Tunnel of Fudge Cake with Hazelnuts

"Tunnel of Fudge Cake with Hazelnuts Recipe"I love hazelnuts but I don’t necessarily enjoy the process to remove their bitter skins.  It’s tedious and messy.  Imagine how excited I was when I happened upon hazelnuts all pristine and perfectly skinned.  I don’t consider myself a lazy baker but I’m all over anything that makes my life easier.  I found these beauties weeks ago while in the midst of my Christmas Cookie Countdown. Knowing how much baking was ahead of me – hundreds of cookies would be going in and out of my oven over the weeks leading up to Christmas – I welcomed the shortcut skinned hazelnuts offered.  I don’t think I want to know how much I paid for them (I never looked at the price), but with an uncanny ability to rationalize a purchase when need be, I told myself that the extra $ spent would be worth the time saved.

Fast forward to today, and the hazelnuts were still sitting in my freezer.  All my best intentions fell by the wayside and those skinned beauties never made into a single recipe – until now.  And what a perfect recipe to showcase their unique nutty flavor.  I have never baked – or tasted – a “tunnel of fudge” cake before today.  My personal thanks goes out to Ella Helfrich for inventing this magical cake while competing in the 1966 Pillsbury Bake-Off Contest.  She won second prize for her recipe which also earned her a place in the annals of recipe development.  Since then, many others have taken a swipe at the phenomenon that creates a subway of fudgy goodness that runs through the center of a Bundt cake.  It was actually a version of this American classic created by Matt Lewis of Brooklyn’s Baked fame that caught my attention.  I was intrigued by that whole “tunnel of fudge” thing, but mostly I was jazzed to find a great use for my hazelnuts.
"Tunnel of Fudge Cake with Hazelnuts Recipe""Tunnel of Fudge Cake with Hazelnuts Recipe"This is a rich, dense, and deeply chocolate flavored cake.  And oh does the flavor of hazelnut shine through.  For some reason, I was anticipating a light and creamy center – almost like whipped cream.  Somewhere along the way, that is the picture I had developed in my mind of what a tunnel of fudge cake was.  Not so.  Not at all like a molten chocolate cake either.  No, the center of this cake is thick, and almost chewy – in a good way.  You have to taste it to get it – and I highly suggest you try this cake.
"Tunnel of Fudge Cake with Hazelnuts Recipe"Two final thoughts.  Frosting is absolutely not necessary on this cake.  As a matter of fact, I think it would kill it.  And second, I – and Matt – recommend using a high-quality cocoa.  I used Valrhona.
"Tunnel of Fudge Cake with Hazelnuts Recipe"

 

Source:  Adapted from Food and Wine, December 2012




9 thoughts on “Tunnel of Fudge Cake with Hazelnuts

  1. My jaw dropped when I saw the photo of this cake! The gooey center looks so enticing, and I love that there are actual pieces of hazelnut scattered throughout.

  2. I agree! Skinning hazelnuts is tedious! And the skins seem to travel everywhere! But they are so worth the mess! A tunnel of fudge cake paired with hazelnuts is just downright irresistible!

  3. Mar, I made this cake two nights ago, used the “simple process” with the hazelnuts along with Valrhona Cocoa powder. It was very good the first night but I thought even better the second and looking forward to the third night.

  4. Hi, I wanted to make this cake but I was wondering how many cups of hazelnuts to put in if they are already ground! I know you measured out two cups if the hazelnuts are whole.

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