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Valentine’s Day Chocolate Lava Cakes

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Valentine’s Day Chocolate Lava Cakes - From Hearth to Stove

These chocolate lava cakes are pure magic — soft chocolate cake with a molten chocolate center that oozes when you cut into them. They’re fancy enough for a date night dinner, but easy enough that even a beginner baker can make them. Jake and I make these together every Valentine’s Day, and somehow it feels more romantic to cook together than to go out.

The first Valentine’s Day Jake and I tried making lava cakes, we didn’t have ramekins. We used coffee mugs. The chocolate stuck to the inside, the centers were either raw or fully baked, and we ate them with spoons out of the mugs while standing at the kitchen counter, laughing at ourselves. That was thirteen years ago, before Wyatt, before Clara was even a thought. I bought proper ramekins the next year, and they changed everything.

A note about food safety: Because this dessert is all about that warm, gooey center, the egg yolks don’t get fully cooked through. I always reach for pasteurized egg yolks here (you’ll find them right next to the regular eggs at the store). It’s a tiny swap that lets everyone enjoy seconds without a worry.

How to Make Valentine’s Day Chocolate Lava Cakes

Melt butter and chocolate together. Use good quality dark chocolate — this is the star of the show, so it matters. Microwave in 30-second intervals, stirring between each, until completely smooth. Let it cool slightly while you prepare the rest.

Whisk eggs, sugar, and flour into the chocolate. Beat two whole eggs and two egg yolks with sugar until thick and pale, then fold in the melted chocolate mixture and a few tablespoons of flour. The batter should be thick and glossy. Pour into buttered and floured ramekins, filling each about three-quarters full.

Bake at 425 degrees for exactly 12 to 14 minutes. The edges should be firm and set, but the center should still jiggle slightly when you tap the ramekin. This is the moment of truth — a minute too long and you’ve got regular chocolate cake (still good, just not lava). Let them rest for one minute, run a knife around the edge, and flip onto a plate. Dust with powdered sugar and serve immediately.

If you love elegant desserts that look harder than they are, my homemade Tiramisu is another showstopper — coffee, mascarpone, and cocoa do all the work.

Valentine's Day Chocolate Lava Cakes

Soft chocolate cake with a molten chocolate center that oozes when you cut into them. Fancy enough for date night, easy enough for beginners. Ready in under 30 minutes.
Course Dessert
Cuisine American
Keyword baking, classic comfort, desserts, valentine's day chocolate lava cakes
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 14 minutes
Total Time 29 minutes
Servings 4 cakes
Author Maggie

Ingredients

  • 4 oz semi-sweet chocolate, chopped at least 60% cacao
  • 1/2 cup unsalted butter
  • 1 cup powdered sugar
  • 2 large eggs
  • 2 pasteurized egg yolks
  • 6 tablespoons all-purpose flour
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • butter and cocoa powder for ramekins

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 425 degrees F. Butter four 6-oz ramekins and dust with cocoa powder. Place on a baking sheet.
  2. Melt chocolate and butter together in a microwave-safe bowl in 30-second intervals, stirring between each. Stir until smooth.
  3. Whisk in powdered sugar until blended. Add eggs and egg yolks, stirring well. Fold in flour and vanilla until just combined.
  4. Divide batter evenly among prepared ramekins. Bake 12 to 14 minutes. The edges should be firm but the center will be soft.
  5. Let cool 1 minute, then run a knife around the edges. Invert onto plates and serve immediately with a dusting of powdered sugar or vanilla ice cream.

Common Questions

Can I make the batter ahead of time?
Yes, and this is the best part — pour the batter into the ramekins, cover with plastic wrap, and refrigerate for up to 24 hours. When ready, bake straight from the fridge but add two to three extra minutes to the baking time.
What chocolate should I use?
Use a good quality dark chocolate bar (60-70% cacao), not chocolate chips. Chips have stabilizers that prevent them from melting as smoothly. The chocolate is the primary flavor here, so quality matters.
My lava cakes didn’t have a molten center. What happened?
They were overbaked. Every oven is different, so check them at 11 minutes. The center should jiggle like barely-set Jello. It’s better to underbake slightly — you can always put them back in for another minute.
Can I use muffin tins instead of ramekins?
Yes, but grease them very well and reduce baking time to about 9-10 minutes since they’re smaller. The lava effect is less dramatic in a muffin tin, but the flavor is the same.
Are these safe for kids to eat?
The center doesn’t fully cook the egg yolks, so use pasteurized eggs if serving to children, pregnant women, or anyone with a compromised immune system. Pasteurized eggs are heat-treated to eliminate bacteria while still remaining raw.

What I Use for This Recipe

A couple things from my kitchen that make this one easier.

Hamilton Beach 6-Speed Hand Mixer
Hamilton Beach 6-Speed Hand Mixer(~$20)

Every frosting, every batter, every whipped cream. Light enough that my wrist survives a double batch.

OXO Good Grips Balloon Whisk
OXO Good Grips Balloon Whisk(~$10)

Smooth gravy, lump-free batter, hot cocoa that is actually mixed. Small tool, big difference.

Pyrex Glass Mixing Bowl Set (3-Piece)
Pyrex Glass Mixing Bowl Set (3-Piece)(~$15)

Mixing, marinating, doubling recipes. Glass so I can see what I am doing and nothing stains.

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