

All you need:*
Nabisco's Famous Chocolate Wafers
one pint heavy whipping cream
one teaspoon vanilla extract
couple spoonfuls of sugar
*Find the wafers in the cookie or baking aisle of the supermarket. If your store doesn't carry them, beg and plead for them to. And please please use real whipping cream (not des
Simply follow the recipe found HERE (whip the cream, blend in the vanilla. I also add a wee bit of sugar to the whipped cream and blend, then spoon a spoonful on each wafer, stack, line up in rows, frost with the remaining cream to cover and stick in the fridge for 6 hours). Be sure to slice at an angle when serving!!

Hi,
ReplyDeleteThis is fantastic! Here in Australia we call it the Chocolate ripple cake.
Such an awesome tasty dessert!!
Again fantastic work!
www.brisbanebaker.blogspot.com
Oh my goodness! I haven't seen one of these in YEARS. My family used to make this every Christmas as our "yule log." Thanks for this lovely post :)
ReplyDeleteLooks interesting! Do you slice it at an angle to keep the traditional triangular cake slice? I would think rectangular slices across the "stripes" would work just as well.
ReplyDeleteThis tastes amazing. I'm a little like Sandra Lee from the Food Network. Anything I can find to cut time I do. With that, you can use IceCream sandwiches in exchange for the wafers. Here is a recipe from Kraft.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.kraftrecipes.com/recipes/oreo-fudge-ice-cream-106562.aspx
This looks delicious! I'll have to try it sometime soon! Thanks for the recipe!
ReplyDeleteHad no idea it had another name, thanks Brisbane Baker! Yes, total nostalgia for me, too, Katy. Marisa, you have to cut it at an angle to keep everything in tact...I'm not sure of the physics behind it, though, it has something to do with the cookies standing on their edges? But if you cut it just so, you still get those great stripes! And by the second cut, you lose the triangle. Oh my gosh, that ice cream looks heavenly (I'm also a sucker for all things ice cream)!
ReplyDeleteI've never made this. It looks beautiful and sounds simple! REAL whipped cream is the ONLY way to go! Mmmmmmmm! :)
ReplyDeleteMy son's birthday cake every year and he just turned 28!
ReplyDeleteThis looks amazing!.. I can almost taste the ice cream melting in my mouth... great pics!!
ReplyDeleteBlessings-
AManda
so funny! My kids love ice box cake, but we do it with graham crackers and chocolate pudding. I bet your version is delicious!!!
ReplyDeleteCan't wait to try it!
Look so yummy! I wish I can have a bite^^
ReplyDeleteAt our grocery store, those wafers are always on the end cap by the ICE CREAM! It took me ages to find them the first time!!!
ReplyDeleteGirl you are BAD for my hips. Now I need to eat something sweet AND gosh, I Want ice cream!
ReplyDeleteok, all this talk about the yumminess is making me want to make a whole OTHER one! In the ice cream aisle, Bridget? oy, way to confuse shoppers. Sometimes they are easy for me to find, other times impossible. I think their existence confuses the market chains. I always buy them if I happen upon them, just in case they are nowhere to be found when I really need them (as has happened many times)
ReplyDeleteWhat a great blog! You have the cutest cookies and marshmallows!! I hafta watch your blog now. :3
ReplyDeleteMuch love.
I just have to say how much I love your blog! I received your book for Christmas and have been making decorated cookies nonstop! Thank you for all the inspiration!
ReplyDeleteAnd you cake looks delicious!
This is called a "chocolate log" in my house. And it's usually one long cylinder of gooey goodness. So good!
ReplyDeleteThank You sooo much. I have plans to make this cake tomorrow. Yet I have not made it since I was a kid, (I am 50+). Therefore, I could not remember exactly how to construct the log and the cookie box directions are vague. Your diagram has helped me so much, again thanks.
ReplyDeleteIn my family we use to use graham crackers and whip cream. And because graham crackers are bigger, they were turned the other way (parallel to the ends) so the long side of a graham cracker was the width of the cake. My English grandmother would make it for all her kid's birthdays (as they all happened to be born in July, the hottest month of the year in New York and she didn't want to heat up the oven).
ReplyDeletehi! i'm from Tasmania Aust...when we make this for adults to eat we brush the bisciuts with a little rum in milk...not too much as this made the biscuits soggy..a bit naughty but nice....thanks for reminding me..I'll have to make this again now...
ReplyDeleteOh, I like the idea of graham crackers! I might try that. And of course add rum. Adding rum to anything is a good idea.
ReplyDeleteThis has always been my brother's birthday cake request since he was a little boy. Seems a shame we eat it only once a year...because it really is that good!!!
ReplyDeleteHow long can it sit in the fridge? I'd like to make it tonight but dont want it to be soggy tomorrow evening.
ReplyDeleteThe Nabisco recipe suggests 4 to 6 hours ahead of time make it, which is ideal, but I always make mine the night before serving and it works great. Then, the day after the party, I'll eat the leftovers, but definitely past its prime by then. The meaning behind the "ice box cake" is that the time in the fridge encourages the moisture from the cream to seep into the cookies, turning them into cake (or turning them soggy, in essence). So the moisture is a good thing. Just don't want too much of a good thing. But the night before should be fine :)
ReplyDeleteYour awesome! Thanks!
ReplyDelete