This is the bundt I bring to every holiday gathering and church potluck where I want to look like I went to pastry school. Chocolate pecan bundt cake is the moist cocoa-rich showstopper that takes over every dessert table: sour-cream chocolate batter loaded with toasted buttery pecans, baked into dramatic bundt ridges, finished with a glossy dark-chocolate glaze that drips into every crevice. 90 minutes start to finish, serves 12, looks straight out of a Southern bakery window.
Fun fact: the bundt pan we know today was invented in 1950 by Minnesota’s Nordic Ware company, but it sat unsold for nearly two decades. It only became a cultural icon after a Tunnel of Fudge cake won second place in the 1966 Pillsbury Bake-Off — orders for bundt pans exploded, and today over 70 million bundt pans live in American kitchens. The fluted shape isn’t just pretty; the central tube ensures even baking for dense rich batters like chocolate.
Why this recipe works
Toast the pecans first. 8 minutes in a 350°F oven wakes up the pecan oils and gives them shatter-crisp texture. Raw pecans turn soggy in cake batter.
Sour cream + oil combo. Sour cream adds tang and tenderness; oil keeps it moist for 5 days. Butter-only bundts go dry in 48 hours.
Grease the pan obsessively. Use baking spray with flour OR brush every ridge with softened butter and dust with cocoa. A stuck bundt is a tragedy you only suffer once.
Ingredients
Serves 12 (10-cup bundt pan).
For the chocolate bundt
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
3/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder (natural)
2 tsp baking soda + 1 tsp salt
1 cup vegetable oil
2 cups granulated sugar
3 large eggs, room temp
1 cup sour cream, room temp
1 cup HOT brewed coffee (or hot water + 2 tsp espresso)
2 tsp vanilla extract
1 1/2 cups toasted pecans, roughly chopped
For the chocolate glaze
1 cup semi-sweet chocolate chips
1/2 cup heavy cream
1 tbsp corn syrup (for shine)
1/2 cup toasted pecan halves for garnish
Smart substitutions
No sour cream: Sub full-fat Greek yogurt 1:1
Different nuts: Sub walnuts, hazelnuts, or almonds for pecans
Caffeine-free: Use hot water + 1 tbsp instant decaf or just hot water
Powdered-sugar glaze: Sub 1 cup powdered sugar + 2 tbsp cocoa + 3 tbsp milk for ganache
Heat oven to 350°F. Spread pecans on a baking sheet and toast 7-8 minutes until fragrant. Set aside. Generously grease a 10-cup bundt pan with baking spray (the kind with flour) — get into every ridge. Dust with cocoa powder; tap out excess.
Step 2: Mix dry ingredients
In a large bowl, whisk flour, cocoa, baking soda, and salt until uniform — no cocoa clumps.
Step 3: Whisk wet ingredients
In a separate large bowl, whisk oil, sugar, eggs, sour cream, and vanilla until smooth and pale.
Step 4: Combine and add coffee
Pour wet into dry; whisk gently just until combined. Stream in hot coffee while whisking — batter becomes thin and that’s correct. Fold in chopped pecans with a spatula.
Step 5: Bake the bundt
Pour batter into prepared bundt pan, tap on counter to release air bubbles. Bake 55-65 minutes until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out with a few moist crumbs (not wet batter). Cool in pan 15 minutes exactly — too short and it crumbles, too long and it sticks.
Step 6: Glaze and finish
Invert onto a wire rack to cool completely. Make glaze: warm cream just below simmer, pour over chocolate chips and corn syrup, let sit 2 min, whisk smooth. Pour over cooled cake so glaze drips down ridges. Press pecan halves into glaze on top.
Nutrition information
Calories: 540 kcal per slice
Protein: 7 g
Carbohydrates: 60 g
Fat: 32 g
Iron: 15% DV (from cocoa)
Magnesium: 12% DV (from pecans)
Pro tips for the perfect bundt
Use a 10-cup pan exactly. A 12-cup pan gives a shorter cake; smaller pans overflow. Check capacity by filling with water if unsure.
15-minute cool is non-negotiable. Set a timer. Turn out at 15 minutes precisely — earlier crumbles, later sticks.
Toss chopped pecans in 1 tbsp flour. Keeps them suspended in the batter instead of sinking to the bottom of the bundt.
Tap pan on counter before baking. Releases air pockets that would create holes in the finished cake’s exterior.
Frequently asked questions
Why did mine stick to the pan?
Not enough grease in the ridges, or cooled too long (over 20 min) so the cake “sealed” to the pan. Use baking spray with flour and turn out at exactly 15 minutes. Plain butter often misses the deep ridges.
How long does it keep?
Room temp 4 days under a cake dome (the oil + sour cream combo keeps it moist). Refrigerator 1 week; let slices warm to room temp before serving. Bundt cakes age beautifully — flavor deepens by day 2.
Can I freeze it?
Yes — unglazed cake wrapped in plastic + foil freezes 3 months. Thaw at room temp, then glaze fresh. Glazed cake freezes 1 month; thaw overnight in fridge.
Can I taste the coffee?
No — the coffee only intensifies the chocolate flavor through “potentiation.” Even kids won’t detect it. Sub hot water if extremely sensitive, but flavor depth drops noticeably.
Can I make cupcakes from this batter?
Yes — fills about 30 standard cupcakes. Bake at 350°F for 18-20 min. Reduce pecans to 1 cup so they don’t overpower the smaller portion size.
What if I don’t have a bundt pan?
Bake in a 9×13 pan for 35-40 minutes, or two 9-inch round layers for 30-35 minutes. Won’t have the dramatic shape but flavor is identical. Glaze is great on sheet cake too.