Russian Honey Cake with Cooked Flour Frosting - Medovik - a beautiful cake for a special occasion.
Today is a very special day, my blog's 1-year anniversary, which I am celebrating by baking a very special honey cake with a very special cooked flour frosting. You should definitely make it at least once in your lifetime - just to see how great this frosting is! My mom has been using this frosting made with flour and milk all along for the last 40 years! And it's my mom's recipe that I am sharing here - a recipe for my favorite Russian honey cake with cooked flour frosting - also known as Medovik Tort.
Yes, a year ago today I started this site, working on the very first recipe which I published on August 29th, 2012 - Thai red curry sauce with quinoa. Unbelievable that it's been already a year: surely, a lot has been done, quite a few recipes have been published, I've "met" and discovered so many great and talented food bloggers, and I've learned a whole deal about food blogging. Yet, it feels like I've only touched the tip of the iceberg: I want to publish more recipes more often, I want to connect more with other food bloggers through comments, social media. I need to learn so many new things, and I want to do so much more! And, the most important thing, I want to balance it better with the rest of my life, because there is so little time, especially with a family, a full-time job, friends, and, supposedly, a regular work-out schedule. I want to do more, but sometimes I feel lost as to when and how to manage it all! I welcome any tips and suggestions. ๐
But, let's go back to this amazing Russian honey cake with an amazing cooked flour frosting, shall we? Growing up, this was the cake that my mom would make every year for special occasions, and since it's a 1-year birthday of my blog, it is only appropriate to celebrate it with this cake, isn't it?
This honey cake is definitely a celebratory cake, perfect for parties, birthdays, or anniversaries! I urge you to try it, if only to get a taste of this delicious frosting made from flour and milk - one of the best you'll ever try! It's much lighter than buttercream frosting, as it uses less butter because we're using flour/milk slurry as a thickening agent or butter-replacement here. The cooked flour frosting is also amazingly easy to spread and pipe. All-in-all it's just a great, lighter cake frosting!
The cooked flour frosting is essentially made by cooking flour and milk mixture, constantly stirring, on low-medium or even high-medium heat until it really thickens and all lumps dissolve. Separately, room temperature butter and white sugar are beaten really well, using electrical mixer. Then, the cooled flour/milk concoction is gradually added to the butter/sugar mixture and beaten until very creamy and smooth.
It's a very special cake, and I loved it since I was a kid. Even though it's called honey cake, a relatively small amount of honey is used: only ยผ cup for the cake batter, and there is no honey in the frosting cream. Yet, even this small amount of honey gives this very subtle and delicious flavor to the whole cake. And, don't forget that you will spread this cake with the most amazing cake frosting made from a slurry of milk and flour!
Russian Honey Cake - Medovik
Ingredients
Cake:
- 1 cup sugar
- ยผ cup honey
- 8 tablespoons butter
- 2 eggs
- 1.5 teaspoon baking powder
- 4 cups all-purpose flour
Cooked flour frosting / Cream:
- 2 cups milk
- 1 cup all-purpose flour , bleached flour
- 1 cup white sugar
- 1 cup unsalted butter (2 sticks)
Instructions
Cake:
- Preheat oven to 350 F.
- In a medium pan, add 1 cup sugar, ยผ cup honey and 1 stick butter – heat it up on low heat until everything is blended well together: honey softens up and sugar dissolves.
- In a large mixing bowl, whisk 2 eggs and 1.5 teaspoon baking powder until well combined. Add heated honey mixture from step 2 to the eggs mixture and stir until everything is well incorporated. Let the mixture cool down. When the mixture has cooled off, add 4 cups flour and whisk until just combined. You will have a pretty thick cake batter.
- Divide the cake batter in 4 portions, because we will have 4 layers of cake. Line 2 cookie sheets with foil, spray with non-stick spray. Using your hands, roll out the the first layer of the cake batter onto the lined cookie sheet, spreading the batter across the sheet. I usually run my hands under cold water, shake off some excess water and use wet hands to handle the dough – that way it doesn’t stick to your fingers. I actually use my hands to spread the batter across a cookie sheet and form a rectangle. I repeatedly rinse my hands with cold water (shaking off excessive water) to help spread the batter. Roll out the second layer of the cake batter onto the second cookie sheet sprayed with non-stick spray. Bake both sheets at the same time for 15 minutes at 350 F. When they are done, they should turn golden brown color. Remove from oven and remove the foil with the cake layer onto the cold surface to cool off.
- In the same manner as described, prepare the 2 remaining layers of the cake batter on the same cooking sheets, using new sheets of aluminum foil. Also, bake for 15 minutes. Let all 4 layers cool completely. Trim the edges so that all layers are the same size.
- Using food processor, finely chop the edges you just sliced off to create finely crumbled mixture which you will use to decorate the cake in the final step.
Cooked Flour Frosting:
- In a medium mixing bowl, whisk 2 cups of milk with 1 cup of flour until very well combined. The mixture in its thickness should resemble crepe batter (if you ever made one :)). It is very important that you use all-purpose white bleached flour! If you use unbleached flour, your frosting will not be white in the end!
- Add this mixture to a small pan and heat it up on low-medium heat, until mixture thickens and starts boiling, constantly stirring. At this point your mixture will start thickening really fast and will not be liquid any more – it will turn into very thick dough-like mixture, and will have lots of big clumps – that’s OK. Remove from heat, and continue stirring the hot thick mixture until all clumps dissolve – and they will dissolve easily at this point. You will have a nice slurry of flour and milk. Continue stirring the mixture until it somewhat cools down – it will help prevent it from sticking it to the bottom of the pan. It will be pretty hard to stir it as the mixture should be very thick. Allow this slurry mixture to completely cool down, occasionally stirring. You might even put it in the refrigerator.
- In a large mixing bowl, using electric mixer, beat 2 sticks of butter with 1 cup of sugar until very creamy and white.
- When the slurry of flour and milk from step 1 is cooled, add it gradually to the large mixing bowl with butter/sugar mixture, and continue beating, using electric mixer, until well incorporated and thick. Place the cream in the refrigerator to cool further.
Assemble the cake:
- Place one of the four cake layers on a large serving platter, spread โ th of the cream over the top. Place the other cake layer on top; spread another โ th of the cream over the top. Repeat with 2 remaining layers.
- Spread the remaining cream over the the four sides of the assembled cake. Sprinkle finely crumbled mixture (That you made in the food processor earlier) all over the top and the sides of the cake. Keep the cake in the refrigerator, and it only gets better the next day, when the cake layers soak up some of the cream and puff up, making the cake even taller.
Nutrition
Nutrition Disclaimer:
The nutritional information on this website is only an estimate and is provided for convenience and as a courtesy only. The accuracy of the nutritional information for any recipe on this site is not guaranteed. It should not be used as a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.
Ari @ Ari's Menu
What a unique recipe!! I've never seen anything like it, and it looks delish!
Julia
Yes, it's quite unique and very tasty! And, the Pioneer Woman made this frosting too! ๐
Kiran @ KiranTarun.com
Happy Blogiversary my dear. And what a delicious cake for celebration ๐
Julia
Kiran, thank you! ๐
Juliana Walters
One more question, if it's OK. Did you use a plugin for you recipe index? If so, which one? Thanks!
Julia
Juliana, no I did not use a plugin! I searched, and I searched, and I couldn't find anything. Maybe I did not search enough. In the end, I just created thumbnails myself with links to the categories.
Juliana Walters
Julia, I have no idea how anyone juggles blogging with the rest of their life stuff. All I know is that I really enjoy it so I'll continue to do it.
But, if someone ever does give you some good advice about it you should share it with the rest of us. Did you do your header design. I think it is beautiful! And your cake is gorgeous!
Rachel Cotterill
I had a very similar-looking cake in Estonia, called meekook. I've been planning to make it ever since so I will have to try your recipe! ๐
Julia
I just looked up meekook - it does look so similar to this honey cake! ๐
Julia
Thank you, John! Baking this cake was a pure pleasure for me since I got to eat most of it! ๐
john@kitchenriffs
Happy first year! And thanks for baking this cake to celebrate! I've not tasted one of these, and it's a wonderful looking cake. Truly excellent - thanks.
Natasha @ The Cake Merchant
Happy Blogiversary, Julia! This cake looks wonderful, and I love your new blog design!
Julia
Natasha, thank you! ๐
Patty
Congratulations on your one year anniversary!! Your blog is beautiful and recipes always delicious ๐ How interesting that you've made a cake frosting using cooked flour - I'm sure it tastes amazing on your lovely cake ๐
Julia
Patty, thank you! ๐ Always very happy to see comments from you. You know how much I adore your blog and your recipes - I pin them all the time! ๐
Angie
Happy one year blog anniversary!
Thank you so much for this recipe! I tried honey cake once in a cafe in Hamburg and was searching all over for this recipe. Finally I think this is the closest I could get to the recipe to this cake!
Julia
Thank you, Angie :). Oh yes, honey cake flavor is unforgettable! That's why I want to keep making more and more of this cake! ๐
Marina | Let the Baking Begin
Wow Julie! Such a successful year you had! Happy blogoversary!
I love medivik but have never made it myself. I think it's time for me to tackle this already)))
Your cakes looks wonderful! . So this cream that you mention is actually like a custard without eggs, right? My mom made it with cream of wheat, since its also a wheat derivative, so it probably tastes similarly to yours? Here's the one i made with somilar frosting ... http://letthebakingbeginblog.com/2009/02/holiday-cake-ะฟัะฐะทะดะฝะตัะฝัะน-ัะพัั/
Once again, happy blogoversary!
Julia
Thank you, Marina, ๐ for your very sweet words. I looked at your recipe, and yes your mom's frosting using "manka" is very similar to this one. It's exactly the same concept, except you're using "manka", and I am using flour. Then this slurry is added to the butter and sugar (already beaten with mixer). That recipe you sent me to looks so good with all that meringue ! ๐ I love meringue cakes - my aunt used to make this huge meringue cake with "drunken cherries" all over it and cream in between - yum!
Shashi @ http://runninsrilankan.com
So glad I stumbled by your blog today - HAPPY BLOGVESSARY!!!
This cake looks devine! I could just face plant right into it!
Julia
Haha! ๐ Thank you Shashi!
Ashley @ Wishes and Dishes
Happy one year blogoversary to you!!!!!!!!!! Beautiful cake!
Julia
Thank you, Ashley! ๐
violeta
Wow Julia,your posts are like torture! ๐ I want to eat your cakes so bad every time I see them. They look so delicious!!!
I'll definitely try this recipe,but I must buy bleached flour!:)
Happy bloggiversary!
Julia
Thank you, Violeta. ๐ I just love your blog and your beautifully styled photos!
veganmiam.com
Happy 1-year anniversary and your Thai red curry with quinoa sounds so yummy! Yummy on a Russian cake! I would love to veganize some Russian desserts someday soon!
Julia
Thank you! ๐