This honey cake is so soft and fantastic. The honey baked into the cake layers pairs perfectly with the simple sour cream frosting.
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For my own safety, I’ve been delivering quarters of this goodness to various family members and I’ve received rave reviews across the board. It stays amazing in the fridge for a several days (the longest we’ve tested was 4 days), so this is also a great make-ahead cake. Woot!
It’s definitely a special occasion cake and will WOW your crowd, but it’s easier to make than typical Russian honey cakes that require a double boiler. This one’s not that sensitive, making it more attainable for everyone. Woot! Woot!
Honey Cake Layers Ingredients:
4 Tbsp (1/4 cup) honey
3/4 cup granulated sugar
2 Tbsp unsalted butter
3 large eggs, room temperature, beaten with a fork
1 tsp baking soda
3 cups all-purpose flour (I used unbleached, organic) *measured correctly
Sour Cream Frosting Ingredients:
32 oz sour cream
2 cups powdered sugar
1 cup heavy whipping cream
For the topping:
1/2 lb Fresh Berries, optional
How to Make a Honey Cake:
1. Add 3/4 cup sugar, 1/4 cup honey and 2 Tbsp unsalted butter to a medium sauce pan and melt them together over medium/low heat, whisking occasionally until sugar is melted (5-7 mins). Don’t put them over high heat or they may scorch to the bottom.
2. As soon as the sugar is dissolved, remove from heat and while it’s still hot, add in your beaten eggs in a slow steady stream while whisking vigorously until all of your eggs are incorporated (whisk constantly so you don’t end up with scrambled eggs).
3. Whisk in the baking soda until no lumps remain, then fold in your 3 cups flour 1/2 cup at a time with a spatula until the dough reaches a clay consistency and doesn’t stick to your hands. Mine took exactly 3 cups flour (measured precisely, scraping off the top of the cup). Watch our easy video tutorial on how to measure correctly!
4. Cut the dough into 8 equal pieces and move on to the next step right away (these roll out best when the dough is still warm)
5. On a well-floured surface, roll each piece out into a thin 9″ circle (about 1/8″ thick). You can sprinkle the top with a little flour too to keep dough from sticking to your rolling pin.
Place a 9″ plate or base from a springform mold over your rolled dough and trace around it with a pizza cutter to get a perfect circle. Keep the scraps for later.
Transfer the dough to a large sheet of parchment paper and bake 2 at a time at 350˚F for 4-5 minutes or until golden. Transfer to a wire rack and let cool completely before stacking. Repeat with remaining layers
6. Finally bake the scraps separated evenly on a re-used sheet of parchment.Once the scraps are baked, cooled and firm, you can crush them with a rolling pin or pulse them in a food processor until you have fine crumbs.
Tips for Success:
Roll out the next layers while the first ones are in the oven and total combined baking time shouldn’t take more than 25-ish minutes. Some of mine bubbled up a little on top which is fine since after it’s frosted, it won’t make a difference. I deflated any real whopping bubbles after they came out of the oven. Oh and I re-used my parchment paper (because I’m frugal that way).
If you don’t have a baking sheet large enough to place the parchment paper on, just bake directly on the rack (that’s what I did!)
How to make the frosting:
1. Beat 1 cup heavy cream until fluffy and stiff peaks form (1-2 min on high speed).
2. In a separate bowl, whisk together 32 oz sour cream with 2 cups powdered sugar. Fold the whipped cream into the sour cream and you have your frosting. Refrigerate until ready to use.
Assembling your Cake:
1. Spread about 1/3 cup frosting on each cake layer (the frosting will be loose, but don’t skimp on it since the cake needs to absorb some of the cream to become ultra soft. Press the cake layers down gently as you go to keep the layers from having air gaps. Frost the top and sides with the remaining frosting
2. Dust the top and sides with your breadcrumbs, then cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight. This cake needs time to absorb some of the cream and soften, so be patient. It’s worth the wait!
Here’s the Print-friendly for your recipe books:
8-Layer Honey Cake Recipe (Medovik)

Ingredients
Cake Layers Ingredients:
- 4 Tbsp honey, (1/4 cup)
- 3/4 cup granulated sugar
- 2 Tbsp unsalted butter
- 3 large eggs, room temperature, beaten with a fork
- 1 tsp baking soda
- 3 cups all-purpose flour, I used unbleached, organic
Sour Cream Frosting Ingredients:
- 32 oz sour cream
- 2 cups powdered sugar
- 1 cup heavy whipping cream
For the topping:
- 1/2 lb strawberries, optional
Instructions
How to Make The Cake Layers:
- Add 3/4 cup sugar, 1/4 cup honey and 2 Tbsp unsalted butter to a medium sauce pan and melt them together over medium/low heat, whisking occasionally until sugar is melted (5-7 mins). Don't put them over high heat or they may scorch to the bottom.
- As soon as the sugar is dissolved, remove from heat and while it's still hot, add in your beaten eggs in a slow steady stream while whisking vigorously until all of your eggs are incorporated (whisk constantly so you don't end up with scrambled eggs).
- Whisk in the baking soda until no lumps remain, then fold in your 3 cups flour 1/2 cup at a time with a spatula until the dough reaches a clay consistency and doesn't stick to your hands. Mine took exactly 3 cups flour (measured precisely, scraping off the top of the cup).
- Cut the dough into 8 equal pieces and move on to the next step right away (these roll out best when the dough is still warm)
- On a well-floured surface, roll each piece out into a thin 9" circle (about 1/8" thick). You can sprinkle the top with a little flour too to keep dough from sticking to your rolling pin. Place a 9" plate or base from a springform mold over your rolled dough and trace around it with a pizza cutter to get a perfect circle. Keep the scraps for later. Transfer the dough to a large sheet of parchment paper and bake 2 at a time at 350˚F for 4-5 minutes or until golden. Transfer to a wire rack and let cool completely before stacking. Repeat with remaining layers.
- Finally bake the scraps separated evenly on a re-used sheet of parchment. Once the scraps are baked, cooled and firm, you can crush them with a rolling pin or pulse them in a food processor until you have fine crumbs.
How to make the frosting:
- Beat 1 cup heavy cream until fluffy and stiff peaks form (1-2 min on high speed).
- In a separate bowl, whisk together 32 oz sour cream with 2 cups powdered sugar. Fold the whipped cream into the sour cream and you have your frosting. Refrigerate until ready to use.
Assembling your Cake:
- Spread about 1/3 cup frosting on each cake layer (the frosting will be loose, but don't skimp on it since the cake needs to absorb some of the cream to become ultra soft. Press the cake layers down gently as you go to keep the layers from having air gaps. Frost the top and sides with the remaining frosting.
- Dust the top and sides with your breadcrumbs, then cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight. This cake needs time to absorb some of the cream and soften, so be patient. It's worth the wait!
Notes
If you don't have a baking sheet large enough to place the parchment paper on, just bake directly on the rack (that's what I did!)
Nutrition Per Serving
(And the Pinterest friendly). Thanks so much for sharing this recipe with your friends and family. Good things are meant to be shared 😉
is it possible to minus 2 tbsp. flour and use 2 tbsp cocoa instead as well as omiting the honey and use sweetened condensed milk, Sort of a mix between a spartak and medovik?
Hi Farah, I honestly haven’t tried that yet to advise. If you do an experiment, please share with us how it goes.
Natasha, thank you for this recipe! I have made it many times and it is always a hit. Everyone in my family loves it and it always goes fast. I will add that i do end up using about 1/2 cup more flour because with 3 cups the dough is still very sticky and hard to work with. Anyway, I Love this cake, it is my favorite after your spartak recipe. 🙂
(PS. currently baking my last layer for this cake as I write this…)
I’m so glad you enjoyed it! Thank you so much for sharing that with me.`
Fantastic recipe! I’d been searching for a Honey Cake recipe for a long time, but most involve water baths etc. Too complicated for my liking! This takes a little time to make, but the results are worth it. I’ve made this cake three times and each time was delicious.
A couple of notes:
* I found that I required 3.5 cups of flour for the dough / batter. 3 was still quite sticky / soft, but an extra half cup gave it the clay-y texture you described.
* The last time I attempted the recipe, I ended up rolling / cutting the circles directly onto floured parchment / baking paper, which I then placed onto a baking tray – this reduced the chance of me stretching out the circular slices by moving them after cutting
* Normal sugar works just as well for the icing – as I found out when I realised at the last step that I was out of icing sugar! It’s a little runnier but still tastes perfect, and when left for a day or two to absorb into the cake layers…yum, yum, yum!
Hello Tim, thank you so much for your wonderful review and suggestions. These are definitely helpful, we appreciate you sharing this with us!
Thank you for this great recipe, i didnt have enough sour cream so I halved the filling and it was still lovely and cakey😍
I’m so glad you enjoyed it!
Hello! I made a mistake with this cake. I forgot my partners birthday date and made it too early. So I’m wondering if it will be okay after refrigerating for 4 days? Please help! I went to so much effort …
Hi Charlotte, it stays amazing in the fridge for several days (the longest we’ve tested was 4 days), so this is also a great make-ahead cake.
Hi Natasha was just mixing the dough manually and turned out so sticky and hard what do you think i can do or the problem is
Hi Guss, when you measure the flour, are you spooning it into the measuring cup and then scraping off the top? It sounds like it is most likely an issue with the flour measurements. Also, are you making any substitutions in the recipe or using a different kind of flour? Different sized eggs?
I made this for my wife’s birthday, and it was delicious. I didn’t have enough ground-up scraps to cover the entire cake, so I used honey-flavored graham crackers to make up the difference.
I’m so happy you enjoyed that. Thank you for sharing that with us! Happy Birthday to your wife!
Hi Natasha, hope you’re doing well. I need to try this recipe asap! But now total lockdown i’m having problems with finding sour cream.
Is there anything else i can use that isn’t that different or a way i can make at home.
Thank you!!
Hi Gus, you might try the cream from our Chocolate Spartak layer cake or my Vanilla Spartak to see if those ingredients are more readily available.
Hi Natasha, always love making this but the cream comes out too runny at times for me and its difficult to spread – any thoughts on what could be going wrong and what I should be adding to make it more solid/spreadable?
Thanks in Advance
Hi, make sure you are using a thick sour cream. There are some runny varieties and you would want to avoid those.
ah ok cool, didnt even think of that. Thanks so much.
I thought my frosting was too runny too, but it really thickened up after sitting in the fridge.
First time making this cake and it was worth it in the end! The only issue I came across was that my egg started cooking when I poured it into the sugar mixture but I frantically started beating it and it came out fine 😂
I had a couple clumps in the end but I put it through a sift and everything went better after that. Family enjoyed the cake, will be making it again!
Hi Elizabeth, I’m glad you were able to make it work! Thank you for sharing your experience with us and I hope you and your family will love every recipe that you will try.
Hi Natasha, I have an odd one, my husband doesn’t like honey.. I know it doesn’t make sense to make a honey cake without honey but is there any chance I can substitute it with anything else? I mean, I think I know the answer but thought to still ask 🤪
Hello Rasma, I honestly haven’t tried anything else to advise. You can also check out our other cake recipes here.
Made this for my kids today. It was a hit. I had to use like 1/2 cup more of flour for some reason but still your instructions were spot on. Thank you for posting this recipe!
You’re welcome! I’m so happy you all enjoyed it, Susan!
I have made this cake several times and it has always been a huge hit.
The sour cream filling is the perfect balance for the honey layers.
The recipe is straight forward and easy to follow.
Do that and you will be delighted with the end result as I was.
Ian
I’m so happy you enjoyed that. Thank you for sharing that with us!
Hi Natasha! Thanks for sharing this wonderful recipe. Made it for New Year’s eve and was a hit! My Russian husband loved it! Its so delicious! Happy New Year from a Russian-Mexican Family living in Italy 🇮🇹 😍
Happy New year, Mariolis! I’m happy you enjoyed this recipe!
Pretty easy recipe! First time trying it, I baked my first 2 rounds on parchment directly on center rack if oven and 3 min in they burned! Therefore I was short on cake layers so I whipped up a 2nd batch and ended up with 1- 8 layer cake for New Years and 1- 6 layer cake for us! I didn’t mind but lesson learned I switched to putting on parchment on a baking sheet! Also, I poke the dough with a fork before baking because the first burned 2 were bubbled all over without it. I decorated the sides with crumbs and top left it white with a sugared berry wreath design. It was hard to roll out the dough large enough but I was able to. My rounds were a little off on sizing after cooking. I wonder if next time I cut after its cooked if Quick enough so they are really symmetrical? Looks and tastes amazing! Thank you! Love trying all of your recipes!
Hi Talyn, make sure to bake on regular conventional oven settings and not convection as they definitely shouldn’t be burning after 3 minutes at 350˚F. Also be sure the oven isn’t set on broil. I hope that helps for next time! It’s best to cut before cooking or you risk breaking the cake layer.
Another recipe that turned out perfect on a first try!
I just added a little less sugar, and favored more whipped cream than sour cream (personal preference). I also added prunes into every other layer.
I love Natasha’s recipes – they are always easy and have a lot of options, just makes you want to try it!
I’m so happy you love our recipes! Thank you so much for the fantastic review and your encouraging words. I am smiling big reading your comment
Thank you, thank you, thank you! Have made this cake now 6-7 times, it turns out phenomenal every time. Anyone who has ever tried it, loooves it. Easy, exactly as described, we fight over every last slice. It has very nostalgic ukrainian flavor, love, love, love it!!
That’s just awesome! Thank you for sharing your wonderful review!
Hi Natasha,
Can I bake the cake layers before and then assemble with frosting couple days later?
Hi Viktoria, yes that will work great. The cake layers can be made ahead.
After I originally commented I clicked the -Notify me when new feedback are added- checkbox and now every time a remark is added I get four emails with the same comment. Is there any manner you possibly can remove me from that service? Thanks!
Hi Craig, that feature has been turned off on my site for some time so I’m not sure why you would still be getting alerts. There should be a link towards the bottom of one of the emails that says “unsubscribe me”. Click on that and hopefully, that will resolve it.
Made this cake for my birthday and it is delicious!! And it looks so impressive with all the layers 😃 Was just wondering, would it be possible to add the metric units of the flour to the recipe? Where I am from a cup is 250ml, but know that some countries use 240ml. Thanks for a great recipe!!
Thanks for your great feedback, Elaine. You can actually convert this to grams by clicking on Jump to recipe and then click Metric. This Ingedient Weight Chart can also help.