Blueberry Eclipse Cake
Put yourself into the path of its totality.


"Blueberry Cake," from Make It Like a Man!

At 11:59 AM central time on Monday, this Blueberry Eclipse Cake will move in between you and your sense of decency, completely blotting out your self-control. This spectacular event will last about two hours, and at it’s height, those of you in its path of totality will abandon your utensils and just shovel it into your face with both fists. During this period, it is very important that you do not look directly into this cake without special glasses.

We found this recipe innocently calling itself “Blueberry Cake with Lemon Whipped Cream Frosting” online. The miLam crew enjoyed it, but we felt it needed some tweaking. After a couple experiments and some excellent advice from Eva at Kitchen Inspirations, we nailed it. The color of the crumb is outstanding. If you’re ever in need of a blue (purple, indigo, violet) cake, and would prefer to avoid food coloring, this is for you. It’s also quite moist and has an appealing texture similar to apple cake. The frosting is perfect. The cream takes on the lemon curd flavor like it was born to it, and the consistency is marvelous. It’s a truly outstanding cake. One of the miLam crew suggested calling it “Blueberry Black Hole” cake, but moments later he was sucked into its inescapable indigo blueberriness and never seen again.

We’ve revised this several times. This is our definitive version. It’s shockingly good.

Ingredients for a 2-layer, 9-inch cake, producing at least 12 servings:

FOR THE CAKE:
15 oz. fresh blueberries (2⅔ cups)[a]
½ tsp cinnamon
10.25 oz. AP flour (2 cups)
2 tsp baking powder
¾ tsp baking soda
½ tsp coarse salt
5.25 oz. butter (2⅔ sticks), at room temperature, plus more for the pans
10.5 oz. granulated sugar (1⅓ cups)
2 oz. brown sugar (¼ cup)
3 eggs
0.25 oz. vanilla (2 tsp)
3 oz. sour cream (⅓ cup)

How to make the cake:

  1. Prep two 9-inch pans by buttering them, lining the bottoms with parchment, buttering the parchment,[b] and then flouring them. Set aside.
  2. Place blueberries and cinnamon into a blender, and blitz on highest speed until liquefied, and then about 30 seconds more. Pour into a bowl and set aside.[c]
  3. Place flour, powder, soda, and salt into a mixing bowl, and mix them on speed 2 (of 10) for 30 seconds. Set aside.
  4. Preheat the oven to 350°F. If you have a baking stone, use it.[d] Meanwhile, if you forgot to take the butter out of the fridge, or if you didn’t forget, but you’re just impatient, nuke it at 10% power for 1 minute, but watch it carefully – you want to soften it, not melt it. Place the butter along with both sugars into a mixing bowl. Mix on lowest speed until just incorporated, then take it just to the point of creaming by upping the speed to 4 for 30 seconds, and then speed 6 for 1 minute. (You don’t want it the way you do for most butter cakes – pale and fluffy – you just want it barely creamed.) On lowest speed, add eggs one at a time, blending each just until incorporated.
  5. Stir the vanilla and sour cream into the blueberry mixture, but not thoroughly. Let a few streaks of white remain distinct.
  6. By hand, fold ⅓ of the dry ingredients into the butter mixture, followed by ½ of the berry mixture. Continue in this manner, ending with the final ⅓ of the dry ingredients. Scrape into pans, about 1 lb. 9 oz. batter per pan. Level the batter and bake until the edges are just barely browned and the centers test clean, 25 minutes.
  7. Cool on racks 15 minutes. Turn out onto racks and cool completely.[e, f] As they cool, the cakes should pull away from the sides of the pan.

Cake Notes:

  1. All in all, between the cake and the frosting, you’ll need three pints of berries.
  2. If you’re tempted to skip the parchment, don’t. I didn’t use parchment; one cake came out of the pan nicely, the second had problems that I could fix, and the third was unsalvageable (which is why there are only two layers in my photos). This brings up a second issue, though: the two-layer version was the perfect volume, given the cake’s density. That’s why in the end, i adjusted this recipe to produce a two-layer cake.
  3. Something strange happened to me. (I should probably publish an entirely new blog by that name.) After I puréed the berries, I left them in the blender and went about other things. When the time came to blend in the sour cream, I noticed that the purée had completely gelled … and I mean completely, to an impressively coherent semi-solid exactly the consistency of jelly. I realize that blueberries have a good deal of pectin, but I’ve made plenty of blueberry sauces to know how that works. This was way beyond. I’m wondering if it has to do with the Ninja that I used. Maybe it decimated them to a degree to which I’m not accustomed. Maybe I shouldn’t have used the “obliterate” setting.
  4. If you bake the cakes on a baking stone, you must make sure that the entire bottom surface of the cake pan rests on the stone. Otherwise, the cakes will cook unevenly.
  5. Before turning out a cake, always run a plastic knife around the circumference, to loosen the cake from the sides of the pan. You can do the same thing with a spatula if you’re careful. Don’t use a metal knife! You’ll ruin my pans, Becky!
  6. Normally, I turn butter cakes out into my hand, and from there transfer them onto racks. These cakes are too delicate for that. Place an inverted rack over the pan, rotate the rack and pan as if it were one unit, set the rack onto the countertop, and if the cake hasn’t already fallen onto the rack, give it a couple of small shakes. Here’s another trick: if the pans are cool enough to handle, turn one of your stove’s burners on to its lowest setting. Set the cake pan on the burner, and shift it back and forth from left to right, always keeping it in motion. Keep this up for about ten seconds. It will help loosen the bottom of the cake.

"Blueberry Cake," from Make It Like a Man!

FOR THE FROSTING:

This is a really, really good frosting. It’s delicious, easy, luscious, and holds up well for days.

Ingredients to frost and fill a 9-inch, 2-layer cake

1 pint heavy cream
1 jar (10 oz.) Dickenson’s Lemon Curd[g]
3 cups fresh blueberries[h]

How to make the frosting and assemble the cake:

  1. Whip the cream to soft peaks. Add ½-cup of the curd and whip to stiff peaks (which takes only seconds).
  2. Reserve 1½ cups of the frosting; set aside. Divide the remaining frosting in half. Scoop the first half onto the center of one of the cakes. Spread the rest of the curd from the jar onto the other cake in a thin, even layer. Into the second half of the divided frosting, gently fold 1½ cups of berries and spread over the curd. Place other cake on top of this one, using a powdered-sugar-dusted cake lifter if necessary. Spread its frosting evenly. Frost the sides of the cakes with the reserved frosting. Mound remaining berries on top of the cake and scatter them toward the sides.
  3. Best served at room temperature, but good cold. Should be refrigerated for long-term storage.

Frosting Notes:

  1. I’ve tried a few different curds, and store-bought Dickenson’s works best, because it’s really sweet, very tart, and so firm that it’s almost like a paste. If you use a homemade curd – one that’s softer, and eggy, and on the comparatively mild side, you will probably want to add ¼ cup of sugar to cream before whipping and make sure the final beating takes the cream to the extra-stiff phase; your frosting will be more subtle, but still delicious. It’s worth seeking out the Dickenson’s.
  2. The berries you use for the top of the cake must be firm and dry, otherwise their juice will stain the frosting.

"Blueberry Cake," from Make It Like a Man!

"Blueberry Eclipse Cake," from Make It Like a Man!


"Blueberry Cake," from Make It Like a Man!


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Blueberry Eclipse Cake

Credit for images on this page: Make It Like a Man! This content was not solicited, nor written in exchange for anything. Make It Like a Man! has no connection to Dickenson’s; we simply like that particular product in this recipe. This recipe began as a modification of one from Simply Suzanne, but since then it’s taken on a life of its own.

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25 thoughts on “Blueberry Eclipse Cake
Put yourself into the path of its totality.

  1. Oh, the beauty! Forget the eclipse today…I need to just be staring at a slice of this cake instead! Do I need glasses to stare at this cake, though? Because if I do, I’m screwed. There are no glasses to be found anywhere in this city! Excellent cake, my friend!
    David @ Spiced recently posted…Crispy Chicken Bacon Ranch Wraps

  2. Wow! That colour is truly impressive. That last shot really shows the variety of tones in the berry cake. It’s too bad it didn’t come through on the flavour base, I wonder if baking the berries reduces their punchiness? What about adding berries in each layer after you bake it, layering in the frosting. It still is quite lovely and nothing like that blue thing a friend made when we were 10, it looked like she had killed a bunch of smurfs to make the cake!
    Eva Taylor recently posted…Tourtière and Another Progressive Dinner, Canada’s 150th Birthday!

    • Thanks, Neil. I was on the fence about it … I mean, the color is amazing, and the texture is really nice, but I was disappointed with the flavor. However, I have to admit, that I could not stop eating it! It has an undeniable comfort-food power. With some advice from Eva Taylor, I took the layers of what was left of the cake apart, and added a layer of fresh berries (and, in a moment of inspiration, a tiny dusting of cinnamon), and that was exactly what it needed. It became quite spectacular.

  3. i’m love with this name. much more special than the other name you were thinking of (; ugh, can i get a spoon and a bowlful of the lemon curd whipped cream? i love cake but the sound of this frosting is enough to make me the kind of person who doesn’t even need cake with their frosting.

    • Thanks, John. Eva gave me an idea of layering in fresh berries between the two layers, and I think that’s what I’ll try next.

    • Use 5.25 oz. for the cake. You’ll need a tiny bit more to butter the pans.

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