This classic Chocolate Chiffon Cake is airy, light, and spongy with a rich chocolate flavor and mild sweetness. Extremely popular in Japan, chiffon cakes are found in cafes and pastry shops across the country. This showstopper recipe will soon be your favorite dessert, too.
Chiffon cakes are extremely popular in Japan, probably more so than in the U.S. You can find all kinds of chiffon cake flavors in coffee shops, pastry shops, and sweets stores. From Green Tea Chiffon Cake to Black Sesame Chiffon Cake, unique Japanese flavors are all the rage and they are the ones you want to try when you’re in Japan.
Today we’re going classic. Because we can never have enough chocolate in our life, here is the much anticipated Chocolate Chiffon Cake!
Table of Contents
Why You Should Make This Chocolate Chiffon Cake
- Easy (compared to Japanese Souffle Cheesecake or Japanese Strawberry Shortcake)
- Just 8 ingredients
- No butter, just 4 tablespoons of oil
- Extra moist
- Light and soft with a velvety crumb
- Rich and deeply flavorful
This is, without a doubt, the best chocolate chiffon cake my family loves!
How to Make Chocolate Chiffon Cake
Ingredients You’ll Need
Each ingredient serves an important role in this cake. For the best results, I do not recommend making substitutions unless stated otherwise.
- Eggs: I use American large eggs and one large egg is about 50 grams without a shell (56.7 g with a shell).
- Granulated sugar: I use granulated white sugar for baking.
- Neutral flavored oil: I use untoasted sesame oil (no flavor) for this recipe. You can use canola or vegetable oil.
- Whole milk: I used cow’s milk but you can use other types of milk or water.
- Vanilla extract: Use good quality vanilla to add flavor.
- Cake flour: Do not substitute! For chiffon cake, you need cake flour (薄力粉 Hakurikiko if you’re in Japan). Can’t find it? You can make it yourself with all-purpose flour and cornstarch (See Notes in my recipe).
- Baking powder: Some people do not use BP for a chiffon cake, but I use it for lifting.
- Dutch-processed cocoa powder: We’ve been using the Droste brand of cocoa powder (mostly used by my daughter who bakes) and we love it. I found this article online that explains a bit more about which cocoa powder you should buy (in short, they recommend Droste brand). You can purchase it on Amazon (but comes with a pack of 3)
Overview: Cooking Steps
You can make this chocolate chiffon cake with a simple whisk and bowl, but I highly recommend using an electric mixer or a stand mixer for beating egg whites to save your arm from falling off.
- Mix wet ingredients in one bowl and add dry ingredients.
- Beat the egg whites in another bowl with the electric mixer or stand mixer, and then combine with the batter.
- Pour the batter into the 20-cm (8-inch) chiffon cake pan and bake for 40 minutes!
2 Tips to Make Perfect Meringue (Egg Whites)
Tip #1: Chill egg whites
I know, it’s the total opposite of what you learned from American recipes. I’ve seen most of the American recipes use room-temperature egg whites to make the meringue. However, almost all (99%) Japanese chiffon cake recipes require cold, well-refrigerated, or sometimes half-frozen egg whites, to make meringue without cream of tartar. Chilled egg whites will make very fine and smooth meringue with small and strong air bubbles inside. They remain strong even in the oven and help the batter rise higher and fluffier. If you are not from the US, which method do you use?
Tip #2: Whisk until stiff peak with a tip that folds over
There is always discussion on how much you should beat the egg whites. From my experience, it’s best to stop the mixer when you’re close to finishing to check the condition of the peaks. When you lift the whisk, the egg whites in the bowl or on the whisk should be firm enough to go straight up and hold a stiff peak, but just the very tip may fold over a little, like taking a bow. The meringue should have a slightly glossy texture, too.
Then, switch from the hand-held electric mixer (or stand mixer) to a balloon whisk, and thoroughly mix the sides and center of egg whites a few times to get to the same consistency throughout.
How to Make Perfect Chiffon Cake
Chiffon cakes are one of the easiest cakes you can make at home. However, it took me some trial and error until I could make a really good one. Mostly because I had a hard time beating the egg whites and folding the batter correctly.
So I put together my tips in this post, including ingredient measurements for all the different chiffon cake pan sizes.
Enjoy this light, fluffy, yet rich chocolate chiffon cake with a cup of earl grey tea or coffee! It is a keeper, especially if you like chocolate and light spongy cakes.
FAQs
How can I convert this recipe to a different chiffon cake pan size?
You can figure out ingredients (eggs, sugar, etc) for your pan that is 7 inches (17 cm), 8.5 inches (22 cm), 9 inches (23 cm), or 10 inches (25 cm) in this post.
Important! You have to take away some cake flour to replace it with cocoa powder for the chocolate chiffon cake, here’s the measurement.
- 7 inches (17 cm): 25 g cocoa powder + 50 g cake flour
- 8 inches (20 cm): 40 g cocoa powder + 80 g cake flour
- 8.5 inches (22 cm): 50 g cocoa powder + 100 g cake flour
- 9 inches (23 cm): 60 g cocoa powder + 110 g cake flour
- 10 inches (25 cm): 70 g cocoa powder + 140 g cake flour
How about Double Chocolate Chiffon Cake?
I knew you would ask this question, so I did try making a Double Chocolate Chiffon Cake recipe several times. What do I mean by “double”? Chocolate is used two times: cocoa powder and melted chocolate.
I tried adjusting the ratio of the cocoa powder and melted chocolate to make the cake as light as possible, but the richer the chocolate cake is, the denser it gets. It loses the bouncy, airy, light “chiffon cake” texture. The cake resembles more like a pound cake, instead of a chiffon cake.
Another issue I had with double chocolate was that the cake does not rise as tall as the chiffon cake with only cocoa powder. For example, I would have to use a 7″ (17 cm) chiffon cake pan for the ingredients for 8″ (20 cm) chiffon cake to get a decent “chiffon cake” height.
In the end, I was not quite satisfied with the result (and can’t call that “chiffon cake”), so I increased the cocoa powder in the batter to get more chocolate flavor. My chocolate to cake flour ratio is 1 to 2 (40 g cocoa powder: 80 g cake flour). If you decrease the cocoa powder to 20 g (1 to 6 ratio), the cake will become taller, but have less “chocolate-ty” taste.
Other Delicious Chiffon Cake Recipes
Wish to learn more about Japanese cooking? Sign up for our free newsletter to receive cooking tips & recipe updates! And stay in touch with me on Facebook, Pinterest, YouTube, and Instagram.
Chocolate Chiffon Cake
Video
Ingredients
- ⅔ cup cake flour (weigh your flour or use the “fluff and sprinkle“ method and level it off; you can make Homemade Cake Flour)
- 1¼ tsp baking powder
- ½ cup Dutch-process cocoa powder
- 5 large eggs (50 g each w/o shell) (separated into whites and yolks)
- ⅔ cup granulated sugar (divided in half)
- ¼ cup neutral oil (4 Tbsp)
- 95 ml whole milk or water (⅓ cup + 1½ Tbsp)
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
For Serving
- 1 Tbsp confectioners’ sugar (for dusting; optional)
Instructions
Before You Start…
- Gather all the ingredients. I highly encourage you to weigh your ingredients using a kitchen scale for this recipe. Click on the “Metric“ button at the top of the recipe to convert the ingredient measurements to metric. If you‘re using a cup measurement, please follow the “fluff and sprinkle“ method: Fluff your flour with a spoon, sprinkle the flour into your measuring cup, and level it off. Otherwise, you may scoop more flour than you need.
- Preheat the oven to 340ºF (170ºC). For a convection oven, reduce the baking temperature by 25ºF (15ºC). You will also need a 20-cm (8-inch) chiffon cake pan. If you have a different size pan, read my chiffon cake post to adjust the ingredients as well as the blog post of this recipe for the cocoa amount. Please see my Notes at the end of this recipe for additional details on ingredients and techniques.
To Mix the Batter
- In a bowl, combine ⅔ cup cake flour, 1¼ tsp baking powder, and ½ cup Dutch-process cocoa powder and mix well with a fork or whisk. Set aside these dry ingredients.
- Separate 5 large eggs (50 g each w/o shell) into yolks and whites. Keep the egg whites in a stand mixer bowl and the egg yolks in a large mixing bowl.
- Refrigerate or freeze the bowl with the egg whites for 15 minutes so both the bowl and egg whites are cold. (It’s okay if the egg whites are partially frozen). Tip: In Japan, we chill the egg whites to make smooth, fine-textured meringue and do not use cream of tartar.
- Now, start mixing the batter. First, beat the egg yolks with a hand whisk (or stand mixer).
- Add half of the ⅔ cup granulated sugar. Whisk vigorously until it’s a creamy pale yellow color.
- Add ¼ cup neutral oil and beat with a whisk to combine.
- Add 95 ml whole milk or water (⅓ cup + 1½ Tbsp) and 1 tsp vanilla extract and combine well.
- Using a fine-mesh sieve, sift half of the dry ingredients into the bowl with the egg mixture. Using a hand whisk, mix well to combine.
- Sift the rest of the dry ingredients into the bowl and whisk by hand until just combined; do not overmix. Make sure there are no lumps in the batter. Set aside while you beat the meringue.
To Make the Meringue
- Take out the bowl of egg whites from the refrigerator or freezer. Set the bowl on the stand mixer with a whisk attachment (I used the KitchenAid Professional Series).
- Start whipping the egg whites on medium speed (Speed 5) until the egg whites are bubbly, opaque, and foamy.
- Gradually add the remaining half of the granulated sugar in small increments while whisking. Once you add all the sugar, increase to a higher speed (Speed 8) and beat vigorously until stiff peaks form (see the next step for how to check). Tip: I usually pause beating when the egg whites are almost done. Take off the whisk attachment from the mixer and use it to hand-mix the looser egg whites near the bowl‘s edge into the stiffer whites near the center until it‘s all homogenous in texture. Then, put the whisk back on and continue beating.
- To check for stiff peaks, pull up your whisk. The egg whites in the bowl or on the whisk should be firm enough to hold a peak, pointing straight up (or maybe a little bit folding over just at the very tips). By this time, the meringue should have a glossy texture, too. If you overbeat the meringue, it will become very stiff and grainy and won‘t incorporate into the batter at all.
To Fold In the Meringue
- Using a hand whisk, take one-quarter of the meringue from the bowl and add it to the batter. Whisk well by hand to combine until homogenous.
- Take one-third of the meringue left in the bowl and this time, gently fold it into the batter without deflating the air bubbles in the meringue and batter.
- Take another third and repeat the gentle folding process.
- Take the final third and gently fold it in. Make sure to thoroughly mix without deflating the air bubbles.
- The final batter should fall in ribbons when you lift the whisk. The image to the left below shows you what the ribbon stage looks like. Lastly, switch to a spatula and fold the batter one last time, scraping the sides and bottom of the bowl to make sure there is no chocolate accumulation.
To Bake
- Prepare an ungreased 20-cm (8-inch) chiffon cake pan. From 6–8 inch high, pour the batter into the pan at just one spot to prevent air bubbles from forming. While holding the removable base in place, gently tap the cake pan on the work surface to release any air pockets in the batter.
- Run a wooden skewer through the batter to release any remaining air pockets. Put the cake pan on the middle rack of the oven and bake at 340ºF (170ºC) for 35–40 minutes (40 minutes for my oven).
- To check that it‘s done baking, insert a wooden skewer into the middle of the cake. If the skewer comes out clean and the top of the cake springs back when gently pressed, it‘s done. Tip: If the top of the cake gets dark too quickly, cover the top loosely with aluminum foil to prevent burning. (The cake may be too close to the heat source.)
- Remove the cake pan from the oven and gently drop the pan onto the work surface to shock the cake. This stops the cake from shrinking.
- Prepare a bottle with a long neck, such as a glass wine bottle. Invert the center tube of the cake pan onto the bottle‘s neck and let the cake cool completely in its pan. Cooling the cake upside down helps it stretch downward and maintain its loft.
- Once the cake is completely cool, run a long offset spatula around the outer edge of the pan and a small offset spatula around the inner tube. Tip: I used to use a knife, but the tip of the knife tends to poke the cake while moving around, so I switched to offset spatulas.
- Gently take out the removable base and cake from the outer pan. Then, run the offset spatula along the bottom of the cake to release it from the base.
- Invert the cake with the removable base onto a plate or cake stand. The cake will slide off the inner tube. Chiffon cake is served “upside down” with the flat bottom on top.
To Serve
- Dust the top of the cake with 1 Tbsp confectioners’ sugar and decorate with raspberries and mint leaves, if you‘d like. Slice and enjoy.
To Store
- I strongly recommend consuming the cake sooner for the best freshness. However, you can keep the cake covered on a plate or stand at room temperature in a cooler place for 1–2 days. To keep it longer, wrap individual slices in plastic wrap or put in an airtight container and store in the refrigerator for 3 days or in the freezer for 2 weeks.
Notes
- Make sure your beaters and mixing bowl are clean and dry. A speck of oil or egg yolk on either one can minimize the volume of the beaten egg whites.
- Avoid plastic bowls, as even clean ones may hold oily residue that can affect the beaten quality of the egg whites.
- Use a bowl that’s wide enough to keep the beaters from being buried in the egg whites.
- Do not overbeat or underbeat the egg whites or your cake may fall. Egg whites should have a stiff peak, pointing straight up (or maybe a little bit folding over just at the very tips).
Nutrition
Editor’s Note: This post was originally published on February 5, 2020. It’s been republished with more helpful tips on November 23, 2022.
I’ve tried chiffon recipes many times and finally this one is first time first success!!! Love the YouTube tutorial and pictures to aid when baking. Thank you! And oh the taste was delicious too!!!!
Hi Jo! Thank you for trying my recipe. Glad to hear yours came out well! I’m so happy for you!
Hi Nami
I want to make 9inch chocolate chiffon
Do I need to change the measurement ingredients for this size Like egg , milk and oil .
I only saw tips for cocoa powder 60g and cake flour 110 g
Hi Jasmine! Yes, I mentioned in the post (right above where you found the cocoa powder measurement) to check this post: https://www.justonecookbook.com/perfect-chiffon-cake/
Hope you enjoy this recipe!
Hello, I’ve tried this recipe thrice and it turns out great each time. Thanks!
There is, however, an issue which I can’t seem to resolve – the cake always end up with a strong egg smell (most obvious during the initial smell/ taste). I have used eggs which are as fresh as possible – straight from the supermarket – and I made sure they are chilled. Any suggestions on how I may avoid this will be most appreciated! Thanks! 🙂
Hi Sharon! Thank you so much for trying my recipe! As you know, the chiffon cake is made mostly of eggs, so it should have an egg smell. You can lower the smell by adding vanilla extract. 🙂
Pls advise:
1. There is no 8″ angel food cake pan available on amazon.com, in order to try your recipe, therefore I have to purchase a 9″ angel food pan instead.
Now, I need to ask you how do I adjust all ingredient quantity & baking time?
Thank you in advance.
Hi Angnes! You can find the different size pan measurement here for guidance: https://www.justonecookbook.com/perfect-chiffon-cake/
Hi Nami,
I would like to trial on 7” size. According to your recipe mention, coco powder should be in 25g. Can I know 25g is equal to how any tbsp/tsp/cup?
Thank you in advance.
Hi Kelly! 1 Tbsp of cocoa powder is 7.5 g according to the internet. 🙂
Hi Nami,
would you recommend lining just the base of the cake pan for easy removal ie does it affect the cake rise (the sides are nonstick). I have a nonstick aluminum cake pan that does not have a removable base, and it does make getting the cake out difficult. Or would you recommend I purchase one with a removable base?
thanks Emma
Hi Emma! No lining for a chiffon cake, and I do not recommend aluminum cake pan for chiffon cake as the batter can’t cling onto the pan. 🙂
As a never before baker of chiffon cakes, your recipe resulted in perfection the first time I made it! Thankyou so much for the detailed explanations, ingredient amounts for different cake tin sizes! Absolutely sublime
Hi Emma! I’m so happy to hear your first chiffon cake came out well! Thanks so much for trying my recipe and for your kind feedback!
Dear Nami,
Thank you fir your most detailed recipes and tips. I have tried baking chiffon cakes several times now and wondered what to watch out for. My cake cracks at the top. I know it shouldn’t matter as it is served inversed, but I thought I d perfect it. Temperature? Over or under whisked white?
Do advise. Thanks v much.
Hi Chin Siew! Thank you so much for your kind comment. It’s a bit hard to pinpoint without seeing how you prepare the batter and bake. But the crack on top is often due to the high heat on the top of the cake. Either lower the oven rack or reduce the temperature or change cooking time (but you have to make sure inside is cooked through and see when it starts cracking). Hope this helps!
This is my first time to bake a cake. This recipe helps me big time. Easy to follow and lots of tips. My finish product my not be perfect but not bad for a first timer. Thank you because it boost my confidence to make better one next time.
Hi Joanna! Aww I’m so glad to hear yours came out well. Thank you so much for trying this recipe and for your kind feedback. Good luck baking! 🙂
This turned out wonderfully light and airy, with just the right amount of sweetness. I look forward to making your other flavors of chiffon cake!
Hi Lisa! I’m so happy to hear that! Thank you so much for your kind feedback and I hope you enjoy other flavors. 🙂
Wooooow Nami this Cake is that much spongy! Unbelievable! When I press the fork gently down the cake sinks down half size! And then …. it buildts up by itself like it was before! Like a wonder. I love to watch it and you were totally right. I ate two pieces. So airy and spongy .. the whole cake is wobbeling when I move the plate, I swear.
Your recipe was so easy to follow like always and it resulted in this wonderful cake. Thank you Nami!
For double chocolate I ate it with hot chocolate with cinnamon 😉
Perhaps soak it with chocolate sirup or coffee liqeur would result in more chocolate flavor?
For the navigation of your recipes I would love to have the option to jump to your notes everytime you meantion them. Because of the fotos it’s always a lot of scrolling (readin with my smartphone). That would be so helpsome.
Thank you for this delicious recipe
Hi Anna! Thank you for trying this recipe already! So happy to hear you like the cake. It’s light… you can eat so many slices. 😀
Haha, I like your idea of double chocolate with hot chocolate. And coffee liquer sounds delicious too!
About the navigation of my recipes – Could you please let me know what you mean by “every time I mention them”? I think you’re talking about jumping to the recipe box? If so, I have JUMP TO RECIPE link right under the title of the blog post. But maybe you’re talking about different things… I don’t know which part you are referring and I’d love to know how I can help. 🙂
I just wonder Nami, if you ever tried dissolving the cocoa powder in hot water during your trials? This blooming method should help to make the cake even more chocolatey. And it’s the first time I heard of chilling egg whites as every other recipe usually recommends room temperature whites for better volume. So it is interesting that the Japanese do it differently. Definitely worth a try. Thank you for this recipe 😊 I look forward to trying it soon!
Hi Jasmine! No, I haven’t but I’ve read about that before. I did try a different amount of melted chocolate (bar and milk) during the testing, and I did not like the final result much (moist for sure, but not light like chiffon cake). I’d take extra steps for better taste/texture, but if it’s not a significant improvement at the end, I wanted to keep the recipe as simple as possible… let me know if you try blooming the cocoa powder and it works wonderfully! 🙂
Hi Nami,
I read other recipes which recommend beating room temperature egg whites rather than cold because they will reach greater volume and is easier. Is it different in different climates?
Hi Sheena! American recipes typically recommend the room temperature egg whites, but 99% of Japanese sweets recipes always recommend using cold egg whites for refined meringue texture. We also do not use the cream of tartar in making meringue. 🙂 I assume this technique came from the European method as Japanese western sweets have more influence from Europe. Someone left a comment years ago (not in this post) that she also uses cold egg whites and I remember she was from European country but I can’t recall which country she was from. As long as you make a good meringue, you can use room-temp egg whites. I’m just used to making the meringue Japanese way. 🙂
I have a 10 inch cake pan. How much flour and cocoa in cups. Also what else do I change in the recipe?
Hi Pamela, Thank you for trying this recipe!
If you are baking in the 10-inch Chiffon Cake pan, Nami posted the flour and cocoa powder amount in this post.
10 inches (25 cm): 70 g cocoa powder + 140 g cake flour
Here is the link to how to adjust the other ingredient for your cake pan size; https://www.justonecookbook.com/perfect-chiffon-cake/
We hope this helps!
I have 7 inch chiffon cake pan..so based on your chiffon cake tips post, I would need to use the 3 eggs with 75gr cake flour recipe.
how would I do 1:2 cocoa powder:cake flour ratio? I’m so bad in math LOL!! Thanks!!
Hi Jos! So… the total flour is 75g. And when you add cocoa powder, it replaces flour.
Cocoa powder:Cake Flour = 25g:50g (1:2)
So you need 25g cocoa powder and 50g cake flour. 🙂
Hi, I am using a 7inch pan. I understand your calculation for flour. But what about milk? How much should it be?
Hi Kaiwen! Use this chart as basic chiffon cake ingredients: https://www.justonecookbook.com/perfect-chiffon-cake/
Hi Nami,
I read the linked article and was wondering if it’s possible to just use chocolate liquor instead of cocoa powder and some kind of fat/oil?
Why “substitute” when there is already tasty fat in the less processed product, I asked myself? I guess it’s more expensive because chocolate liquor isn’t your tipical thing in a normal kitchen, but perhaps tastier and healthier?
What do you think?
Hi Anna! I wish I am more knowledgeable about chocolate liquor but I am not, so I can’t give you any feedback on this. 🙁 I did try adding/using melted unsweetened chocolate but the chiffon cake doesn’t come out as “chiffon cake” texture, and it was more like a pound cake (but slightly more chiffon cakey).
I wish I could answer your question. Sorry…
Don’t feel sorry for that Nami. It’s my usual fascination and fun in experimenting in the kitchen, well and elswhere too. Believe me, I drove some of my profs at the university crazy with my never ending ideas and questions;)
I enjoyed the cake with a sauce of fruits, mainly raspberrys. I froze the cake in peaces, put like 60g frozen raspberrys for a minute in the microwave, then the cake for another minute. In this minute I would stir the raspberrys already liquid with a pinch of cardamom and vanilla sugar and eventually mix it with cream of something milky, sometime even with plain yoghurt and it was good. Well not delicious, but good. After I poured the sauce all over the cake and enjoyed the fluffiness. I swear it was going down half the cake when I grabed a bite and then miraculously puffed up again to former high! That was really enjoyable
Hi Anna! Creativity is very important in cooking too! It’s a part of the fun. 🙂
I followed this recipe to the tee and it turned out so good. I think the trick of putting egg whites in the fridge is so useful in getting the perfect meringue. The texture of the chiffon is also so spongy and airy. Thank you so much for the recipe, Nami. Can’t wait to try the earl grey chiffon cake !!
Hi Rosi! Thank you for your kind feedback! I’m so happy to hear your chiffon cake came out well! Thanks for trying my recipe! 🙂
Hi Nami,
Can I replace the Dutch chocolate to normal cocoa powder (Hershey cocoa powder) instead? Would it be the same amount if I were to replace it? Kindly advise. Thank you very much 🙂
Hi Manda! I wasn’t familiar with it… and I found this article: https://sallysbakingaddiction.com/baking-basics-dutch-process-natural-cocoa-powder/
Hi Nami,
I have the 17 cm pan and was looking at your blog post on ingredients measurements for this size. For the cocoa powder, how much should I use for this pan size? Should I use the same amount as this recipe for the 20 cm? I can’t wait to make this!
Thank you for sharing all your amazing recipes!
Hi Nami,
I would also like to know how much cocoa powder to use for a 17 cm chiffon cake pan. Thank you so much!
Hi Jordan! Thank you for asking! I added the information on the blog post too. 🙂
7 inches (17 cm): 25 g cocoa powder + 50 g cake flour
What about the measurements for rest of the ingredients? Stays the same?
Hi Wai! Oh no, you have to adjust all ingredients based on whatever measurement you pick. Please read both posts. 🙂
https://www.justonecookbook.com/perfect-chiffon-cake/
Would you recommend icing or glaze for the chocolate chiffon cake? 😊
Hih Cynthia! You can add if you like. In general, Japanese people don’t like the desserts that are too sweet, so you rarely see icing or glaze on chiffon cake. 🙂
Hi Lisa! Thanks for asking! I added this information to the blog post, but here’s the measurement.
7 inches (17 cm): 25 g cocoa powder + 50 g cake flour
Hope you enjoy the recipe!