Self-Saucing Chocolate Pudding

Why you are cooking this tonight

The self-saucing chocolate pudding is magic. You put a dry cake batter in a dish, tip a terrifying amount of cocoa and sugar on top, pour boiling water over the whole thing, and shove it in the oven. Thirty-five minutes later, you have a dense chocolate cake sitting in a pool of warm glossy chocolate sauce, without ever having made a sauce.

This was the dessert of every Country Women’s Association cookbook in Australia for six decades, and for good reason: it uses what is in the cupboard, takes fifteen minutes to throw together, and looks like you did something clever. Serve straight from the dish with a jug of cream and the smugness you have earned.

Notes on method

The boiling water goes on top: do not stir. It works its way down as it bakes and creates the sauce layer. Use good dark cocoa – Dutch-process has more flavour.

What to pour with it

A Victorian pinot noir, or a glass of Rutherglen tokay for full winter comfort. If cocktails, an Espresso Martini is the perfect after.

Mr Black Cold Brew Coffee Liqueur

Mr Black Cold Brew Coffee Liqueur

Espresso Martini afterwards. Chocolate and coffee, always.

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Kahlua

Kahlua

White Russian on the side. Cold cream against warm pudding.

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Woodford Reserve Bourbon

Woodford Reserve Bourbon

Bourbon over ice. Vanilla and chocolate are best friends.

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The recipe

Self-Saucing Chocolate Pudding

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Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 35 minutes
Total Time 10 minutes
Servings: 6
Cuisine: Australian
Calories: 420

Ingredients
  

Pudding
  • 150 g self-raising flour
  • 1 pinch salt
  • 2 tbsp cocoa powder, Dutch-process
  • 100 g caster sugar
  • 125 ml milk
  • 60 g unsalted butter, melted
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
Sauce (poured on top)
  • 150 g brown sugar
  • 3 tbsp cocoa powder, Dutch-process
  • 300 ml boiling water

Method
 

Build the pudding
  1. Preheat oven to 170°C fan-forced. Grease a 1.5-litre baking dish.
  2. Sift flour, salt and first 2 tbsp cocoa into a bowl. Stir in caster sugar.
  3. Whisk milk, melted butter and vanilla together. Pour into dry ingredients, whisk until smooth.
  4. Spread batter evenly into the dish.
  5. Mix brown sugar and remaining 3 tbsp cocoa. Sprinkle evenly over the batter.
  6. Pour boiling water over the back of a spoon onto the sugar layer. Do NOT stir.
  7. Bake 30-35 minutes until top is cakey and sauce is bubbling underneath.
  8. Rest 5 minutes. Serve straight from the dish with thick cream or vanilla ice cream.

Nutrition

Serving: 1gCalories: 420kcal
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

Two things that go wrong

You stirred after pouring the boiling water.

DO NOT STIR. The whole magic is the water sinking through the sugar layer to form the sauce while the cake bakes above. Stir and you’ve made wet brown soup. Pour the water over the back of a spoon and walk away.

Your boiling water wasn’t actually boiling.

Lukewarm water doesn’t trigger the sauce reaction. Use water straight from the kettle, the second it boils. The temperature differential is what creates the layers.

Variations worth knowing

  • MochaAdd 2 teaspoons of espresso powder to the cake batter and 2 tablespoons of strong brewed coffee to the boiling water mixture.
  • Salted caramel self-saucingReplace cocoa with salted caramel sauce. Sprinkle sea salt flakes on top before baking.
  • Orange chocolateAdd the zest of an orange to the batter and 30ml of Cointreau to the water. Christmas-pudding adjacent.

Leftovers and make ahead

Best the moment it comes out of the oven — the sauce thickens as it cools and the cake top hardens. If you have leftovers, microwave individual portions for 60 seconds with a splash of cream on top to bring the sauce back. Keeps 2 days in the fridge.