Mini Christmas Cakes
Here are the Mini Christmas Cakes I promised in last weeks’ Holiday Gift Guide!! This is just my classic Christmas Cake converted into mini form. They look so great on a platter to serve at gatherings, and are also ideal for gifting because they have a long shelf life. The cake is beautifully moist, rich with dried fruit, perfumed with Christmas spices. Dense, but soft pudding-like, not like a brick as many store bought ones are. I also like that they’re easy to dress up for serving and gifting, because this Christmas Cake is designed to be eaten plain. So you don’t need to fuss to work around frosting or add a sauce for serving. Just dust with icing sugar, then for an extra Christmassy touch, tie a ribbon around each one and add a sprig of rosemary! Also – the option to add a Christmas pudding drippy glaze!
What you need to make Mini Christmas Cakes
A LOT of dried fruit and very little cake batter!! 🙂
1. SOAKED DRIED FRUIT (booze optional)
Here’s what you need for the Soaked Dried Fruit. The fruit is soaked in either apple juice OR a combination of apple juice and brandy (for those who like boozy Christmas Cake). Dried fruit mix speedy option – While I like to chop my own dried fruit (cake is softer, you get better flavour and I can use the ratios I like), feel free to use a store bought mix of pre chopped dried fruit for convenience.
Use any dried fruit you want – As long as it weighs 855g / 30 oz in total. The selection above is the mix I like! Mixed peel is a store bought mix of dried, crystallised (ie sugared) lemon and orange peel. Usually it comes pre chopped – I like to chop it a bit finer. I like less citrus peel than some recipes because I’m too scarred by all those times I bit into a huge piece of orange peel. Just not to my taste! Don’t use FRESH orange and lemon peel, it will be too strong and too bitter. I do not know how much fresh peel to substitute this for. Juice and/or booze – for a traditional boozy Christmas Cake, just switch 1/3 of the apple juice with brandy. Can also sub apple juice with orange juice if you want a stronger citrus flavour.
2. CHRISTMAS CAKE BATTER
And here’s what you need for the cake batter part. The cake has very little baking powder because it’s quite a dense cake with a pudding-like texture. But it’s still got a distinct “cake” texture – unlike some Christmas Cakes that are so dense they are like eating fudge!
Brown sugar – Dark brown sugar gives the cake a richer colour and that is what I use for my classic single large Christmas cake. For individual ones, I prefer a slightly lighter coloured crumb so the fruit bits stand out more, so I use regular brown sugar. Molasses / golden syrup – adds to the richness of flavour and colour of cake. Either is fine – I interchange year on year. Walnuts – sub with any nuts of choice, or leave it out completely. Oil AND butter – oil is what gives this cake a superb moistness. Butter is for flavour! Eggs – This is what makes the cake hold together rather than being crumbly. Flour – Just regular plain / all-purpose flour. Self raising flour can be used to substitute the flour and baking powder but the cake may dome a little more than pictured. Spices – All spice, cinnamon and nutmeg. Classic Christmas cake flavours!
How to make Mini Christmas Cakes
The only difference between this and my classic Christmas Cake is that I bake it in a square pan so I can cut into square individual cakes. Pan size – I use a 20 cm / 8″ square pan which makes a 4.5cm / 1.8″ tall cake so when cut into 9 squares, they are a nice tall height and impressive gift-giving size. Feel free to use a larger pan – for example, a 23 x 33cm / 9 x 13″ pan will make a 2.3cm / 1″ tall cake which you can cut into more pieces. You can also use a muffin tin lined with silver foil patties.
1. Baking the Christmas cake
The key step that makes this so much faster to make than other fruit cakes is the fruit soaking step. Most recipes call for dried fruit to be soaked overnight. I take a speedy approach: just microwave the dried fruit with juice and/or brandy, then stand for 1 hour to soak up the liquid. So much faster – and just as effective!
2. Cutting mini cakes
I like to cut into 9 squares because I think the proportions look nice and the cake is a gift-worthy size. To be specific, they are 6.5cm / 2 1/2″ squares that are 4.5cm / 1.8″ tall. As noted above, feel free to use different size pans. For example, a 23 x 33cm / 9 x 13″ pan will make a cake that is 2.3cm / 1″ tall and you will be able to cut many more pieces. Cool – Remove the cake from the oven and let it cool for 10 minutes in the pan before transferred to a rack to fully cool.
Gift wrapping
As I mentioned earlier, Mini Christmas Cakes have in their favour as a homemade gifting idea. They are:
Easy to make Economical – especially if you use a mixed fruit option instead of getting individual dried fruits Easy to decorate – Just a dusting of icing sugar makes them instantly Christmassy! Though tying ribbon around the cake really is an easy way to make them even more gift-worthy. 🙂 Easy to gift wrap – no need to find specific size jars of gift bags. Just wrap in cellophane and tie with ribbon. Long shelf life – This one is important to me! A few years ago I did cookies but they just don’t have a great shelf life. It’s rare for any cookie to truly remain in top-notch fresh form beyond 2 days. Wheres the Christmas Cake? I’ve kept mine in the fridge for a month and it was still like freshly made. How good is that!
Love to know how you present these Mini Christmas Cakes if you try them, or how you customise the cake to your taste. Share in the comments below – readers love getting inspiration! Also, spoiler alert for my friends – you’re all getting Mini Christmas Cakes this year. 😂 – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
Life of Dozer
Pleading for help.