A chemical property of a slice of chocolate cake is its ability to undergo fermentation when exposed to yeast or certain bacteria, which can lead to changes in flavor and texture over time. Additionally, the cake's ingredients, such as sugar and cocoa, can react with heat during baking, resulting in the Maillard reaction that enhances its flavor and color. These properties highlight how the cake can change its composition under different conditions.
That depends oh how big is the slice and how many are there but i think this site might be helpful: http://caloriecount.about.com/calories-stater-bros-double-chocolate-cake-i115093
about 260 calories per slice.
There are about 20 grams in an average sized slice of chocolate cake. :D
Chocolate cake is a complex mixture, not a compound; and the preparation involve many chemical reactions.
It depends a lot on factors of the cake, such as icing, layers, fillings, decorations (sprinkles, shaved chocolate, piping, ect.) and they type of cake (milk chocolate, baking chocolate, dark chocolate, ect.). Generally, a small slice of fairly simple and plain chocolate cake will be about 200 calories. A large slice can be about 400 calories. But a more complex cake can be up to 700 or 800 calories a slice.
300-400
You can make a mint and chocolate slice or cake.
Chocolate cake is a food that players can make with a cooking level of 50, heals 150 life poins when consumed and yields 180 cooking experience for making a cake and 30 cooking experience for adding the chocolate. Each slice of chocolate cake heals 50 life points when consumed, which is 10 more than a plain cake. When one bite is taken out, it becomes a 2/3 chocolate cake. When two bites are eaten, it becomes a chocolate slice. Sources: http://runescape.wikia.com/wiki/Chocolate_cake
2 cups of pure cane sugar
That depends on the individual chocolate cake recipe.
Appetite
The average chocolate bar has 210 calories. The average slice of chocolate cake (commercially prepared, with frosting) has about 250 calories. Just remember: these numbers aren't exact, and the actual numbers can vary depending on the brand, recipe, etc.