1. Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (18)Helen says

    Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (19)
    it was delightful but it was a bit of a faf getting everything ready it was really good overall though it says you can make 4 but actually it makes 6 it oozed out and it was great fun recomend getting strawberries and dipping them in the centre

    Reply

  2. Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (24)Lyn L says

    Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (25)
    I made this for my hubby’s birthday. feedback was good. Easy to follow recipe. My ganache didn’t ooze out. I wonder if it’s because I put in about 1 tablespoon of filling instead of 1 teaspoon. Will try less ganache next time. I managed to fill 3 ramekins with a big dome at the top. Next time will try less batter and fill up 4 ramekins. Thanks.

    Reply

  3. Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (27)Candy says

    Hi. I can’t wait to bake this but Is there a way to make this gluten free? Thanks.

    Reply

  4. Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (30)Monica says

    Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (31)
    Turned out wonderfully, and not overly sweet. Surprisingly uncomplicated to do. Enjoyed making them with my teen daughter for Mother’s Day dinner. Got compliments from everyone!

    Reply

  5. Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (33)Anne says

    Hi Nagi,
    I made the lava cakes today as a trial before a dinner party. They were a bit too sweet for me, do you think the recipe would still work if I reduced the sugar content?

    Reply

    • Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (34)Nicole says

      Hi! Thank you for sharing this amazing recipe! The ganache recipe is wonderful! I encountered a problem where my batter became too oily after making it sit in room temperature for 5 mins while I was scooping my batter to my ramekins. All my ingredients were in room temperature and I followed the recipe exactly. Do you think it’s because of the weather since I live in a humid and hot country? What should I do to avoid oily cakes and batter? (I’ve been really stumped on this problem)
      Thank you in advance 💗

      Reply

  6. Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (35)Debbi says

    I am ready to make but realized I don’t have cocoa powder for dusting the ramekins. Could I use powdered sugar instead for dusting the ramekins?

    Reply

    • Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (36)Nagi says

      You can Debbie – you just might get a few white marks on them which is why I usually use cocoa! N x

      Reply

  7. Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (37)Barbara T says

    I don’t have individual molds, but I have a standard size pop over pan I’d like to try using. Can you tell me how many fluid ounces your mold holds, so I can compare to see if the pop over pan would work?

    Reply

  8. Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (38)A says

    Do you have a link for the recommended pudding molds? For some reason searching by the dimensions you listed I’m having an issue coming up with the proper mold. There are so many to choose from and I don’t want to mess it up. Thank you for your time!!

    Reply

    • Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (39)Nagi says

      Try ebay or a specialty baking site – it really depends on what country you are in! N x

      Reply

  9. Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (40)Nicola says

    I made this today for the first time. Tasted delicious but the centre didn’t ooze. I think I left the ganache in the fridge too long. I had to scrape it out with a tablespoon – it wasn’t scoopable. I also applied it straight from the fridge so I think that’s where I went wrong. Also, when I turned it upside down, it broke and the ganache was left at the bottom of the ramekin. Hopefully it will work out better next time.

    Reply

    • Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (41)Nagi says

      Yes Nicola, you really need to follow the details with regards to fridge times or other timing on baking recipes as it can make a huge difference in the final result!! N x

      Reply

  10. Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (42)Lorraine says

    Hi there, could I make these ahead of time and pop in the oven when ready to serve
    Cheers
    Always such great recipes Nagi
    Have converted many friends 🙂

    Reply

    • Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (43)Nagi says

      I haven’t let them sit very long before baking Lorraine – I would suggest baking first and reheating as per the notes just before serving. N x

      Reply

  11. Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (45)Lori says

    Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (46)
    I made these for Valentine’s Day as well and they were excellent! I used Lindt chocolates instead of making the ganache – so delicious!

    Reply

  12. Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (48)Sammyluvbx says

    Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (49)
    Absolutely delish! I made these for Valentine’s Day. I made the ganache the night before, used a muffin pan and the cakes turned out amazing.

    Reply

  13. Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (50)Tamara says

    I’d like to try this, but cream is ridiculously expensive around here. Would canned evaporated milk work instead?

    Reply

  14. Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (54)Gabrielle says

    I was wondering whether the ganache could be made the night before and if so can I use it straight from the fridge?
    Thanks.

    Reply

  15. Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (55)Jenny says

    Molten Chocolate Cakes – with real chocolate centres! (56)
    I’ve made this 3 times now. I definitely feel proper dariole moulds are better than ramekins. The cakes made in ramekins just didn’t cook consistently for me either underdone or over. It was 3rd time lucky dariole mould cakes came out perfectly with the lindt balls for centre.

    Reply

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Molten Chocolate Cakes –  with real chocolate centres! (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between molten cake and lava cake? ›

While both molten cakes and lava cakes typically contain similar ingredients (such as chocolate, butter, eggs, sugar, and flour), the specific recipes may vary. Lava cakes are always chocolate-based, while molten cakes could be made with other flavors like lemon, caramel, or even fruit.

What is the center of a lava cake made of? ›

The molten centre isn't just raw cake batter, it's melted chocolate. No more stress about overcooking the molten centre – because chocolate will always ooze. And chocolate trumps raw cake batter in the texture and taste test, always!

Is lava cake raw in the middle? ›

The technical answer is no, molten lava cake is not raw in the middle. However, the centers of molten lava cakes are under-baked, in the sense that the centers are not fully set. The molten chocolate centers get hot enough to “cook” the eggs to a food-safe temperature, without hardening the batter.

Can I add melted chocolate to my cake batter? ›

Adding melted chocolate to the sponge mixture gives it a fudgier texture, but you can leave this out and simply use the cocoa paste for a lighter (and cheaper) cake.

Does Dairy Queen have molten lava cakes? ›

MOLTEN. LAVA CAKE

A rich, moist chocolate cake filled with a gooey fudge center served hot from the oven with a side of DQ vanilla soft serve that is topped with hot fudge.

Does molten lava cake need to be refrigerated? ›

Yes, both unbaked and baked Lava Cakes should be refrigerated. Can I double or triple the recipe? Yes! You can double or triple the recipe, but the cakes will likely need an extra minute or two in the oven.

What is a fancy name for lava cake? ›

Molten chocolate cake
Alternative namesmi-cuit au chocolat, Lava cake, chocolate lava cake, molten chocolate lava cake, volcano cake
CourseDessert
Place of originFrance
Main ingredientsButter, eggs, sugar, chocolate
Media: Molten chocolate cake
1 more row

What can I use instead of ramekins for lava cake? ›

If you don't have ramekins, you can use a standard muffin pan. Grease 6 muffin pan cups and dust with cocoa powder to prevent the lava cakes from sticking. Because your lava cakes will be slightly smaller, you'll get 6 lava cakes instead of 4. Bake at 425°F (218°C) for 8–10 minutes.

Why did my lava cake fail? ›

The temperature is far too low to bake a molten lava cake. The cake depends on cooking the outer edge of the batter quickly, before the inside has chance to set, but hot enough so the center is warm and gooey. Lava cakes should be baked at 425°F, for between 8 - 12 minutes, depending on the size of the ramekin.

Are chocolate Lava Cakes safe to eat? ›

Lava cakes typically include eggs so a common question, given that the center is molten, is if Lava Cakes are safe to eat. These Chocolate Peanut Butter Lava Cakes are baked at 425 degrees so the batter is able to reach 165 degrees in the center, rendering them safe to eat.

Why did my lava cake sink in the middle? ›

If you over mix the cake batter, your molten lava cake is going to collapse or sink in. Reason being when you over mix the batter, you are incorporating too much air bubble into the batter resulting it in losing its structure to hold the cake together.

Why is my lava cake dry? ›

Lava cakes are pretty easy to make, but if you're having problems with it collapsing or being dry in the middle, you haven't quite nailed the cooking time. If your molten lava cake collapses, bake it for a little longer next time. If it doesn't have the liquid chocolate in the center, shorten your baking time.

What is the best chocolate to melt for cakes? ›

The 10 Best Chocolates for Melting
RankName
1Callebaut Belgian Dark Couverture Chocolate
2Nestle Toll House Milk Chocolate Morsels
3Lily's Dark Chocolate Chips
4Wilton Chocolate Pro Melting Chocolate Wafers for Chocolate Fondue
6 more rows

Can I use melted chocolate instead of cocoa powder in cake? ›

Alternatively, you can use cooking chocolate instead of cocoa powder. Use 30 grams of cooking chocolate for every 24 grams (three tablespoons) of cocoa powder that's required, and 15 grams less butter or oil.

Why does my chocolate cake not taste like chocolate? ›

If your homemade chocolate cake has a lackluster taste, you're probably not adding enough salt.

Why is it called molten lava cake? ›

Molten chocolate cake is a French dessert that consists of a chocolate cake with a liquid chocolate core. It is named for that molten center, and it is also known as mi-cuit au chocolat, chocolat coulant ("flowing"), chocolate lava cake, or simply lava cake.

Is it melted or molten chocolate? ›

“Molten” is now usually used of hard materials liquified by very high heat, like lava, glass, and lead. Most other substances are “melted,” though some people like to refer to “molten cheese” and a popular dessert is called “molten chocolate cake,” perhaps to emphasize its gooey, lava-like character. BUY THE BOOK!

How do you heat a molten lava cake? ›

Wrap well in plastic wrap and store in an airtight container in the freezer for up to 1 month. You can thaw frozen lava cakes overnight in the fridge and reheat them in the oven at 350°F for about 8 minutes. Alternatively, you can reheat them from frozen in a preheated 400°F oven for 15-18 minutes.

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