This Peanut Butter Chocolate Cake is pure decadence! Rich chocolatey cake layers and a silky peanut butter frosting.
There are few things that go better together than peanut butter and chocolate. I know some of you will disagree, but it is one of my favorite flavor combinations. In fact, one of the first cakes I ever made for the blog was this exact combination. That was a long time ago, and I like to consider this one new and improved.
The main difference between this Peanut Butter Chocolate Cake and my old Peanut Butter Chocolate Cake is the frosting. The cake recipe is very similar, though smaller in scale – the old cake was three 8″ pans, this one is three 6″ pans – but the frosting got a complete, delicious makeover.
For the old recipe, I used an American style buttercream, which was delicious, but I generally prefer the taste and texture of meringue buttercreams. They are a tiny bit trickier and a bit more involved, but SO worth the extra effort.
What is Swiss Meringue Buttercream?
Unlike American buttercreams, which use butter and powdered sugar, meringue buttercreams use a mixture of egg whites and granulated sugar that is gently heated and then whipped to stiff peaks. At that point, room temperature butter is added and the mixture is whipped until it’s smooth and silky.
And that truly is the benefit of meringue buttercreams — they are super smooth! Unlike their grainy (but equally delicious) American counterpart. They are also less sweet, but some people consider them too “buttery”. It’s really just a matter of preference.
So, if you prefer an American buttercream with your Peanut Butter Chocolate Cake, head on over to my other recipe.
I actually made a peanut butter Swiss meringue not too long ago, in my Peanut Butter Banana Chocolate Chip Cake. In that particular frosting, I used regular old peanut butter (not the natural kind). It worked really well and was delicious, but the addition of the peanut butter made the frosting softer than normal and a bit trickier to work with.
For this peanut butter frosting, I used powdered peanut butter, and it was pretty much a game changer.
What is powdered peanut butter?
I didn’t even know this existed until a month ago, when someone mentioned it in my Facebook Baking group.
Powdered peanut butter is made from roasted peanuts that have had the oil extracted. As such, it has way less fat per Tbsp than regular peanut butter. Once the oil is extracted, the peanuts are ground up to a superfine powder. The one I used had sugar and salt added, but you can get it without that as well. Either will work just fine.
Powdered peanut butter is often used in things like smoothies, breakfast bowls, oatmeal, etc. and unbeknownst to me in baking!
It can be harder to find than regular peanut butter, and is usually more expensive, but from a baking perspective it’s totally worth it. I was able to find some for a steal at Homesense, so definitely check there if you have one near you!
I didn’t intend to do another naked cake with this one, but sometimes you just gotta go with the flow. I had intended to fully frost the cake and do a ganache drip before adding the decorative border at the top, but my ganache was not co-operating. I had some leftover that I had taken out of the freezer to thaw, but it had split and I didn’t have the time to fix it or make a new one.
You can usually save a split ganache by reheating it and stirring it together again. If that doesn’t work, you can try adding a bit more cream to it. It usually comes together. I didn’t have the time to heat/cool the ganache though, so I scrapped the whole idea.
I had already made all of the frosting, so the recipe below will be enough to fully frost the cake if you choose to do so. I decided to do a naked cake because I wanted a bit of that dark contrast that the ganache was supposed to give me. I think it worked out in the end, maybe even better than I intended in the first place, which is always nice!
The technique for the decorative border is the same as I’ve done on my Pecan Pie Cake and Baileys & Guinness Cake, except I used a 1M tip from Wilton this time instead of the 6B tip. If you’d like to see a video of this technique, you can follow me on Instagram and check out my Baking Tips story highlights, or join our Baking Community Facebook group where I’ve also shared the video.
I didn’t actually use any peanut butter cups in the cake (just as photo props), but you could totally chop some up and put them between the layers and/or pile them on top.
This Peanut Butter Chocolate cake is pure heaven. The cake is moist and delicious and the frosting is just the perfect pairing. If you have a chocolate peanut butter lover in your life (pretty sure everyone has one of these), this cake is sure to be a hit!
Looking for more Peanut Butter Recipes?
- Banana Chocolate Chip Cake with Peanut Butter Frosting
- Peanut Butter S’mores Cookies
- Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies
- Peanut Butter & Jelly Cookie Cups
Tips for making this Peanut Butter Chocolate Cake
- This recipe will also work in two 8″ pans, though the layers will be slightly thinner.
- If you don’t have powdered peanut butter you can use regular peanut butter and make the frosting from my Peanut Butter Banana Chocolate Chip Cake.
- I added powdered peanut butter to the cake batter too, but I didn’t find that it had a huge flavor impact so I put it as optional.
- You can add chopped peanut butter cups, or chopped peanuts between the layers if desired.
- This recipe makes enough frosting to fully frost the cake if desired.
- Be sure to check my Swiss Meringue Buttercream post for tips and troubleshooting.
- To help ensure your cake layers bake up nice and flat, see my Flat Top Cakes post.
Peanut Butter Chocolate Cake
Ingredients
Peanut Butter Chocolate Cake:
- 1 1/2 cup all-purpose flour
- 1 1/2 cups granulated sugar
- 3/4 cup Dutch-processed cocoa powder sifted
- 1/4 cup powdered peanut butter optional
- 1 1/2 tsp baking soda
- 1 tsp baking powder
- 1 tsp salt
- 1/4 cup vegetable oil
- 3/4 cup buttermilk room temperature
- 3/4 cup hot water
- 2 large eggs room temperature
- 2 tsp vanilla extract
Peanut Butter Swiss Meringue Buttercream:
- 5 large egg whites
- 1 2/3 cup dark brown sugar lightly packed
- 1 1/2 cups unsalted butter cubed, room temperature
- 1/2 cup powdered peanut butter
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
Instructions
Cake:
- Preheat oven to 350F, grease three 6″ round baking pans and dust with cocoa powder. Line bottoms with parchment.
- Place all dry ingredients into the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment. Stir to combine.
- In a medium bowl whisk all wet ingredients (pour water in slowly as not to cook the eggs if very hot).
- Add wet ingredients to dry and mix on medium for 2-3 mins. Batter will be very thin.
- Pour evenly into prepared pans. I used a kitchen scale to ensure the batter is evenly distributed.
- Bake until a cake tester comes out mostly clean. A total of 35-40mins.
- Cool 10 minutes in the pans then turn out onto a wire rack to cool completely.
Peanut Butter Swiss Meringue Buttercream:
- Place egg whites and dark brown sugar into the bowl of a stand mixer, whisk until combined.*
- Place bowl over a hot water bath on the stove and whisk constantly until the mixture is hot and no longer grainy to the touch (approx. 3mins). Or registers 160F on a candy thermometer.
- Place bowl on your stand mixer and whisk on med-high until the meringue is stiff and cooled (the bowl is no longer warm to the touch (approx. 5-10mins)).
- Switch to paddle attachment. Slowly add cubed butter and mix until smooth.**
- Add powdered peanut butter 1 Tbsp at a time. Add vanilla and whip until smooth.
Assembly:
- Place one layer of cake on a cake stand or serving dish. Top with about 2/3 cup buttercream. Repeat with remaining layers. Frost and smooth the outside with a thin crumb coat (thicker on the very top). Chill for 20mins.
- Do a decorative rope border on top using a 1M tip if desired.***
Notes
** The buttercream may look like it’s curdled at some point. Keep mixing until it is completely smooth.
*** This recipe makes enough frosting to fully frost the cake if desired.
Karen says
Your instructions for making swiss meringue buttercream are terrific. Following all your advice and warnings, I have been able to make delicious, impressive buttercream every time. It is worth all the extra effort. And, the consistency is perfect for decorating.
Your chocolate cake recipe is excellent. Everytime I bake chocolate cakes or cupcakes, I get such great
feedback on how good, moist and not too sweet the cakes are.
Whenever I want to bake something new, I first go to your website to see what you have already created. I know the instructions will be clear, thorough and accurate. Thank you
Olivia says
Hi Karen! Thanks so much for the wonderful feedback! You totally made my day. I’m so glad you find the recipes informative and easy to follow 🙂
Ann Tillson says
Hi Olivia, I have enthusiastically enjoyed perusing the recipes on your web site. I have successfully made several of your cakes. Yesterday one of my daughters had a birthday. When I asked what type of cake she wanted she requested a chocolate/peanut butter. So of course I went to your website and decided on the Reese’s Peanut Butter Chocolate Cake. I printed your recipe and followed it carefully. Your recipe called for three 8″ cake pans. I have 9″ pans. That was the only substitution I made to the recipe. I used the “belts” around the pans to keep the cake tops level. I turned on the oven light. After the recommended 20 minutes of baking I was ready to turn the pans. I looked through the oven window and the pans were all overflowing with batter. I was unable to turn the pans due to this problem. I baked them for a bit longer. One pan tested done so I removed it. The other two took much longer to test done. After rising so much the cakes eventually sank. I was afraid that I would be unable to remove them from the tins, but they came out fine. I followed the rest of the instructions and the cake was delicious. When reading the ingredients list it seemed that to me that 1 tbs. of baking powder was quite a bit. Could this possibly be an incorrect amount, causing the problems? Please let me know your thoughts. Thanks, Ann
Olivia says
Hi Ann! That is really bizarre that the batter overflowed in three 9″ pans for that particular recipe. Are you at high elevation by chance? Over 3000ft? That can wreak havoc on baking and chocolate cakes like this are particularly susceptible to it.
Shannon Moore says
It looks like you added too much baking powder. You mention that 1 TBS seemed like too much and that is correct. 1 TPS (teaspoon) is what the recipe calls for. We’ve all done it, just as you suspected, it was too much. I’m dyslexic and this tends to get me more often than not! This is an amazing recipe!
Olivia says
Hi Shannon! Good catch on that, I didn’t notice that Ann said tbs. That would surely have been the issue! I think I need to start spelling out my teaspoons and tablespoons instead of shortening them.
Camille says
I’d like to make this cake gluten free by substituting Measure for Measure for the flour. Any suggestions for other tweaks I’d need to make to accommodate that?
Olivia says
Hi Camille! I haven’t made it GF myself but it should work fine as long as you use a proper GF AP flour blend.
Drea says
Tried the icing recipe, perfect!
Olivia says
Hi Drea! So glad you loved it 🙂
Elisa says
Like all of Olivia’s recipes, this cake was amazing. The Swiss butter meringue frosting was spectacular. Follow her tutorials and instructions. I made it for my son’s birthday and everyone was raving about it. Thanks Olivia, for making me look like a pastry chef!
Olivia says
Hi Elisa! Thank you so much for the wonderful feedback. I am so happy everyone loved it! I can’t wait to hear what you try next 🙂
Natalie says
Hi! I’m wondering what you would suggest for making this in advance? Would refrigerating the whole thing overnight mess up the buttercream consistency?
Olivia says
Hi Natalie! It would be totally fine refrigerating the whole thing overnight, just take it out 2-3 hours before serving.
Natalie says
Thank you!
Cynthia says
I’ve never made anything with peanut butter powder, where could I find this ingredient?
Olivia says
Hi Cynthia! A lot of health food stores should carry it. Or some place like Whole Foods. I actually found mine at HomeSense though!
Nikki M says
Thanks for the recipe! Question for you: I made the PB SMB yesterday, with powdered PB, and all was well. Great texture and everything (I’ve made SMB many times). I refrigerated it overnight and took it out today…let it to warm up to room temp for about an hour then re-whipped it….and for some reason, even after whipping for 20 MINUTES, the texture is just way off. Not exactly runny, but too soft to pipe….and yet grainy, too (but not clumpy or broken). What the heck? Any suggestions?
Olivia says
Hi Nikki! SMBC is very finicky when it comes to temperature. I don’t find an hour to be enough for it to come to room temp but it depends on how much of it there was. Have you read through my tutorial on SMBC? It has tons of tips and some pictures of SMBC that’s broken https://livforcake.com/swiss-meringue-buttercream-recipe/ It does sound like it’s maybe a bit too soft. I would try chilling it for 20mmins and rewhipping.
Christa Sauer says
This is my third recipe I have followed from you and once again I am so impressed! I’m impressed with myself on how beautiful my cake turned out, but also I am impressed with how easy the recipe is to follow and obviously how delicious the cake was. For other people reading that might have the same questions and concerns as me, I used 2 8″ pans and baked them for 30 minutes and they came out perfect and moist. I also made a semi-sweet chocolate ganache to put on top. I tried to have it drip down the side of the cake, but it didn’t work out. I also covered the sides of the cake to where you couldn’t see any cake popping out. I then just did swirls of the buttercream on top with half of a peanut butter cup on top of each one. I also crushed up some peanut butter cups and put them around the bottom of the cake. Once again, I loved how my cake turned out and I will continue to come back to explore more of your recipes! Thank you Olivia 🙂
Olivia says
Hi Christa! I’m so happy you loved the recipe and found it easy to follow 🙂 I cant wait to hear what you try next!
Jessica says
Hey Liv!
Quick question— what is the best way to convert this recipe to make it in a sheet pan that is 9×13?
I’d like to cut out 4 inch rounds to make mini cakes!
Olivia says
Hi Jessica! Converting pan sizes is always tricky. Here are some sites I use as a guideline:
http://www.joyofbaking.com/PanSizes.html
https://www.cookipedia.co.uk/recipes_wiki/Cake_tin_conversion_charts
Using the first link it looks like it’s 12 cups vs 14 cups, but the chocolate cakes tend to bake up a bit thinner. I think I would 1.25 or 1.5x the recipe to make sure it bakes tall enough.
Jessica says
Hey Liv,
Is there a way to make this frosting but somehow make the color white?
Olivia says
Hi Jessica! Not with the peanut butter in it unfortunately 🙁 Depending on what you’re trying to do, you could use the pb frosting as a filling and then a plain vanilla frosting for the outside.
Danielle says
We have only nibbled the domed top tmI cut off with just a little extra frosting. It is so decadent! The cake is rich and the frosting is tasty.
Cake: I subbed applesauce for the oil with no noticeable change.
Frosting: I love Swiss or Italian buttercreams! I do find the frosting to be a bit sweet for my liking so will decrease sugar to 1 1/4 c next time (oh, there WILL be a next time!!! This will likely be a regular cake for us now! Just gotta find a way to make it gf). I used 1/2 c pbutter powder for the frosting because I didn’t think it tasted enough pbutter. This didn’t affect the consistency of the frosting any. Can’t wait for grandpa, the birthday boy, to try this cake!!!
Olivia says
Hi Danielle! So happy you like it. Thanks for your tips and feedback 🙂
Catherine says
Hi. This is a lovely looking recipe. Do you think you could colour the icing yellow for decorating after crumb coat?
Olivia says
Hi Catherine! You’ll be starting with a brownish tint from the pb so just keep that in mind. It shouldn’t be a problem though, might just tint the color a bit.
Meghna says
Hi Olivia! How many cupcakes would this recipe make? And would the bake time remain the same for cupcakes?
Olivia says
Hi Meghna! It should make about 18-24 depending on size.
Emilee says
I didn’t use the cake recipe (didn’t have Dutch processed cocoa and realized last minute!) but I did use the frosting and WOW! It was my first time making a Swiss meringue buttercream so I was worried about messing it up but it was so tasty and smooth. Definitely recommend, I do plan to use the cake recipe when I get my hands in the right cocoa!
Olivia says
Hi Emilee! I am so happy that you tried SMBC and loved it 😀 You can use any cocoa, really, for the cake. So I hope you try that soon 🙂
Rachel Tyler says
Another recipe of yours I am excited to try! Would you say you can taste the peanut butter in the chocolate cake? I was excited to see the powdered peanut butter in the cake recipe.
You have hot water in the recipe and I wonder if using coffee would be appropriate, like in some of your other chocolate cakes? I suppose I wouldn’t want to overpower any peanut butter flavor that might come through the cake though… with the coffee… what do you think?
And I am FINALLY going to try your swiss meringue buttercream!
Rachel Tyler says
Whoops sorry, I see now you have already answered my first question in your notes! The pb flavor doesn’t really come through in the cake!
Olivia says
Hi Rachel! You can totally use hot coffee instead. The pb flavour in the cake didn’t really stand out for me. And yay for trying SMBC!! Let me know how it goes. Be sure to check this tutorial if you haven’t already: https://livforcake.com/swiss-meringue-buttercream-recipe/
Rachel Tyler says
Dude!!!! I nailed the frosting. I don’t know what I was so afraid of. Thank you for your blog post, it was so helpful! I read it a few times and read through the comments. Man, idk if I can go back to American buttercream after this.
so excited to try the whole cake tomorrow!
Olivia says
YAY!! I am so happy to hear that!! Going back to ABC is hard, I’ll admit. I hope you love the cake! 😀
Rachel says
Hi Liv! I love your blog and am excited to try this recipe. One question: if I wanted to fully frost the sides (i.e., not a naked cake), does your buttercream recipe make enough to allow for a fully frosted cake? Or should I increase it by 1 1/2 or so?
Ideally I would love to make a fully frosted cake with rosettes on the top and also a chocolate drip. I’ve never done a drip before but this seems like a perfect opportunity to to try a drip cake! Any tips or tutorials on achieving the perfect drip? 🙂 thanks!
xoxo Rachel
Olivia says
Hi Rachel! To make sure you have enough frosting I would use these amounts instead:
6 large egg whites
2 cups dark brown sugar lightly packed
2 cups unsalted butter cubed, room temperature
1/2 cup powdered peanut butter (could add a bit more to taste, but not too much as it could affect the buttercream)
I don’t have any drip tutorials myself, but there are lots out there. It really comes down to the consistency of the ganache. You want it thickened but not too thick. Some people test the drip on an upside down glass first to see if it drips well. Make sure the cake is well chilled before doing the drip.
Let me know how it turns out!
Christina Nickerson says
Is it possible to use butter in place of the vegetable oil?
Olivia says
Hi Christina! You can try melted butter if you like but it will make for a denser cake. Ideally use some type of oil.
Melissa says
Are you using pans that are 2” or 3” deep? I’m trying to find some to make this recipe and just wanted to check
Olivia says
Hi Melissa! Mine are all 2″ deep and the cakes bake right to the top. 3″ deep will work fine too!
Joyce C Finn says
Best cake ever! The Peanut Butter Swiss Meringue Buttercream is soooo good! Made this for my daughter’s birthday. She loved it and wants it again for her next birthday.
Olivia says
Hi Joyce! I love this buttercream too. So glad you guys did as well!