youtube pinterest twitter facebook instagram vimeo whatsapp Bookmark Entries BURGER NEW Chevron Down Chevron Left Chevron Right Basket Speech Comment Search Video Play Icon Premium Nigella Lawson Vegan Vegetarian Member Speech Recipe Email Bookmark Comment Camera Scales Quantity List Reorder Remove Open book
Menu Signed In
More Guest recipes Recipe search

Marsala Almond Chocolate Slice

by , featured in A Cook's Book
Published by Fourth Estate
Print me

Introduction

Roasted nuts, dark chocolate. A marriage made in heaven. The cake will appear, as you take it from the oven, to be not quite ready. The middle will be slightly sunken and feel less springy than the sides. That is as it should be. As it cools, the texture settles and the result is deeply fudgy and really rather pleasing. It is, incidentally, flourless and will keep, covered with kitchen foil, for several days.

Image of Nigel Slater's Marsala Almond Chocolate Slice
Photo by Jonathan Lovekin

Ingredients

Serves: 8

  • 120 grams skinned almonds
  • 125 grams dark chocolate
  • 175 grams butter
  • 4 eggs
  • 120 grams caster sugar
  • A few drops vanilla extract
  • 50 millilitres marsala (see Additional Info below if you need this to be gluten free)
  • 30 grams cocoa powder

Method

Marsala Almond Chocolate Slice is a guest recipe by Nigel Slater so we are not able to answer questions regarding this recipe

You will need a rectangular loaf tin measuring approximately 20cm × 10cm × 7cm (measured, as always, across the base).

  1. Set the oven at 160°C. Line the base and sides of the loaf tin with baking parchment.
  2. In a dry, shallow pan, toast the almonds over a moderate heat till golden. Shake them regularly to encourage as uniform a colour as possible. Tip them into a food processor and reduce to coarse crumbs. Ideally, some of them almost as fine as ground almonds, others a little larger, like fine gravel.
  3. Break the chocolate into small pieces, roughly dice the butter and put them in a mixing bowl. Place the bowl over a small pan of simmering water (the base of the bowl should be just shy of the water level) then leave to melt. Give it no more than the occasional stir.
  4. Separate the eggs and put the yolks into the bowl of a food mixer, add the sugar and whisk till thick and creamy. (You can use a hand-held whisk if you don’t have a food mixer.) Stir in the melted chocolate, the vanilla extract, the Marsala, cocoa powder and then the toasted, ground nuts.
  5. Beat the egg whites till almost stiff. I do this by hand. (Stop whisking when they are thick enough to sit in soft mounds rather than whisking to stiff peaks.)
  6. Using a large metal spoon, fold the whites into the chocolate mixture, stopping as soon as the whites are no longer visible. (It is essential not to overmix.)
  7. Transfer to the cake tin using a rubber spatula and bake for 35–40 minutes until the edges are lightly firm to the touch, the middle still a little soft. Listen to it. The cake should be making a very faint crackling sound. (If it’s silent, you’ve overcooked it.) Remove from the oven and leave to settle and cool.
  8. To serve at its best, cut it after about an hour, and serve in thick wedges, with crème fraîche or thick double cream.

Additional Information

Some Marsala wines may contains traces of gluten so please check before using if you need this to be gluten free.

Tell us what you think

Venison Steak Salad