Death certificates for Blake, 14 and brother Tristen, 13, show their cause of death as being "ligature strangulation".
The boys' deaths were registered three weeks after they died in hospital following an incident at a house in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, on the morning of May 24, this year.
Barrass sobbed in court last month when she, along with family member Brandon Machin, pleaded guilty to murdering Tristen and Blake.
Both also pleaded guilty to conspiracy to murder six of Barrass's children, including Tristen and Blake.
Post-mortem examinations were carried out on the brothers - but the results were not given at the opening of an inquest into their deaths.
The brief inquest hearing at Sheffield Coroners' Court on June 5 did hear that Tristen was pronounced dead at 9.14am and Blake died 12 minutes later.
The court heard that all of the surviving children are under the age of 13.
It can also be revealed that evil Barrass made a sick 'murder boast' on Facebook just months before killing her two children.
The 34-year-old posted a chilling quote from Stephen King's Under the Dome to her Facebook page which read: 'Murder is like potato chips; You can't stop with just one'.
The sick post was one of several macabre posts about death she made over several months before the double murder.
Another picture shows a Grim Reaper with a bloodstained scythe points at you with the caption: "Coming for you...".
Barrass cried throughout the 20-minute hearing at Sheffield Crown Court and was separated from Machin, who showed no emotion, by three security guards. She was told she could be jailed for the rest of her life.
Judge Jeremy Richardson QC told the pair they will be sentenced on November 12 and said: "No words of mine can ever fully reflect the enormity of what you have both done.
"The crimes you have committed quite frankly speak for themselves. The murder of two children.
"The attempted murder of four children and the over-arching conspiracy to murder those children.
"I repeat, those crimes speak for themselves.
"I have little doubt that each of you will in due course be sentenced to several terms of life imprisonment.
"This may well be a case, but it's a matter for the judge, where a whole life order is imposed."
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