How do you make coffee and walnut cake? Step by step.
Step one: prepare your tins.
Preheat your oven to 180°C fan, or Gas Mark 4. Grease two 20cm round sandwich tins with butter and line the bases with baking parchment. Set them aside while you make the batter.
Step two: brew your espresso.
Brew 100ml of strong speciality espresso. Measure out one tablespoon (15ml) and set it aside in a small bowl to cool. This goes into the filling later. The rest will be divided between the batter and the post-bake drizzle.
Step three: make the batter.
Put the softened butter, sifted flour, golden caster sugar, baking powder, eggs, vanilla extract, and half of your remaining espresso into a large mixing bowl. Beat with an electric hand whisk or stand mixer for around two minutes until the mixture is smooth, pale, and free of lumps. Don’t rush this stage — a well-aerated batter is what gives the sponge its lightness.
Step four: fold in the walnuts.
Gently fold the 60g of finely chopped walnuts into the batter using a spatula, making sure they’re evenly distributed. Divide the mixture equally between your two prepared tins and smooth the surfaces. Scatter the roughly chopped walnuts over the top of just one of the layers — this becomes the decorative top of the finished cake.
Step five: bake.
Place both tins on the middle shelf of the oven and bake for 25 to 30 minutes. The sponges are ready when they’ve risen, turned a deep golden brown, and a skewer inserted into the centre comes out clean. Don’t open the oven door in the first 20 minutes — a sudden drop in temperature can cause the centre to collapse before the baking powder has finished its work.
Step six: the espresso drizzle.
This is the step most recipes skip, and it makes a real difference. As soon as the tins come out of the oven, prick a few small holes across the surface of the plain sponge layer with a toothpick. Slowly drizzle the remaining espresso over the warm cake — it soaks in as the sponge cools, deepening the coffee flavour all the way through. Leave both cakes to cool in their tins for 15 minutes before turning them out onto a wire rack.
Step seven: make the filling.
While the sponges cool, beat together the sifted icing sugar, double cream, and room-temperature mascarpone until the mixture holds stiff, velvety peaks. Fold in the reserved tablespoon of cooled espresso until smooth and streak-free. Taste it. It should be rich, lightly sweet, and distinctly coffee-forward — if you’d like it a little stronger, add another half teaspoon of espresso.
Step eight: assemble.
Place the plain, coffee-drizzled sponge on your serving plate. Spread the mascarpone filling evenly across the top. Set the walnut-crusted layer on top, pressing down gently to secure it. Finish with a light dusting of sifted icing sugar.
Three things that make the difference.
Temperature matters.
Make sure your eggs and butter are at the same room temperature before you start mixing. Cold eggs added to warm butter cause the batter to split, which affects the structure of the sponge. Take everything out of the fridge an hour before you begin.
Chop the walnuts finely for the batter.
Pieces that are too large will sink to the bottom of the tin during baking, leaving the top of the sponge nut-free and the bottom dense. A fine, sand-like chop keeps them suspended evenly through the crumb. If in doubt, toss the chopped walnuts in a teaspoon of dry flour before folding them in — it helps them grip the batter.
Keep the oven door closed.
The baking powder in the batter creates air pockets that expand in the heat of the oven. Opening the door in the first 20 minutes introduces a blast of cool air that can collapse those pockets before the structure has set. Set a timer and resist the urge to check.
Which Pact coffee works best in this recipe?
A medium or dark roast with chocolatey, nutty characteristics will work beautifully here. A Brazilian – smooth, full-bodied, with natural notes of milk chocolate and toasted hazelnut – is the natural choice. The flavour profile complements the walnuts without competing with them, and the natural sweetness of a well-roasted speciality bean means the cake never tastes harsh or bitter.
If you’d like something with a little more complexity, a Colombian medium roast adds a gentle brightness alongside the chocolate notes – a subtler variation that rewards attention in the finished cake.