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 😉
Had to use more flour to get the dough to a roll out consistency. Closer to 4 cups. You must have been packing your flour pretty tight. Also, the frosting is a disaster. Waaayyy too runny with a liquid to powdered sugar ratio like that. Should cut the sour cream in HALF if not in a quarter! I had to junk the batch and make a different recipe.
Hi Arthur,
The frosting is not supposed to be thick like a normal cake frosting. The cake layers absorb the moisture form the frosting as it sits and that is what makes the cake soft. Did you use a regular sour cream (several people have tried using the Canadian runnier kind of frosting and it’s just too loose). Also, I scooped the flour into the measuring cup and scraped off the top as usual. Did you possibly use a liquid ingredients measuring cup? Also, what kind of flour did you use?
Hi Natasha
Thanks so much for this easy recipe !
My family and I enjoyed it
I added half a teaspoon of orange zest to the dough and it came out DELICIOUS
Love this recipe !!!!
Jerusha, thank you for such a great review and you are welcome :).
Hi Natasha ! This is such a delicious cake!! Thank you for this recipe. It’s a lot of work but it is so worth it. I have one question though. Do you think it would be okay to bake off the layers one day and put it all together the next day? I want to make it for a party I’m throwing and I won’t have enough time to do all the steps in one evening. Do you think splitting the work between two days would be okay?
Absolutely and I think that’s a great idea! You can even pre-make the cake layers a few days in advance then wrap them loosely in a plastic bag and leave them at room temperature until you’re ready to use them. The layers end up like a cookie that softens with the cream after it’s assembled.
I love this cake. Just got one from a bakery this afternoon, but really want to make on my own. Recipe and photos are beautiful. Will be making soon! So glad I found your blog!
I hope you love it just as much if not more than than the bakery one! 🙂
I’m am certain I will!! Sorry wrote my wrong website before!!
This is such a great and easy recipe. I tried it last weekend for Father’s Day and everyone loved it. Thanks 🙂
Thank you Mariya for such a great review and you are welcome :).
Omg I love this cake! I used to go to the local Russian bakery and get myself one slice of this once in a while when I was a kid, but the shop closed down and never knew what the name was! Thanks so much for posting this recipe.
Also, I work for a foodtech company called Chicory and we would love to have you as a recipe partner. Are you interested?
Thank you Chi Tran 🙂 you can email me more details if you’d like. My email is Natashaskitchen @yahoo .com
Lovely! I sent you an email 2s ago. Can’t wait to see your reply
Natasha- I’ve made this cake over and over (and OVER!!!) again for both Russians and Americans…from patients at home health care in the summer to college get-togethers to church picnics… I throw in some cream cheese to the cream to make it slightly tangy. I’ve had to quit gluten due to autoimmunity, but that doesn’t stop me from baking this cake for others. Everyone really really loves it. Thank you for the recipe!!!
Thank you so much for the fantastic review! Are you using gluten-free flour for this?
Actually- I just use regular flour but don’t eat any. I just love watching people’s first reactions when they have a piece. And then have another one. 🙂
That definitely is a good feeling to watch others make it. If you ever tried this with the gluten-free flour, let me know how it works out. My sister is also gluten-free and I’m sure she would love to know also. 🙂
the worst cake ive ever cooked… you should at least make a video…
Have you seen my video for the chocolate spartak cake? It’s similar to this one. What problems did you run into with the recipe?
I have done the honey cake 3 times and won a local competition for the taste category. I have found that if the layers become a bit misshapen cut them to size after the frosting has been absorbed over night in the fridge.
I am going to try it with lemon curd instead of honey to see how that works.
That is fantastic!!! Thank you so much for sharing that with me. Let me know how the lemon curd works out!
hi Natasha,
this looks lovely!
is it okay to add cream cheese instead of the sour cream? will that be fine? Also, do we need butter for the cream filling? i am planning to make this day after! 🙂
To be honest, I haven’t tested that substitution and with baking being so much a science, I hesitate to recommend it with out trying it first.
Delicious! Like many of the other reviewers, I was only able to make 6 of the cookie layers. I also used more than 3 cups of flour to get the batter less sticky. Additionally, I had to let the sugar/honey/butter mixture cool some before whisking in the eggs. I had scrambles on my first try, but when I let the mixture cool for about 3-5 minutes (it was still warm), I was able to whisk in the eggs and obtain the pudding type consistency that I think it is supposed to be. Fairly labor intensive, but well worth the work for a special occasion &/or family!!
Thank you so much for sharing your review :). I’m glad you enjoyed the cake. I think it makes a difference with how wide and thin you roll the cake layers, but a 6 layer cake is just as stunning 🙂
Hi Natasha, I was wondering if you can convert the ingredients into grams/ ml
Many thanks
Eram
Hi Eram, I don’t usually provide measurements because it would take twice as long to weigh all of the ingredients . The best way to get those conversions would be to either search for the conversion calculators on google or just weighing out the ingredients with a kitchen scale.
Natasha,
I’ve never baked cakes in my life till today. This morning I visited your site and got medovik recipe. It turned out really pretty and wasn’t hard at all. Thanks a bunch for clear step by step recipes
Warmly, Lilly
I’m so happy to hear that!! Seriously, I’m grinning big :). Thanks for sharing that with me Lilly
Hey Natasha usually how many day ahead do you bake this cake. I want to make it for Easter Sunday thinking about baking the layers on Monday. When should I frost it? Thank you so much.
You’ll want to frost the cake the day before and then refrigerate overnight for the layers to soften. You can make the cake layers on Monday, that’s perfectly fine. They turn out like cookies after they cool to room temperature so you just need to put them in a plastic bag and leave them in the pantry until you’re ready to frost them.
Hi Natasha, I made this cake today and it took only 1 hour start to finish! WOW!. I have a few tips, that I think may save some time. On step 5 and 6, instead of removing the scraps when you cut out the circle, leave them on the tray and bake with each circle. This way you wont have to bake them separately at the end. Also I used my blender on “crush ice” setting to crumble the scraps, worked great! Thank you for this super-easy tasty recipe!
Thank you so much for sharing your time saving tips! That is awesome that you got it done in 1 hour! Way to go! 🙂
I normally suck at baking, but this turned out to be such an achievement. It was so lovely! Thanks to your easy, step-by-step and very organised recipe! Your version of sour cream + whip cream frosting is fantastic, so much better than using toffee condensed milk (some recipes out there uses that and I think its an overkill). Gonna do this many more times and get ppl around me introduced to medovik. Much love from Singapore! <3
I’m so happy for your success! Thank you so much for sharing that with me :). Hello from Idaho!
Thank for tis lovely recipe,my hus lyk it soo much, its really tasty and soft…..
I’m so happy you enjoyed it! Thanks for letting me know 🙂
Hello Natascha, thank you a lot for this recipe. I add a little crushed wallnuts with the breadcrumbs in mine, and this has become one of my family’s favorite cake.
We have an ongoing argument with my mother, who lived in eastern Europe, that this cake is called Smetanik and not Medovik. Her recipe of Medovik involves fruits between the cake layers and was passed on by my grandmother. Do you know anything about the names being used interchangeably?
Nethertheless, she has adopted your recipe as her own and even started doing it without me! Thank you very much. We very much love your blog!
Greetings from France,
Alexandrina and Aliona.
I’ve heard it both ways also. Do her cake layers have honey in them? Usually if there is no honey in the layers and the frosting is made of a sour cream base, then it’s more of a smetanik. It’s kind of like the argument of spartak versus napoleon cake. They are called by both :). Her cake sounds really really good! Do you have the recipe you could share? If not, I understand 🙂
I do agree with your mum. this one is Smetanik, Medovik is with other cream – Zavarnoy
Many thanks for this wonderful recipe, Natasha! This has been the first cake I have made in my life and it is a total success. Everyone absolutely loved it! I have to make another one now, will make ‘Drunken Cherry’ next! Thank you! ))
I’m so happy to hear that. Thank you for sharing your success story with me 🙂 – music to my ears 🙂
We loved this cake! It turned out really well. I ended up using more flour to get the dough to the right consistency. Thank you for the recipe 🙂
I’m so glad you enjoyed the cake! Thanks Silvia 🙂
Natasha! I made this cake yesterday (for my own birthday!) and it’s soooo delicious! I read some of the other comments; not sure why many people have problems with it, but I followed your instructions and everything went smoothly 🙂 The honey layers were very easy to roll and the whole cake came together very quickly. It’s delicious! I love how light it is and not heavy…mmmmmm. I think another slice is calling my name :))
Julia, thank you so much for such a great review. Blessings to you on this new year of your life :).