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 😉
Hi Natasha,
I have made this cake twice already and it is absolutely delicious. Thank you for the recipes. I have 2 questions if you don’t mind. One is how long in advance can I bake the layers. If I let them cool completely and store in a ziploc type bag, do you think 3-4 days before frosting will be OK?
My other question is how can I make this dairy free?
Thank yoiu very much
Hi Ailuy, That would work with the cake layers, just let them get completely to room temp before covering to store at room temperature.
Thank you. Any thought on dairy free?
I haven’t tried this dairy free so I’m not sure. Sorry I can’t be more help with that. Maybe someone else has tried? Thanks in advance! 🙂
Hi Olga, I am going to be attempting to make this for the first time this weekend, however, if I made it on the Sunday would it last until Tuesday? Or am I better off making it on the Monday? Thanks
Sorry I meant *Natasha, I got distracted reading the below comment!!
Ha ha, oh ok, I’m glad you clarified, I thought you were asking another reader so I just approved it. 🙂 That would still work to make it ahead, just be sure to let the layers get completely to room temperature before you stack them then cover loosely in a plastic bag and keep at room temperature. they basically turn into dry cookies that soften with the cream when assembled 🙂
Can I bake the layers ahead of time like maybe the day before I assemble? And if so how would you store them. I’m trying to prep as much as I can before I assemble.
Hi Heather, yes that will work great. Let the layers come to room temperature then place in a plastic bag on the counter overnight at room temperature.
Hi all. I really love the cake, it is the best I ever eat for my whole life!(I am 62 OMG!)
Your recipe is EXACTLY as my mom baked for special events when I was a child (and later of course).
I was just looking for the Medovnik recipe in Google, because of course I do not remember my mother’s one (Dah!). Anyway, I read that all over the Internet this recipe present as it was invented in Prague in 1997. WHAT?????
At least 50 years ago it was very popular and baked in Russia (all over the country, including Ukraina and Sibiria ( I am from tiny northen sibitian city with 9 months winter) I swear and I want to know everybody who will get the best ever cake, that is a Russian guft to the world, not Prague, or from whatever contry it is a capital today. As always russian who gave a lot for free.
Thank for reading
Hello Olga! I’m so glad to hear how much you love this recipe! It is one of my favs too! Thanks for sharing your excellent review! 🙂
Great cake recipe. Followed it excactly and it turned out perfect. It is very labor intensive. You can skip “arm day” at the gym the week you roll these layers out. 😂
It’s definitely a labor of love! I’m so glad to hear you enjoy the recipe! Thanks for sharing Tania!
Oh wow!! Could your oven be broken? It really should only take 4-5 minutes. 🙂
Hi Natasha. I have made this cake so many times i can not even count. AMAZING. I love all of your recipes. I moved to the states when i was 14 (13 years ago) and i love that these recipes are familiar. Keep up the good work! You are doing a fantastic job.
I’m glad you love the cake recipe Kateryna! Thanks for following and sharing your fantastic review!
I have tried to make this honeycake twice now, and each time I just get a very sticky mesh that is almost impossible to roll out. I have always made sure that I am using the right weight of ingredients and that I have not scrambled the eggs. Where am I going wrong.?
Hi Sue, 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?
Hi Natasha,
I have carefully translated all ingredients to English equivalent measurements and have not altered any of the ingredients from the recipe. I also have added more flour but still cannot get a firm dough. Can you advise anything more?
Thanks Sue Jones
Hi Sue, It is hard to say without being there. There may have been a variance in ingredient measurements when converting or did you possibly use a different type of flour? The dough should form a ball and come together but it still should be very soft and pliable – I don’t know if that helps at all.
Although labour intensive, this cake was absolutely worth all the effort – so so delicious! How should it be stored – kept in the fridge I presume? And roughly how long would you say it would last for?
Thanks in advance x
Hi Sarah, I would store it in the fridge since the frosting is dairy based and it will hold up for 3-5 days. Also, I recommend keeping it covered in the refrigerator so it does not absorb food smells.
This is the cake my hubby requests for his birthday every year…its so yummy and so Ukrainian! I love it. Thanks Natasha!
You’re welcome Nataliya! That’s so nice to hear! Thanks for sharing your great review! 😀
Except it’s Russian.
I made this over the weekend and it was seriously the best cake I have ever baked! I’ve never had so many compliments. I’ll definitely be making this again!
That’s aweseome Steph! Thanks for sharing your wonderful review! 😀
We had our first ever Honey Layer cake experience when visiting beautiful Prague in 2016. We loved the cake so much that when we returned to Australia we just had to find a recipe and my search led us here. This recipe so very close to what we had in Prague.
It has been an instant hit since the first time we made it and is now requested for most family celebrations.
Thank you.
One request for your recipes – it would be helpful if measurement were also provided in metric.
Hi Jim, I am trying to keep that in mind with baked goods with more recent recipes. With an archive of over 700 recipes, it would be a really big job to go in and include that. That would more likely happen when we are able to get more help, but it is a great suggestion! 🙂
I am so happy to hear that and it is quite a compliment! 🙂 Thank you so much for the wonderful review!
hii natasha. iam confused about the amount of the sour cream. how many cups will be 32 ounce. plz help
Shaz, 32oz of sour cream equals 4 cups. Hope that helps 😀
Hello Natasha!
I would like to correct you-it is medovník not medovik. Trust me 🙂
Btw ignore my bad english please xx
Hi Lucie, we have always called it Medovik. Maybe it’s called medovnik in other parts of Eastern Europe? It’s definitely possible! 🙂
Lucie, cesky tomu rikame medovnik a rusky Je to medovik. Mala zmena, stejny vysledek😉
Delicious cake Natasha!!! Thank you
Hi, Natasha! Can I substitute baking powder for soda?? If so, in what amount?
Thank you!
Hi Marina, this recipe was developed with baking soda activated by honey. I haven’t tested that substitution and since baking is so much a science, I really can’t guess how it would affect the cake. Sorry I can’t be more helpful, but without testing otherwise, I can only recommend baking soda.
I made this cake it looked great and everybody liked 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻Thank you for all your tasty 😋 recipes.
Oh that is so great! I’m so glad everyone liked the cake 🙂 Thank you for sharing your fantastic review! 🙂
Cant wait to use your recipe and make this cake for my moms birthday coming up. What do you cover the cake with, which breadcrumbs are you talking about?
Hi Vitaliya, I use the scraps left over from the cake and I put them into the food processor to turn into crumbs. You can also use crushed graham crackers if you prefer )
Hi Natasha,
Can I make the cake layers 3 days in advance and then assemble it?
Hi Olga, yes that should work fine. Cool to room temp then cover loosely in a plastic bag and store at room temperature in a low-humidity room.
Hi Natasha, is it okay to change sour cream to yogurt? As it quite difficult to find it in my place. Tq
Hi Jools, I haven’t tried that substitution so I can’t say for sure how it would change the flavor. I think it would work with a thick yogurt, like a whole fat Greek yogurt. Regular yogurt would probably be too loose.
Can I use heavy whipping cream as frosting and how. Thanks
Hi Snizhana, the cream does have heavy cream in it but I don’t think whipping cream alone would work as a frosting for this cake. The cake layers need to absorb some of the cream and I’m nut not sure that plain whipped cream would work to flavor and soften the layers and still have cream between the layers after it has softened.