Chocolate Poke Cake Recipe - Chocolate Covered Katie (2024)

A moist and decadently rich chocolate poke cake recipe – this makes such a great addition to any party!

Chocolate Poke Cake Recipe - Chocolate Covered Katie (1)

A few weeks ago, I received an email with such an incredible and exciting opportunity that my initial thought was, “There’s just no way I’m not dreaming right now.”

HERSHEY’S Kitchens asked if I’d like to be a guest chef on their website, creating a new recipe in partnership with them to highlight a few of their core baking products, such as the Simply 5 Chocolate Syrup. Having grown up with their original chocolate syrup (It was the only way my mom could get me to drink milk!), I was intrigued and happy to learn they now offer a version with just 5 simple ingredients and no high fructose corn syrup, artificial preservatives, or artificial flavors.

I knew exactly what I wanted to make first with the syrup: a homemade chocolate poke cake!

Originally popular in the 1970s, the idea of a poke cake is to press holes into the top and pour on a filling that soaks into the cake, adding extra moisture and flavor to each deliciously gooey bite.

Poke cakes have been making a resurgence in recent years and seem to be really popular lately at potlucks or barbecues, with anything from pudding, to caramel sauce, to fruit-flavored gelatin, to sweetened condensed milk being used as the filling.

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I made this chocolate poke cake over the weekend to share with a small group of friends, and as we sat on the balcony catching up and eating chocolate cake, I couldn’t imagine a more perfect way to spend a Sunday afternoon.

Baking is something that has always made me ridiculously happy.

It’s a creative outlet where I can use my imagination to transform everyday household ingredients into an endless array of magical possibilities, turning the chocolate desserts of my dreams into reality.

And one of my favorite parts of the baking process is sharing the results with others.

(The recipe video above now has over 1 million views on facebook!!!)

Tips For Success:

1. You can poke small or large holes into the cake. I decided my favorite way is to poke a larger number of smaller holes with a fork, which disperses the chocolate filling more evenly.

2. Check off each ingredient as you add it, to ensure you don’t accidentally skip over an easy-to-miss item such as salt or baking soda.

3. When making a recipe for the first time, it’s always a good idea to follow the recipe exactly—without substituting a different flour, sweetener, or cutting back on the salt, sugar, or oil—as even seemingly small changes can make a huge difference.

Once you know how a recipe is supposed to turn out, you can play around. Edible experiments are the best kind!

4. Be sure to have all ingredients out and read through the full recipe before starting.

5. As a general rule, baked goods are actually richer, sweeter, and have a much better texture the day after they are made, which is definitely the case with this cake and many of my other recipes.

If you can wait, I highly recommend not even tasting the poke cake until the next day.

Also Try These: Sweet Potato Brownies

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Chocolate Poke Cake Recipe - Chocolate Covered Katie (5)

Why Should You Try A Poke Cake?

This was my first time making a poke cake from scratch, and I was surprised at how just the one little step could have such an enormous impact on the results – it is so much better than an ordinary chocolate cake!

The chocolate syrup gave the cake a soft and opulent center with an unbelievable richness. If you can find HERSHEY’S Simply 5 Syrup, I highly recommend it, because it can be used just like regular chocolate syrup yet has a much cleaner ingredient list (no GMOs, and just 5 ingredients: cane sugar, organic invert cane syrup, water, cocoa, and natural vanilla).

I also used HERSHEY’S Natural Unsweetened Cocoa to make this cake. It’s vegan and 100% natural, as the only ingredient is cocoa.

I frosted this cake with my Avocado Chocolate Frosting, but the cake is so decadent on its own that you can honestly get away with skipping the frosting altogether and it will still be fantastic!

Chocolate Poke Cake Recipe - Chocolate Covered Katie (6)

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Chocolate Poke Cake Recipe

A moist and decadently rich chocolate poke cake recipe that's great for parties.

Chocolate Poke Cake Recipe - Chocolate Covered Katie (7)

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Print Recipe

Total Time 25 minutes minutes

Yield 9 servings

5 from 11 votes

Ingredients

  • 1 cup spelt or white flour
  • 6 tbsp unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 1/2 tsp each: baking soda and salt
  • 3/4 cup granulated sugar, unrefined if desired
  • 1/4 cup applesauce, banana, or yogurt of choice
  • 1/4 cup oil, almond butter, or allergy friendly sub
  • 1 1/2 tsp pure vanilla extract
  • 3/4 cup water
  • 2/3 cup chocolate syrup

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 350. Line an 8-inch pan with parchment, and set aside. In a large bowl, combine the flour, cocoa, baking soda, salt, and sugar. In a separate bowl, whisk all remaining ingredients except the syrup until evenly combined. Pour wet into dry, stir until just combined, and pour into the prepared pan. Bake on the oven center rack 25 minutes or until cake has risen and a toothpick inserted into the center comes out mostly clean. Let cool completely. Poke holes into the cooled cake with a toothpick or fork. Pour the syrup evenly on top, and let it seep into the cake. As mentioned earlier, if you can wait, I highly recommend not tasting until the next day… this cake is so much richer and sweeter after sitting for a day!

    View Nutrition Facts

Notes

The recipe was adapted from my Vegan Chocolate Cake Recipe.

Have you made this recipe?

Tag @chocolatecoveredkatie on Instagram

Chocolate Poke Cake Recipe - Chocolate Covered Katie (8)

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Thank you again to HERSHEY’S Kitchen for sponsoring this post. I was excited for the opportunity and had so much fun creating this recipe. If you try the poke cake, be sure to tag me @chocolatecoveredkatie on Instagram so I can see and like your photos!

Chocolate Poke Cake Recipe - Chocolate Covered Katie (2024)

FAQs

Why is my poke cake soggy? ›

Make sure the holes aren't too close together or too far apart—if they're too close together, your cake could be too moist; if they're too far apart, there may not be enough filling throughout the cake. Once you've poked holes throughout the cake, pour the filling on top.

What is a Tom Selleck cake? ›

Tom Selleck – Sometimes Better Than Sex Cake or Robert Redford is a Midwest dessert that is a shortbread crust, chocolate pudding layer, and cream top.

What is the difference between chocolate cake and chocolate pastry? ›

Difference Between Cake and Pastry

Let's know them. Ingredients: Cake is made by combining several ingredients including wheat flour, milk, baking soda, sugar, butter and eggs together. On the other hand, a pastry is made up of a kind of dough made up of merely three things, i.e. flour, butter and water.

What is chocolate temptation cake? ›

Description:Four layers of irresistable chocolate cake, iced and layered with a rich chocolate icing. Pefectly finished with chocolate cookie crumbs.

How can you prevent the soggy bottom of the cake? ›

Blind-bake your base before adding a filling to help to firm the base and avoid liquid being absorbed into it. Prick the base with a fork to help steam escape, cover with foil or parchment, and weigh it down with ceramic baking beans, uncooked rice or white sugar. Then bake at 220°C (425°F) for 15 minutes.

How do you keep a cake super moist? ›

Pastry chefs often soak cakes in a simple syrup made of equal parts granulated sugar and water after the cakes come out of the oven. This step can add sweetness and moisten the cake. In addition to simple syrup, you can also use coconut milk, evaporated milk, or flavored liqueur.

What chocolate do pastry chefs use? ›

Let's say it clearly here, the best (for us at least) is Valhrona. All the Pastry chefs I know personally, use Valhrona. Not because it is the most expensive, because ”it is the most expensive”, but because it is the best in flavor, in sweetness and bitter balance and also – that is important, it is consistent.

Which is better, chocolate cake or truffle cake? ›

Texture: Chocolate cake is lighter and more sponge-like, while a truffle cake is denser and richer. Flavor: A standard chocolate cake is sweet with a pronounced cocoa flavor. In contrast, a chocolate truffle cake is deeper and more intense, often with a creamy, melt-in-your-mouth quality.

What is meant by truffle cake? ›

What is a Chocolate Truffle Cake? A chocolate truffle is a type of chocolate candy that's usually made of ganache (heavy whipping cream + chocolate). The chilled ganache is rolled into balls and then coated in sweetened cocoa powder or melted chocolate. Chocolate truffles are dark, rich and not very sweet.

What is Elvis Presley cake? ›

You don't have to be Young and Beautiful to appreciate the Elvis Presley Cake. After one bite, you'll be saying that you Can't Help Falling in Love with how easy it is to make this fruity cake, which has a pineapple topping and creamy, decadent cream cheese frosting.

What is the witches cake? ›

A bizarre form of counter-magic, the witch cake was a supernatural dessert used to identify suspected evildoers. In cases of mysterious illness or possession, witch-hunters would take a sample of the victim's urine, mix it with rye meal and ashes and bake it into a cake.

What is a Mary Jane cake? ›

Mar′y Jane′, Fooda small, round sponge cake, usually with a circular indentation on top, for topping with fruit, whipped cream, etc., and served as an individual portion. Trademarks, FoodMary Janes, small bits of chocolate, candy, sugar, or the like, for sprinkling on ice cream; sprinkles.

Why did my cake turn out soggy? ›

Adjusting the cooking time and temperature

If your cake has a soggy middle, the first thing to try is bringing the temperature down a little and baking for slightly longer. I'd suggest reducing the temperature by 20 degrees and increasing the baking time for 7 minutes.

How to dry out a soggy fruit cake? ›

If they have not absorbed the alcohol from a previous feeding then you could leave them unwrapped for a couple of days in a cool place (cover loosely with a clean tea towel) and some of the excess alcohol should evaporate. Once they feel drier then you can re-wrap them and then maybe only feed them very sparingly.

What causes a soggy bottom cake? ›

Soggy bottoms

And finally, the most frustrating pastry problem of all – the soggy bottom. This normally happens when the oven is not hot enough or the pastry is not baked for long enough. However, it can also be because too much water was added to the dough.

Why is my fruit cake soggy in the middle? ›

The middle rises too fast and doesn't cook all the way through and falls because the cake batter was too wet and concentrated in the center to hold its shape. Odds are you didn't bake it long enough, or you added too much leavening. Underbaking is easy if you don't know what temperature your oven is at.

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