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My Grandma’s easy boiled Spice Cake is my most treasured dessert recipe. As a sweet brunch addition, birthday cake, or party dessert idea, there’s no wrong time to savor a slice.
Every summer when I was young, my family would pack up our car and drive north to a cabin for am extended family vacation. One taste of this Spice Cake recipe takes me instantly back there. All credit for this easy Spice Cake goes to my Grandma, who perfected and shared the recipe with me.
When Grandma made her Spice Cake, it was always moist with delicious flavor and gone within the first two days. While it likely won’t last long in your family either, the sweet memories you make while whipping it up time and time again sure will.
Table of Contents
Recipe ingredients
At a Glance: Here is a quick snapshot of what ingredients are in this recipe.
Please see the recipe card below for specific quantities.
Ingredient notes
- Raisins: I love the chew factor these offer, but if you’re not fond of regular raisins, golden raisins, dried cranberries, or chopped dried figs would also work well. Or omit entirely.
- All purpose flour: Sift the flour together with the baking powder and baking soda to not only mix those ingredients, but to also ensure you don’t end up with any flour pockets hiding inside your cake batter (white flour is obvious in a dark cake like this one).
Step-by-step instructions
- In medium saucepan over medium heat, combine raisins, sugar, water, butter, cinnamon, and cloves. Bring to a boil; remove from heat and cool completely, at least one hour. Pour into a large mixing bowl.
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Generously grease 12-inch bundt pan. In a medium bowl, sift together flour, baking powder, and baking soda. Whisk eggs into cooled spice mixture until uniformly combined. Add dry ingredients in 3 batches, whisking well after each addition.
- Pour batter in to prepared pan.
- Bake for 55 minutes or until toothpick inserted comes out clean. Cool completely. Transfer to a plate or wire rack.
- To make the glaze, in a small bowl whisk together powdered sugar, water, and vanilla. Drizzle over cooled cake.
Recipe tips and variations
- Yield: This Spice Cake recipe makes one bundt cake, which serves between 12 to 20 depending on the thickness of your slices. This usually serves about 16 nice slices when I’m cutting.
- Storage: Cover any extra cake in plastic wrap and store covered at room temperature for up to 4 days.
- Freezer: Cool an unglazed Spice Cake to room temperature, then wrap tightly in a double layer of plastic wrap, and freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight at room temperature, then glaze and slice.
- Your pan plan: My Grandma always made this in a 9-inch x 13-inch pan with stellar results, so if you don’t own (or don’t want to use) a bundt pan, that’s certainly a great option.
- One bowl: I love that this recipe is mixed by hand in one bowl, but you can certainly mix the cake batter in the bowl of a stand mixer fit with the paddle attachment or with an electric mixer by hand. The batter can be mixed on medium-high speed.
- Mix up your spices: Customize the spice blend you use in your spice cake. Consider ground ginger, nutmeg, or allspice.
- Spice up your glaze: To echo the spices in the cake batter, feel free to add a pinch of cinnamon to your powdered sugar glaze if you like. Or, try a drizzle of Caramel Sauce with a sprinkle of flaky sea salt.
- Nuts: Fold in toasted walnuts, almonds, or hazelnuts into your spice cake batter if you love some extra crunch.
- Cream Cheese frosting: For the ultimate indulgence, slather on a thick layer of homemade cream cheese frosting. This works better if you make the spice cake in a 9-inch by 13-inch cake pan. If you use a cake pan, line it with parchment paper for the easiest clean-up.
- More fall desserts: If you’re craving more fall baking recipes, try Pumpkin Bars, Apple Cider donuts rolled in brown sugar and cinnamon, or Cinnamon Apple Cake.
Frequently Asked Questions
Carrot cake and spice cake both have a lot of similar spices (warming spices like cinnamon, cloves, or nutmeg). However, carrot cake also has shredded carrots, while this version of spice cake has a boiled raisin mixture. Carrot cakes are often made in to a layer cake, while spice cakes are usually made in a sheet pan or bundt pan.
For a butter-free spice cake, substitute an equal amount of canola or vegetable oil or even unsweetened applesauce.
Substitute your favorite one-for-one gluten free flour blend to make this cake gluten free.
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Spice Cake
Ingredients
For the Spice Cake:
- 2 cups raisins (see note 1)
- 2 cups granulated sugar
- 2 cups water
- ¾ cup butter
- 2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
- ½ teaspoon ground cloves
- 3 cups all-purpose flour (see note 2)
- 2 teaspoons baking powder
- 2 teaspoons baking soda
- 2 eggs beaten
For the glaze:
- 2 cups powdered sugar
- 3 tablespoons water
- 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
- In medium sauce pan, combine raisins, sugar, water, butter, cinnamon, and cloves. Bring to a boil; remove from heat and cool completely, at least one hour. Pour into a large mixing bowl.
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Generously grease 12-inch bundt pan (or 9-inch by 13-inch cake pan). In a medium bowl, sift together flour, baking powder, and baking soda.
- Whisk eggs into cooled spice mixture until uniformly combined. Add flour mixture in 3 batches, whisking well after each addition.
- Pour batter in to prepared pan and bake for 55 minutes or until toothpick inserted comes out clean. Cool completely.
- To make the glaze, in a small bowl whisk together powdered sugar, water, and vanilla. Drizzle over cooled cake.
Recipe Video
Notes
- Raisins: I love the chew factor these offer, but if you’re not fond of regular raisins, golden raisins, dried cranberries, or chopped dried figs would also work well. Or omit entirely.
- All purpose flour: Sift the flour together with the baking powder and baking soda to not only mix those ingredients, but to also ensure you don’t end up with any flour pockets hiding inside your cake batter (white flour is obvious in a dark cake like this one).
- Yield: This Spice Cake recipe makes one bundt cake, which serves between 12 to 20 depending on the thickness of your slices. This usually serves about 16 nice slices when I’m cutting.
- Storage: Cover any extra cake in plastic wrap and store covered at room temperature for up to 4 days.
- Freezer: Cool an unglazed Spice Cake to room temperature, then wrap tightly in a double layer of plastic wrap, and freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight at room temperature, then glaze and slice.
- Your pan plan: My Grandma always made this in a 9-inch x 13-inch pan with stellar results, so if you don’t own (or don’t want to use) a bundt pan, that’s certainly a great option.
- Spice up your glaze: To echo the spices in the cake batter, feel free to add a pinch of cinnamon to your powdered sugar glaze if you like.
Nutrition
Meggan Hill is a classically-trained chef and professional writer. Her meticulously-tested recipes and detailed tutorials bring confidence and success to home cooks everywhere. Meggan has been featured on NPR, HuffPost, FoxNews, LA Times, and more.
Meggan: THIS CAKE was to-die-for! I made it for myself on my birthday, and my husband also pronounced it “a definite do-over!” (Easy for him to say, haha!). Thanks for your reply to my earlier question about technique for drizzling the frosting! It turned out just fine. And… may I ask you another, kind of shot-in-the-dark question? I have been on a quest (for years) to find a recipe for the old-time (1960’s) A&P Spanish Bar Cake — or something very similar! This cake was quite close in taste, but the consistency of the other, as I remember it, was a little darker and a little more dense… and it had what I think today must have been a cream cheese frosting… (and of course, it was baked as a loaf, which is not at all important to me :) Thanks!!
Making this today! How do you drizzle the icing so perfectly?
Hi Jill, so exciting! My best advice is to make sure the cake is 100 percent cool when you’re ready to glaze. If it is warm at all, the glaze will melt and pool off the cake, even clump some. Make sure the glaze is also a consistency to be drizzled, if it is somewhat stiff, you can add a little bit more water, or if it is too loose, you can add a little more powdered sugar. I hope you love this cake! Please write back and let me know how it turns out! – Meggan
My husband requested an old fashioned raisin spice cake for his birthday. When I found your recipe I felt it was perfect. The recipe was easy to follow and cam together perfectly. The cake was nice and moist and the flavor was heavenly! My husband LOVED it, and he is hard to please when it comes to spice cakes. I finally found the perfect recipe! Thank you!
Hi Rita, I’m so glad you both loved this cake! Take care! – Meggan
Deliciously easy! The only thing I did differently was to add my boil to the flour mixture (unsifted) and mix with a mixer about a minute. Came out perfect like your picture. Next time I will use golden rasins and add nuts. Thanks
Thanks Brenda, glad you enjoyed! – Meggan
Oh my Yum….
Very good and tasty. Quick and easy. I know this a bread can adapt to my needs. I use whole wheat 100% flour. It cooks great and it is healthy for me. I am into healthy eating with food that has all the ingredients to be healthy and vital with ,vitamins and grains. More, Of a wholistic approach to eating . I want to feel full and nourish at the same time.
Thanks Linda! I’m so glad you were able to make it to your liking and enjoyed. – Meggan
Looks good, but can I leave out the raisins from the cooked sugar-spice mix and add 2 cups of chopped nuts to the batter instead?
Hi Patty, I haven’t tried that variation myself, but I don’t see why not! Sounds great! – Meggan
Delicious cake. Very easy & makes a nice presentation. Definitely use the icing.
THANK YOU SO MUCH! I was looking for an old fashioned recipe to make for my friends for Thanksgiving (we will not be gathering due to the pandemic, but I offered to make desserts for a pickup dinner that two of my friends are cooking to share with everyone). I wanted something comforting, delicious and nostalgic, and just reading through this recipe (and knowing it came from your grandmother!) – it seemed perfect.
Well, today I made a test batch using Nordicware’s quartlet pan (I am making small 5” cakes and putting them in little cake boxes for friends to pick up on Thanksgiving). Baked at 350 for 23-24 minutes, the little cakes turned out beautifully! I dusted them with powdered sugar and gave them to four friends to test – they absolutely loved them! I also had enough leftover batter for a little cake for myself, and it was absolutely delicious. I love how the brown crust is so flavorful while the inside of the cake is so deliciously moist. Dusting the cakes rather than icing them happened because I’ll be making more than a dozen cakes for the holiday, but you and your other reviewers are right – icing is not necessary.
Thank you so much! Although my friends and I will not be together this holiday, we will all be enjoying your grandmother’s wonderful spice cake and looking forward to when we can safely gather again.
Happy holidays.
This spice cake is easy to make and lovely when poured into a Bundt pan. It is more breadlike than cakelike and does not need icing. The taste is wonderful and reminded me of a cake my mother used to make.
Delicious easy cake! I added some extra cinnamon, a pinch of ginger, and some rum! Was a hit for Christmas dessert and even better with coffee or tea the next morning. I decided not to glaze mine and it’s incredible.
howdy – wondering if you have a time range for a sheet cake version?
Thanks for posting the recipe; I’m making this for Secret Santa exchange at work. Am going to use orange juice & zest in the glaze, because I want to. lol
The cake completely absorbed the glaze. How can I prevent that in the future?
Allow the cake to cool before adding glaze
Would I be able to bake this cake in a 9-inch Bundt cake pan? I would absolutely love to try this recipe out! Thanks
Is it brown or white sugar?
Hi Emily, white sugar! I should probably specify that, huh? Sorry for the confusion!
Can you leave out the raisins completely?
Yes! They aren’t a leavening agent or anything like that and don’t change the recipe. I’ve made this without raisins. You’ll be fine. Thanks Holly!
Hi, two questions before I make this cake. Wanted to confirm that you grease but do not flour the pan. Also, for non-raisin lovers, would dried cranberries be a suitable substitute? Thank you!!
Hi Linda, thanks for the questions. Just grease, don’t flour the pan (but grease it WELL). For non-raisin lovers, dried cranberries are an excellent substitute! I’ve made the cake with them before. I find that for some reason I tend to have dried cranberries on hand more often than raisins. If you need anything else, just let me know! Have a great weekend! -Meggan
Just made this recipe and absolutely loved it!! So moist & flavorful…easy too!! I’ll definitely be saving it & making it again!
Hi is there anyway I can substitute the eggs with applesauce in this recipe?
Hi Neha, yes of course! 1/4 applesauce replaces one egg in most recipes, so I’d use 1/2 cup applesauce. I haven’t tested it, though, so I don’t know if the baking powder needs to be adjusted (sometimes people add 1/2 teaspoon or something like that). You could definitely try it, even the texture changes a little the flavors will be fantastic. I will definitely put this on my list to test I can tell you for sure! Thank you.
This cake sounds yummy but I really dislike raisins. Can I just omit them or would something else need to be substituted? 2 cups is a lot.
Hi Emma, just omit them! My husband is the same. LOVES this spice cake but hates raisins (it’s a texture thing). Leave them out and you don’t need to change anything. Thank you for the question!
Holy Moly!! this is delicious and so easy to whip up. I halved the recipe and it came out perfect, I also slathered on some butter and had it for breakfast too Yum! God Bless your Grandma, I will be passing this one down to my grandchildren too.
Thank you so much Maureen! And yes to BUTTER!!! I even put butter on stuff like monkey bread. I’m so glad you liked the cake. It brings back so many memories for me! Have a lovely weekend and take care.
I happened upon this recipe today while on the hunt for a dessert to make with dinner. I followed the recipe for the cake exactly (although I did add a bit of cardamom to the glaze). This was probably the LEAST fussy cake recipe I’ve made in a long time. The whole thing was delicious! I will absolutely be making it again.
That’s so great to hear Megan! Thank you so much, and I love your tip about the cardamom in the glaze. So glad you enjoyed it! Thanks again and take care.
How I love family recipes!
We used to have a ‘family recipe’ cake a bit like this when I was younger – I must try to get the recipe from my mum!
I bet this is beautiful, Meggan – definitely the perfect cake to take on family vacation!