Description: I've gotten to the point where the zucchini is starting to take over the kitchen. When you find wayward zucchini hidden inside your box of raisin bran, in the dog's food dish, and piled in mounds on every counter top, you know it's time to take action.
OK, so it hasn't really gotten that bad yet, but I could see where things were headed and I decided to take matters into my own hands. After zucchini bread, stuffed zucchini, ratatouille with zucchini and zucchini in my stir fry, I was completely sick of zucchini. I finally decided it was time for the ultimate in food disguise mechanisms. Sure, cheese covers over a multitude of wrongs, but even that was starting to wear on me. It was time for the big guns. It was time... for chocolate.
The following recipe was taken from Garden and Hearth and it's fantastic. I took some to the pool yesterday and offered it to a friend's kid. I said, "B, would you like some zucchini chocolate cake?" She looked at me funny, but nodded. I gave her a piece and she scarfed it right up. Her mom asked her later, "So did you notice the zucchini in the cake?" She turned and looked at me in awe and said, "I thought you were kidding!" Honestly, you don't notice the zucchini except that the cake is moister and there's an occasional green sliver of zuc. skin popping out.
Ingredients: * 1 cup butter * 2 1/2 cups sugar (I used sucanut.) * 4 eggs * 2 tsp. vanilla * 2 tsp. baking powder * 1 tsp. baking soda * 3/4 tsp. salt * 3 cups plain flour (I used ground hard red wheat.) * 1/2 cup baking cocoa * 1 cup milk * 3 cups zucchini grated (any summer squash is fine)
Directions: Mix the butter and sugar until creamed. Add the eggs and vanilla until blended. Add in the dry ingredients and milk. (You're supposed to alternate but I just toss it all in at once.)
I'm making my second cake already because the one I made two days ago is long gone.
we were stepping out of the car as we came back from the airport from our michigan trip and there's a neighbor's daughter with that behemoth. we already had zuc in the fridge from before we'd left and zuc to be picked up at the CSA the following tuesday, but i couldn't very well say no to a neighbor that i hardly ever talked to and who i felt was trying to show some sign of neighborliness. ... hence the overwhelming amount of zucchini gracing my kitchen counters.
I have heard of Zucchini described in unflattering terms, both in terms of finding new and interesting ways of giving the stuff away to "Friends and Acquaintences" if you have a plant, and in terms of always feeling obligated to take one when offered to you, and thus the plethora of recipes for the stuff.
We've just eaten so much zucchini yet that we're going to turn to a living zucchini as well. But the idea of eating it with chocolate is quiet exciting. We're going to have a try tonight with this recipe and I hope, enjoy it...[from margaux]
BTW, I remember "Deep Fried Zucchini" playing a part in a "White Spot" plate that I was quite fond of, called the "Grill and Greens". Yum. Some things about BC, I do still miss, and White Spot is one of 'em. Oh well.
A past acquaintance of ours used to make wonderful zucchini pickles (or for those who live in America, a spread like jam only not sweet, a sort of chutney I guess) I am sorry now that I never got the recipe of her. It was delish.
I'm here to find a picture of your recipe as you said in the group but I couldn't see any and in the albums on your top page. Since I love chocolate cake I couldn't resist to take a peek. :) I don't cook much but this is a different recipe - chocolate cake with zucchini? Ummm... we don't have it here but it's interesting to find out what I can replace it with. I won't be doing it by myself but I can ask my mom to give this a try when I fly back home this x-mas. I hope it's ok for me to copy this... Thanks. :)
I'm here to find a picture of your recipe as you said in the group but I couldn't see any
you have to click on my recipe tag (in the welcome box near the bottom of my page) to see those in the list. the recipe box isn't really a tag box but an ancient content box that multiply has stopped using.
I have a friend in Germany who has a similar recipe but they use sauerkraut instead of zucchini. It's to die for, once you can bring yourself to taste it anyway.
I might have to try that recipe. But only when we have visitors as Alan doesn't eat chocolate cake - strange man.
can you taste the sauerkraut in it? you can't taste the zuc. in this recipe. but with sauerkraut, there's more than just the taste of the cabbage. i would think it might add a bit of zing with the vinegar in it.
You wash it first to get rid of the vinegar so the taste isn't affected too much by it. And it's lovely and moist. The main advantage of using sauerkraut rather than cabbage is that some of the cellulose has been broken down so the texture is better.
LOL!! This is exactly how I discovered Arnold Palmer's zucchini bread recipe (in a celebrity cookbook my mom did for a charitable organization in the 1970s). My parents went out of town for two weeks, leaving me to watch over two little zucchini plants. Two little zucchini plants on steroids, or something - my Lord, but they multiplied and bore fruit. I fed my friends' boyfriends (and half the guys in a university dorm) on zucchini bread for a week!! Yikes.
I did a blog on zucchini and using it up too. You might want to check that out on my blog. I have my own zucchini nitemare story on there too . I went away and came back to 3 massive ones. You know you could just shred it and freeze it till ya need it. :)