Chocolate Biscuit Cake (the Queen's Favorite Cake) A Tiffin Recipe (2024)

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Chocolate biscuit cake is a no bake cake recipe that happens to be Queen Elizabeth’s favorite/favourite cake! Growing up in the UK, this type of treat, called a tiffin, is quite popular for one reason: it’s fantastic!

Chocolate Biscuit Cake (the Queen's Favorite Cake) A Tiffin Recipe (1)

The original recipe is by the Queen’s past royal chef–Chef Darryn McGrady, who shared it some years ago.

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I want to share this recipe with you because it’s the perfect treat to celebrate the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee! Apparently, this is the only “cake” that Queen Elizabeth wants kept for leftovers for herself! All other cakes are shared after the queen has enjoyed a slice, but not this one.

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You may also recall that when Prince William and Kate were married, the groom’s cake was this exact recipe! So now you know, this cake is definitely fit for royalty, however, it’s the most simple treat you could probably ever make, since there’s no baking involved!

What was the Queen’s Favorite Cake?

The Queen’s favorite cake isn’t actually a traditional cake, but something known as a tiffin. It is made in the shape of a cake, but it is not baked. Instead, biscuits (cookies) are broken and folded into a chocolate mixture which is chilled and coated in more chocolate.

What was Queen Elizabeth’s Favorite Dessert?

Chocolate Biscuit cake was Queen Elizabeth II’s favorite dessert, as well.

Chocolate Biscuit Cake (the Queen's Favorite Cake) A Tiffin Recipe (3)

If you’re surprised at the Queen’s “down to earth” taste in food, you shouldn’t be, as she’s been quoted as saying she loves beans on toast, and even attributed catching Covid to not eating her beans for two days! She’s got such a great sense of humor!

I hope you don’t believe the myth of bad English food! I can prove them wrong!

Chocolate Biscuit Cake (the Queen's Favorite Cake) A Tiffin Recipe (4)

And Scottish shortbread is surely on the afternoon tea menu when the Queen is at Balmoral.
Shortbread is the Queen’s favorite cookie/biscuit.

What is a Tiffin?

Tiffin actually means a light meal or snack, and is an Indian/English word. As noted above, a tiffin is simply the name for this chocolate biscuit treat. A cake is actually a misnomer since there’s nothing cake-like about it, except for the shape and the tin it’s made in. You can add dried fruit, nuts, and British candy like Maltesers, but then it won’t be the Queen’s favorite version. Tiffin is often served with a cup of British tea.

Chocolate Biscuit Cake (the Queen's Favorite Cake) A Tiffin Recipe (6)

Tips on Making the Best Chocolate Biscuit Cake

  • Although it might be more difficult to find, I would recommend using McVitie’s Rich Tea biscuits. These are the ones I grew up eating, and always dipping into my cup of tea, just like Digestives! I could have ordered them on Amazon, but they would have taken too long to arrive, so I bought another brand at Cost Plus.
  • Use good quality dark chocolate. You can use something like Callebaut chocolate, but honestly, the big bars of Belgian chocolate from Trader Joe’s are really good, too, and much more inexpensive.

Chocolate Biscuit Cake (the Queen's Favorite Cake) A Tiffin Recipe (7)

  • Be sure to use Baker’s or caster sugar or else the cake may have a gritty texture. You can also put granulated sugar in a blender, but don’t process too long or you’ll make powdered sugar.

Chocolate Biscuit Cake (the Queen's Favorite Cake) A Tiffin Recipe (8)

Chocolate Biscuit Cake –
The Queen’s Favorite Cake (Tiffin Recipe)

Original recipe by Chef Darren McGrady-slightly adapted by Christina Conte. Serves 18

FULL PRINTABLE RECIPE BELOW

Ingredients

  • Rich Tea biscuits or similar cookies/biscuits
  • butter, softened
  • Baker’s/caster sugar
  • dark chocolate
  • pinch of salt
    COATING
    good quality dark chocolate
    chocolate curls, bits of a chocolate bar, or whatever you would like to put on top the cake

Special equipment: 6″ cake tin or springform pan (optional: cake stand)

Prepare the Chocolate Biscuits and Filling

Butter a 6″ cake tin and line the bottom with parchment or waxed paper.

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Break the tea biscuits into small pieces (about 1″ long) and put into a bowl and set aside.

Chocolate Biscuit Cake (the Queen's Favorite Cake) A Tiffin Recipe (10)

Beat the butter, salt and sugar together until light and fluffy.

Chocolate Biscuit Cake (the Queen's Favorite Cake) A Tiffin Recipe (11)

Melt the dark chocolate using the defrost function of the microwave or over a double boiler. Stop heating the chocolate when it is almost melted.

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Add the melted chocolate to the butter and sugar mixture and mix well until combined. (At this point, the original recipe adds an egg, however, I don’t recommend doing this in the US as it is not cooked.)

Chocolate Biscuit Cake (the Queen's Favorite Cake) A Tiffin Recipe (13)

Gently add in the Rich Tea biscuit pieces until they are fully coated in chocolate mixture.

Chocolate Biscuit Cake (the Queen's Favorite Cake) A Tiffin Recipe (14)

Put this into the prepared cake tin, carefully trying to fill all the air spots so there aren’t holes in the bottom or middle of the cake (the bottom will be the top).

Coat and Decorate the Chocolate Biscuit Cake

Place the tin in the fridge for about 4 hours. When ready to finish the cake, remove from the fridge and allow to stand for about 30 minutes. Run a knife around the edge and turn upside down onto a cooling rack placed on a sheet tray (or anything to catch chocolate drips). Remove the parchment paper.

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Now, melt the dark chocolate for the coating in a double boiler or again in the microwave on defrost to slowly melt the chocolate, stirring at intervals. Stop heating the chocolate when there are still pieces of chocolate. Continue stirring off the heat until completely smooth.

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Slowly pour the melted chocolate over the top and sides of the cake and smooth using a butter or palette knife.

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Allow to set at room temperature. When set, remove the cake and place on a serving plate and decorate as desired and serve.

Chocolate Biscuit Cake (the Queen's Favorite Cake) A Tiffin Recipe (18)

Cutting the cake is much easier at room temperature, and a cup of tea is (practically) mandatory. 👑

Chocolate Biscuit Cake (the Queen's Favorite Cake) A Tiffin Recipe (19)

Chocolate Biscuit Cake (The Queen's Favorite Cake - Tiffin Recipe)

Yield: 18 slices

Prep Time: 15 minutes

Additional Time: 10 minutes

Total Time: 25 minutes

A chocolate and cookie concoction that is called a tiffin in the UK and happens to be Queen Elizabeth II's favorite cake!

Ingredients

  • 8 oz (225 g) Rich Tea biscuits or similar cookies/biscuits
  • 5 oz (142 g) unsalted butter, softened
  • pinch of salt
  • 5 oz (142 g) Baker's/caster sugar (if the sugar isn't fine, it might be gritty)
  • 5 oz (142 g) dark chocolate

COATING

  • 8 oz (225 g) good quality dark chocolate
  • chocolate curls, bits of a chocolate bar, or whatever you would like to put on top the cake

Instructions

1. Butter a 6" cake tin and line the bottom with parchment or waxed paper.

2. Break the tea biscuits into small pieces (about 1" long) and put into a bowl and set aside.

3. Beat the butter, salt, and sugar together until light and fluffy.

4. Melt the dark chocolate using the defrost function of the microwave or over a double boiler. Stop heating the chocolate when it is almost melted. Add the melted chocolate to the butter and sugar mixture and mix well until combined.

5. Gently add in the Rich Tea biscuit pieces until they are fully coated in chocolate mixture.

6. Put this into the prepared cake tin, carefully trying to fill all the air spots so there aren't holes in the bottom or middle of the cake (the bottom will be the top).

7. Place the tin in the fridge for about 4 hours. When ready to finish the cake, remove from the fridge and allow to stand for about 30 minutes. Run a knife around the edge and turn upside down onto a cooling rack placed on a sheet tray (or anything to catch chocolate drips). Remove the parchment paper.

8. Now, melt the dark chocolate for the coating in a double boiler or again in the microwave on defrost to slowly melt the chocolate, stirring at intervals. Stop heating the chocolate when there are still pieces of chocolate. Continue stirring off the heat until completely smooth.

9. Slowly pour the melted chocolate over the top and sides of the cake and smooth using a butter or palette knife.

10. Allow to set at room temperature. When set, remove the cake and place on a serving plate and decorate as desired.

Notes

Use good quality chocolate for best results (DO NOT USE HERSHEY'S)

Nutrition Information:

Yield: 18Serving Size: 1 slice
Amount Per Serving:Calories: 305Total Fat: 17gSaturated Fat: 9gTrans Fat: 0gUnsaturated Fat: 7gCholesterol: 22mgSodium: 109mgCarbohydrates: 36gFiber: 2gSugar: 25gProtein: 2g

Nutrition information is only estimated.

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Chocolate Biscuit Cake (the Queen's Favorite Cake) A Tiffin Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the queens favourite cake recipe? ›

Queen Elizabeth's Favorite Cake: Chocolate Biscuit Cake
  1. CAKE. 1/2 teaspoon butter, for greasing the pan. 8 ounces Rich tea biscuits or sweet cookies. 4 ounces unsalted butter, softened. 4 ounces granulated sugar. 4 ounces dark chocolate. 1 egg.
  2. ICING. 8 ounces dark chocolate, for coating. 1 ounce chocolate, for decoration.

What was Queen Elizabeth's favorite dessert? ›

When we learned that the Queen of England is obsessed with this Chocolate Biscuit Cake, a decadent layering of chocolate and rich tea biscuits (the most dunkable of English cookies), we knew it was the sweet for us.

What is the chocolate biscuit cake Prince William? ›

It's famous for being one of two royal wedding cakes made to celebrate the marriage of the then Duke and duch*ess of Cambridge (now the Prince and Princess of Wales) in 2011. With a mix of chocolate, biscuits and a shiny chocolate covering (called a 'ganache'), it makes for a decadent treat!

Why is it called tiffin cake? ›

Classic Scottish tiffin is made using shortbread biscuits, dried fruits (such as currents) and milk chocolate.. Why is it Called Tiffin Cake? The word 'tiffin' comes from the Indian term meaning 'light snack' or 'light meal'.

What is chocolate biscuit cake made of? ›

A Chocolate biscuit cake requires no baking and is a kind of tea cake, a sweet commonly served with tea in the U.K. It consists of crumbled up cookies, or biscuits, floating in a kind of chocolate syrup or pudding mix and smothered with melted chocolate on the outside.

What is Queen Elizabeth cake made of? ›

Queen Elizabeth cake is a lightly sweet, moist, and low-fat date cake, topped with a brown sugar, butter and broiled coconut mixture. "Queen Elizabeth cake" is named after the Queen of Canada, Elizabeth II, and may have first been made in 1953 for her coronation.

What was Prince Philip's Favourite dessert? ›

Prince Philip's Favourite Dessert was Crepe Islandaise.

What was the Queen's favorite cookie? ›

Print RecipeThese Buckingham Palace Shortbread Cookies are rich, tender, and buttery. They were among the late Queen Elizabeth's favorite sweets for her after… White Chocolate Oatmeal Cranberry Cookies - the most requested Cookie Recipe for the Holidays.

What is Queen Elizabeth favorite color? ›

Answer and Explanation: According to an evaluation of the clothing Queen Elizabeth has worn on public appearances in the past year, blue is the Queen's preferred color. Many shades of blue have been featured in the Queen's wardrobe, but beige seldom appears at all.

What kind of cake did Princess Diana have? ›

This specimen from Mini Museum comes from a slice of Diana and Charles' wedding cake, a traditional fruit cake with cream cheese frosting. The layers of the official cake took 14 weeks to prepare, including an identical twin held in emergency reserve.

What cake did King Charles have at his coronation? ›

The batter alone weighed over 300kg and comprised 300 Duchy organic, free-range eggs, and fruits including sultanas, raisins, and glacé cherries. It was baked in small batches, aged over two months and fed with a spirit produced with apples sourced from the 1,000-tree orchard at His Majesty's Highgrove Estate.

What cake did the Queen have at her wedding? ›

The Majesty of Queen Elizabeth's: Royal Wedding Cake

The result was a magnificent four-tiered fruit cake standing at nine feet tall. The cake design was an epitome of royalty with intricate sugar-work representing the couple's family crests, symbols of love and friendship, and scenes from their lives.

What does tiffin mean in British? ›

noun. tif·​fin ˈti-fən. chiefly British. : a light midday meal : luncheon.

Why do Indians use tiffins? ›

“Soon, tiffin became an integral part of South Asian society and food culture.” In the 1850s, tiffin became the easiest way for workers to carry homemade lunches. Eager to change the way Indian laborers ate, the British Raj set up offices that made it impossible to take lunch at home.

What is a tiffin in British slang? ›

It is derived from "tiffing", an English colloquial term meaning to take a little drink. By 1867 it had become naturalised among Anglo-Indians in northern British India to mean luncheon.

What cakes did the queen eat? ›

When it's time to treat herself, McGrady revealed that all the Queen wants is a piece of chocolate biscuit cake. The cake is reportedly made in-house (or, more appropriately, in-palace), and Her Majesty consumes one slice per day.

What cakes does the queen eat? ›

chocolate biscuit cake from the British royal kitchen

Chocolate biscuit cake is Queen Elizabeth's favorite cake ~ she would take a small slice every day with her tea, until the cake was finished, and then she'd start on a fresh one!

What cakes are associated with the Queen? ›

Victoria sponge

Said to be the Queen's favorite, Victoria sponge consists of airy cake layers sandwiched together with whipped cream (or buttercream) and jam and dusted with caster sugar.

What is the difference between a king cake and a queen cake? ›

The Queen Cake is a tribute to excess. It is a revved up King Cake that offers a variety of flavors that have become so popular in the King Cake universe.

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