Lately, I lost my voice (metaphorically speaking). I don’t know if I want to talk about Christmas, or about how full we still are or maybe how the kittens are growing and getting bolder.
So instead of trying to make up something, I will present you with a monster cake aka honey cake (miodownik).
The cake is huge, it has 3 layers of cake and 2 layers of cream. It was baked in a pan 25x35cm. So this is a great cake for a party or sharing. We made one Italian guy very happy as he saved himself three slices for the Christmas breakfast.
The cake tastes the best after 2-3 days in the fridge. All flavors nicely come together. Tomek and I still argue what the best part of the cake I think that is the walnut top layer is, he says it was the cream. I wonder what will be your choice.
Honey Cake (Miodownik)

Cake
- 600 g plain flour
- 2 tsp baking soda
- 3/4 cup caster sugar
- 2 eggs, lightly beaten
- 2 egg yolks
- 200 g butter, cold
- 3 Tbsp milk
- 3 Tbsp honey
- 1 Tbsp vanilla sugar
Walnut layer
- 2 Tbsp unsalted butter
- 4 Tbsp honey
- 3 Tbsp sugar
- 200g walnuts
Cream
- 10 Tbsp/115g semolina (Polish: kasza manna)
- 500 ml full-fat milk
- 250 ml evaporated milk (unsweetened)
- 2/3 cup sugar
- 2 egg yolks
- 1 Tbsp vanilla sugar
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 250 g butter
- 2 Tbsp vanilla liqueur or other alcohol
Cake
Preheat the oven to 180ºC/160ºC fan. Sift the flour and baking soda. Add cold butter. With your hands, rub together the flour mixture with the butter cubes until the mixture forms small breadcrumbs. Alternatively, you can use a food processor for 10-12 second. Add the remaining ingredients and quickly knead the dough. Divide it into 3 pieces. Line 25x35cm pans with parchment paper. If you have three pans than you are lucky, you can bake them in one batch. Otherwise, you need to bake each layer separately. Roll out the dough on a lightly floured work surface until it covers the pan base. Transfer it gently into the pan. Press the dough evenly into the bottom and sides of the pan. Prick the dough with a fork.
Walnut layer
Melt the butter in the pan. Add honey and sugar. When everything is melted add walnuts and let them fry for a few minutes.
Arrange the walnuts at the top of the one dough layer (this will be your top layer).
Cake
Bake each cake layer around 10 minutes or until golden.
Frosting
Assemble
I can almost taste the crunchiness of the toping with the softer cake base through looking at your picture. Looks lovely!
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Thank you Julie, so I see you would probably go with my opinion that the walnut layer is the best.
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Definitely!
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The cake looks super tempting!
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Thank you Angie 🙂
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Hi Magda!
Can’t wait to make Miodownik for my mum tomorrow. Special occasion calls for a special cake 🙂
I love visiting your cauldron, you take great photographs and what a fantastic selection of recipes. I’m finding it awfully hard to get into blogging, so I really admire this space.
Hope you and the cats are keeping well after the stroms!
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Hi Kama, so nice to hear from you. I hope your cake worked out nicely. Go back into blogging, without it I don’t know how to follow your adventures. I love your pets and I would love to visit you one day, I somehow have a feeling we would have nice time chat over coffee.
We actually went on holidays this month, the cats were with our friend, but yes, we are all safe and sound 🙂 Please say hello more often 🙂
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Hi, I’m looking forward to making this honey cake, but I’m a bit confused about putting the cake together once it’s cooked. Do you bake 3 separate cakes or 1 at a time? Also it doesn’t say when you put the cream on and does that need to be cooked too. Do we line the pan with grease proof paper? I’m not sure how it is all assembled? Waiting to hear back from you, thanks
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Hi Amanda,
If you have a fan oven and three 25x35cm pans, than you can bake all three layers at once. Otherwise you bake one layer at a time and yes you line your pans with parchment paper.
I usually wait with preparing cream until I have all three cake layers ready, but you can start cooking it when you put the cake into an oven as the cream needs to cool down as well.
For cream you Mix evaporated milk with semolina in a small bowl. Set aside. Then in a medium saucepan heat slightly full fat milk, sugar and vanilla sugar. Add evaporated milk with semolina, you bring it to boil and stir from time to time until the mixture thickens. Then follow the rest cream steps.
To assemble place the first walnut-less cake layer on a plastic board. Cover it with half of the frosting. Place the second cake layer. Cover it with the remaining frosting. Place the cake layer with walnuts at the top.
Leave in fridge for at least 24 hours (preferably for 48 hours). The moisture from the cream needs to transfer to the cake and soften it.
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Hi Magda
Thanks for your reply, I’ve baked the cakes and made the cream just waiting for everything to cool down so I can assemble it all together , I’ll let you know how it goes 🙂
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I hope it goes well 🙂 Fingers crossed. Just remember it takes some time to cake to soften.
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Just made the cake today, probably the most complicated cake I’ve made so far, so fingers crossed it turned out well.
Didn’t have vanilla liqueur, so used Vanilla Vodka, I’m hoping that will be ok.
I’ve made it for my wife’s birthday in 2.5 days, which will give it plenty of time to soak up the cream. She tried it at a Polish cafe and quickly became her favourite cake.
I’ll come back in a few days and let you know how it goes down.
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And how did it go, Aaron? Was your wife happy with your gift? Yes, it’s not the easiest cake and I hate all that waiting, but I hope it went well and you will believe in your baker’s skills more 🙂
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Can you use pecans instead of walnuts. Thanks
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I think this can work but never tried it.
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