
I make chocolate chip cake with ganache drip when I want a chocolate dessert that feels generous but still follows a dependable method. The recipe has a few small moments where patience matters — cooling caramel, pressing bars tightly, chilling dough, or letting chocolate set — and those moments are where I pay attention.
I want the instructions to sound like a cook standing beside you, not a label on a box. If the batter is thick, I say so. If the center should look a little soft, I say so. Those small cues have saved more of my bakes than any timer ever has.
The original measurements, pan sizes, temperatures, and servings are preserved here. My goal is not to reinvent chocolate chip cake with ganache drip, but to make it easier to repeat with confidence, especially on a busy afternoon when chocolate is already on the cutting board and the sink is filling up.
Why I keep coming back to this
- The texture has contrast.I like desserts that give me more than one bite: crisp edges with soft centers, creamy ganache with tender cake, or salty pretzel under smooth chocolate.
- The method is honest.None of the steps are difficult, but a few reward patience. I would rather name that up front than pretend every step is instant.
- The ingredients are familiar.Butter, flour, chocolate, fruit, oats, nuts, and coconut all show up in practical ways, so I am not buying a pantry of one-use items.
- It can be shared cleanly.The servings are clear, and most of these pieces wrap, slice, or plate without collapsing once they are cooled properly.
- The flavor improves as it rests.Chocolate settles, fruit softens, and salt becomes more noticeable after a little time.
- It is forgiving if I watch the cues.I can handle small oven differences because the recipe tells me what to look for.
What you need and what each ingredient is doing
- cake flour, 2 and 1/2 cups.285g.
- baking powder, 2 teaspoons.
- baking soda, 1/2 teaspoon.
- salt, 1 teaspoon.
- unsalted butter, 3/4 cup.12 Tbsp; 170g.
- granulated sugar, 1 and 3/4 cups.350g.
- egg whites, at room temperature, 5 large.
- sour cream, 1/2 cup.120g.
- pure vanilla extract, 1 Tablespoon.yes, Tbsp!.
- whole milk, 1 cup.240ml.
- mini chocolate chips, 1 and 1/4 cups.225g.
- unsalted butter for frosting, 1 and 1/2 cups.340g.
- confectioners’ sugar, 5 and 1/2 cups.650g.
- heavy cream for frosting, 1/3 cup.80ml.
- pure vanilla extract for frosting, 1 and 1/2 teaspoons.
- salt for frosting, 1/8 teaspoon.
- mini chocolate chips for frosting, 1 cup.180g.
- semi-sweet chocolate for ganache, 6 ounces.170g.
- heavy cream for ganache, 3/4 cup.6 ounces or 170-180g/ml.
How I make it
Step 1 — Prep the base
Preheat to 350°F (177°C), grease and line three 8-inch round pans, and whisk the dry ingredients.
Step 2 — Mix with care
Cream butter and sugar, add egg whites, sour cream, and vanilla, then alternate in the dry ingredients and milk before folding in mini chips.
Step 3 — Bake, chill, or set
Divide among pans and bake 24-26 minutes. Cool 1 hour in pans, then cool completely on racks.
Step 4 — Finish and serve
Make the frosting, stack the leveled layers with frosting, chill at least 20 minutes, then make ganache and drip it around the cold cake.
Tips from my kitchen
- Measure flour gently.I spoon it into the cup and level it off; scooping straight from the bag can make these bakes dry.
- Respect cooling time.Warm desserts smear, crumble, or melt toppings. I wait even when the kitchen smells unfairly good.
- Use the chocolate called for.Chopped bars melt differently than chips, and mini chips distribute differently than standard chips.
- Line pans when lifting matters.Parchment overhang is the easiest insurance for bars, bark, and brownies.
- Taste for salt.Sweet chocolate needs a little salt to taste rounded instead of flat.
Variations I have actually tried
- Darker chocolate:I use bittersweet chocolate when I want the dessert less sweet and a little more grown-up.
- Extra crunch:Toasted coconut, chopped nuts, or flaky salt on top add contrast without changing the base recipe.
- Fruit twist:Dried cherries, raspberries, strawberries, or banana can lean brighter with a small pinch of extra salt.
- Smaller servings:I cut bars, bark, and cakes smaller for a dessert tray; the bake time stays the same because the pan is unchanged.
- Simple finish:When I am short on time, I skip decorative piping and use a spooned drizzle or a clean dusting of toppings.
Storing, serving, and make-ahead notes
I cool everything completely before covering. For frosted cakes, filled cupcakes, fruit-heavy muffins, and chilled tarts, I use the refrigerator. For sturdy cookies, bark, pretzels, and bars, I use an airtight container at room temperature unless the kitchen is warm. Parchment between layers keeps chocolate from scuffing and sticky edges from grabbing.
For serving, I like most chocolate desserts closer to room temperature, but I slice chilled items while they are firm. That gives cleaner edges. Then I let the pieces sit for a short time so frosting softens, ganache loses its chill, and the crumb tastes less muted.
Frequently asked questions
Can I make this ahead?
Yes, with a little judgment.
What is the most common mistake?
Yes, with a little judgment.
Can I change the chocolate?
Yes, with a little judgment.
How do I know it is done?
Yes, with a little judgment.
How should I store leftovers?
Yes, with a little judgment.
A final note from my counter
If you make chocolate chip cake with ganache drip, I would like to hear what detail helped most: the mixing cue, the cooling note, or the storage tip. Those are the little things I always want to know from another cook.

Chocolate Chip Cake with Ganache Drip
Description
Chocolate Chip Cake with Ganache Drip is rewritten in a first-person kitchen voice with the original measurements, timing, servings, and baking cues kept intact. I focus on texture, storage, and the small details that make the recipe easier to repeat.
Ingredients You’ll Need
Instructions
- Preheat to 350°F (177°C), grease and line three 8-inch round pans, and whisk the dry ingredients.
- Cream butter and sugar, add egg whites, sour cream, and vanilla, then alternate in the dry ingredients and milk before folding in mini chips.
- Divide among pans and bake 24-26 minutes. Cool 1 hour in pans, then cool completely on racks.
- Make the frosting, stack the leveled layers with frosting, chill at least 20 minutes, then make ganache and drip it around the cold cake.
Nutrition Facts
Servings 12
- Amount Per Serving
- Calories 136kcal
- % Daily Value *
- Total Fat 14g22%
- Saturated Fat 9g45%
- Trans Fat 0.5g
- Cholesterol 38mg13%
- Sodium 320mg14%
- Potassium 44mg2%
- Total Carbohydrate 2g1%
- Sugars 2g
- Protein 1g2%
- Calcium 84 mg
- Iron 0.1 mg
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Note
Cooling note. I cool completely before slicing, filling, or covering.
Chocolate note. Melt chocolate gently and stop heating as soon as it stirs smooth.
Measurement note. I keep the original weights and volumes because texture depends on them.
Prep time note. The source prep number is 1 but the recipe clearly represents about 1 hour, so I use hr.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. I make it ahead through the bake or chill step, then add the final topping when that keeps the texture cleaner.
You can reduce it slightly, but I keep the listed amount when I want the same flavor and structure.
Too much flour or too much time in the oven is usually the cause. I measure carefully and check early.
Most baked portions freeze well when tightly wrapped. I thaw in the refrigerator and bring to room temperature before serving.
Watch the cooling, chilling, or setting cue. That step often decides whether the final texture is clean or messy.