Chocolate Buttermilk Bundt Cake
This Chocolate Buttermilk Bundt Cake is super moist (thanks to the buttermilk and vegetable oil), super rich (thanks to blooming the cocoa powder) and has a deliciously smooth chocolate ganache frosting that rolls beautifully down the sides of the bundt cake! It’s chocolate cake perfection!
Looking for some more delicious bundt cakes to make in your fun bundt pans? Be sure to try my Apple Cider Bundt Cake, Lemon Poppy Seed Bundt Cake, Blood Orange Cardamom Bundt Cake, or Gingerbread Bundt Cake recipes! There’s one for every time of the year!

Why This Recipe Works
- Chocolate bundt cake with buttermilk. Using buttermilk in the cake tenderizes the cake and makes it really moist!
- Chocolate ganache frosting with melted chocolate. The melted chocolate in the frosting produces a much richer chocolate flavor than if cocoa powder were used. It also makes the frosting more of a ganache texture.
- Perfectly textured chocolate frosting. I know I already talked about the frosting, but it’s just seriously SO good! It is thick but it isn’t globby. It’s the perfect consistency and texture so that it rolls beautifully down the sides of the cake without running off the cake completely. Using half and half instead of heavy cream makes a big difference since half and half is more liquidy than heavy cream. We want the frosting to roll down the sides and using heavy cream would make it too thick.
- Blooming cocoa powder. In this recipe, we bloom the cocoa powder. What does it mean to bloom cocoa powder? It’s adding hot water to cocoa powder in order to bring out a much richer chocolate flavor.
Ingredient Notes

- Eggs + Egg Yolk: Adding an extra egg yolk into the batter means additional fat; additional fat means more moistness in the cake!
- Buttermilk: The buttermilk tenderizes the crumb of the cake. It also adds a subtle tang to the cake that creates a more complex flavor profile.
- Vegetable Oil/Canola Oil: Making a cake with oil instead of butter will contribute to a cake that is more moist.
- Unsweetened Cocoa Powder: Using unsweetened cocoa powder (also known as natural cocoa powder) + baking soda means the acid of the cocoa powder will react with the base (the baking soda) and contribute to the rise in the cake.
- Baking Soda: Baked goods made with baking soda traditional use unsweetened cocoa powder instead of Dutched cocoa powder. The baking soda will react with the acid in the unsweetened cocoa powder to help rise the cake.
- Very Hot Water: The process of blooming cocoa powder is when very hot water is added to cocoa powder. Blooming cocoa powder brings out a richer cocoa flavor than if you weren’t to bloom it.

- Unsweetened Chocolate: Cut the unsweetened chocolate into pieces to make the chocolate frosting glaze.
- Half and Half: Using half in half instead of heavy cream helps the frosting be more like a glaze than a thick frosting, so it can roll down the sides of the cake. Heavy cream would make the chocolate frosting too thick.
- Powdered Sugar: Sift the powdered sugar to ensure a smooth ganache frosting.
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Combine the wet ingredients. Mix the wet ingredients for the chocolate buttermilk bundt cake in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment until combined.


- Add the dry ingredients. Add the flour, cocoa powder, sugar, salt and baking soda and mix on low speed.


- Bloom the cocoa powder. Once the dry ingredients are starting to combine with the wet ingredients, slowly stream in the hot water. Once the hot water has combined, continue mixing on low speed for 1 minute.


- Bake. Pour the cake batter into a bundt pan that is very well greased and floured. Bake at 350°F for 45-55 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Remove from the oven and let cool for 10 minutes in the pan, then invert onto a wire rack to cool to room temperature.


- Make the chocolate ganache frosting. Combine chocolate, butter, and half and half in a microwave safe bowl. Heat in 20-second increments (stirring very well in between) until the chocolate and butter are completely melted. Whisk the salt and vanilla into the melted chocolate mixture. Then whisk the powdered sugar until smooth. Let the frosting sit for up to 5 minutes before frosting the cake.

- Frost the bundt cake. Spoon the chocolate frosting with melted chocolate overtop of the chocolate bundt cake and let the frosting roll down the sides.

Recipe Tips
Make sure to spray the bundt pan liberally with nonstick spray that contains flour in it! Or better yet grease and flour with butter or shortening and THEN spray the pan too. 😊
For the frosting, after you’ve melted the chocolate, butter and half and half, the mixture will appear slightly gritty. Don’t worry, it will smooth out when you add the powdered sugar!
Make sure the cake has cooled to room temperature and the chocolate glaze frosting has sat for up to 5 minutes. If you were to frost the cake right away, the frosting would slide down the sides of the cake.
Don’t over mix the cake when you add the dry ingredients to the wet. Over mixing cake batter at this stage in the process will result in a tough batter, which will affect the rise of the cake. If you are looking for ways to help your cakes rise, make sure you are using baking soda that isn’t expired and make sure your oven temperature is correct by using an oven thermometer! You’d be surprised how often ovens will say they are a certain temperature when in fact they are cooler or warmer than the temperature shown.
Another delicious chocolate bundt cake recipe is my Chocolate Chip Bundt Cake topped with a smooth chocolate ganache.
Make Ahead, Storing, and Freezing
Store the chocolate bundt cake with buttermilk covered in the fridge for 3-5 days. It needs to be refrigerated because of the half and half in the frosting.
You can make the cake ahead of time, but I wouldn’t recommend making the chocolate frosting ahead of time. Once chilled, the frosting shouldn’t be reheated. Since it’s a ganache frosting, reheating it or cooling it down (by chilling it in the fridge) then stirring or whisking it could cause the chocolate to go gritty again in the frosting. Because of this, I recommend making the cake ahead of time, but then making the chocolate ganache frosting the day of.
You can freeze this cake! Flash freeze it in the freezer until solid, then wrap in plastic wrap and aluminum foil and freeze for up to 2 months. Let thaw in the fridge overnight, then remove, uncover and continue thawing at room temperature.

Recipe FAQs
Yes it is! It’s super moist thanks to a few things: using vegetable oil helps make cakes moist. This is because vegetable oil is a liquid at room temperature. The acidity in the buttermilk breaks down the gluten in the flour, making the cake much more tender, too.
Just the shape! I guess the point of a bundt cake is to not only taste delicious but to have a fun shape to it!
Lots of grease and flour! I would recommend greasing the pan, flouring the pan, and then topping that with some cooking spray that contains flour in it!

More Chocolate Cake Recipes
- Moist Chocolate Cake Recipe
- Chocolate Cake with Peanut Butter Frosting
- Chocolate Cake Pops
- German Chocolate Cake Recipe
- Best Chocolate Cupcake Recipe
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Chocolate Buttermilk Bundt Cake
Ingredients
Cake
- 2 large eggs
- 1 egg yolk
- 1 1/3 cups buttermilk - at room temperature
- 1 cup + 2 tablespoons vegetable oil - or canola oil
- 1 tablespoon vanilla extract
- 2 1/2 cups + 2 tablespoons all purpose flour
- 3/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
- 2 1/4 cups granulated sugar
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 2 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
- 1 1/3 cup very hot water
Chocolate Frosting/Glaze
- 6 oz unsweetened chocolate - finely chopped
- 1/2 cup unsalted butter - if using salted butter eliminate the salt in the frosting
- 1/2 cup half and half
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- 4 cups powdered sugar - measured then sifted
Instructions
Chocolate Bundt Cake
- Preheat oven to 350°F. Grease, flour and then generously spray a 12 cup bundt pan with nonstick cooking spray that contains flour. Set aside.
- In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, mix the eggs, egg yolk, buttermilk, vegetable oil, and vanilla until combined.
- Add the flour, cocoa powder, sugar, salt and baking soda and mix on low speed. Once the dry ingredients are starting to combine with the wet ingredients, slowly stream in the hot water. Once the hot water has combined, continue mixing on low speed for 1 additional minute.
- Pour the cake batter into the prepped bundt pan and bake for 45-55 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Remove from the oven and let cool for 10 minutes in the pan, then invert onto a wire rack to cool to room temperature.
Chocolate Frosting/Glaze
- Combine chocolate, butter, and half and half in a microwave safe bowl. Heat in 20 second increments (stirring very well in between) until chocolate and butter are completely melted. At this stage the mixture will appear slightly gritty but don't worry, it will smooth out when you add the powdered sugar.
- Whisk the salt and vanilla into the melted chocolate mixture. Lastly, whisk the powdered sugar until smooth. Let the frosting sit for 1-5 minutes. If you were to frost the cake right away, the frosting will slide off the sides of the cake.
54 Comments on “Chocolate Buttermilk Bundt Cake”
AMAZING recipe and so moist and delicious!! Made it for a very special birthday (my momma’s 76th :)) and it was incredible!! Thank you so much for the super easy step by step instructions! This will most definitely be my new go to for chocolate cake! 😉
So happy to hear it turned out for such a special event! Thanks for your review Sara 🙂
Lovely recipe! Made it for important guests (quite a worthwhile risk) and it was devoured. THANK YOU!! I will make this again.
(I made half again as much so I had 6 small bundts and a 9×13 cake.)
Nancy, so glad to hear this turned out wonderfully for you! Thanks for coming back and sharing your experience. 🙂
Best chocolate cake I’ve ever made. Changes I made, used soured milk and replaced hot water with leftover coffee from breakfast that I reheated, almost slightly heated a can of store bought frosting to glaze. Served with a scoop of Columbian Espresso ice cream.
I love that you used what you had Terri! Thanks so much for your review!
Can you use a 9 x 13 pan fir this cake or is it too much batter?
Lisee, make sure to pour carefully but I think this batter will fit in a 9×13 pan with no trouble! You may have to adjust the baking time since a 9×13 isn’t as tall as a bundt pan – I would check around 30 minutes for doneness.
Just finished making your cake I’m serving it tonight for dessert . The frosting is absolutely delicious.
Yum! I’m glad you made this recipe, Carolyn – I agree, the frosting is delicious!
So moist and absolutely delicious! Very chocolatey. The frosting was a little stiff, but I just added a little extra half-and-half until I got the consistency right. My kitchen scale was out of batteries so I may have had too much chocolate.
I’m happy you were able to figure out your frosting, Lisa – it sounds like you did exactly the right thing. Glad you loved this extra-chocolatey recipe!
This recipe is a keeper. The only adjustment I made was hot coffee instead of hot water, and only about 3/4 cup instead of 1 1/3. It worked out perfectly. The frosting recipe makes a lot, one could probably halve it and still have enough.
Great changes, Liz! Glad it was such a hit.
Sorry I did not like how this cake turned out. It was dry and heavy. I feel like it needed butter or more moisture. and a better texture. I consider my self an experienced good baker. I would not make this again.
Sorry it didn’t work out for you! It’s a super moist cake, so something must have gone wrong. Thanks for trying the recipe!
Wow, this was an exceptional cake, absolutely the most moist and tender crumb. It was enjoyed by everyone. The very little that was left is still moist and delicious two days later. A keeper for sure. Thanks!
Glad you loved it, Jody! It’s definitely is super moist and delicious!
hi, this cake looks so good…any easy trick how to convert it to metric?🙏
Great cake for chocolate lovers. I followed the recipe exactly and was very impressed with the end result! Will definitely make again!
Happy to hear this, Cheryl! Thanks for the great review.
This cake is AMAZING! The batter appeared to be so thin I didn’t think it would ever bake thru but it did!!! I followed your recipe only added a little bit of instant coffee (dried) to the batter (as Ina Garten does with any of her chocolate recipes!) Our fav new dessert!
If I could rate this with 0 stars, I would. This turned out awful for me! I was a little short on sugar (by like 1/4 cup), but I don’t think it would have altered it *that* badly. I had the correct cocoa powder and everything else. It came out a bit cracked looking, and deflated while it was cooling off. Cut into it and it was dense like fudge. Literally. There was no crumb – just solid, stodgy, and not really all that flavorful. Massive waste of ingredients (and money), very disappointed.
Shay, I’m sorry to hear this cake didn’t turn out for you. Unfortunately, reducing the amount of sugar in a cake recipe doesn’t just affect how sweet it is. Sugar contributes to the moisture in a recipe, assists in leavening, and inhibits the development of gluten, all of which are important to helping a cake be soft, light, and flavorful. I hope you’ll try this recipe again with all the right ingredients.
This cake is AMAZING! The batter appeared to be so thin I didn’t think it wouid ever bake thru but it did!!! I followed your recipe only added a little bit of instant coffee (dried) to the batter (as Ina Garten does with any of her chocolate recipes!) Our fav new dessert!
This recipe is a keeper! I discovered the buttermilk in the fridge was too old, so I decided to substitute the homemade plain yogurt (New batch made yesterday) with the yogurt setting on my Instant Pot. Honestly, I don’t know when I’ve made such a moist, flavorful cake!
I also love how moist this cake is! So glad you loved it. Thanks for the great review, Peggy!
I reread the recipe and paid attention to the oil. It seems an awful lot. 🙂
Hi Judy! t’s a very moist cake thanks to the oil and buttermilk! If you follow the recipe as written, you’ll love it!
Absolutely loved this cake !! Will be my new take everywhere cake. So chocolaty…so moist..the frosting IS the topper. So happy to have found this recipe. Thankyou.
This is the worst cake I ever made. I followed the directions. The batter was very runny. It puffed up really high in the bundt pan. I had to cook it 10 extra minutes – until it started to smell burnt, then I took it out to cool. It totally flattened. The edges from around the top were very crusty and tasted good, but the cake did not rise properly, so it was very dense. Total Failure. I will not try any other recipes from this site. Waste of time and ingredients.
I’m wondering if you used Dutch processed cocoa powder??
Hi Whitney! It won’t turn out the same. Unsweetened cocoa powder has a completely different acidity as dutch process, so there’s a difference in what leavening agent is used. Read more here: https://saltandbaker.com/cocoa-powder-guide/
I made this last week and the cake was delicious! Very moist.
For the frosting, did you use a milk chocolate bar or dark chocolate? This looks delicious and I hope to make this over the weekend. Thank you..😁
I used unsweetened chocolate chocolate bar. You can find them in the baking aisle 🙂
Let me know if you have any other questions.
I can’t get half and half where I live.
How is the cake supposed to look after adding very hot water?
There’s a photo in the blog post of the batter in the bundt pan, the batter is fairly thin.