Get this recipe sent to your inbox, plus
new home-style recipes from An Amateur Cook every week.
This cake exists because I thought I’d make “just a chocolate cake” and somehow ended up in a full situation with layers, frosting, ganache… the whole dramatic setup.
It started simple. I wanted chocolate. Not a small amount. A serious, no-nonsense chocolate situation. Then I saw strawberries and thought, yeah, let’s make it slightly fancy. That was the turning point. That’s where things escalated.
Somewhere between whisking hot cocoa like I knew what I was doing and trying not to spill batter everywhere, I realized I had committed to a full baking project. No turning back.
But when it all came together, layers stacked, frosting everywhere (including places it shouldn’t be), and that ganache slowly dripping down the sides… yeah, I forgot how much work it felt like.
Table of Contents
Why I Keep Making This Dish (Real Reasons)
Chocolate Overload: This is not subtle. It’s bold, rich, and exactly what I want when I say “I need chocolate.”
That Strawberry Frosting: Sweet, fruity, and dangerously easy to eat straight from the bowl.
Looks Like a Big Deal: People think this took expert-level skill. I just didn’t quit halfway.
Ganache Drama: Pouring it on top feels like a moment. It always works out better than expected.
Celebration Ready: Birthdays, random wins, or just surviving the week.
Soft Cake Texture: Somehow super soft every time, even when I doubt it.
Worth Every Dish: There will be a mess. Accept it. It’s worth it.
Equipments Required
9-inch cake pans
Parchment paper
Mixing bowls
Saucepan
Ingredients Required
½ cup unsweetened cocoa powder (40g)
1 cup boiling water or very hot coffee (240ml)
3 cups all-purpose flour (360g)
2½ cups granulated sugar (500g)
2½ teaspoons baking soda
1½ teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
1 cup vegetable oil (240ml)
1 cup whole or low-fat buttermilk room temperature (240ml)
3 large eggs room temperature
1 tablespoon vanilla extract
For the Strawberry Buttercream:
1½ cups unsalted butter room temperature (340g)
pinch of salt
6 to 8 cups confectioners’ sugar (720g – 960g)
½ cup chopped fresh strawberries (about 6 berries)
For the Ganache:
3½ ounces semi-sweet chocolate bar chopped (98g)
½ cup heavy whipping cream (120ml)
For the Garnish:
fresh strawberries
Instructions
Step 1: Preheat oven: Set oven to 350°F. Prepare cake pans with butter and parchment.
Step 2: Make cocoa base: Whisk cocoa powder with hot water or coffee until smooth. Let it cool slightly.
Step 3: Mix dry ingredients: In a large bowl, whisk flour, sugar, baking soda, baking powder, and salt.
Step 4: Combine wet ingredients: Add oil, buttermilk, eggs, and vanilla to the cocoa mixture. Mix well.
Step 5: Make batter: Pour wet into dry and whisk until smooth. Try not to overthink it.
Step 6: Bake: Divide into pans and bake for about 30 minutes until springy. Cool completely.
Step 7: Make frosting: Beat butter and salt until fluffy, then slowly add sugar and strawberries until smooth.
Step 8: Layer the cake: Place first layer, spread frosting, repeat with second, then top with third layer.
Step 9: Frost outside: Cover entire cake with remaining frosting. Chill for at least 1 hour.
Step 10: Make ganache: Heat cream, pour over chocolate, let sit, then whisk smooth.
Step 11: Add ganache: Pour over chilled cake and let it drip naturally. Don’t over-control it.
Step 12: Garnish: Add fresh strawberries and chill until set before serving.
Tips I Learned the Hard Way
Cool the Cakes Fully: I rushed once. Frosting melted into a slippery disaster.
Don’t Skip Cooling the Cocoa: Too hot and it messes with the batter.
Add Sugar Gradually: Dumping it all in frosting at once is chaos.
Watch the Ganache: Too hot melts everything, too cool won’t spread. Timing matters.
Level If Needed: Uneven layers happen. Trim if it bothers you. Or don’t.
Strawberries Can Add Moisture: If frosting gets too soft, add more sugar.
Chill Before Ganache: Helps everything stay in place instead of sliding around.
chocolate stawberry cake recipe
A rich chocolate cake layered with strawberry buttercream and topped with glossy ganache. Decadent, slightly messy, and completely worth the effort.
1cupwhole or low-fat buttermilk room temperature240ml
3large eggs room temperature
1tablespoonvanilla extract
For the Strawberry Buttercream:
1½cupsunsalted butter room temperature340g
pinchof salt
6 to 8cupsconfectioners’ sugar720g – 960g
½cupchopped fresh strawberriesabout 6 berries
For the Ganache:
3½ouncessemi-sweet chocolate bar chopped98g
½cupheavy whipping cream120ml
For the Garnish:
fresh strawberries
Equipment
9-inch cake pans
Parchment paper
Mixing bowls
Saucepan
Method
Step 1: Preheat oven: Set oven to 350°F. Prepare cake pans with butter and parchment.
Step 2: Make cocoa base: Whisk cocoa powder with hot water or coffee until smooth. Let it cool slightly.
Step 3: Mix dry ingredients: In a large bowl, whisk flour, sugar, baking soda, baking powder, and salt.
Step 4: Combine wet ingredients: Add oil, buttermilk, eggs, and vanilla to the cocoa mixture. Mix well.
Step 5: Make batter: Pour wet into dry and whisk until smooth. Try not to overthink it.
Step 6: Bake: Divide into pans and bake for about 30 minutes until springy. Cool completely.
Step 7: Make frosting: Beat butter and salt until fluffy, then slowly add sugar and strawberries until smooth.
Step 8: Layer the cake: Place first layer, spread frosting, repeat with second, then top with third layer.
Step 9: Frost outside: Cover entire cake with remaining frosting. Chill for at least 1 hour.
Step 10: Make ganache: Heat cream, pour over chocolate, let sit, then whisk smooth.
Step 11: Add ganache: Pour over chilled cake and let it drip naturally. Don’t over-control it.
Step 12: Garnish: Add fresh strawberries and chill until set before serving.
Variations You Can Mess Around With
Chocolate Only: Skip strawberry frosting and go full chocolate mode.
Berry Swap: Use raspberries or mixed berries instead.
Cupcake Version: Same batter, less stacking stress.
Jam Layer: Add strawberry jam between layers for extra flavor.
White Chocolate Ganache: Switch it up for a sweeter finish.
Lighter Frosting: Use whipped cream frosting instead.
Extra Chocolate Chips: Because why not.
How I Like to Serve This
Celebration Centerpiece: Put it in the middle of the table and let it shine.
With Coffee: Cuts through the sweetness perfectly.
Cold Slice: Straight from the fridge late at night. Elite choice.
With Friends: Everyone gets a big slice whether they asked for it or not.
Second Day Cake: Somehow tastes even better after sitting overnight.
Big Slice Only: No tiny portions here. Commit to it.
Storage, Leftovers, and Next-Day Thoughts
Refrigerate It: Keeps fresh for up to 5 days.
Cover Well: Prevents drying out.
Bring to Room Temp: Before serving for best texture.
Ganache Firms Up: But softens nicely when slightly warm.
Freeze Slices: Great for future cravings.
Next-Day Flavor: Everything blends together even better.
FAQs (Real Questions People Actually Ask)
Can I make this ahead of time? Yes, and it actually improves after sitting overnight.
Can I skip the coffee? Yes, use hot water instead. Coffee just deepens the flavor.
Why is my frosting too soft? Likely too much strawberry moisture. Add more sugar to fix it.
How do I know the cake is done? It should spring back lightly when touched.
Can I make fewer layers? Absolutely. Two layers works just fine.
What if my ganache is too thick? Warm it slightly and stir again.
Can I use frozen strawberries? Yes, just drain them well first.
What if it looks messy? Call it rustic and keep going. It still tastes amazing.
The Last Bite
This cake is a bit of a project, not going to lie. But it’s the kind of project that pays off in the best way possible.
If it’s not perfect, that’s fine. Slice it anyway, enjoy it anyway, and remember… a slightly messy cake still tastes incredible.
This cake exists because I thought I’d make “just a chocolate cake” and somehow ended up in a full situation with layers, frosting, ganache… the whole dramatic setup.
It started simple. I wanted chocolate. Not a small amount. A serious, no-nonsense chocolate situation. Then I saw strawberries and thought, yeah, let’s make it slightly fancy. That was the turning point. That’s where things escalated.
Somewhere between whisking hot cocoa like I knew what I was doing and trying not to spill batter everywhere, I realized I had committed to a full baking project. No turning back.
But when it all came together, layers stacked, frosting everywhere (including places it shouldn’t be), and that ganache slowly dripping down the sides… yeah, I forgot how much work it felt like.
Why I Keep Making This Dish (Real Reasons)
Chocolate Overload: This is not subtle. It’s bold, rich, and exactly what I want when I say “I need chocolate.”
That Strawberry Frosting: Sweet, fruity, and dangerously easy to eat straight from the bowl.
Looks Like a Big Deal: People think this took expert-level skill. I just didn’t quit halfway.
Ganache Drama: Pouring it on top feels like a moment. It always works out better than expected.
Celebration Ready: Birthdays, random wins, or just surviving the week.
Soft Cake Texture: Somehow super soft every time, even when I doubt it.
Worth Every Dish: There will be a mess. Accept it. It’s worth it.
Tips I Learned the Hard Way
Cool the Cakes Fully: I rushed once. Frosting melted into a slippery disaster.
Don’t Skip Cooling the Cocoa: Too hot and it messes with the batter.
Add Sugar Gradually: Dumping it all in frosting at once is chaos.
Watch the Ganache: Too hot melts everything, too cool won’t spread. Timing matters.
Level If Needed: Uneven layers happen. Trim if it bothers you. Or don’t.
Strawberries Can Add Moisture: If frosting gets too soft, add more sugar.
Chill Before Ganache: Helps everything stay in place instead of sliding around.
Variations You Can Mess Around With
Chocolate Only: Skip strawberry frosting and go full chocolate mode.
Berry Swap: Use raspberries or mixed berries instead.
Cupcake Version: Same batter, less stacking stress.
Jam Layer: Add strawberry jam between layers for extra flavor.
White Chocolate Ganache: Switch it up for a sweeter finish.
Lighter Frosting: Use whipped cream frosting instead.
Extra Chocolate Chips: Because why not.
How I Like to Serve This
Celebration Centerpiece: Put it in the middle of the table and let it shine.
With Coffee: Cuts through the sweetness perfectly.
Cold Slice: Straight from the fridge late at night. Elite choice.
With Friends: Everyone gets a big slice whether they asked for it or not.
Second Day Cake: Somehow tastes even better after sitting overnight.
Big Slice Only: No tiny portions here. Commit to it.
Storage, Leftovers, and Next-Day Thoughts
Refrigerate It: Keeps fresh for up to 5 days.
Cover Well: Prevents drying out.
Bring to Room Temp: Before serving for best texture.
Ganache Firms Up: But softens nicely when slightly warm.
Freeze Slices: Great for future cravings.
Next-Day Flavor: Everything blends together even better.
FAQs (Real Questions People Actually Ask)
Can I make this ahead of time? Yes, and it actually improves after sitting overnight.
Can I skip the coffee? Yes, use hot water instead. Coffee just deepens the flavor.
Why is my frosting too soft? Likely too much strawberry moisture. Add more sugar to fix it.
How do I know the cake is done? It should spring back lightly when touched.
Can I make fewer layers? Absolutely. Two layers works just fine.
What if my ganache is too thick? Warm it slightly and stir again.
Can I use frozen strawberries? Yes, just drain them well first.
What if it looks messy? Call it rustic and keep going. It still tastes amazing.
The Last Bite
This cake is a bit of a project, not going to lie. But it’s the kind of project that pays off in the best way possible.
If it’s not perfect, that’s fine. Slice it anyway, enjoy it anyway, and remember… a slightly messy cake still tastes incredible.
Leave a Reply