Queen Elizabeth's Chocolate Biscuit Cake • the royal recipe! (2024)

Chocolate biscuit cake was the late Queen Elizabeth’s favorite cake, and this is the authentic no-bake recipe from former royal chef Darren McGrady.

Queen Elizabeth's Chocolate Biscuit Cake • the royal recipe! (1)

chocolate biscuit cake from the British royal kitchen

Chocolate biscuit cake is Queen Elizabeth’s favorite cake ~ she would take a small slice every day with her tea, until the cake was finished, and then she’d start on a fresh one! She reportedly had her chefs bring along this special chocolate cake wherever she traveled, and the cake was so popular in the royal family that it was Prince William’s groom’s cake at his wedding to Kate Middleton.

After researching this tea cake I wasn’t entirely sure I’d like it, but I was wrong! I gobbled up an entire piece right in the middle of my photo shoot. The combination of the mousse-like chocolate filling with the crunch of the biscuits and the chocolate layer on top is really delicious. I’m a fan!

Queen Elizabeth's Chocolate Biscuit Cake • the royal recipe! (2)

just four ingredients for British chocolate biscuit cake

Queen Elizabeth was famously not a ‘foodie’. Her tastes in food were surprisingly simple and homey and this no-bake ‘fridge cake’ is a good example. Just four basic ingredients make up this no-bake recipe. A fifth ingredient, a raw egg, is in the original recipe, but I’ve left it out because raw eggs aren’t considered safe to consume in the US. You could, if you like, use a pasteurized egg.

  • English rich tea biscuits
    • Look for English rich tea biscuits in larger supermarkets and specialty stores. Cost Plus World Market carries them as well. I used McVities Digestive Biscuits which are very similar to rich tea biscuits. These not too sweet wheat biscuits remind me a little bit of American graham crackers.
  • butter
  • granulated sugar
    • if you happen to have superfine bakers sugar, that’s ideal, but otherwise, regular white sugar will do.
  • dark chocolate
    • melted chocolate is used in the filling and also as the icing on top. Honestly use whatever good quality chocolate you like, whether chips, or bar chocolate. Dark chocolate is specified in the original recipe and that’s what I used.
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how to make a British chocolate biscuit cake

STEP 1. Break or chop the biscuits into pieces. Beat butter and sugar together until fluffy, then beat in melted chocolate. At this point the British recipe has you beat in a raw egg, but I left that out.

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STEP 2. Fold in the biscuit pieces so that everything is evenly blended.

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STEP 3. Fill prepared cake pan, cover with plastic, and refrigerate until chilled and firm.

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STEP 4. Invert cake out onto a rack. Remove plastic wrap.

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STEP 5. Pour melted chocolate over cake and spread over top and sides with an offset spatula.

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STEP 6. Allow the chocolate to set up at room temperature, and slice.

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final thoughts on chocolate biscuit cake…

This cake is vey good, and unique, at least as far as American desserts go. It’s quite rich, so thin slices are best. It actually reminds me of a KitKat candy bar, in cake form! I hope you give it a try, I think you’ll love it like I did.

Queen Elizabeth's Chocolate Biscuit Cake • the royal recipe! (10)

more British inspired food

  • How to Make Clotted Cream
  • Cornish Clotted Cream Shortbread
  • Classic Cream Scones Recipe
  • Mary Berry’s Lemon Drizzle Cake
  • English Crumpets with Maple Pecan Butter
  • Classic Victoria Sponge Cake Recipe
  • Kedgeree
  • The Best Cottage Pie Recipe

Queen Elizabeth's Chocolate Biscuit Cake • the royal recipe! (11)

British Chocolate Biscuit Cake

4.82 from 48 votes

Chocolate biscuit cake was the late Queen Elizabeth's favorite cake, and this is the no bake recipe from former royal chef Darren McGrady.

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Prep Time:20 minutes minutes

chilling:3 hours hours

Total Time:3 hours hours 20 minutes minutes

Servings: 12 servings

Equipment

  • 8 inch cake pan (the original recipe uses a 6 inch cake ring.)

Ingredients

for the cake

chocolate topping

  • 8 ounces dark chocolate, melted

garnish, optional

  • mini chocolate chips. You could also use chocolate sprinkles, or chocolate curls.

Instructions

  • Butter or spray your pan, then line with plastic wrap, with long ends. This will make it easier to invert after the cake chills.

  • Break or chop your biscuits into pieces. The original recipe says to break them into pieces the size of almonds. I chopped mine a little larger than that. Set aside.

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  • Cream the soft butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Beat in the melted chocolate until everything is completely combined.

    Queen Elizabeth's Chocolate Biscuit Cake • the royal recipe! (13)

  • Fold in the chopped biscuits until they are evenly distributed.

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  • Spread the mixture into your prepared pan. You want to make sure to fill all the nooks and crannies so there are no air pockets. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for 3 hours. Note: You could also leave it overnight.

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  • When the cake has chilled, run an offset spatula or other thin blunt knife along the edge to loosed the cake from the sides of the pan. Invert onto a rack that is set over a sheet of parchment paper. Peel off the plastic.

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  • Pour the melted chocolate over the top and sides of the cake, using an offset spatula to smooth it out. Add your garnish, if using, while the chocolate is still wet.

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  • Allow the topping to set at cool room temperature before slicing.

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  • The cake can be stored at room temperature, but for overnight I would refrigerate it. Let it sit on the counter for 30 minutes for easier slicing.

Video

Notes

*Recipe lightly adapted from former British royal chef Darren McGrady. The changes I’ve made are to omit the raw egg, and to increase the amounts of butter, sugar, and chocolate for the filling to account for a larger 8 inch pan.

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Course: Dessert

Cuisine: British

Author: Sue Moran

Keyword: British, cake, chocolate, dessert, no bake

Nutrition

Calories: 407 kcal · Carbohydrates: 42 g · Protein: 4 g · Fat: 26 g · Saturated Fat: 15 g · Polyunsaturated Fat: 2 g · Monounsaturated Fat: 7 g · Trans Fat: 0.5 g · Cholesterol: 31 mg · Sodium: 194 mg · Potassium: 239 mg · Fiber: 4 g · Sugar: 26 g · Vitamin A: 366 IU · Calcium: 39 mg · Iron: 4 mg

Nutritional information is provided as a courtesy and is an estimate only. This information comes from online calculators. Although The View from Great Island attempts to provide accurate nutritional information, these figures are only estimates.

Did You Make This?We love seeing what you’ve made! Tag us on social media at @theviewfromgreatisland for a chance to be featured.

Queen Elizabeth's Chocolate Biscuit Cake • the royal recipe! (2024)

FAQs

What is chocolate biscuit cake made of? ›

A Chocolate biscuit cake is a kind of tea cake, a sweet commonly served with tea in the U.K. It consists of crumbled up biscuits mixed with a kind of chocolate syrup and set in a pan. It is finished with melted chocolate on the outside.

What is the royal family's favorite dessert? ›

Chocolate biscuit cake is reportedly one of the Royal Family's favourite desserts, which "has become irresistible to generations of royal diners".

What is Queen Elizabeth cake made of? ›

Queen Elizabeth cake is a lightly sweet, moist, and low-fat date cake, topped with a brown sugar, butter and broiled coconut mixture.

What desserts did Queen Elizabeth eat? ›

When it's time to treat herself, McGrady revealed that all the Queen wants is a piece of chocolate biscuit cake. The cake is reportedly made in-house (or, more appropriately, in-palace), and Her Majesty consumes one slice per day.

What is the Queen's favorite cake? ›

Queen Elizabeth's Favorite Cake: Chocolate Biscuit Cake.

What are queen cakes made of? ›

He instructs to make his Queen's Cakes with currants, washed, picked and rubbed clean, and flavourings which are a little Mace and orange flower water. He also uses a pound each of butter, flour, sugar and currants but about 5 modern eggs, omitting half the whites.

What is Princess Diana's favorite dessert? ›

Another one of Princess Diana's favourites include bread and butter pudding. "Her favourite dessert? Bread and butter pudding – she would only have it when William and Harry were staying, and then she would only have a small portion," said Darren.

What is the royals favorite chocolate? ›

As for what chocolates are her favourite, Express.co.uk recently reported how the Queen is said to enjoy sweet offerings from the famous chocolatier Charbonnel et Walker, whose chocolate can sell for up to £280.

What cake was served at the royal wedding? ›

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are getting married, which seemed like a good reason to bake a lemon and elderflower cake with raspberry filling and buttercream frosting.

What is the coronation cake for Queen Elizabeth? ›

The cake is typically baked in a square or rectangular pan and then topped with a creamy frosting made with brown sugar, cream, and chopped nuts. The history of Queen Elizabeth Cake dates back to the 1950s in Canada. The cake is said to honour Queen Elizabeth II's coronation in 1953.

What was Queen Elizabeth's wedding cake? ›

The four-tier wedding cake of Princess Elizabeth and Philip Mountbatten stood 2.7 metres high, weighed 220 kilograms and was decorated with ornate scenes from the future Queen's life. After Prince Philip cut the alcohol-laced fruitcake with his sword, an entire layer was sent to Australia.

What is the difference between a king cake and a queen cake? ›

The Queen Cake is a tribute to excess. It is a revved up King Cake that offers a variety of flavors that have become so popular in the King Cake universe.

What was Queen Elizabeth's favorite meal? ›

Game Meats and Wild-Caught Fish Dinners

The queen's preference for game meats even extended to more casual meals; she was, reportedly, a big fan of hamburgers made with ground venison. She usually skipped any potatoes, pastas or grains at her evening repast, but almost always had room for dessert.

Can you buttercream a chocolate biscuit cake? ›

Chocolate biscuit cake, while incredible to eat, is hardly very elegant, so I also whizzed up butter, sugar and cocoa to create a thick buttercream frosting to mask the lumpy bumpy bits – totally unnecessary but actually rather delicious to have that contrast between the cool, crunchy cake and soft, creamy icing.

What is biscuit cake made of? ›

275g/10 oz Butter. 150ml/¼pt Golden Syrup. 225g/8 oz Chocolate (good quality, at least 60% cocoa) ½ x 400g packet of Digestive Biscuits, roughly crushed.

What are chocolate biscuits made of? ›

Method. Beat the butter and sugar together with an optional pinch of sea salt in a bowl until light and fluffy, then beat in the eggs one at a time. Sift over the flour and cocoa powder and beat into the butter mix, then fold through the chocolate chips.

What makes a cake a cake and a biscuit a biscuit? ›

The Characteristics of Biscuits and Cakes

Biscuits are also usually flat and crunchy, and they can be stored for a long time. On the other hand, cakes are larger, softer, and more delicate than biscuits. They are usually made with flour, sugar, eggs, and butter, and they are baked in an oven.

What is chocolate cake made of? ›

In a large bowl, stir together flour, sugar, cocoa, baking powder, and baking soda. Add oil, milk, eggs, and vanilla; mix until smooth. Stir in hot coffee last. Spread evenly into the prepared pan.

What is the legal difference between a cake and a biscuit? ›

It was accepted under UK law that biscuits were a luxury item and the full VAT would be levied. But cakes, on the other hand, have been regarded as a staple food — so were zero-rated for the purposes of VAT.

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