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You have to make this chocolate Spartak layer cake for the holidays! This cake is a close relative of the wildly popular original Spartak cake I posted last year. I made the chocolate Spartak cake on Sunday and took it over to my parent’s house for dinner. It was my first time baking the chocolate Spartak which is now a family favorite and extended family favorite. No crumb was left behind (I was half hoping to take a slice of heaven home with me).
The room was buzzing with happy cake eaters – and my family is open and honest; they level with me if something needs to be scrapped.
This cake takes some effort, but it’s oh-so worth it! Big Thank you to Laura, one of my readers who shared her suggestions on rolling out the dough and using parchment paper. I love learning from you all!
What you will need for Chocolate Spartak Cake:
2 large sheets of parchment paper
round plate or the base of a 9″ springform pan
Ingredients for Chocolate Spartak Cake:
1 egg
1 cup sugar
4 Tbsp unsalted butter, softened
1/3 cup warm milk
1 tsp baking soda
2 cups minus 1 Tbsp all-purpose flour *measured correctly
1 1/2 Tbsp unsweetened cocoa
Ingredients for Chocolate Spartak Cream:
2 sticks (16 Tbsp) butter, softened at room temp
14 oz can sweetened condensed milk (raw/un-cooked)
8 oz package cream cheese, soft at room temp
3/4 cup of very cold heavy whipping cream
1 1/2 Tbsp powdered sugar
Watch How To Make Chocolate Spartak Cake:
How to Make Chocolate Spartak Cake Layers:
Preheat the Oven to 350 ° F at step 5 while your dough is standing 20 min.
1. Sift together 2 cups minus 1 Tbsp all-purpose flour with 1 1/2 tbsp cocoa.
2. Beat together 1 egg and 1 cup sugar with a whisk attachment of your stand mixer (medium speed, 6 min).
3. Add 4 Tbsp softened butter, warm milk, and baking soda. Mix on medium/high speed 3 min, until smooth (or mostly smooth).
4. Bring a medium/large pot of water to a boil. Place mixture in a glass bowl or medium sauce pan over the steam (not immersed in the water) for 10 min, stirring frequently.
5. Remove from heat and immediately stir in sifted flour & cocoa and mix well. (Add flour right away or you will ruin the dough and it may crack when you roll it out).Let stand 20 minutes; until dough is just warm; it thickens as it cools:
Note: It’s easier to roll out the dough while it’s still warm.
Preheat the Oven to 350 °F.
6. Place a heaping Tbsp over a large sheet of parchment paper. Sprinkle flour over the dough (so it doesn’t stick to your rolling pin) and roll it out to a very thin 9″ circle. Place your round dish over the dough and use a pizza slicer to cut out the circle. Pull the scraps away from the circle or they will bake into it. I was able to get two circles on one large sheet of parchment paper and baked them together. Bake the parchment paper with dough directly on the middle oven rack at 350˚F for 4-5 minutes until the edges barely start to brown (no need for a baking sheet). Don’t touch the top of the cake layer while it’s hot, or you’ll leave finger indents.
7. Place the baked scraps to a separate bowl; you’ll need them for the top. Transfer cake layers to a clean, dry surface. They can be stacked once they are cooled to room temp. You can also make the layers several days in advance and store them in plastic wrap until ready to frost. I’m frugal so I re-used each sheet of parchment paper a couple times and then kept it for a temporary cake decorating surface.
How to Make the cream/frosting:
1. Using the whisk attachment on your stand mixer, beat together 2 packages softened butter and 1 can sweetened condensed milk on medium speed 7 min, scraping down the bowl as needed. Goodness this by itself might make a luscious cupcake frosting!!
2. Mix in the softened cream cheese a little bit at a time until smooth (2-3 min). It’s important that the cream cheese is really soft or you might get small chunks of cream cheese in the frosting. Scrape down the bowl as needed.
3. In a separate bowl, beat very cold heavy whipping cream and 1 1/2 Tbsp powdered sugar on high speed (about 2 min) or until stiff peaks form. Fold whipped cream into the rest of the frosting until well blended.
Assembling Chocolate Spartak Cake:
1. Place your first layer over one of the sheets of parchment paper and spread enough frosting to cover the entire surface. Place the next layer on top and press it down with your hand so you don’t end up with air gaps. Repeat step one with all the layers. Finish by frosting the sides.
3. Use a rolling pin to crush the baked cake scraps you set aside (again, another good way to re-use that parchment paper!).
4. Generously sprinkle the crumbs over the top and sides. The sides are tough to put crumbs on. At one point I got frustrated and started throwing crumbs at the cake. Then I learned you can kind of toss the crumbs at the base up onto the cake by flicking the sides of the parchment paper; just do the best you can. Refrigerate overnight (it takes about 10 hours for the layers to soften).
It cleans up nice! 🙂
P.S. Do you know this cake as Spartak or Napoleon? It seems there are some differing opinions out there.
Chocolate Spartak Cake Recipe

Ingredients
Ingredients for Cake Layers:
- 1 egg
- 1 cup sugar
- 4 Tbsp unsalted butter, softened
- 1/3 cup warm milk
- 1 tsp baking soda
- 2 cups minus 1 tbsp all-purpose flour
- 1 1/2 Tbsp unsweetened cocoa
Ingredients for Spartak Cream
- 2 sticks, 16 Tbsp butter, softened at room temp
- 14 oz can sweetened condensed milk, (397 grams) raw/un-cooked
- 8 oz package cream cheese, soft at room temp
- 3/4 cup of very cold heavy whipping cream
- 1 1/2 Tbsp powdered sugar
Instructions
How to Make Spartak Cake Layers: Preheat the Oven to 350˚ F at step 5 while dough is cooling.
- Sift together 2 cups minus 1 tbsp flour with 1 1/2 Tbsp cocoa. Set aside.
- Beat together 1 egg and 1 cup sugar with whisk attachment on medium speed for 6 min.
- Add 4 Tbsp softened butter, warm milk, and baking soda. Mix on medium/high speed 3 min, until smooth.
- Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Place mixture in a glass bowl or medium sauce pan over the steam for 10 min, stirring frequently.
- Remove from heat and immediately add sifted flour and cocoa mixture.Stir until even consistency. (Add flour right away or you will ruin the dough). Let stand at room temp 20 min; until just warm. It thickens as it cools. It's easier to roll out dough if it's still warm. Preheat the Oven to 350˚ F.
- Place a heaping tbsp of dough over a large sheet of parchment paper. Sprinkle flour over the dough (so it doesn't stick to your rolling pin) and roll it out to a very thin 9" circle. Place your round dish over the dough and use a pizza slicer to cut out the circle. Push the scraps away from the circle or they will bake into it. I was able to get two circles on one large sheet of parchment paper and baked them together. Bake the parchment paper with dough directly on the middle oven rack at 350 for 4-5 min until edges just start to brown. Don't touch the tops of the layers while hot; it will indent. Reserve the baked scraps.
- Transfer layers to a clean, dry surface. They can be stacked once cooled to room temp. You can also make the layers several days in advance and store them in plastic wrap until ready to frost. You can re-use the parchment papers to roll out and bake all the layers.
How to Make the cream/frosting:
- With the whisk attachment, beat together 2 packages softened butter and 1 can sweetened condensed milk on medium speed for 7 min, scraping down the bowl as needed.
- Mix in the softened cream cheese a little bit at a time until smooth (2-3 min). It's important that the cream cheese is really soft or you might get small chunks of cream cheese in the frosting. Scrape down the bowl as needed.
- In a separate bowl, beat very cold heavy whipping cream and 1 1/2 tbsp powdered sugar on high speed (about 2 min) or until stiff peaks form. Fold whipped cream into the rest of the frosting until well blended.
Assembling the Cake:
- Place your first layer over one of the re-used sheets of parchment paper and spread enough frosting to cover the entire surface. Place the next layer on top and press it down with your hand so you don't have air gaps. Repeat step one with all the layers. Finish by frosting the sides.
- Over the second re-used sheet of parchment paper, use a rolling pin to crush the baked cake scraps.
- Generously sprinkle the crumbs over the top and sides. Refrigerate overnight (it takes about 10 hours for the layers to soften).
Hello Natasha:) Alot of the cakes on your website need cream cheese, (i love cream cheese) but i live in Ukraine and its SO expensive here 🙁 is there another ingridient that i can use instead of cream cheese?
The only thing I can think of that comes close is mascarpone cheese, but that is more expensive here in the states.
Thanx Natasha for your awesome recipes 😉
I use ur website a lot and I love it 😉
Will make spartak for New Years Eve 😉
Thank you so much.
That is a great choice for New Years! 🙂 Thank you so much for your sweet comment 🙂
Perfect recipe :)… And ur instructions are just too perfect.. Nothing can go wrong wid dis
Thank you so much Salma 🙂
So, I made this wonderful cake and took it to my event today, and it was very delicious! It disappeared very fast! Will def be making this cake again 🙂
Thank you Natasha!!
I’m so happy you loved it! Thank you so much for reporting back and for the great review! 🙂
Hi!
do you know if I can do the stiming part #4 in the microwave and for how long?, would it be the same like on the stove?
and if I will be using 10″ pan how many layers should I expect??
if microwave is not an option then another question,should the stiming bowl touch the water?
sorry for all this questions I just never did stiming dough before, want to try this cake, but kind of scared of step4
thankyou so much!!
I definitely wouldn’t risk microwaving it. You will curdle it and it will heat unevenly. The bowl should be above the water and not touching it. Did you get a chance to watch the video for this cake? You will probably find it helpful if you’re nervous about that part :).
This recipe did not work out for me at all! I’ll stick to my moms recipe of spartak.
What step didn’t work out? Did you have a chance to watch the video to see if anything was done differently?
HI Natasha, i really enjoy making this cake it’s easy to make & i really liked your recipe better than the one i have. i tried both recipes & my husband said that your recipe is the best. so keep it up girl. love making things from your web sit. God bless you & give u strength through your pregnancy. Do u know who ur having?
Thank you so much Olga. What a sweet comment :). God bless you too! The pregnancy is going well. The second trimester is definitely a relief ;). I will find out this week; so excited!!!
Thank you for this recipe! Just finished baking and absolutely loved the dough, it was so much easier to roll out compared to other recipes that I have tried.
Thank you for the great review Natasha and you are very welcome :).
Made this cake today gota be honest kinda wish it was more chocloty and I only got 6 layers
Any more chocolate and I think the layers would be too tough to roll out. You might try using a chocolate cream to make it more chocolatey. To get 7 layers, you really have to roll it out super thin, but even with 6 layers, it should work just fine 🙂
Hi Natasha,
I want to make this cake ahead of time and freeze it for a week in the freezer. Is that possible?
Do you know if it will be the same after I defrost it.
Thank you
To be honest, I haven’t tried to freeze the entire made cake. The only thing we’ve done to prep in advance is to make the cake layers up to a week in advance and leave them at room temperature (they basically turn into cookies as they sit), then frost the night before your event and it’s ready to go the next day. The cake layers are the most time consuming so that definitely helps to do it in advance. Without trying to freeze it, I can’t really recommend it. Maybe someone else has tried?
Could you please review the Chocolate Spartak recipe? Not sure in which step to incorporate the powdered sugar.. Thanks!
It’s in step 3 of the section: How to make cream/frosting. 🙂
Got it! I went off the printable instructions and they don’t list that in step 3… I appreciate you replying 🙂 Cake turned out yummy!
Oh how weird. Thanks so much for letting me know! 🙂
Hey Natasha,
Im planning on making this cake for this weekend:) I did want to ask though, what if I just use cool whip instead of heavy whipping cream? Is there a reason you usually use heavy whipping cream? Im always afraid of over beating it so dont like to use it!
Hi Snow,
Great news! The answer is yes! My mom makes her cream that way and the original spartak recipe has cool whip listed so just follow that one :). I use heavy whipping cream only because it’s a more natural/healthy option (no chemicals), but I’m not against cool whip. Its necessary for some of my recipes so I do have an appreciation for it 🙂
Awesome! Thanks so much! I just finished rolling out and baking 13 layers of this cake but it will be so worth it this weekend!
This looks delicious, your recipes are the best, and thank you for sharing them with us, I do have one question what kind of cream cheese did you use? Was it Philadelphia
Thank you
Hi Seli! I hope you love this recipe. We normally use either Philadelphia or the Costco brand cream cheese.
hi natasha.. this recipe is so interesting and i wana try it.. but i feel its good if u give us a video tutorial on this!! :p
thanks,
shahina
Hi Natasha, I just finished making the cake…layers are good but the cream was watery:(( how thick is the cream? Hope it will taste good tomorrow.
The cream should be thick enough to stay on the cake. It’s not a very thick cream because the layers will absorb the moisture. A thicker frosting doesn’t work as well. Did you use all of the same ingredients, like HEAVY whipping cream rather than regular whipping cream. I hope that helps! 🙂
Hi Natasha. Is it fine to use 30% whipping creme for the frosting?
Tanya, that should work fine, just make sure that your bowl, whisk and creme are chilled before using them.
Hi Natasha:) I am a visual learner and I wish you could do a video of this cake. I really love this cake and I want to make it for my daughter…When you have time please make a video :)) really appreciate it.
This is one of those cakes that I agree; it would be nice to have a video. Hopefully when my pregnancy symptoms ease up a little, I’ll have a little more time 🙂
Oh congratulations:))) you have a beautiful sun and a beautiful family:) wishing you a safe and easy delivery and a healthy baby.
I made this cake for my son’s birthday,except on top i put chocolate paste and it was so delicious, and the whole family loved it. Totally a keeper, thank you for sharing, I always wanted to make, and I asked people around, and for some reason it was hard for them to explain, they said they have to show it to me in order to understand, now I am so thankful for your blog, I don’t even need to ask. Keep up the gorgeous work you do for all of us. Happy Pregnancy:-))
Thank you so much for your sweet and thoughtful comment! I’m so happy to hear that the cake was a success for you and you finally found the recipe you were looking for 🙂 That’s awesome!
Hi Natasha,
I was wandering if i can use sour cream instead of butter for the Spartak cream?
Thank you
If you’re looking for a good sour cream frosting, you should try the frosting on my honey cake: https://natashaskitchen.com/2014/03/09/8-layer-honey-cake-recipe-medovik/ Hope that helps 🙂
Natasha,
I made this cake once based on your recepie and it turned out soooooo good (of course dear husband helped) in fact, it was so good I am thinking of makijg it for Easter and my hubbys birthday. Do you think I can make korji ahead of time like 4 dayd ahead? I tried to look at comments but couldnt see if someone posted similar question. Sorry if this is a repeater.
Thank you
No problem 🙂 You can make the layers ahead of time. Let them cool completely then just store them in a plastic grocery bag at room temp. Keep them dry and they’ll be just fine.
Hi Natasha
I just wanted to know if I can use sour cream instead of butter for the cream?
I don’t know how the frosting would blend with sour cream. I don’t think it would be firm enough, but I haven’t tested it to be sure. Sorry, I wish I had a great answer for that.
Wonderful cake!!! I am making like the 6th cake by now…although every single time I run into the same issues. Natasha, maybe you could show me where my problem lies? I usually make the recipe in double portions (freeze one) but, other than that I follow the recipe exactly. Anyway, once I add the hot liquid into the flour mixture it stays very sticky and never turns into the “ball of flour” like yours does. I actually end up adding up to twice the flour after that point and even then it’s very hard to work with so I am literally throwing on the flour to make it rollable and pliable. I use King Arthur’s unbleached all purpose flour. Could it be that the milk mixture isn’t hot enough (since I make double portions should I be cooking it longer?) But then again, I have made single portions with very similar results…hmm…any insight would help!! By the way, the last time I made this I ended up making 26 layers since I ended up adding all that extra flour!! Lol
With a double portion, it takes nearly twice as long; at least that was the experience I had when I did it. It takes much longer to heat a double portion over steam. 26 layers? Wow! That was from a double portion, right? 😉
How was the taste of the defrosted cake? I am thinking og freezing one but so douthing it.
I haven’t tried freezing it so can’t really recommend it.