| Prep Time | 10 minutes |
| Cook Time | 25 minutes |
| Rest Time | 5 minutes (after baking) |
| Total Time | 40 minutes |
| Yield | 9 spoon-servings (8×8 pan) |
| Difficulty | Very Easy (Intensity Level 1/5) |
Intensity Guide (1 to 5):
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Prep Intensity: 1/5 — One bowl, one whisk, no mixer.
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Baking Intensity: 2/5 — Just pour and bake. Watch for the jiggle test.
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Flavor Intensity (Chocolate): 5/5 — Deep, dark, bittersweet. Not for milk-chocolate lovers.
Ingredients
Dry:
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1 cup (125g) all-purpose flour
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½ cup (45g) unsweetened natural cocoa powder (not Dutch-processed for best texture)
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1 cup (200g) granulated sugar
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½ tsp baking soda
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¼ tsp salt
Wet:
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½ cup (120ml) vegetable oil (or melted coconut oil)
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2 large eggs, room temperature
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1 tsp vanilla extract
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½ cup (120ml) whole milk or buttermilk
Hot Liquid (activates the chocolate):
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½ cup (120ml) hot brewed coffee or very hot water
Optional but recommended:
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½ cup (90g) semi-sweet chocolate chips or chopped dark chocolate
Instructions
1. Preheat & prepare
Preheat oven to 350°F (175°C). Lightly grease an 8×8-inch baking pan or line with parchment paper. Intensity: Low
2. Mix dry ingredients
In a large microwave-safe bowl (or regular mixing bowl), whisk together flour, cocoa powder, sugar, baking soda, and salt. Make sure there are no cocoa lumps — break them up with the back of your whisk. Intensity: Low
3. Add wet ingredients (except hot liquid)
Add oil, eggs, vanilla, and milk to the dry mixture. Whisk until just combined — it will be very thick, almost like brownie batter. Intensity: Medium (arm work to incorporate)
4. Add hot liquid (the magic step)
Pour in the hot coffee or hot water. Whisk gently. The batter will transform — from thick to thin, smooth, and glossy. This step “blooms” the cocoa for deeper flavor and creates the spoon-soft texture. Intensity: Low (just stir)
5. Add chocolate chunks
Fold in chocolate chips or chopped chocolate. Don’t overmix. Intensity: Low
6. Bake
Pour batter into prepared pan. Bake for 22–25 minutes.
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At 22 min: Center will be very jiggly — pudding-like interior (ideal for spoon cake lovers).
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At 25 min: Edges set, center still soft but not liquid.
Test: A toothpick inserted 1 inch from the edge should come out with moist crumbs; the center will still look underdone. That’s correct. Intensity: Low (patience only)
7. Rest & serve
Let cool in the pan for 5 minutes — no more, or it firms up too much. Serve warm with a spoon. Top with whipped cream, ice cream, or nothing at all.
The “Last” of the Recipe (Storage & Enjoyment)
Last of the pan: This cake is best eaten within 2 hours of baking. After that, it becomes more like a dense brownie. To revive: microwave a portion for 15 seconds — it returns to spoonable glory.
Last spoonful: Don’t scrape the pan. Leave the thin, crackly edges for last — they’re chewy and caramelized, the secret treasure of spoon cakes.
Last tip: Never refrigerate this cake. The texture hardens irreversibly. Store covered at room temperature for up to 1 day (if it lasts that long).
Nutrition Information
*Per serving (1/9 of recipe, without toppings). Values are estimates.*
| Nutrient | Amount |
|---|---|
| Calories | 385 kcal |
| Total Fat | 20g |
| Saturated Fat | 5g |
| Trans Fat | 0g |
| Cholesterol | 45mg |
| Sodium | 180mg |
| Total Carbohydrate | 48g |
| Dietary Fiber | 3g |
| Total Sugars | 32g |
| Protein | 6g |
| Vitamin D | 2% DV |
| Calcium | 5% DV |
| Iron | 12% DV |
| Potassium | 180mg |
Note: Using coffee boosts antioxidant availability. Substituting applesauce for ¼ cup oil reduces fat by ~30g per serving.
Why This Works (The Short Science)
The hot liquid + baking soda creates immediate gas bubbles, giving the cake lift without a stand mixer. The high ratio of sugar to flour keeps the crumb from drying out. And skipping the frosting keeps the texture spoon-soft — frostings add stiffness.