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 😉
Hey!
I tried this recipe twice nd liked it…
Initially it was too sour for us even when we used just 2 cups sour cream instead of d 4 cups mentioned here… But the cake was soft and yummy…
So today i tried the frosting with just 1 cup of sour cream…. It tasted great but the frosting was soo much like liquid and it didnt stay thick between layerz.. so my cake became hard…
I want to try this once more since i liked ur recipe.. can u tell what adjustments i shd make to d recipe, to use just 1 cup sour cream so dat its soft, yet not sour…
Hi Merin, The cake layers will be hard until you let them sit in the refrigerator to soften overnight. The cake layers are like cookies and you need that sour cream to soften the layers – the cake layers absorb alot of the cream, which is also why it it’s important for it to be runny and not thick. Have you tried the cake the next day or are you serving it soon after completion?
Yes.. i tried it next day only.. but it was stil hard… The only change i made is reducing sour cream to make it less sour..
And i baked both sides of those layers… Cud dat b d problem..?
Hi Merin, You only need to bake one side of the cake layer. Did you flip them over and bake twice? It is possible that the layers got too dry but it’s also possible that reducing the amount of sour cream reduced the overall moisture that the cake had to absorb to make it softer.
I am having a problem with the eggs scrambling as I am whisking vigorously. Any tips on what I can do to prevent this? Do I need to let the mixture cool for a few minutes for attempting to whisk? I added as little as a teaspoon of beaten eggs while whisking and they still scrambled. Thanks in advance for your help.
Hi Nur, make sure you remove the pan from the heat and then start adding the eggs in a very thin stream while whisking vigorously (you need to be simultaneously whisking while adding the egg). You can wait for the mixture to cool down a few minutes which may help but it does need to be hot while you’re adding the egg.
Thanks so much! It turned out just wonderful!
Dear Natasha, I have eaten this Russian honey cake several times at a Russian restaurant in London and once tried it too from Harrods as my family and I just adore it!!!
My challenge was to try and make it myself so after browsing around for a while I found your recipe and besides being 10pm I decided to tackled it and prepare it for Father’s Day.
I had so much fun making it and left it to rest according to your instructionsand wow was it a winner!!! It tasted exactly like the one from the Russian restaurant and Harrods and my guests and family just loved it! Can’t wait to make it again. Thank you so much for this recipe!
Oh that’s just awesome! Thank you so much for the wonderful review 🙂 Way to go baking this at 10pm!! 🙂
So tasty! I have made the medovik first time and i want to tell that this cake is perfect! thank you so much!!!!i am from Russia and i know the real taste of this cake as i have tryed Medovik at cafe Pushkin and otheres but this one is unreal!!
Hi Anna! Thank you so much – seriously that is quite a compliment! 🙂
Hi Natasha, can u make a video of this cake? This. Cake looks very good. 🙂
Olga, thank you for the suggestion. I will add it to my list 😁.
Hi, this cake is delicious!!!but what is the difference between this cake and your mom’s spartak cake, I’m confused if this is also considered spartak cake?
Veronica, this is more referred to as Medovik because it has honey base.
Hai.i made the honey cake and it tastes really great but its really hard like biscuit.how do you get the soft texture for this.should we use a lot of cream?
Hi Fathima, the layers are supposed to be hard and cookie like when they dry it. It is really important to let this cake sit overnight before cutting into it to allow the frosting to soften the layers. Did you try to eat it right away?
I tried it after 4 hrs.Maybe because of that.I’ll try it one more time.Thanks for the tip.
Hi,My mum, used to do this cake and she let this cake sit in freezer 7 days and then it is superdelicious. But most people I know is not strong enough to let it sit that long 🙂
Ha! Yes that does require a fair amount of self control! 😉
Can i use plain all purpose flour because I could not find unbleached flour? Thank you.
Yes, that will work fine 🙂
Dear Natasha
Firstly, I love your recipes. I had made the tres leches cake for my friends birthday and she loved it.. Thanks.
About this recipe, I was just surfing for other recipes for traditional honey cake and in one of them, it was written that the instead of complete sour cream for frosting, do a layer of sour cream and sweetened condensed milk.
What is the difference with that and your frosting, kindly clarify. Thanks.
Munira 🙂
Hi Munira, there are so many different frostings out there for honey cake. It is just a different version. If you wanted to test it with this recipe, it would probably work fine but keep in mind that condensed milk might make it slightly runnier.
Hi Natasha, thanks for the reply. I will try the cake and frosting depends on what I have available at home. 🙂
hi ,any comments on the use of cream cheese spread instead of sour cream??
Hi Akum, here is a similar cake that I’ve made with a cream cheese based spread that would work for this cake also.
It’s so fun to watch people taste this cake for the first time – they take a bite, chew for a moment, and then stop and remain completely still, their eyes slowly widening as they realize they’re eating one of the most delicious things they’ve ever put in their mouths! Thankfully I made two of these cakes for a party for 22 people I had recently, because every last one of them begged me for slices to take home! This recipe is a WINNER! Thank you so much!!!!
Wow thank you for such a fantastic review! I love how you described that. Spot on!! 🙂
Can I store the layers in tightly closed plastic bag for one day ? Thx
Katya, once cake layers are at room temperature, you can wrap them loosely in the plastic wrap and store them at room temp.
My mom uses a fork to make small inprints so that the layers would come out even and not bubbly
Thanks for sharing that tip!
I made this early yesterday. A friend asked me to bake it for her mother’s 70th birthday next week and I had never heard of this cake before. I did a little research and settled on this recipe. I knew I’d better do a trial run. I got home from work late and figured my cake had enough time to soak up the deliciousness, so my husband and I dug right in. We both ate two pieces. It was delicious! So happy I took the time to make it! It’ll definitely get made again! Thank you for the great recipe and instructions! I look forward to trying more of your yummy treats!
I’m so happy you and your husband both liked it!! Thank you so much for sharing that with us 🙂
I have made this cake twice already and I LOOOOOOVE it. I’m not a huge desert person but honestly when it isn’t sitting in my fridge, I miss it. It’s kind of a lot of work to make in comparison to the traditional American sponge stuff 🙂 but it is sOOO worth it.
Really thank you so much for having all the ratios correctly measured out and the recipes carefully tested so they all turn out right the first time. Really appreciate all the hard work you do so I can just log into your website, find the recipe I need and prepare it. 🙂 Love all your recipes!
Ksenia, I’m so inspired reading your review. Thank you!
For the cream, I found that using a stick of unsalted butter, and one package of cream cheese, and 1 can of sweetened condensed milk with either heavy whipping cream or a tub of whipped cream is a good alternative.
That does sound really good! Thank you so much for sharing!
Hello,
Good day, as much I wanna try your recipe, I was wondering if, I could use sour yogurt instead of sour cream?
There’s no store I can get it in here (Dubai), at least not anywhere near me.
Thank you.
HI, I haven’t tried substituting with plain yogurt but I think it’s worth an experiment. I would recommend getting a full fat yogurt and really a Greek yogurt would probably work better since regular yogurt might be a bit too loose to stay on the cake. Again, I haven’t tested it that way but if I did, that is what I would try – plain full fat Greek yogurt.
Sour cream is available in Choitram’s, Spinneys, Lulu, Carrefour and other big supermarkets. Both local and imported brands.
To prevent the layers from forming bubbles, poke the dough all over with fork, before baking it. That should solve the issue.
Natashaa thank u sooo much dear its a super cake. Everyone loved the cake . Got 💯marks 😀
I’m so happy everyone loved it! Thank you for sharing that with us 🙂
I made it today ☺️Tomorrow i will tell u the result
Awesome! I hope you enjoy it! 🙂