Whatever it wishes to be called, here it is:


I have to preface this with admitting that, yes, this dessert is evil...evil to the point that my beloved
Young's Double Chocolate Stout Cake

I adapted this from the Guinness Chocolate Cake that was posted recently. I thought the Guinness cake sounded wonderful, but since it was a chocolate cake, I thought...why not use a chocolate stout, instead? The trifle was born when, as is my nature, I just couldn't let that one adaptation be enough, and I decided that I had to throw in some sort of raspberry sauce made with Lindeman's Framboise, my favorite Lambic ale as of late. Since I wasn't sure how easily the cake could be sliced into two layers, I decided to go for the trifle, though for anyone who might wish to make this into a layer cake, it is so dense and compact that it slices very easily with a bread knife, so it could be quite easily turned into a lovely layer cake.
Ingredients
1 c. Young's Double Chocolate Stout
1 stick + 2 T. unsalted butter
3/4 c. unsweetened cocoa
2 c. sugar
3/4 c. sour cream
2 eggs
1 T. vanilla
2 c. all-purpose flour, sifted
2 + 1/2 t. baking soda
Method
Heat butter with beer until melted in large saucepan. Remove from heat and whisk in cocoa and sugar. In a separate bowl, beat together sour cream, eggs, and vanilla. Temper egg mixture with some of the warm cocoa mixture, then combine the egg mixture and the cocoa mixture in a large mixing bowl. Gradually add in flour and baking soda mixture and mix well.
Pour batter into a 9" springform pan that has been greased and dusted with cocoa powder. Bake for 60 minutes at 350 degrees. Let cool for at least 20 minutes before removing from springform.

Lindeman's Framboise Coulis

Ingredients
1 c. fresh raspberries
2 c. Lindeman's Framboise Lambic Ale
1/4 c. sugar
1 T cornstarch
2 T cold water
Method
Soak raspberries in 1 c Lindeman's for 1 hour. They should plump up and absorb about half the liquid. Over medium heat, heat remaining Lindeman's with raspberries and any unabsorbed Lindeman's until gently boiling. Add sugar while stirring constantly, then simmer mixture until about half the liquid has cooked off. In a small bowl, mix cornstarch in cold water until blended, then add this to the raspberry mixture. Bring the mixture to a boil and let it cook for one minute, stirring as it thickens. Remove the mixture from the heat and let it cool and thicken. Strain raspberries with cheesecloth or a food mill (I used a fine sieve) to remove all seeds.
Kahlua Cream Filling
Ingredients
1 8 oz package Neufchatel cheese (you can use cream cheese or marscapone cheese for this, as well).
3 T. sugar
2 T. Kahlua coffee-flavored liqueur
Method
With hand mixer or in stand mixer, cream together all ingredients until smooth.

Kahlua Whipped Topping
Ingredients
2 c. heavy whipping cream
2 T. sugar
2 T. Kahlua coffee-flavored liqueur
Method
Combine all ingredients in a chilled stainless steel bowl or in the chilled bowl of a stand mixer. Whip to stiff peaks with chilled beaters. Be careful not to overwhip, or you'll end up with Kahlua butter.

Port-Soaked Cherries and Chocolate Topping
Ingredients
1 cup fresh cherries, stemmed and pitted (I used Bing cherries)
2 T. Port (I used Graham's Six Grapes)
2 blocks dark chocolate confectioner's coating
Method
Soak cherries in port overnight. Drain cherries, reserving liquid.

Melt confectioner's coating in double boiler and coat each cherry thoroughly and let cool on wax paper.

When finished, there should be about 1 T. chocolate remaining in the double boiler (if not, just use another block, if you wish). Stirring constantly, pour in enough of the remaining port liquid to make a thin sauce (it took about 2 T. for the chocolate I had left). Let the sauce cool slightly.
Trifle Assembly
Cut the cake into four quarters and slice each into generous chunks.

Line the bottom of a deep trifle dish with 1/4 of the cake chunks.

Drizzle 1/4 the raspberry coulis over the chunks. You don't want to completely cover the chunks, just distribute some of the sauce evenly over each chunk.

Add another 1/4 of the cake chunks.
Drizzle 1/4 the raspberry coulis over the chunks.
Add the cream cheese mixture (I added all of the topping at once as I only made enough for one good, thick layer. You may wish to double the amount of cream cheese topping and use it for two layers, but I felt that having this one layer worked out fine (and, well, I didn't want my bowl to overflow). Another possibility would be to gently fold the cream cheese mixture with the whipped cream mixture and just have one Kahlua cream mixture; however, I wanted a distinct "heavy, creamy" layer and, since everything else is so rich and heavy, a forgiving "light, fluffy" layer, so that's why I didn't combine the two.
Add 1/2 the whipped topping

Add 1/4 the cake chunks
Drizzle with 1/4 the raspberry coulis
Add remaining cake chunks
Drizzle with remaining coulis.
Top with remaining whipped cream.
Scatter cake crumbs over top of whipped cream.
Drizzle chocolate port sauce over top of cake (I used a ziploc bag with the corner snipped off).


Arrange cherries over top of trifle.
Voila

Chill for at least 12 hours before serving.
Here's what was left after my party:

Sliced with a side of raspberry sorbet:

January 16 2005, 04:06:46 UTC 7 years ago
January 16 2005, 04:39:40 UTC 7 years ago
I usually drink them. ;) Seriously, I had to make a special trip to buy the beer for this recipe, because Young's wouldn't last two days in my fridge.
January 16 2005, 04:13:28 UTC 7 years ago
I'm a happily married pregnant woman.
But I'm willing to overlook a few indiscretions for some of THAT.
Would you like my firstborn? It would be an even trade, especially with Young's in it. (GOD I miss that beer. I'm on the East Coast after 3 years in Portland, and I'd about die for some of it. Specially now when drinking=a sip or two of someone else's alcohol stolen while nobody's looking.)
January 16 2005, 04:37:58 UTC 7 years ago
LOL. Thanks for the offer, but I'm not sure I'd know exactly how to bake an infant. j/k ;)
I'm on the East Coast after 3 years in Portland, and I'd about die for some of it.
I'm in Tennessee, which isn't exactly the pinnacle of culinary accessibility, seeing as how there's no Trader Joe's anywhere near me, and I've always been able to find it at every "specialty beer store" near me. In fact, I have a harder time finding the lambic ales than the Young's products. Of course, state blue laws make finding alcohol from state to state a hit or miss situation, but I can at least assure you that Young's has at least made it across the Mississippi. :)
Funnily enough, I almost went with Rogue Mocha Porter or Mackeson's XXX Stout, but when I thought about the Young's there was just no question!
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January 16 2005, 04:32:31 UTC 7 years ago
I kinda just wanted to eat the chocolate stout cake all by itself, but the trifle just looks so fun...
January 16 2005, 04:40:25 UTC 7 years ago
January 16 2005, 05:37:52 UTC 7 years ago
*whimper*
Thank you.
January 16 2005, 06:14:27 UTC 7 years ago
January 16 2005, 05:40:39 UTC 7 years ago
that is some porn right there.
January 16 2005, 06:16:32 UTC 7 years ago
Sticky, gooey, creamy, requiring the assistance of alcohol, and with one star piling on top of another with total disregard for the sinfulness of the final product....
It's definitely not safe for work!
7 years ago
January 16 2005, 05:47:54 UTC 7 years ago
that looks tastier than Josh Holloway shirtless
this is defnitely porn material
January 16 2005, 06:17:12 UTC 7 years ago
As one of my friends said: "Never before have I seen a dessert that required me to remove both shirt and pants!"
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January 16 2005, 06:50:11 UTC 7 years ago
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January 16 2005, 14:28:31 UTC 7 years ago
January 16 2005, 21:20:06 UTC 7 years ago
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January 16 2005, 21:21:27 UTC 7 years ago
January 16 2005, 16:35:21 UTC 7 years ago
I have to make this. I'm totally saving this one so I can make it the next time I can entertain. Thanks so much!
January 16 2005, 21:20:25 UTC 7 years ago
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January 16 2005, 17:16:55 UTC 7 years ago
I want a trifle dish!!
My husband drinks the Double chocolate stout all the time I'll have to see about making something like this. It doesn't last long around here, but I'd love to try making something like this.
Thanks for posting this!
On a side note... you mention you are in TN. Where do you find the Mackeson's XXX Stout? We've been looking for it.
January 16 2005, 20:11:45 UTC 7 years ago
Where exactly in TN are you? I'm in Nashville and it's *really* easy to find Mackeson's here. In Nashville, it can be found at Frugal MacDoogal's, Hillsboro Beer World, J. Barleycorn's, Midtown Liquors, etc. It can also be found served at The Flying Saucer.
I haven't been to Memphis in years, but I know it can be found at The Flying Saucer, and I have two friends in Memphis with good taste in beer, so if you're near Memphis, I can ask them where they get it.
Chattanooga...I know little to nothing about.
Knoxville is a bit more difficult. Knoxville is actually where I first found Mackeson's, but the one specialty beer store that carried it -- Leaf and Ale -- stopped carrying it after a while because they had to pay an extra fee to import it and there just wasn't enough demand for it. This was four years ago, though, so if you're in the Knoxville area, perhaps they have it. You might also try Sam's Party Store, which is on 16th Ave. next to Falafel Hut. That's where I first found it.
I hope you're somewhere near a location to get it. It's my favorite beer!
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January 16 2005, 17:43:03 UTC 7 years ago
Thank you!
January 16 2005, 21:21:44 UTC 7 years ago
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January 16 2005, 18:28:54 UTC 7 years ago
That is the funniest thing that I have ever read.
January 16 2005, 20:14:57 UTC 7 years ago
January 16 2005, 19:12:23 UTC 7 years ago
<Cymru> The name is elusive, because there's really a lot more in there, but I couldn't very well call it the "Young's Double Chocolate Stout, Lindeman's Framboise, Kahlua Cream, and Port-Soaked Chocolate Cherry Trifle."
<Alaric> Young's Liquor Cabinet Trifle
<Cymru> No. Because Young's is the name of the Double Chocolate Stout.
<Cymru> So it would have to be Clockworktomato's Liquor Cabinet Trifle.
<Alaric> OK. :)
January 16 2005, 20:13:34 UTC 7 years ago
Bwah ha ha ha! Brilliant!!! It's like the cake is "velcro for the liquor cabinet."
January 16 2005, 21:07:43 UTC 7 years ago
And, you have the mixer of my dreams. I've been drooling over those kitchenaids for a month - SO MANY ATTACHMENTS!!!
January 16 2005, 21:17:29 UTC 7 years ago
And I *love* my Kitchenaid. It was a gift from
All of the non-cooks among our friends, mostly his, were all confused, proclaiming "you got her a mixer? Isn't that like getting her a vaccuum cleaner?"
A Kitchenaid is NEVER like a vaccuum cleaner! ;)
I'm so incredibly lucky, and my friends just chuckle about it. For Christmas, while they got jewelry and clothes and the like, I was given *exactly* what I wanted: a garbage disposal! :D
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January 17 2005, 02:45:34 UTC 7 years ago
...Food Porn.
Your pictures and discription are so well done that I can almost taste it. Nope, that's just a drool-stained shirt tail.
January 17 2005, 17:51:59 UTC 7 years ago
Thank you SO much! :D
March 1 2005, 19:00:14 UTC 7 years ago