This Chocolate Peanut Butter Cake is a party on its own! It features a decadent chocolate cake, peanut dacquoise, caramel peanut butter nougat filling, and a chocolate French buttercream! This cake is a special occasion worthy treat unlike no other!
This is a cake recipe for special occasions! And so it was, when I made this cake for my birthday a couple of weeks ago! 🙂
Usually when I make a cake (whether it’s for a birthday, a special occasion or just for the heck of it) I spend a little time making it look pretty. But this time, the flavours were just so awesome, I let them be the star.
It’s a bummer that I cannot prove to you just how amazing this cake tasted, but I hope you do take my word for it. 🙂 The focus was all on flavours and I brought together some of my husband’s and my favourites in this Chocolate Peanut Butter Cake with Caramel Peanut butter Nougat Filling & Chocolate French Buttercream!
Yep, I know it’s a mouthful.
Components of this chocolate peanut butter cake
- An amazingly soft, delicious Chocolate Cake.
- Very peanutty, crunchy, chewy Peanut Daquoise layer.
- A beautiful filling/layer I made with Salted Caramel Buttercream and a whipped Peanut Nougat.
- And a rich, creamy Chocolate French Buttercream to cover all that indulgent awesomeness!
- All topped with Peanut Caramel Shards!
Does that sound a little over the top? If so, that’s exactly what I was going for! It’s a birthday cake after all!
Unfortunately the birthday weekend weather wasn’t too kind to me. We were stuck at home with snow and ice outside which kind of messed up our plans a little bit.
Regardless, I still find birthdays a lot of fun! Especially those of my loved ones. I can’t do much for my parents’ or my little sister’s birthday at the moment because they live half way across the world from me, but I did make this super fun red velvet cake with blue ombre crusting cream cheese frosting and hand-made Avengers cake toppers for Mr. K’s birthday last year!
The presents are fun, the cards are fun, the cake is fun. The one thing I don’t like about birthdays though is that I get an year older. I swear, the Earth has picked up its speed of rotation in the last few years or so. There’s no way time is the same as it once was! 🙂
You know what else puts a damper on birthdays in my opinion? Facebook! Ha! Everyone knows your birthday now (although mine isn’t visible on my profile anymore). Yikes! So once a year, your wall (do they still call it that?) gets flooded with wishes from people that you won’t hear from again for another 365 days (and yep, I’m one of them too! haha).
This cake started off as a wannabe Snickers cake. I didn’t quite like the idea of adding just peanuts, so I made a Peanut Dacquoise instead.
It’s chewy, it’s crunchy and it has a rich peanut flavour. I also didn’t feel like having a gooey salted caramel layer in the middle either.
So after a few tries, I was able to achieve the consistency I liked, and then whipped it with my favourite caramel frosting to get a deliciously creamy, slightly salty, caramel, nougat and peanut butter flavoured frosting.
I mean, you could never wrong with PB-flavoured anything, could you? This peanut butter hot chocolate, peanut butter balls (buckeyes), peanut butter berry smoothie bowl, peanut butter streusel cake are all evidence of that!
I love eating French buttercream, but I don’t make it often. It’s quite a rich (hence super tasty, obviously) frosting recipe, which is why I used it here just to cover the cake.
I used my recipe for this, but I adopted the “Swiss” way of making it which makes it safer to eat.
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Chocolate Peanut Butter Cake (with Caramel Peanut Butter Nougat Filling and Chocolate French Buttercream Frosting)
Ingredients:
Chocolate cake
- 7.7 oz / 220 g AP flour
- 14 oz / 400 g granulated sugar
- 3.2 oz / 90 g Dutch process cocoa powder
- 2 tsp baking soda
- 1 tsp baking powder
- 1 tsp salt
- 2 eggs at room temperature
- 1 cup / 220 mL buttermilk at room temperature
- 1 cup / 220 mL freshly brewed hot strong black coffee
- 1/2 cup / 110 mL vegetable oil
- 1 tablespoon vanilla extract
Peanut dacquoise
- 6 oz / 170 g roasted salted peanuts
- 1 tbsp cornstarch
- 5 oz / 142 g granulated sugar
- 5 large egg whites
- pinch of cream of tartar
Salted caramel buttercream for the nougat frosting
- 100 g white sugar ¼ cup
- 60 mL heavy cream ¼ cup, warmed in the microwave
- 340 g cool butter 12 oz / 3 sticks
- 1 tsp sea salt use less if you don't want a salted caramel frosting
- 226 g confectioners sugar 2 cups, sifted and measured
Caramel peanut butter nougat frosting / filling
- 1 salted caramel buttercream frosting Recipe above
- ½ cup white sugar
- 1 stick / 115 g unsalted butter
- 1/4 cup smooth peanut butter
- ¼ cup evaporated milk
- 1 ½ cup marshmallow fluff
- ¼ cup whipped cream
Instructions:
Chocolate cake
- Preheat the oven to 180°C / 350°F. Butter and line two, 8 inch cake pans with parchment paper (if you're not using parchment paper, butter and flour the two pans).
- Sift all the dry ingredients in a large bowl or your mixing bowl (if you’re using a stand mixer).
- In a large jug (pitcher) or smaller bowl, whisk the eggs, buttermilk, oil and vanilla until just mixed. Add this liquid mix into the dry ingredients slowly while mixing it with your stand mixer (or whisk by hand or hand-mixer). Make sure the batter is smooth and thick without any lumps.
- Pour the freshly brewed coffee into the batter while mixing. The batter will become very thin, so be careful as the batter might splash if the beater is too fast. Mix only until everything is well combined. Divide batter between the two pans.
- Bake the cakes in the preheated oven for about 30 – 40 minutes, rotating them once around the 20 minute mark. The cake is done when a toothpick inserted into the cake comes out with only a few cake crumbs on it (i.e. not completely clean).
- Cool the cakes in the pan for about 15 minutes, and then turn out onto cooling racks carefully (the cake is really soft) to completely cool.
Peanut dacquoise
- In a food processor, combine the roasted, salted peanuts, cornstarch, and 1.4 oz / 40 g of the sugar. Process until the peanuts have been finely processed.
- Draw two 8 inch circles on parchment paper. Turn the paper over and make sure these circles fit within the width of your baking sheet. Preheat the oven to 250°F / 120°C.
- In a clean, dry mixer bowl (of your stand mixer or hand mixer) whisk the egg whites with the cream of tartar using a whisk attachment, until it gets frothy.
- Gradually add the sugar while whisking well, making sure to incorporate the sugar well into the egg whites. Keep whisking until the egg whites become thick and glossy and reach the stiff peak stage.
- Fold in the ground peanuts in 2 additions, being careful not to deflate the egg mixture.
- Divide the mixture equally between the two circles and spread it evenly inside the drawn line.
- Bake in a preheated oven for 1 ½ hours, rotating only once inside the oven (take care not to keep the oven door open for long). Turn off the oven and let the dacquoise cool completely in the oven (about 1 – 1 ½ hours)
Salted caramel buttercream frosting
- In a saucepan, add the sugar and melt over medium high heat. Stir the sugar with a clean, dry silicone spatula to evenly melt the sugar.
- The sugar will melt first and then start to caramelize. Stir the mixture so that the sugar melts well and caramelizes evenly.
- Allow the caramel to turn amber in color. Lower the heat to low and remove the pot from the heat.
- Immediately add the warm cream. (Be careful here as this will generate a lot of steam and could potentially burn your hands!)
- Place the pot on low heat and stir until the caramel is dissolved in the cream and is smooth. Remove the pot from the heat and turn off the stove.
- Allow the caramel to cool to slightly warmer than room temperature. The caramel should still have some flow to it.
- In a mixer bowl, add the cool butter and the slightly warm caramel, and salt. With a whisk attachment, cream the butter on high speed until the butter is light and fluffy.
- Add the confectioner's sugar in batches and whisk on medium speed. First add half of the confectioner's sugar and mix until the frosting is creamy. Then add the other half if you'd like a stiffer buttercream.
- The icing can be refrigerated. However, let it soften to room temperature and whisk it before using it.
Salted caramel and peanut nougat filling
- Prepare the salted caramel frosting as above, and set it aside.
- In a pan, combine the butter, sugar, evaporated milk, and heat on low, stirring occasionally until the sugar dissolves and the mix comes to a boil.
- Boil this mixture for about 1 – 2 minutes. Then remove from the heat and stir to make sure it's smooth. Add the peanut butter and marshmallow fluff, and whisk until well incorporated. Let it cool to room temperature.
- Add cold whipping cream and whisk with a hand-held beater for about 2 minutes until smooth. Set aside.
Chocolate French buttercream frosting
- Place the egg yolks in a heat-proof bowl, together with the sugar. Whisk until it becomes frothy. Add vanilla and salt, and keep whisking until egg yolks become pale and foamy and the sugar has almost completely dissolved.
- Place the bowl with the yolk and sugar mix over a pan of simmering water (without the bowl touching the water), and whisk constantly while gently heating the mix to a temperature of 150°F / 65°C. Please see recipe note below on how to pasteurize the egg yolk and sugar mix.
- Remove from the heat and whip the egg yolk until the mix thickens and reaches the ribbon stage. Make sure you keep mixing until it has cooled to room temperature.
- Add butter, 1 tablespoon at a time, incorporating each piece of butter well before adding the next one. Keep adding the butter until the buttercream is nice and fluffy. I add 9 oz / 250 g first and only add the rest if the buttercream isn’t fluffy enough.
- Add the melted and cooled bittersweet chocolate and incorporate it into the buttercream with the mixer.
Assembly
- First take one chocolate cake layer. Spread half of the peanut butter nougat layer on top of it. Spread half of the salted buttercream frosting on top of the nougat layer. Next layer is the dacquoise. Then the rest of the nougat and rest of the caramel frosting.
- Top with the second layer of chocolate cake.
- Frost the cake with the chocolate French buttercream.
- Decorate with peanut brittle if you like, or any way you prefer!
Tips & Tricks
Note on French buttercream
Keep the mix at this temperature for about 10 minutes to make sure there is no risk of Salmonella. This is a great way to prepare the frosting if it’s going to be served to toddlers or pregnant women or the elderly. If you’re not too worried, you don’t have to maintain the mix at this temperature for 10 minutes, you can remove it from the heat once it reaches the temperature, and proceed from step 3 of the buttercream recipe.“This website provides approximate nutrition information for convenience and as a courtesy only. Nutrition data is gathered primarily from the USDA Food Composition Database, whenever available, or otherwise other online calculators.”
I only used one dacquoise layer for this chocolate peanut butter cake, but you’re more than welcome to use both. I love how it makes the center of the cake a little chewy and crunchy. It blends in with the frosting too and is a lovely surprise of texture and rich peanut flavour when you dig in.
You can also easily double either of the filling recipes while omitting the other. They both taste equally amazing on the cake. I wanted to try them together however and I’m very glad I did!
This cake is truly a celebration of rich flavours. It has a Snickers vibe going for it, though it’s not a Snickers cake. However if you like Snickers, you will love this cake. Guaranteed!
What’s your favourite candy bar that you wish you could have in cake/dessert form?
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Karen Kniaz says
How do I find the recipe for the salted caramel buttercream?
Varsha Rohith says
Can I make this as a 3 layer 6 inch cake?
Dini says
Hi Varsha
Unforunately I haven’t made this in a smaller cake pan. There will have to be adjustments to the bake times and the ingredient amounts to get the same results.
Dino says
Not the best recipe. When I finished making the cake, my appetite for it was already gone. OMG…, so much butter. The Dacquoise I really liked and also the Salted Caramel and Peanut Nougat Filling. The tastes are very good. Recipe needs a lot of adjustments.
Tip: name the Salted Caramel and Peanut Nougat Filling consistently the same because you use two different names for it. A bit confusing. Thanks for the recipe. Sorry I am not more positive about it.
Dini says
Hi Dino!
Thank you so much for your feedback!
This is definitely a rich cake 🙂 The butter is necessary for the French buttercream (it wouldn’t be French buttercream without that level of richness), but I have had others who made this with regular chocolate buttercream too. I am very sorry this recipe wasn’t to your liking, but I am glad you liked the Dacquoise and nougat filling! 🙂
Thank you again!
Cheers,
Dini
Emily says
Hi, I’m sorry to trouble you again. How much cream of tartar should I use for the Peanut Dacquoise? Thank you :).
Dini says
No problem!
Just a pinch of cream of tartar… you can substitute it with just a few drops of lime or vinegar as well, but add it after the egg whites are a little frothy 🙂
Emily says
How much peanut butter should I used for the Salted Caramel and Peanut Nougat Filling?
Thank you!
Dini says
Hi Emily! 🙂
Thank you for pointing out that mistake! I had forgotten to include the amount of peanut butter in the recipe. It is 1/4 cup of creamy peanut butter 🙂
Emily says
Thank you so much for your quick reply :)! I bought all the ingredients today and am super excited about baking this tomorrow for a birthday/picnic. It looks wonderful!
Thank you again :).
Dini says
That’s very exciting!! 🙂 I hope you love the cake as much as I did. I would absolutely LOVE to see the final result too!!
Emily says
I’d really love to show you! Fingers crossed I do it justice and don’t make any mistakes! 🙂
Jay says
This is very unfair!! It annoys me to see mouth watering recipes and not have the opportunity to savour them. I cannot bake cakes but love eating flavoursome cakes. This looks like one of those and I wish if someone could make it for me so that I can eat it over the entire day as breakfast, lunch and dinner.
Jerri says
Wow! What an amazing cake! Thanks for linking up with me for Friday Favorites. I’m featuring you this week!
zita subasinghe says
Hi Dini!
This is a seriously mouth watering recipe even to read it and for the moment that’s all I shall do as I have a few pounds I like to lose. But come my birthday, this is what I shall make for a celebration cake for family and friends.
Thanks a lot.
Zita
Dini says
Hi Zita!
Thank you so much! I really hope you do and please let me know how it comes out… 🙂
Prachi Garg says
OH my my !! Dini this is just so decadent… i am going weak in knees with this recipe !!
Shari Kelley says
Happy belated birthday, Dini! This cake is one of the most incredible I’ve ever seen. I can’t even imagine how good it must have tasted. What a perfect birthday cake. I love all the different flavors you incorporated. Thank you for sharing it – just wish I could taste it too!:)
Dini says
Thank you Shari! 🙂 It does have a few layers, but it was worth it in the end 😀
Angie says
Happy Belated Birthday, Dini! And that cake looks awesome! Saving this for my husband’s birthday. He will LOVE it!
arl's world says
What a wonderful Birthday Cake! Lucky Birthday to you! 🙂 This cake looks so delicious!
Sweet and Savoury Pursuits says
This cake looks so good, and that nougat filling sounds just divine!
skd says
Layers and Layers of delicious goodness. yum..This is a marvelous cake Dini. And belated yet lots of good wishes to you 🙂
Dini says
Thank you! 🙂