russian honey cake

smittenkitchen.com
Your recipes

Total: 150

Servings: 10

Cost: $2.96 /serving

russian honey cake

Ingredients

Remove All · Remove Spices · Remove Staples

Export 7 ingredients for grocery delivery

Instructions

Helping creators monetize
Show ad-free recipes at the top of any site

The day before, get ready: Heat oven to 350 degrees F. Get 2 baking sheets (or even better, round pizza pans) down, more if you have them. Tear off 6 sheets of parchment paper large enough to have a 9-inch circle on it.Make cookie/cake dough: In a medium-sized saucepan, combine the sugar, honey and butter over medium heat. Once simmering, cook for 3 to 4 minutes (no specific temperature needed), it should get a faint shade darker and smell wonderful. Whisk in baking soda.Remove from heat and set aside for 2 to 3 minutes. It’s not going to significantly cool off, just settle a little. Lightly beat your eggs in a spouted measuring cup (for easiest pouring) or small bowl. Take a deep breath. Whisking the honey mixture vigorously in the pot the whole time, drizzle the thinnest stream (think: 1/2 teaspoon at a time, that slowly) of the eggs into the honey mixture. Do not stop mixing. Continue until all of the eggs are thoroughly whisked in.Stir in the salt and vanilla and 3 cups (390 grams) of the flour with a spoon. The dough is going to be thick like a bread but you’ve got this. Stir in the last 1/2 cup of flour 1/4 cup at a time; you’ll get a bonus arm workout.Shape and bake the cookies/cakes: [Plus, a bunch more layer tips at the end.] Lightly flour your counter and divide the still-warm dough into 8 even pieces. Roll the first one between two sheets of parchment paper (no flouring needed) to a slightly-bigger-than-9-inch round. Remove top sheet of parchment paper. Very lightly dust the top with flour if you’re going to put something on it (such as the bottom of a 9-inch cake pan or the rim of a 9-inch bowl) to trim the shape to an even 9-inch circle. Save the trimmings — put them aside on one of the sheets of parchment paper, it’s fine if they overlap a little. Dock the circle all over with a fork. Slide your 9-inch round onto a baking sheet and bake for 6 to 7 minutes; it should feel firmish and get slightly darker at the edges. Slide the cookie onto a cooling rack. Go ahead and reuse the parchment for another layer.Meanwhile, while the first layer is baking, roll out your second piece so it’s ready to go into the oven as soon as the first comes out. If you’re making good time, get the third ready too and continue to bake them two at a time. Keep adding the unbaked cookie trimmings onto one piece of parchment paper. Repeat this process as you bake each round and you’ll have all 8 baked before you know it.Finally, take that last sheet of parchment with all of the cookie scraps on it and slide it onto a baking sheet and bake it, checking in at 4 minutes, because the thinnest scraps will want to burn quickly. By 5 minutes, all should be baked until pale golden. Let cool completely and save until you’re ready to decorate the cake tomorrow.Fill and frost the cake: Whisk sour cream and sweetened condensed milk together in a large bowl. Once cookies are cool, place a dab of the sour cream mixture on your cake plate and place the first cookie on top of it to help adhere it.Cut or tear one of your used pieces of parchment paper into strips and tuck them all around the underside of the cake to protect your cake plate. Trust me, if you do not do this, you will regret it.Scoop 3/4 cup sour cream mixture onto the center of your first cookie layer. Spread it only a little from the center, leaving a good 1- to 2-inch margin of unfrosted cookie. Stack the second cookie on top and repeat until you have 8 layers.This will quickly become a huge mess. The sour cream is going to spill out and down the sides anyway (hear hear for those paper strips) and you’re going to start yelling at me/drafting an angry comment in your head. It’s also going to want to slide around and not stay neatly stacked. It’s totally okay because the filling will thicken as it absorbs into the cookies. Put the cake in the fridge for a couple hours (1 to 3) and when you come back to it, nudge the stack gently back into place and use a spoon and icing spatula to scoop the spilled-out filling back up the sides and onto the top of the cake. Don’t worry about it looking neat. Let it chill overnight.The next day, finish the cake: Grind your baked, reserved cookie scraps in a blender or food processor, or bash them into crumbs in a bag with a rolling pin.Take your cake out and do one final frosting clean-up. Spread any newly puddled sour cream back up the sides and across the top. If you’d like to make a decoration on top of your cake, take one of those used pieces of parchment paper (see how much Deb hates wasting parchment) and cut a stencil with it. Place it gently on top of the cake.Use a small spoon to sprinkle the top and sides of the cake with the crumbs. In the coolest trick I saw on a cooking video, use a pastry brush (or extremely clean paintbrush, I won’t tell) to gently brush the crumbs off the stencil and across the cake in a thin layer. It sounds crazy but it works — on the sides too. Remove the stencil and parchment paper strips and look at that clean serving plate! (Bravo, you.)You can serve the cake right away, or keep it in the fridge for up to 5 days. When slicing, I found that a knife dipped in hot water made picture-perfect cuts.A bunch of extra dough and cake layer tips:The dough is a bit stiff, but it will stretch to the size you need with pressure. If you’re finding it to be a huge pain, that the dough clearly wants to go to 8 inches but not 9, just go ahead and make the cake 8 inches round. It will be just as good of a cake; the layers might need a single extra minute to bake.Ovens will vary, especially for such thin cookies, so keep an eye on the first round as of the 6-minute mark, checking in each minute after as it can brown very quickly, and then you’ll know how much time you need for the remaining ones.This dough is easiest to roll/softest when it’s still a little warm; if yours has cooled quickly, I found that you could put each piece in the microwave for 5 to 7 seconds (only!) to get it a touch warmer again, without prematurely baking the cookie.Go ahead and save all of those used pieces of parchment paper for the next step and beyond. We’re going to use them again.

Top similar recipes

Russian Honey Cake-image
trending681 views

Russian Honey Cake

allrecipes.com

4.8

(26)

45 minutes

Russian Honey Cake-image
trending372 views

Russian Honey Cake

cooking.nytimes.com

5.0

(758)

Russian Honey Cake-image
trending1087 views

Russian Honey Cake

momsdish.com

4.8

(2.0k)

90 minutes

Russian Honey Cake-image
trending282 views

Russian Honey Cake

foodiemail.com

45 minutes

Russian Honey Cake Medovik-image
trending816 views

Russian Honey Cake Medovik

vikalinka.com

5.0

(9)

120 minutes

Medovik Russian Honey Cake-image
trending684 views

Medovik Russian Honey Cake

michellebessudo.com

4.8

(9)

45 minutes

Russian Honey Cake (Medovik)-image
trending166 views

Russian Honey Cake (Medovik)

internationalcuisine.com

5.0

(3)

25 minutes

Medovik - Russian Honey Cake Recipe-image
trending913 views

Medovik - Russian Honey Cake Recipe

thecookingfoodie.com

4.0

(116)

2 hours

Easy Russian Honey Cake Recipe (Medovik)-image
trending694 views

Easy Russian Honey Cake Recipe (Med...

alyonascooking.com

4.6

(14)

28 minutes

The Most Amazing Russian Honey Cake-image
trending444 views

The Most Amazing Russian Honey Cake

cleobuttera.com

4.5

(276)

Russian Cake - Korolevskiy Cake-image
trending1017 views

Russian Cake - Korolevskiy Cake

letthebakingbegin.com

4.6

(9)

30 minutes

Pryaniki - Russian Honey Spice Cookies-image
trending218 views

Pryaniki - Russian Honey Spice Cook...

olgasflavorfactory.com

5.0

(2)

20 minutes

Pryaniki - Russian Honey Spice Cookies-image
trending621 views

Pryaniki - Russian Honey Spice Cook...

olgasflavorfactory.com

5.0

(2)

20 minutes

Russian Korolevsky Cake (King'S Cake)-image
trending480 views

Russian Korolevsky Cake (King'S Cak...

natashaskitchen.com

4.7

(19)

22 minutes

Russian Cake "Muraveinik" (Anthill Cake)-image
trending434 views

Russian Cake "Muraveinik" (Anthill ...

natashaskitchen.com

5.0

(11)

20 minutes

Sharlotka (Russian Apple Cake)-image
trending594 views

Sharlotka (Russian Apple Cake)

curiouscuisiniere.com

4.6

(62)

50 minutes

Honey Cake-image
trending366 views

Honey Cake

delish.com

Honey Cake-image
trending170 views

Honey Cake

preppykitchen.com

5.0

(4)

40 minutes

Honey Cake-image
trending146 views

Honey Cake

thepioneerwoman.com