Rich Christmas Fruitcake (2024)

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Rich Christmas fruitcake - a rich, make-and-mature fruitcake packed full of fruit and rum. Make in advance and feed regularly with rum.

Rich Christmas Fruitcake (1)

So it is somehow December already and I have done no Christmas shopping or planning whatsoever; I wont be hosting Christmas lunch (my house is essentially a building site at the moment) but I do need to make dessert and some Christmassy nibbles.

I did manage to be organised enough to bake a rich Christmas fruitcake last week though; I haven't yet decided how I want to decorate it but I've got a few weeks left to come up with something.

Rich Christmas Fruitcake (2)

This is a fairly traditional rich fruitcake recipe, but I've used a wider variety of dried fruits to make it a bit more interesting; as well as the usual raisins, sultanas, currants, mixed peel and glace cherries, I added chopped figs, apricots and dates and some dried cranberries.

The fruits are soaked overnight in a mixture of orange juice and zest, dark rum (or use whisky, brandy or sherry) and Grand Marnier or Cointreau to help keep the cake moist. It also benefits from being baked a month or so in advance and fed weekly with a couple of spoonfuls of your alcohol of choice.

The cake does take a long time to bake - up to five hours, because it needs to be baked at a really low temperature to ensure that it bakes all the way through without burning.

To help stop it drying out in the oven, you need to line the inside of the tin with a double layer of baking parchment that comes well above the top of the tin AND wrap the outside of the tin in a double layer of brown packing paper.

Rich Christmas Fruitcake (3)

Rich Christmas Fruitcake (4)

I baked my cake in a deep, 18cm (7in) round tin so that it is really tall; the mix does come above the top of the tin but as long as you line it securely with a double layer of baking parchment that comes about 10cm above the top of the tin then it will bake with perfectly straight sides.

You can also bake it in a deep 20cm (8in) round tin if you want a slightly less tall cake; in this case it will not take quite as long to bake, start checking after 2 hours (you will need to cover the top with foil partway through baking to stop the top from burning) but it will probably take about 4 hours.

Rich Christmas Fruitcake (5)

The cake is delicious as is, but it is also perfect for decorating with marzipan and royal icing or fondant, I'll share my design closer to Christmas so stay tuned! If you need some decorating inspiration now, check out the easy rustic cake I made last Christmas.

Rich Christmas Fruitcake (6)

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5 from 5 votes

Rich Christmas Fruitcake

Author Domestic Gothess

Ingredients

Fruit Mixture:

  • 250 g (8.8oz) dried figs
  • 125 g (4.4oz) dried apricots
  • 125 g (4.4oz) dates
  • 100 g (3.5oz) dried cranberries
  • 100 g (3.5oz) mixed candied peel
  • 125 g (4.4oz) glace cherries
  • 125 g (4.4oz) sultanas
  • 125 g (4.4oz) raisins
  • 125 g (4.4oz) currants
  • zest and juice 1 large orange
  • 100 ml (⅓ cup + 1tbsp + 1tsp) dark rum
  • 30 ml (2tbsp) Grand Marnier or Cointreau

Cake:

  • 100 g (3.5oz) almonds roughly chopped
  • 275 g (1 cup + 2tbsp + 1tsp) softened butter
  • 275 g (1 + ½ cups, packed) dark muscovado sugar
  • 3 tbsp treacle
  • 1 tsp almond extract
  • 4 large eggs
  • 350 g (scant 3 cups) plain flour
  • 75 g (½ cup + 2tbsp) ground almonds
  • 1 ½ tsp ground cinnamon
  • ¾ tsp ground nutmeg
  • ½ tsp ground cloves
  • ½ tsp ground ginger
  • finely ground seeds from 10 cardamom pods

Instructions

  • Start the cake the day before you want to bake it. Remove the hard stalk from the figs and chop the figs, apricots and dates into small pieces and place in a large bowl with the cranberries and candied peel. Chop the glace cherries - some into halves, some into quarters and add to the bowl. Add the sultanas, raisins, currants and orange zest and juice; pour over the rum and Grand Marnier then stir everything together. Cover and leave to steep overnight, giving it an occasional stir.

  • The following day, preheat the oven to 140C/275F/gas mark 1. Grease a deep, 18cm round cake tin and line the base and sides with a double layer of baking parchment, making sure that it comes well above the top of the tin.

  • Stir the chopped almonds into the fruit mixture. Place the butter and sugar in a large bowl and beat with an electric mixer until pale and fluffy, add the treacle and almond extract and beat until smooth.

  • Whisk in the eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition. In a separate bowl, sift together the flour, ground almonds and spices.

  • Fold a third of the flour mixture into the butter sugar mixture then add a third of the fruit mix; continue to alternate adding the flour and fruit until it is all well combined, the mixture will be quite stiff.

  • Scrape the batter into the prepared tin, it will come above the top of the tin. Level the top with the back of a spoon and tap the tin once on the work surface to burst any bubbles. Wrap a folded piece of brown parcel paper around the tin and tie it securely in place with string.

  • Bake for 4 and a half to 5 hours until dark golden brown and firm to the touch. A skewer inserted into the centre should come out with a few moist crumbs but no wet batter on it. Loosely cover the top of the cake with tin foil after about 2 hours to stop it from browning too much.

  • Remove the cake from the oven and drizzle over a couple of tablespoons of rum, loosely cover the top with tin foil then leave in the tin until completely cold.

  • Once cold, unwrap the cake and re-wrap in a double layer of baking parchment then a double layer of tin foil. Once every week or two, feed the cake by unwrapping it and drizzling a spoonful of rum or Grand Marnier over the top, and bottom of the cake then re-wrap securely and store in a cool, dry place. Don't feed the cake the week before icing it so that the surface is dry.

Rich Christmas Fruitcake (7)

I am sharing this with Fiesta Friday hosted by La Petite Paniere and The Not So Creative Cook, Foodie FriDIY, Foodie Friends Friday

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. linda

    This look gorgeous, I love it. Thanks for sharing it at Fiesta Friday! 🙂

    Reply

      • savita Vanjani

        what can be replaced eggs for egg less

        Reply

        • Hannah

          Hi Savita, I have a vegan Christmas cake recipe which I recommend using instead; replacing more than 2 eggs is difficult. https://domesticgothess.com/blog/2018/11/10/vegan-christmas-cake/

          Reply

          • savita Vanjani

            thank you mam .want to ask one more question how many loaf 8×4 tin size cake we can make from these measurements

            Reply

            • Hannah

              Hi Savita, I haven't tried making it as a loaf but I reckon it would make 2.

              Reply

      • Jane Hall

        Hi, I've made ur Christmas cake for several years now and it's amazing, never fails to impress ☺️, I'm wanting to make it this year but as a smaller cake 5inch x 3inch deep but not sure what all the measurements would be, please could you help? Thank you ☺️

        Reply

    • Daniel Willis

      Rich Christmas Fruitcake (12)
      Thank you for this Fabulous recipe ….. it’s now my go to and favorite of all time for Christmas
      Fourth time making them lol one for us and one as a gift
      The house is smelling divine
      Thank you for such a Wonderful recipe
      Daniel

      Reply

      • Ash

        Rich Christmas Fruitcake (13)
        Same here! I make one big one as per the recipe, and then 6-8 small ones in little loaf tins to give away. I find using a meat thermometer and pulling it at around 200f takes the guesswork out of timing, it always tastes amazing. Thank you DG!

        Reply

  2. Angela - Patisserie Makes Perfect

    This looks great Hannah - it's really deep what height tin did you use?

    Love Christmas cake so much.

    Reply

    • hannahhossack

      Thanks Angela 🙂 I adore Christmas cake! The tin is 7.5cm deep (18cm round), the mix actually comes above the top of the tin but as long as you double line it with baking parchment it doesn't spill over and the sides are perfectly flat. I think that you can get deeper tins but I didn't have one and wanted a really tall cake!x

      Reply

  3. Lucy Parissi

    It looks amazing! I don't normally make fruitcake as I seem to be the only one that eats it in my family but I am very tempted.

    Reply

    • hannahhossack

      Thanks Lucy! I will happily eat a whole one! It's probably a good thing that I will be sharing this one with my family at Christmas rather than just scoffing it all myself though...

      Reply

    • hannahhossack

      Thanks Miranda 🙂

      Reply

    • Ash

      I love this recipe and have made it the last three years. I skip the fig (we also don't like the crunchy seeds) and add some candied ginger and it's just so nice.

      Question -
      I'm using small loaf tins this year so I can give it away to friends, and I'm wondering if I can make the full recipe and refrigerate the remaining batter while each cake cooks. Your recipe makes about 4 of my little loaves and I only have one tin so the mixed batter would stay in the fridge for quite a while, but I think that since there isn't any baking soda is should be fine? What do you think?

      Thanks!

      Reply

      • hannahhossack

        Hi Ash, sorry for the slow reply. I haven't tried letting the batter sit before baking but yes, as there is no raising agent I don't see why it would be a problem!

        Reply

    • Jane Hall

      Hi, I always use your Christmas cake recipe every year as it's amazing, I normally use a 7inc x 3inch deep but could i use 2 6x3inch deep tins for this Christmas cake recipe, would there be enough mixture? Thank you xx

      Reply

      • Hannah

        Hi Jane, yes that should work ok, the cakes just probably won't be as deep and won't take as long to cook (I'm not sure how long though so you'll just have to keep an eye on them.)

        Reply

  4. Sally hossack

    Very nice

    Reply

    • hannahhossack

      You'll get to try it at Christmas!

      Reply

  5. Jyothi

    Rich Christmas Fruitcake (14)
    This recipe doesn't have baking powder..is there any mistake or no need to put the baking powder?

    Reply

    • hannahhossack

      Hi Jyothi, no mistake! This is meant to be a very rich and dense fruitcake - more fruit than cake really; so it doesn't need any baking powder. If you would like to make the texture a little lighter then you can add in a teaspoon of baking powder.

      Reply

  6. Mary-Gail Durst

    I made this Christmas cake last year and it was amazing! I would like to make it again this year but in a smaller loaf pan. (make 2 or 3 cakes with the same amount of batter as the larger one). Would it work in a loaf pan and how long should I bake it ?

    Reply

    • hannahhossack

      Hi Mary-Gail, So glad you enjoyed the cake! I think that it would work fine as several smaller loaves. I haven't tried it myself so I'm not sure how long they would take; keep the same oven temperature and start checking for doneness after an hour but they could take up to three; I really can't say for sure without testing it.

      Reply

  7. Shannon

    This sounds amazing and I want to try making it. Can I substitute molasses for the treacle? I don’t think I can buy it in my area. The sugar also. May I substitute dark brown sugar? I might be able to buy some of the items on Amazon but I would really like to make it sooner than later !

    Reply

    • hannahhossack

      Hi Shannon, yes, both of those subs are absolutely fine - muscovado and soft brown sugar are interchangeable and treacle is very similar to molasses. I hope you enjoy it!

      Reply

  8. Patricia Mary Scott

    Rich Christmas Fruitcake (15)
    Best Christmas Cake ever!
    I made 3 and my husband has eaten 2 of them I'm just going to marzipan and ice the 3rd one and I'll have to hide it again.
    Thank you for the wonderful recipe.
    Patty

    Reply

  9. Tamra

    Made this fruitcake flavour absolutely amazing but ... the fig seeds are crunchy(like little poppy seeds) once cake is cooked should I have deseeded gigs prior to putting in cake

    Reply

    • hannahhossack

      Hi Tamra, There is no need to de-seed the figs (I'm not sure that would even be possible!). If you aren't keen on the crunch then you can swap the figs for another dried fruit such as dates.

      Reply

  10. Grissel

    Rich Christmas Fruitcake (16)
    Yummmm! Looks so delicious, can't wait to try this.

    Reply

  11. Sylvia Hutchings

    How do I translate grams and two regular measurements such as cups teaspoons tablespoons soforth? I have no idea how to measure the first few ingredients

    Reply

    • hannahhossack

      Hi Sylvia, I really recommend investing in a digital scale; they are cheap to buy and are so much easier and less messy to use and way more accurate than cups. I provide cup conversions where possible but I never bake using cups myself and would never recommend using them as they are wildly inaccurate; I have no idea how you can possibly use a cup to measure out dried figs for example which is why I have not provided conversions for the first few ingredients. Here in the UK we almost always measure in grams with a scale.

      Reply

  12. Bridgel

    Hi Hannah, gonna try this recipe for Christmas. I'm planning to make them in paper loaf tins. The ones that are the bake and serve. If I make them in those do I still have to line then with double parchment paper? Please do reply.

    Reply

    • hannahhossack

      Hi Bridgel, I would still line the tin as the double parchment paper stops the outside of the cake from burning due to the long bake time.

      Reply

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  1. […] the Rich Fruitcake recipefrom Domestic […]

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  2. […] cake recipe I used is my rich Christmas fruitcake, so the marzipan and royal icing quantities given below are the amount to cover an 18cm round but […]

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  3. […] The best way I came up with was these mincemeat and marzipan cinnamon buns, which also helpfully used up the marzipan leftover from covering my Christmas cake. […]

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