This prune honey cake rose beautifully and was stunningly tall. The layers are fluffy, moist, creamy, and studded with sweet prunes.

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My entire family was smitten with this prune honey cake; especially Mom. She had 2 slices ;). This cake is traditionally called Chernosliv (black prune cake). I’ve been developing the recipe for months and was really close to throwing in the towel because my initial cake layers looked more like bowls rather than cakes.

I felt this cake was worth-while so I stubbornly continued on with my experiments. Now it’s finally perfect! This prune honey cake rose beautifully and was stunningly tall. The layers are fluffy, moist, creamy, and studded with sweet prunes. 

P.S. There’s a very cool baking soda/honey chemical reaction in this cake. Like “kids come check this out” type of cool!

 

Ingredients for the Prune Honey Cake Layers:

6 large eggs, room temp
1 cup white granulated sugar
2 cups unbleached all-purpose flour *measured correctly
5 Tbsp honey
2 tsp baking soda

Ingredients For the Frosting:

32 oz sour cream
2 cups powdered sugar
1 cup heavy whipping cream

Fillings/Toppings/Decor:

1 1/2 cups chopped prunes
Melting Chocolate or Chocolate chips to melt for decor
Chocolate block for shavings

Prune Honey Cake Recipe

How to Make the honey cake layers:

Butter and line the bottoms of 2 (9-inch cake pans) with parchment paper. Preheat the Oven to 325˚F.

Prune Honey Cake Recipe-5

1. Using your electric stand mixer, beat 6 large eggs with 1 cup sugar 5  minutes on high-speed.

Prune Honey Cake

2. {Here’s the cool chemical reaction part: did you know honey activates baking soda?} Heat 5 Tbsp honey in a saucepan  over medium heat until it is very hot, but not boiling (about 125˚F), stirring often.

Just as soon as you see faint bubbling on the edges,  use a spoon to stir in the 2 tsp baking soda into the honey stirring continuously until your mixture turns a yellow/light caramel color (about 30-45 seconds seconds) and immediately remove from heat. It will continue to cook even after you remove from heat. Continue stirring until you’re finished adding it to the egg mixture.

Prune Honey Cake-1

This is what it looks like by the time you are ready to spoon it into the egg mixture. You don’t want it darker than this and it happens quick so don’t step away from it!

Prune Honey Cake Recipe-9

3. With the mixture on high speed, add hot honey to the egg mixture about 1 Tbsp at a time so you don’t cook your egg mixture. Also, don’t wait for your honey mixture to cool down or it will harden and you won’t be able to blend it into your egg mixture.

Honey Cake

See that honey on the edges of the bowl? That’s pretty much candy. It’s expected. You won’t be able to scrape it  down into the bowl, but don’t worry, it washes off easily.

Prune Honey Cake Recipe-11

4. Reduce mixer speed to med/low and blend in flour 1 cup at a time. Use a spatula to scrape down the mixing bowl to make sure the flour is well blended.

Prune Honey Cake-2

5. Just as soon as the flour is well incorporated, divide into two prepared baking pans and bake at 325° for 25-28 minutes or until the cake is golden brown and a toothpick comes out clean.

Prune Honey Cake-3

Once they are cool enough to handle, remove from the pans and transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.

Prune Honey Cake Recipe-18

To make the Honey Cake frosting:

1. Beat the heavy cream until stiff and spreadable (1-2 min on high speed).

Prune Honey Cake Recipe-19

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.

Prune Honey Cake-4

Honey Cake Assembly:

1. Once your cake is completely cooled to room temp, slice your cake layers in half and keep the halves stacked until ready to assemble so your cake doesn’t dry out.

Prune Honey Cake Recipe-24

2. Order of layers (assemble the cake on your serving platter).
(A) First cake layer (B) enough frosting to cover the layer  (C) 1/3 of your chopped prunes (D) thin layer of frosting on the bottom of the next cake layer (like putting mayo on both sides of bread for a sandwich), then repeat steps (A-D). Frost the outside of the cake and sides then decorate with piped strips of melted chocolate, chocolate shavings and more prunes. Prunes prunes the magical fruit, the more you eat, the more you,… did I really just go there? Sorry about that. Lol. Anyway, I think the song was meant for beans. oh nevermind! :-O.

Prune Honey Cake-5

3. I melted some chocolate and piped it on over the top in a checkerboard fashion, then put some horizontal lines on it for extra awesomeness.

Healthier Carrot Cake-3

Come to Mama.

This prune honey cake rose beautifully and was stunningly tall. The layers are fluffy, moist, creamy, and studded with sweet prunes.

P.P.S. This cake is best eaten the next day after the layers and prunes have gotten a chance to soften up with the velvety sour cream frosting.

Prune Honey Cake Recipe

4.98 from 70 votes
Author: Natasha of NatashasKitchen.com
Prep Time: 1 hour
Cook Time: 28 minutes
Total Time: 1 hour 28 minutes

Ingredients 

Servings: 12

For the Cake:

For the Frosting:

Fillings/Toppings/Decor:

  • 1 1/2 cups chopped prunes
  • Melting Chocolate or Chocolate chips to melt for decor
  • Chocolate block for shavings

Instructions

How to Make the honey cake layers:

  • Butter and line the bottoms of 2 (9-inch cake pans) with parchment paper. Preheat the Oven to 325˚F.
  • Beat 6 large eggs with 1 cup sugar 5 minutes on high-speed.
  • Heat 5 Tbsp honey in a saucepan over medium heat until it is very hot, but not boiling (about 125˚F), stirring often. Just as soon as you see faint bubbling on the edges, use a spoon to stir in the 2 tsp baking soda into the honey stirring continuously until your mixture turns a yellow/light caramel color (about 30-45 seconds seconds) and immediately remove from heat. It will be fluffy. It will continue to cook even after you remove from heat. Continue stirring until you're finished adding it to the egg mixture. You don't want it darker than a yellow caramel by the time you are ready to add it to your egg mixture and it happens quick so don't step away from it!
  • With the mixture on high speed, add hot honey to the egg mixture about 1 Tbsp at a time so you don't cook your egg mixture. Also, don't wait for your honey mixture to cool down or it will harden and you won't be able to blend it into your egg mixture.
  • Reduce mixer speed to med/low and blend in flour 1 cup at a time. Use a spatula to scrape down the mixing bowl to make sure the flour is well blended.
  • Just as soon as the flour is well incorporated, divide into two prepared baking pans and bake at 325° for 25-28 minutes or until the cake is golden brown and a toothpick comes out clean. Once they are cool enough to handle, remove from the pans and transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.

To make the frosting,

  • Beat the heavy cream until stiff and spreadable (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.

Assembly:

  • Once your cake is completely cooled to room temp, slice your cake layers in half and keep the halves stacked until ready to assemble so your cake doesn't dry out.
  • Order of layers (assemble the cake on your serving platter).
  • (A) First cake layer (B) enough frosting to cover the layer (C) 1/3 of your chopped prunes (D) thin layer of frosting on the bottom of the next cake layer (like putting mayo on both sides of bread for a sandwich), then repeat steps (A-D). Frost the outside of the cake and sides then decorate with a checkerboard design of piped strips of melted chocolate, chocolate shavings and more prunes.
  • This cake is best eaten the next day after the layers and prunes have gotten a chance to soften up with the velvety sour cream frosting.
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: Russian, Ukrainian
Keyword: Prune Honey Cake
Skill Level: Medium
Cost to Make: $$
Natasha's Kitchen Cookbook

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4.98 from 70 votes (11 ratings without comment)

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Recipe Rating




Comments

  • kate
    December 29, 2013

    Oh and one more question, what do u think if i add walnuts to it??

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 29, 2013

      I have read that people add walnuts to it with good results. I haven’t tried only because my son doesn’t eat Walnuts right now. But I think it would work. Are you thinking about putting them in the batter or between the layers with the prunes?

      Reply

  • kate
    December 29, 2013

    Hey Natasha, sounds amazing, planning to also make it for new years. So u suggest to make it a day ahead right? And also, what do u use to melt ur chocolate, chocolate chips or the cocoa and sugar n milk mix? thnx 😉

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 29, 2013

      I used melting chocolate this time by girrardeli (spelling?), but I’ve also used regular semi-sweet chocolate chips and microwaved them or heated on very low heat on the stove top. You can use either a ziploc bag or a frosting piping bag to decorate the top with chocolate.

      Reply

  • Svetlan
    December 29, 2013

    Hi Natasha! What a beautiful cake! I am planning on making this for New Year’s, was wondering how much ahead would it be ok to make it? If I make it more than 24 hours ahead of time, will it stay well?

    Thanks a lot!

    Svetlana

    Reply

  • Caitlyn
    December 29, 2013

    Natasha, I love you site!!! And this cake looks amazing… Have you tried making it gluten free by any chance? Gluten allergies… 🙁 Making your Borscht tomorrow, that’s gluten free 🙂

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 29, 2013

      I haven’t experimented much with gluten free flour so I have no idea how well it would work. The baking soda/honey combo sure makes the cake rise well so maybe it might work. I just haven’t experimented, sorry :(. I hope you love the borscht! 🙂

      Reply

  • Maureen | Orgasmic Chef
    December 29, 2013

    I really like prunes and this cake looks like it would be fun to make.

    Happy New Year!

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 29, 2013

      They are a nice treat in this cake 🙂 Thank you and you have a Happy New Year as well! 🙂

      Reply

  • Ulayna
    December 28, 2013

    Is it possible to make this cake with other fruit? Or even fresh fruit like strawberries or raspberries?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 28, 2013

      Yes! I think that would taste good. I think it would be nice with strawberries and peaches. Let me know how much you love it and what kind of fruit you end up using 🙂

      Reply

  • Tina
    December 27, 2013

    This is some aaaamazingness Natasha!! I’m drooling just by looking at this “healthy” version of the cake. lol, let’s not count the heavy whip and all the other goodies:) Thank you and happy New Years to you and your family!!

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 27, 2013

      Yeah, we don’t have to talk about the rest. Lets just keep our focus on the prunes. lol. )

      Reply

  • Marina G
    December 27, 2013

    Yay! You did it .. I think I asked for this recipe like about a year ago (on FB) 🙂 Thank you for posting this recipe, cant wait to try it out!!!

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 27, 2013

      Yeah,.. About that. No excuse. Lol 😉

      Reply

  • Eve
    December 27, 2013

    Do you have to use unbleached flour or can you use bleached flour?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 27, 2013

      You can use either one. I just shared what I used. It was an organic unbleached one from Costco. You can use either one 🙂

      Reply

  • Alena
    December 27, 2013

    YYUUUMM!!! Definatly gonna try this! I bought a whole container with prunes to make this cake but different recipe version and i didnt like it at all:( i was soo bumbed out, kinda came out dry! and i said that im not making that cake again for sure, but now i will give this one a try:) thank you

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 27, 2013

      Don’t quit! I’m so glad I didn’t 🙂 This cake turned out so nice. I think you’ll love it. I’d love to know how it compared to the one that you were bummed out about 😉

      Reply

  • Julie
    December 27, 2013

    Wow! This cake looks fantastic!!! Making it tomorrow for Sunday birthday party:) Thank you Natasha!

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 27, 2013

      I hope you love it!! Is it your birthday?

      Reply

      • Julie
        December 27, 2013

        No, my son is turning 3 on the 30th:) smack dab between Christmas and New Year! I’m suspecting I’ll be making another one for New Year:))) <— that's my triple chins right there, from too much yummy stuff you post;)

        Reply

        • Natasha
          natashaskitchen
          December 27, 2013

          Happy birthday to your little guy! Wow that is alot of celebrating for you in 1 week! Is this your busiest week all year? 😉

          Reply

          • Julie
            December 27, 2013

            Thank you! I told him, and he ran to his sister yelling that a “famous person from iPad” wished him happy birthday! Lol:) As far as the busy week of the year goes, it is the busiest! By the way the cakes are cooling as we speak, and I’m getting ready to make the frosting:)

          • Natasha
            natashaskitchen
            December 27, 2013

            Awww that’s so sweet. I’m smiling ear to ear. Awwww. 🙂

          • Julie
            January 4, 2014

            Natasha! I wanted to thank you for this recepie 🙂 The cake turned out great, and my family looooved it!

          • Natasha
            natashaskitchen
            January 4, 2014

            That is fantastic! Thank you so much for a great review.

  • Alena H.
    December 27, 2013

    I have a similar recipe and we love it a lot. the honey cake layers and the prunes are just yummy for real. (even healthy. lol)

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 27, 2013

      That’s right. Prunes, prunes, the magical fruit… lol. Definitely healthy 😉

      Reply

  • Inna
    December 27, 2013

    I tried this cake before and it was so good! They sell it at our local Russian store and I tried it couple of times. Now my mission is to make it at home. Saving this recipe! Thank you as always!

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 27, 2013

      Thank you Inna! I hope it’s even better than the store-bought one! 🙂

      Reply

  • Vika
    December 27, 2013

    I am making this cake for the New Year party. Thanks Natasha.

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 27, 2013

      I hope you and all your party guests love it!! 🙂

      Reply

  • ksenia
    December 27, 2013

    I love, love, love this cake. My aunt in Belarus made this cake for special occasions and it is divine. I have made it several times and unless you tell people that this cake has prunes no one can ever guess. 🙂 Beautiful pictures as always, Natasha!

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 27, 2013

      The prunes on top give it away! Otherwise, you’re right, you would never be able to tell 🙂 Thank you Ksenia for your sweet compliment 🙂

      Reply

  • Oksana
    December 27, 2013

    You did it again!!!!! Amazing cake dear!! Happy New Year to your family!!

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 27, 2013

      It felt like a marathon this month. Two major new cakes in 1 month. Phew!! 🙂 Happy New Year to you too! 🙂

      Reply

  • Julia @Vikalinka
    December 27, 2013

    It looks incredible! The cake layers look so soft and fluffy. I love Chernosliv but haven’t had it for ages. It would be so great for the New Year’s Eve!

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 27, 2013

      It’s one of my favorites also. I’m so excited to finally get the recipe down and it rose so nicely. I’m just REALLY EXCITED!!! 🙂

      Reply

      • Julia@Vikalinka
        December 27, 2013

        I noticed that you whip your heavy cream and sour cream separately and then blend them together. Is there a reason for it?

        Reply

        • Natasha
          natashaskitchen
          December 27, 2013

          You want your heavy cream to be whipped up nicely to make the frosting a little thicker.

          Reply

  • Mila
    December 27, 2013

    this cake looks like real beauty. I want to make this cake for new years.. how would u say this cake would taste with raspberries instead? and I’m thinking of making a clock decor on top of cake…. oooooh that works look awesome….
    love your cakes natasha. u always give me the passion for baking

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 27, 2013

      What an awesome idea!! I LOVE that! Do you do it with melted chocolate and a steady hand? Get it, steady hand? on the clock? nevermind. lol 🙂 Happy New Years!

      Reply

  • Karolina L
    December 27, 2013

    Yummy. I always get excited to bake cakes. Thanks Natasha

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 27, 2013

      Oh me too! Me too!! I hope you love this 🙂

      Reply

  • Julia
    December 26, 2013

    Beautiful cake! I have all the ingredients except the prunes, gotta grab some and make this one! Thank you 🙂

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 27, 2013

      Isn’t that the best when you already have what you need. The ingredients in this cake aren’t complicated. The prunes are the only ingredient I don’t stock regularly 😉

      Reply

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