The classic Spartak cake is absolutely worth making! It is a family favorite layer cake recipe that has been handed down through generations. Fantastic!

This post may contain affiliate links. Read my disclosure policy.

This Spartak cake is pure awesomeness! Really! You can make the spartak cake layers up to a week early. I love that; especially when you are cooking up a storm for an event. Wouldn’t it be pure awesomeness (I already said that) if your dessert was already done and it gets better with age, just like a good cheese; except it should sit closer to 10 hours, not 10 months or it may grow a mowhawk.

This recipe for Spartak Cake is brought to you by my Mama; the woman whose taste in food I inherited. Mom uses 3 springform pans so she is working on a layer while the other two are baking; efficiency!

Theoretically, you could use a dinner plate to cut-out a circle of the dough and then place it on a non-stick floured cookie sheet to bake. Please don’t panic over the pictures; my mom doubles all of the ingredients and turns out 3 cakes in one evening (superwoman). So, the photos show double all of the ingredients for the Spartak Cake.

This recipe can make 2 shorter cakes, or 1 tall cake. You end up with about 10 layers if they are 9 inches in diameter. If making 2 cakes, each would have 4-5 layers (5 if you use graham crackers for crumbs), or one tall cake with 8-9 layers (with one layer for crumbs mixed with graham crackers).

Mom always likes to add at least a couple crushed graham crackers to the crumb mix. It makes the whole cake tastier and pahuchye (fragrant). Enjoy it!

What you will need for Spartak Cake:

preferably 2 springform pans and a cookie cutter

Ingredients for Spartak Cake:

1 egg
1 cup sugar
4 Tbsp unsalted butter, softened at room temp
6 Tbsp (or 1/3 cup) milk, warmed to room temp
1 tsp baking soda
2 cups flour *measured correctly
2-3 graham crackers (optional)

Ingredients for Spartak Cream:

2 sticks (16 Tbsp) butter, softened at room temp
1 can sweetened condensed milk
8 oz package cream cheese, softened at room temp
8 oz tub cool whip, fully thawed (or make your own by beating 1 cup of whipping cream with 1.5 Tbsp powdered sugar)

How to Make Spartak Cake Layers:

1. Beat together 1 egg and 1 cup sugar (whisk attachment, medium speed, 6 minutes). I know the photo shows two eggs, but its because we were doubling the recipe when we made it. So, yes it is just 1 egg.

Spartak Cake-1

2. Add softened butter, warm milk, and baking soda. Mix on medium speed 1 minute, until smooth.

Spartak Cake-2

2. Bring a medium/large pot of water to a boil. Place mixture in a glass bowl or medium sauce pan over boiling water for 10 minutes, stirring constantly (if making a double portion, do 20 minutes since it takes longer to heat up). It should just be hanging out over the steam and not floating in the water.

Spartak Cake-3

3. Remove from heat and immediately mix in 2 cups flour and mix well. (Don’t wait to add flour or you will single-handedly destroy the cake)

Spartak Cake-4

Preheat the Oven to 350˚ F.

Let stand 20 minutes until it is just warm; it thickens as it cools:  Note: It’s easier to roll out the dough while it’s still warm

Spartak Cake

4. Dust flour over your non-stick surface (I wish I had my mom’s countertops!) Sprinkle flour over the dough as well so it wont’ stick to your rolling pin. Roll out a heaping tablespoon of dough on a nonstick surface into about a 10-inch round. It should not be sticking to the surface.

Spartak Cake-5
5. Generously dust the base of the springform pan with flour.

Spartak Cake-6

6. Place the rolled out dough over the base of the springform pan, run a pizza cutter around it. It’s ready to bake.

Spartak Cake-7

7. Mix the scraps of dough with some fresh dough and roll it out again. Don’t waste those scraps!

Spartak Cake-8

8. Bake at 350˚F until it turns golden (4-5 minutes). You can slide the cake layers off right away and continue on, but Don’t touch the top of the cake layer while its still hot, or you will indent it like I did – whoops!

Spartak Cake-9

Note: If one of your layers, is exceptionally oogly, don’t fret. Remember, you will take a rolling pin to one of them and make crumbs.
Notes: do not try to trim your cake layers after they are baked; they will crack.

How to Make the cream/frosting:

1. Using whisk attachment on electric mixer, beat together 2 packages butter and 1 can sweetened condensed milk on medium speed for 7 minutes, scraping down the bowl as necessary

Spartak Cake-10

2. Mix in the softened cream cheese 1 chunk at a time until smooth, scraping down the bowl as necessary (2-3 minutes

Spartak Cake-11
3. On low speed, mix in the cool whip (or whipped cream) until well blended.

Spartak Cake-12

Assembling the Cake:

1. Set one cake layer aside for crumbs (or use graham crackers) – or you can mix like we did. Spread a thin layer of frosting over the first layer (enough to cover the surface) and go all the way to the edges.

Spartak Cake-13

2. Place the next layer on top. Frost and repeat this until you finish all the layers. Frost the sides and even out the frosting everywhere. Push down the layers in between so you don’t have gaps of air between your layers.

Spartak Cake-14
3. Crush the cake layer you set aside as well as the optional graham cracker.

Spartak Cake-15

4. Generously sprinkle the crumbs over the top. Cup handfuls of crumbs and pat them onto the sides of the cake.

Spartak Cake-17

5. Transfer to a pretty serving dish and refrigerate overnight (it should sit at least 10 hours for the layers to soften).

The classic Spartak cake is absolutely worth making! It is a family favorite layer cake recipe that has been handed down through generations. Fantastic!

Thank you Mama for being patient with me while I took a million pictures. I love you Mom!!

Spartak Cake-19

Mom's Spartak Cake Recipe

5 from 38 votes
Author: Natasha of NatashasKitchen.com
Prep Time: 2 hours
Cook Time: 5 minutes
Total Time: 2 hours 5 minutes

Ingredients 

Servings: 12 -15
  • 1 egg
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 4 Tbsp unsalted butter, softened at room temp
  • 6 Tbsp or 1/3 cup milk, warmed to room temp
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 2 cups flour
  • 2-3 graham crackers, optional
  • 2 sticks, 16 Tbsp butter, softened at room temp
  • 1 can sweetened condensed milk
  • 8 oz package cream cheese, softened at room temp
  • 8 oz tub cool whip, fully thawed

Instructions

  • Beat together 1 egg and 1 cup sugar (whisk attachment, medium speed, 6 minutes).
  • Add softened butter, warm milk, and baking soda. Mix on medium speed 1 minute, until smooth.
  • Bring a medium/large pot of water to a boil. Place mixture in a glass bowl or medium sauce pan over boiling water for 10 minutes, stirring constantly (if making a double portion, do 20 minutes since it takes longer to heat up). It should just be hanging out over the steam and not floating in the water.
  • Remove from heat and immediately mix in 2 cups flour and mix well. (Don't wait to add flour or you will single-handedly destroy the cake). Let dough stand 20 minutes until it is just warm; it thickens as it cools: Note: It's easier to roll out the dough while it's still warm. While dough rests, preheat the Oven to 350°F.
  • Dust flour over your non-stick surface. Sprinkle flour over the dough as well so it wont' stick to your rolling pin. Roll out a heaping tablespoon of dough on a nonstick surface into about a 10-inch round. It should not be sticking to the surface.
  • Generously dust the base of the springform pan with flour. Place the rolled out dough over the base of the springform pan, run a pizza cutter around it. It's ready to bake.
  • Mix the scraps of dough with some fresh dough and roll it out again. Don't waste those scraps!
  • Bake at 350°F. until it turns golden (4-5 minutes). Remove cake layers from the baking pan righta way but Don't touch the top of the cake layer while its still hot, or you will indent it. Notes: do not try to trim your cake layers after they are baked; they will crack.

How to Make the cream/frosting:

  • Using whisk attachment, beat together 2 packages butter and 1 can sweetened condensed milk on medium speed for 7 minutes, scraping down the bowl as necessary.
  • Mix in the softened cream cheese 1 chunk at a time until smooth, scraping down the bowl as necessary (2-3 minutes)
  • On low speed, mix in the cool whip (or whipped cream) until well blended.

Assembling the Cake:

  • Set one cake layer aside for crumbs (or use graham crackers) - or you can mix like we did.
  • Spread a thin layer of frosting over the first layer (enough to cover the surface) and go all the way to the edges.
  • Place the next layer on top. Frost and repeat this until you finish all the layers. Frost the sides and even out the frosting everywhere. Push down the layers in between so you don't have gaps of air between your layers.
  • Crush the cake layer you set aside as well as the optional graham cracker. Generously sprinkle over the top than cup handfuls of crumbs and pat them onto the sides of the cake. Transfer to a serving dish and refrigerate overnight (it should sit at least 10 hours for the layers to soften).
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: Russian, Ukrainian
Keyword: Spartak Cake
Skill Level: Difficult
Cost to Make: $$
Natasha's Kitchen Cookbook

Final Final Picmonkey Hashtag banner

5 from 38 votes (14 ratings without comment)

Leave a Comment

Recipe Rating




Comments

  • Oksana B.
    February 9, 2013

    Hi Natasha! So this recipe (1 egg, 1 cup sugar, etc… ) will make how many layers? Also, what kind of flour did you use?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      February 9, 2013

      I used regular all-purpose flour and it makes 8-10 layers depending on how thin you roll them out.

      Reply

  • Liliana
    January 23, 2013

    Just finished the cake! Looks just like on the picture. Have to wait for three more days until my son’s birthday party to try this masterpiece. Natasha, I had to double the recipe for the dough but I only made a single recipe for the cream. There was a lot of cream still left but just a perfect amount of layers. Well, my boys enjoyed the leftover cream mixed with some graham crackers and demanded more. It was heavenly… I believe the cake will be a sensation at the party! Thanks a lot. Tomorrow I am going to make the Bird’s milk souffle cake. And, btw, we are finishing the second batch of pryaniki. Love them!

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      January 24, 2013

      Sounds like you are quite the baker! 🙂 You can even make little cakes with the frosting and graham crackers and let them sit overnight and they taste amazing. We figured this out when we had a little extra frosting at my mom’s house 😉 I’m so tickled that you like my recipes.

      Reply

  • manara
    January 12, 2013

    ur recipe is amazing i made it this weekend and my mom go crazy with it, its creamy and moist , she though i bought it from a bakery lol .

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      January 13, 2013

      I love to hear a good report. I’m so happy that you enjoyed it :).

      Reply

  • Ari AS
    December 28, 2012

    Thank you for the wonderful recipe!! I am from Indonesia, I was challenged to try to make this dish

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 29, 2012

      Hope you had fun with it :).

      Reply

  • dt
    December 17, 2012

    I made this cake its awesome. I like it very much.Thanks.

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 17, 2012

      You are welcome, I’m glad that you enjoyed it :).

      Reply

  • Vera
    December 14, 2012

    Natasha,
    Thanks for the recipe! I make it all the time with my mom.
    Tip: the extra dough can be very dry, if you lay it aside for too long. Just warm up the extra dough for 10-15 sec. in the microwave, then roll out.
    Thanks again! Ps. I love your blog!

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 14, 2012

      I always welcome tips :). Thank you for the tip and you are welcome Vera.

      Reply

  • Lena
    December 5, 2012

    I can’t wait to make both this and the chocolate Spartak cakes. PS your mom has beautiful sriking blue eyes!

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 5, 2012

      Thank you so much Lena 🙂

      Reply

  • Olga
    November 24, 2012

    Hi Natasha!

    I’ve made this cake for a Thanksgiving party, and it was so good! Men loves it and woman were jealous. Lol. Thank you!

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      November 24, 2012

      You are welcome Olga 😀

      Reply

  • Olga N.
    November 22, 2012

    Hi Natasha,
    To serve this cake to its best taste, is it better to eat it out of the fridge as in cold, or let it stand at room temperature? Because a piece of cake was standing out for 2 hours after it marinated over the night, and it taste so good. Im bring this cake to my family and its an hour drive there. Should I put it into fridge when I get there, and take out when to serve, or leave it out the whole time so the cream can taste good? Say they will eat the cake in 2 hrs from taking it out of fridge.

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      November 22, 2012

      Either way. You can leave it out for a few hours; that should be just fine, just keep it refrigerated overnight; you can even keep it in a very cold garage overnight if you run out of space in the fridge; it won’t spoil 🙂

      Reply

  • Oksana
    November 20, 2012

    Hi Natasha! So I started making this cake today and was so devastated when my dough started to stick to my counter top. I couldn’t roll it out because it would just stick, stick, stick. I had to re-roll couple of times and then my dough became very hard. I was so disappointed that I couldn’t complete the cake so I just had to stop all together! I am so sad because I really wanted to try this for Thanksgiving. I guess you were right – having nonstick counter tops is extremely IMPORTANT! So sad 🙁

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      November 21, 2012

      I’m sorry that it did not work out, thats a big bummer :(. I have found that if you don’t have a great non-stick surface, you can roll it out on parchment paper and bake directly on the paper without having to transfer it. I detailed how to do this in my Chocolate Spartak Recipe. I will update this recipe with a link to the chocolate cake method.

      Reply

  • olga
    November 12, 2012

    Which cake in your opinion do you like better, the chocolate version or this one?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      November 12, 2012

      Honestly they are equally good. If you’re craving a little chocolate, make the chocolate 😉 but they really are equally good!

      Reply

  • olga
    November 8, 2012

    Is heavy whipping cream okay to whip up for the frosting?

    Could I make the layers somehow without the circle pans?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      November 8, 2012

      Yes, heavy whipping cream is great! I used it in my chocolate spartak cake; also I used a different method in the chocolate spartak cake recipe where you don’t need the circle pan; just a round plate would be fine. Click here for chocolate spartak recipe.

      Reply

  • oksana
    November 2, 2012

    Yes that makes sense! Ill try that. But I did roll it out on parchment paper and the paper would just crinkle up and it was very frustrating. Maybe ill try a fondant board?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      November 2, 2012

      Maybe? I’ve never worked with one of those. Did you use parchment or wax paper?

      Reply

  • Mary
    November 1, 2012

    I have a question when I started beating my 2 eggs with 2 cups of sugar my mix was really thick looking not like your that is really runny! What did I do wrong and can I continue to add other ingredients or do i need to start all over?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      November 1, 2012

      I would continue to add other ingredients.

      Reply

      • Mary
        November 4, 2012

        Thanks for ur answer I made the cake and it turned out great!!!! 2 cakes barely lasted 2 days!! Thanks again!!

        Reply

  • marwa
    October 30, 2012

    Natasha it is a great pleasure for me to have these recipes I have spent one year in livov Ukraine it was amazing and I enjoyed the best Ukrainian cuisine from a grandma nadya’s mother and vika’s mother. Am an Arab Muslim pharmacist and your recipes brought back to me the best of memories I was a newly wed
    Thanks a lot I will follow these indulging recipes to keep the memories alive

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      October 30, 2012

      You are very welcome Marwa, and welcome to the site 🙂

      Reply

  • Oksana
    October 28, 2012

    Hi Natasha,
    This cake indeed was “pure awesomeness!” however, I had a REALLY rough time with the dough. I think you used the outside of the springform pan right? Cause I tried multiple times using the base with the dough inside the rim, and ruined it every time. Then I turned it over, but it just stuck to the bottom like crazy and I had to scrape off the baked dough for like 10 min. Then I tried using Pam for grease and sprinkling flour generously, but NOPE! Ahh I doubled the recipe and was glad I did cause I wasted half of it. I finally managed to get the cookies to bake and come off, and we had the cake today t a family gathering and it was well worth the struggle! What do to recommend to use as a nonstick surface? What do you use? I used waxed paper, plastic wrap, cutting boards and all failed miserably 🙁

    Thank you for the recipe! I’m definitely gonna make it again cause it was amazing! The cream reminded me of Russian ice cream “plombir” 🙂

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      October 29, 2012

      I’m trying a new method that works pretty well where you roll it out over parchment paper, place the bottom of the springform mold gently over the top (don’t push it down), and cut around it with a pizza cutter. Then remove the springform pan and bake the layer directly on the parchment paper and right on the oven rack. No transferring required! No baking dish required! It came out pefectly. It was a suggestion from a reader. Hope that makes sense; ask if it doesn’t.

      Reply

  • Cher
    September 26, 2012

    Privet Natasha! Wondering if you have recipe of Medovik cake, one that you can actually roll (like ‘rolet’). The cake itself is very light and fluffy, like the texture of biskvit. One of the ladies made it for our church New Year’s celebration. I asked her for the recipe but she didn’t have time to write it down. Now we live abroad and can’t get in touch with her, I keep searching the Internet but couldn’t find it. Thanks! P.S. my hubby is Ukrainian! 😀

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      September 26, 2012

      I don’t have one posted but medovik is on my to-do list. I’ll ask my aunt if she has one for roulade.

      Reply

  • Liza
    September 21, 2012

    I do every other layer chocolate and white. I also put crushed cherry pie filling cherries inbetween the layers love it!!!

    Reply

  • Natasha
    September 16, 2012

    Thank you so much for this recipe.It turned out very delicious,everyone
    loved it.God bless you.

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      September 17, 2012

      Oh awesome! I’m so glad you all enjoyed it. God bless you too Natasha 🙂

      Reply

  • Sarah Z.
    September 7, 2012

    I just made the karshe yesterday, and I doubled the amount just like you did. I was wondering if I should also double the cream? I am going to be finishing it today. Karshe came out great! Thank you!

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      September 7, 2012

      I’m sorry for the late reply Sarah. No need to double the cream.

      Reply

As Featured On

Never Go "Hangry" Again!

Get weekly updates on new recipes, exclusive giveaways plus behind the scenes photos.