Sometime over the Christmas period I purchased a litre of eggnog at the grocery store. I had in mind that I was going to make am Eggnog Cake for us to enjoy. It never got done.
I kept thinking about making it, but other things kept getting in the way. Every time I opened the refrigerator I would spy it sitting there and think to myself I must make that cake. Finally I just grabbed the bull by the horns and made it.
Eggnog was not an ingredient which we had readily available in the UK. You could get it at some American supply companies, but always at a premium price I was not really willing to pay.
I did make it from scratch several times and it was very good. I used to look at recipes for eggnog cake online and think I wanted to make and would love to make one. My dream finally came true.
I do apologize in advance for the poor quality of these photos. I had to take them at night in the kitchen light. I still think they turned out fairly well irrespective of that fact.
My photos have never really been the best anyways. I know you will forgive me if these are less than perfect! Don't let that dissuade you from trying this lovely cake however. You will be missing out on a real gem!
Its a lovely dense cake, very similar to a pound cake. In fact I took my regular pound cake recipe and substituted eggnog for the cream in the cake. They are about the same consistency.
The eggnog of course has a flavor that isn't there in the cream. So if you are in the UK, you can use cream instead of eggnog and just increase the spices in the cake batter. You will still have a very good cake.
Use double or heavy cream. It will work beautifully. But, of course, if you have eggnog, do use that.
Have you ever wondered why it is that you have to beat your eggs and sugar together until light and fluffy when you are making a cake? Its very simple really.
This act of creaming/beating the butter and sugar together actually helps to melt the sugar into the butter. It helps it to dissolve. Have you ever noticed a cake come out of the oven looking somewhat "freckly" on the surface?
This happens when the sugar hasn't melted enough into the butter. If you don't really beat them together and give the sugar a chance to dissolve, you end up with granular sugar which leaves darkish freckles/speckles on the surface of the cake.
Have you ever wondered why it is that you need to beat eggs into a cake one at a time? There is a very good reason for this action.
This is to help prevent the butter/sugar mixture from curdling. Adding them slowly and one at a time prevents this from happening. You don't want your cake batter to curdle. A curdled batter produces a cake with an uneven texture.
This is because the fat hasn't been evenly dispersed throughout the batter. When cake batter is properly emulsified, it traps air into the batter, producing a cake with a lighter, more evenly baked finish.
If your batter starts to curdle when you are beating in the eggs, this can be rectified by beating in a tablespoonful of the flour required for the cake, just until the batter emulsifies again. Generally speaking this will correct it.
For better cakes it is also better if you can have everything at room temperature. I know we are often in a hurry and don't want to wait for this to happen, but if you know you are going to be baking a cake today, it is quite easy to take the refrigerated ingredients out of the fridge and leave them on the counter for about an hour before you start.
These simple steps taken always result in a cake with a better texture and finish.
I have seen quite a few eggnog cake recipes out there that require the use of a cake mix. I am sure they are very good. I didn't want to use a cake mix. I really wanted to make a from scratch cake.
Over in the UK, especially when I first moved over there, cake mixes were not readily available. Even when they became more available they were not really available in many different flavors.
I know that cake mixes are really very convenient to use, and doctored up cake mix cakes can be very nice. Chocolate pound cake for instance, which uses a cake mix and a packet of chocolate pudding mix, is dense and delicious.
Generally speaking however, I prefer to make my cakes from scratch. That way I know how fresh my baking powder is and, well, I just like the finished product better. To me they just taste, feel and look better.
I don't think my grandmother ever used a cake mix in her life. If it was good enough for Grandma, its good enough for me. In any case I hope you will give this cake a go, even if it is well past Christmas, and if you want to wait until next Christmas then I hope you will try it then.
I think you will be very happy with the end results. My sister, who doesn't generally tend to eat a lot when it comes to sweet things, has really enjoyed this cake. That makes me very happy. And like I said, if you don't have any eggnog, you can use cream in its place or even undiluted evaporated milk. Just amp up the cinnamon and eggnog.
You will still have a very delicious, beautiful cake that the whole family will enjoy!
Eggnog Bundt Cake
Yield: 8-10
Author: Marie Rayner
prep time: 10 Mincook time: 45 Mininactive time: 10 Mintotal time: 1 H & 4 M
This wonderfully flavoured cake is dense like a pound cake and incredibly moist. i thought it was quite delicious and a great way to use up some eggnog we had in the refrigerator.
Ingredients
For the cake:
1/2 cup (120g) butter at room temperature
1 cup (190g) granulated sugar
2 large free range eggs
1/2 tsp pure vanilla
1/4 sp salt
2 cups (280g) all purpose flour
4 tsp. Baking powder
1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
1/4 tsp ground nutmeg
1 cup (240ml) full fat eggnog
For the glaze:
1 cup (130g) icing sugar, sifted
1/4 tsp vanilla
1/4 tsp ground cinnamon
1/8 tsp ground nutmeg
milk to thin
Instructions
Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4. Butter a medium sized bundt pan and dust with flour, shaking out any excess flour.
Cream the butter and sugar together until light and fluffy. Beat in the vanilla and then beat in the eggs, one at a time.
Sift together the flour, salt, baking powder, cinnamon and ground nutmeg. Add to the creamed mixture in thirds, alternating with the eggnog. Mix together until well combined and the pour into the prepared bundt pan.
Bake in the preheated oven for 45 minutes until a toothpick inserted in the centre comes out clean and the top spings back when lightly touched.
Let cool in the pan for 10 minutes then tip out onto a wire rack to finish cooling completely.
To make the glaze, whisk together all of the ingredients only adding enough milk to give you an icing thin/thick enough to drizzle decoratively over the cake. Allow to set.
Cut into wedges to serve.
Did you make this recipe?
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Hi Marie your cake looks delicious. I've never seen eggnog in the shops here or been offered it at Christmas so I was surprised to read it's based on an old English drink called posset according to Wikipedia. The nearest thing I've had is a Snowball-a mixture of lemonade and advocaat which is very sweet and sickly imo and very different to eggnog I would imagine.
I have heard that advocaat tastes quite a bit like egg nog. You can use double cream and still have a delicious most cake with lush cinnamon and nutmeg flavours! xoxo
I've never had eggnog. Christmas was in the middle of summer in Australia, so really no time to be drinking creamy, egg based drinks. Not when it was often over 40°C! And here they don't have it either, preferring a warm spiced mulled wine or a soft drink they call "julmust" for Christmas drinking.
But the cake does sound lovely and I'm more than used to substituting ingredients not found here. Or like you, making things from scratch.
Your baking tips are really good - just the sort of thing I learned from my mother, grandmother and aunties when I was growing up. I think that is something people miss out on these days. I have such fond memories of afternoons spent in a lovely fragrant kitchen with these amazing women and learning how to cook and bake. Those lessons have stayed with me always and I've passed them on to my children and now on to my own grandchild. I think they are more inclined to follow the recipe if they know why it is so. I hope that soon you will be able to bake with your grandchildren as well and pass on all of your incredible knowledge.
I think I would have really liked being a teacher Marie, especially a Home Economics teacher! I love sharing what I ‘now with others, not in a know it all way, but in a helpful way. I can’t wait to cook with the grandchildren! Xoxo
I have never had egg nog but Advocaat was a favourite of my mum's at Christmas time. That and Babycham! Your cake looks wonderful and I shall bookmark the recipe. I also love your smallish Bundt tin, some of mine are so huge, take a huge amount of mixture and a lot of eating!
I think eggnog is a love it or loathe it thing. I am from the love camp! My mother would sometimes make it for us as a treat using raw eggs. We never got sick thank goodness! Boy did it taste good though! Xoxo
You mentioned that you would have loved to be a Home Ec teacher. You would have been an excellent teacher. I loved Home Ec. I would go home and try to recreate what we had learned in class that day. Sometimes hard to do since I wasn't the grocery shopper. I remember making boiled radishes one time. That did not become a family favourite. Happy Birthday to your Dad. Love and hugs, Elaine
Thanks so much Elaine, I am glad and lucky at least that I get to share here. That makes me happy. Dad had a lovely birthday, thanks!! I can't imagine boiled radishes tasting good, but I could be wrong! LOL love and hugs, xoxo
Ohhhh that cake looks delicious. I am an eggnog fan like you. However, where I live you can only find it in the stores around Christmas. By the middle of January it has completely disappeared! I remember as a kid, I used to make it from raw eggs for New Year's Eve for my dad and me. Never got sick on it, either. Haven't tried doing that for years. I've heard you can make it by cooking an egg mixture, but it really seems like too much work!
Thanks Marty! Mom used to make us raw eggnog all the time and we never got sick thankfully! I cringe when I think of it now! Its gone here by mid January as well, thankfully I had that one litre in the refrigerator! xoxo
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This is a book I wrote several years ago, published by Passageway Press. I am incredibly proud of this accomplishment. It is now out of print, but you can still find used copies for sale here and there. If you have a copy of it, hang onto it because they are very rare.
Welcome, I'm Marie
Canadian lover of all things British. I cook every day and like to share it with you!
A third of my life was spent living in the UK. I learned to love the people, the country and the cuisine. I have always been an Anglophile. You will find plenty of traditional British recipes here in my English Kitchen. There are lots of North American recipes also, but then again, I am a Canadian by birth. I like to think of my page as a happy mix of both. If you are looking for something and cannot find it, don't be afraid to ask! I am always happy to help and point you in the right direction, even if it exists on another page, or in one of my many cookbooks.
Hi Marie your cake looks delicious. I've never seen eggnog in the shops here or been offered it at Christmas so I was surprised to read it's based on an old English drink called posset according to Wikipedia. The nearest thing I've had is a Snowball-a mixture of lemonade and advocaat which is very sweet and sickly imo and very different to eggnog I would imagine.
ReplyDeleteI have heard that advocaat tastes quite a bit like egg nog. You can use double cream and still have a delicious most cake with lush cinnamon and nutmeg flavours! xoxo
DeleteMoist not most, lol
DeleteI've never had eggnog. Christmas was in the middle of summer in Australia, so really no time to be drinking creamy, egg based drinks. Not when it was often over 40°C! And here they don't have it either, preferring a warm spiced mulled wine or a soft drink they call "julmust" for Christmas drinking.
ReplyDeleteBut the cake does sound lovely and I'm more than used to substituting ingredients not found here. Or like you, making things from scratch.
Your baking tips are really good - just the sort of thing I learned from my mother, grandmother and aunties when I was growing up. I think that is something people miss out on these days. I have such fond memories of afternoons spent in a lovely fragrant kitchen with these amazing women and learning how to cook and bake. Those lessons have stayed with me always and I've passed them on to my children and now on to my own grandchild. I think they are more inclined to follow the recipe if they know why it is so. I hope that soon you will be able to bake with your grandchildren as well and pass on all of your incredible knowledge.
I think I would have really liked being a teacher Marie, especially a Home Economics teacher! I love sharing what I ‘now with others, not in a know it all way, but in a helpful way. I can’t wait to cook with the grandchildren! Xoxo
DeleteI have never had egg nog but Advocaat was a favourite of my mum's at Christmas time. That and Babycham! Your cake looks wonderful and I shall bookmark the recipe. I also love your smallish Bundt tin, some of mine are so huge, take a huge amount of mixture and a lot of eating!
ReplyDeleteI think eggnog is a love it or loathe it thing. I am from the love camp! My mother would sometimes make it for us as a treat using raw eggs. We never got sick thank goodness! Boy did it taste good though! Xoxo
DeleteIsn’t this recipe missing the baking powder amount?
ReplyDeleteWell spotted! I have added it! Thank you so much! 4 tsp.
DeleteYou mentioned that you would have loved to be a Home Ec teacher. You would have been an excellent teacher. I loved Home Ec. I would go home and try to recreate what we had learned in class that day. Sometimes hard to do since I wasn't the grocery shopper. I remember making boiled radishes one time. That did not become a family favourite. Happy Birthday to your Dad. Love and hugs, Elaine
ReplyDeleteThanks so much Elaine, I am glad and lucky at least that I get to share here. That makes me happy. Dad had a lovely birthday, thanks!! I can't imagine boiled radishes tasting good, but I could be wrong! LOL love and hugs, xoxo
DeleteThis looks super tasty, Marie! Thanks!
ReplyDeleteYou are welcome! Thanks so much Jeanie! xoxo
DeleteOhhhh that cake looks delicious. I am an eggnog fan like you. However, where I live you can only find it in the stores around Christmas. By the middle of January it has completely disappeared! I remember as a kid, I used to make it from raw eggs for New Year's Eve for my dad and me. Never got sick on it, either. Haven't tried doing that for years. I've heard you can make it by cooking an egg mixture, but it really seems like too much work!
ReplyDeleteThanks Marty! Mom used to make us raw eggnog all the time and we never got sick thankfully! I cringe when I think of it now! Its gone here by mid January as well, thankfully I had that one litre in the refrigerator! xoxo
Delete