
Yes, you read the title correctly!
The cake sounds weird, but I was assured it tastes delicious—a shame I’m on a diet and it’s loaded with sugar. I am no stranger to carrot or apple cake, so I wonder if I could jazz up the beetroot cake by using oats instead of flour, finding a substitute for sugar, and giving this recipe a new twist by substituting the apple with beetroot. Do you think it would work?
Chocolate and Beetroot Cake
Serves 6
75g cocoa powder or powdered drinking chocolate
175g plain flour
2 tsp baking powder
250g caster sugar
250g cooked beetroot
3 large eggs
200ml corn oil
1 tsp vanilla extract
Icing sugar for dusting
METHOD:
1. Heat the oven to 180°C and line a 20cm round or square cake tin.
2. Sift the cocoa powder, flour and baking powder into a bowl. Mix in the sugar, and set these dry ingredients aside.
3. Purée the beetroot in a food processor
4. Add the eggs one at a time to the purée, then add the vanilla and oil and whiz until it is smooth. Make a well in the centre of the dry ingredients, add the beetroot mixture and mix it all lightly. Pour into the prepared cake tin.
5. Bake for 50 to 60 minutes or until an inserted skewer comes out clean (cover with a loose sheet of foil if it starts to brown at about 30 minutes).
6. This cake will not rise a great deal, and the top will crack. After removing from the oven, leave it for 15 minutes before taking it out of the pan. Cool on a wire rack and dust with icing sugar before serving.Or you could make chocolate or orange buttercream icing for the top.
Recipe and Photograph courtesy of Colin (2013)
Bon Appetite!

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We can buy pre-made cassava flour, thank goodness. Yes, our household is gluten free.
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I make a really good beet brownie. So good and so moist and with half the sugar of my regular brownie. It doesn’t keep well though. I adore beets and eat them lots. Bernie
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Hi Bernie, beet brownies sound delicious. When you say they don’t keep do they go turn soggy? I ask because I know when I cook the apple and oat cake it goes soggy after a couple of days.
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No I’ve had them go moldy after only a couple of days. So always fridge and eat fast
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I’m sure it would be good. Because beetroot is so messy to deal with, I always cook it in my Instant Pot. My grandma used to make beet jelly and it tasted just like grape jelly only better.
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Hi Terry, I always get in a mess with beetroot. Beet jelly sounds interesting. Is that what us Brits call jam?
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Jam and jelly are two different consistencies here. Jam is coarser. Jelly is more the consistency of Jello only thicker.
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I should have said two different textures. The consistency is the same for both ie: spreadable
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Okay, Got it 🙂
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It sounds good to me. I know a very good lady cook. Perhaps I’ll pass it on to her and get her to make some. The beetroot should keep it moist?
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Hi Jo, I think the cooked beetroot would keep it moist. If your lady does try it I would love to know how it turns out.
PS I hope you are all okay with the floods?
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Hi, Carole! It’s not bad here, thanks. Some of the low lying fields have flooded but they will soon drain. The storms were amazing to watch, but it’s back to sunshine today. There was an incident on the railway, but nobody hurt, thankfully.
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that’s a relief. From what I was reading on Safe Communities and other sites and pictures of flldoing and a river of water through various streets in different areas along the Eastern end of the Algarve it was difficult to gauge the extent of the damage
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that sounds delicious!
Foodie Friday – Spinach cheese pie – Ladyleemanila
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I will have to cook a variation on this recipe.
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Sounds very delicious. If I would try my hand, I’d use cassava flour, and banana for sweetening.
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Interesting re cassava flour, Rebecca. I had no idea what it was so I googled it. I always wondered what the brown root things were in the supermarkets. Seems like you can dry them and make your won cassava flour which is gluten free,
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PS I like the idea of using banannas a health alternative to sugar
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