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Home » Chocolate Cakes

September 7th Cake

Modified: Sep 7, 2024 · Published: Aug 22, 2008 by Anna · This post may contain affiliate links · 17 Comments

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Maida Heatter’s September 7th Cake is my favorite cake, but boy is it ever a pain. The recipe is basically an exercise in whipping things – whipped egg yolks, whipped whites, whipped cream. With all the mixers running it is quite a noisy endeavor, so I only make it when I already have bad tinnitus and need a really distracting project.

September 7th cake recipe

Like washing dishes? September 7th cake will dirty up a lot of them for you so you can wash and wash. Have fun!

September 7th Cake recipe

And I hope you have a spare refrigerator in the garage or something because you have to keep the whole cake chilled due to the copious amounts of whipped cream. Again. A pain.

September 7 Cake

Oh, but I love this cake. I first had it at a restaurant and was so enamored. It was the lightest, creamiest cake I'd ever tasted and the frosting was so rich and chocolaty (even though it was light textured).

Maida Heatter's Birthday

I went on to research the origin of the recipe, which of course turned out to be Maida Heatter.  She came up with this cake for her own birthday, September 7th.  Since then I've made the cake many times.  Or relatively "many".  Because it's such a rich and slightly expensive cake the "many times" have been spread out over the years so I've never been able to get a ton of practice and often screw up the icing, which is the only tricky part of the cake.   It is VERY easy to curdle it.  Here's a batch where I did just that.  If you whip the cream too much, you'll get the curdled look.  You only want to whip it until it, as Maida says, "holds a soft shape".  But if you whip it to stiff peaks, you'll get the curdled look.

September 7 Cake

I hope you are enjoying all the bad photography here, BTW.  I usually take pictures when I'm in the middle of a baking project so they are quite candid and often poorly lit.  But what I want to show here is that I’ve successfully made this as a 6-inch cake using half of all the ingredients. You will most likely want a full size cake, so the directions are for the 9 inch.  However, if you want to practice without using too many ingredients you can make a smaller version.

September 7th Cake


You should also know that after you take the beautiful baked cakes out of the oven they will collapse and look pathetic.  That is normal, so don't worry.  Maida mentions all of this in the recipe.

September 7th Cake using Maida's recipe

If you’d like to try the recipe yourself, you can find it in Maida’ Heatter’s book of Great Chocolate Desserts.  You can also probably find someone who posted it verbatim without paraphrasing using Google.

One final note. September 7 Cake can also be a gluten-free dessert. All you’d need to do to make it gluten-free is use a gluten-free flour to dust the sides of the cake pans.

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Recipe

September 7th Cake

Anna
September 7th Cake is a light textured cake filled with a whipped vanilla cream and iced with a rich chocolate frosting. The time I've given (prep time) is going to be very different from kitchen to kitchen. Just give yourself a lot of time for this cake.
Print Recipe Pin Recipe
Prep Time 50 minutes mins
Cook Time 30 minutes mins
Chilling, Cleaning, Crying 4 hours hrs
Total Time 5 hours hrs 20 minutes mins
Course Dessert
Cuisine American
Servings 12

Ingredients
 

Cake:

  • 6 extra-large eggs OR 7 large separated (192 grams of whites) You need yolks too, I just don't have a weight for them yet.
  • ¾ cup sugar (150 grams)
  • ¼ cup unsweetened cocoa powder plus 1 tablespoon
  • ¼ teaspoon salt

Filling:

  • ¾ teaspoon gelatin
  • 1 ½ tablespoons cold water
  • 1 ½ cups heavy whipping cream
  • ⅓ cup powdered sugar
  • ¾ teaspoon vanilla

Chocolate Frosting

  • 8 ounces semisweet chocolate. chopped (230 grams)
  • 2 ounces unsalted butter (56 grams)
  • 1 tablespoon instant coffee powder or use 1-2 teaspoons of espresso powder
  • ¼ cup boiling water
  • 2 cups heavy whipping cream
  • ¼ cup powdered sugar
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Instructions
 

  • Preheat oven to 375. Grease two 9x2 inch round cake pans and line the bottoms with rounds parchment or wax paper. Grease paper and dust insides of pans with flour.
  • Using the whisk attachment of a stand mixer or a handheld mixer, beat yolks at high speed for about 5 min until light. Add half of the sugar and beat another 5 minutes until very thick and mixture forms a wide ribbon when the beaters are lifted. Add cocoa and beat until blended, scraping sides of bowl.
  • If using the stand mixer you can just change bowls and use the whisk attachment. If using a handheld, just use a large mixing bowl. Beat the egg whites and salt until egg whites hold soft peaks. Very gradually add the remaining sugar. In small additions, fold about half of the whites into the chocolate mixture, then fold the chocolate mixture into the remaining whites. Turn into pans and smooth each layer. If you have a scale and want to make sure the batter is evenly divided, weigh a little over 8 ounces of batter into each pan.
  • Bake in lower third of oven for 30 min. until layers spring back when pressed with fingertip and begin to come away from sides of pan. Loosen warm cakes with a knife, then remove layers from pan, remove paper, and invert again to let layers cool right side up. They will buckle and sink and be uneven, but that's to be expected.
  • Place 4 10x3 inch pieces of wax paper or parchment around edges of cake plate and place the first layer of cake upside down so that it touches the paper pieces, but the paper pieces are still sticking out from under the cake.

Filling

  • Sprinkle gelatin over water in small cup and let stand for 5 min, then set the cup in skillet you've filled with about an inch of hot water. This helps dissolve the gelatin. Remove cup from hot water and set aside.
  • Set aside 3 tablespoons of the cold cream and put the rest in a clean mixing bowl. Add sugar and vanilla to the cream in the mixing bowl and whip only until it holds a soft shape. Quickly stir remaining cream into the dissolved gelatin and pour into the softly whipped cream. Continue whipping until cream holds a firm shape. Cover bottom layer of cake with cream and cap with top layer. Refrigerate while preparing icing.

Chocolate Frosting

  • Place chopped chocolate, butter and coffee (which has been dissolved in boiling water) in a saucepan over very low heat. Stir occasionally until melted and remove from heat. Alternatively, you can melt this in a microwave-safe bowl and heat at 50% power, stirring every 30 seconds, until smooth. Cool just to room temperature.
  • Beat cream, powdered sugar and vanilla together just until mixture thickens a bit and holds a soft shape. This part is important. If you overdo it here, the icing will be too stiff and will have a slightly curdled appearance. Fold half the cream gradually into the chocolate mixture, then fold the chocolate mixture into the remaining cream. Use as much of the icing as you need to fill in any hollows on the sides of the cake and then smooth icing all over. Pull away the parchment paper pieces the cake is sitting on.
  • Refrigerate at least 6 hours or overnight and serve cold. To slice without squashing cake, insert the point of a sharp knife in the center of the cake, then cut with an up-and-down sawing motion.

Notes

It's good to have a pastry bag with star tip on hand.  You'll have plenty of chocolate icing and can pipe stars or a border.  If your icing is curdled, it will be less noticeable when piped.  
 
Keyword 7 Cake, Maida Heatter, September
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

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Comments

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  1. Anna says

    September 03, 2024 at 4:52 pm

    Annie, I think an allulose blend like Magic Baker would work. It is a mix of three different alternative sweeteners and it measures like sugar. Straight allulose might be okay too, but I've really had good luck with the blend. The Magic Baker is under the Splenda brand name, but it doesn't have sucralose.

  2. Annie G. says

    September 03, 2024 at 2:19 pm

    Really want to make this cake. My son's birthday is 9/7 and my daughters's is 9/17. But is it possible to substitute the sugar with allulose?

  3. Anna says

    September 07, 2023 at 9:36 am

    I had it at a restaurant in Austin called Chez Zee, and it's still on the menu! They call it Maida's Cake.

  4. Cynthia Wilson says

    September 07, 2023 at 8:31 am

    So curious, where did you find this cake first? I understand a bakery near me in Oregon created this .. just curious if you had it nearby!

  5. Anna says

    June 07, 2019 at 9:14 am

    Lisa, I can't think of any Maida Heatter recipes that aren't good.

  6. Lisa A Langston says

    June 07, 2019 at 9:03 am

    Hey! I have "Maida Heatter's Book of Great American Desserts", have you ever made a recipe from this book? I have not, just wondering which recipe to make. Have you ever made one of her recipes that didn't turn out good?

  7. janet weberg says

    February 19, 2009 at 7:11 am

    We make this for cousin Philips Sept 7th birthday as a tradition. Phils mom
    Aunt Frances was also born on Sept 7th. Its a great cake to celebrate with!!

  8. Anna says

    September 07, 2008 at 9:47 am

    Glad you liked it!

    Hey, it's Maida Heatter's birthday today. Thanks for calling it to my attention.

  9. Anonymous says

    September 07, 2008 at 8:33 am

    We had this last night at a friends dinner for her Sept. 7th birthday.. YUMOOO

  10. Anna says

    August 25, 2008 at 9:46 am

    Hi Claudia,

    There's a way to view the original recipe from Maida's book. The trick is to go to Amazon, look up Maida Heatter's Great Chocolate desserts, then view "inside of book". There are limitations as to what you can print or copy, but you can certainly check to see if recipes posted on the Yahoo BB are accurate. In this case, the book snapshot say the Maida Heatter September 7th Cake recipe does not contain flour.

    Hopefully this will work for you. Here's a link to the inside of the book.

    http://www.amazon.com/gp/reader/0740758160/ref=sib_dp_ptu#reader-link

  11. CPB says

    August 25, 2008 at 9:35 am

    Can you confirm that there is no flour in this recipe (as indicated in the Yahoo Answers version)?

  12. Michele says

    August 22, 2008 at 7:39 pm

    I have also had Chez Zee's Maida's Cake and can attest that it is out of this world. It's such a rich cake that I can only handle a small slice (and I have a very high tolerance for rich sweets). Thanks so much for posting a link to the recipe. I've been searching for it for years.

  13. Katrina says

    August 22, 2008 at 2:23 pm

    Good camera or not, that picture looks great!

  14. Cathy - wheresmydamnanswer says

    August 22, 2008 at 2:11 pm

    Holy Cow - Off the charts and so bad for the diet!!

  15. BouncyWouncy says

    August 22, 2008 at 2:04 pm

    Cookie U So MADNESS!

  16. Cookie says

    August 22, 2008 at 1:59 pm

    Just got your comment. The Pear Muffins actually don't taste too "pear-y". My coworker tried it and thought it might be apples SO if you're family likes Apple Pies (and who doesn't?) they should like these! Good luck! 🙂

  17. VeggieGirl says

    August 22, 2008 at 1:41 pm

    The inside of that cake is total food porn - wowza!

Peanut Butter Fudge Jumbles recipe baked in a 9-inch square Pampered Chef stoneware pan.

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I'm Anna, and welcome to Cookie Madness. To learn more about me, check the About page.

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