Christmas fruitcake - one hundred year old family recipe - bite (2024)

UPDATE: It’s time to start your Fruitcake so that it’s ready for the holidays. I shared this Fruitcake recipe five years ago but it continues to be one of my most popular posts. If you’ve never liked fruitcake in the past, this recipe will change your mind. If you make it in the next few days, it will be ready for Christmas dinner. XO

It snowed. We’ve gone from gardening in shirtsleeves to frantically trying to find matching winter gloves in one day! The upside; it’s time to make my Christmas fruitcake.

I heard your gasp. “Christmas is almost two months away. Why are you making fruitcake now?”

Simple. Fruitcake needs time to mellow. The mellowing process is called ripening. Fruitcake needs at least one month to ripen. I prefer to give my fruitcake two months.

Growing up, fruitcake was the only holiday sweet that I’d leave on the party platter. It often looked dry and, on the rare occasion when I did take a nibble, I found the taste bitter. The first Christmas that I spent with Ralph, he kept on about his mother’s fruitcake for weeks. When Boxing Day rolled around, all of the Hootons gathered at the family homestead for their annual holiday get-together. The dining room table was literally groaning with desserts. Gingerbread men, shortbread cookies, jam-jams, mincemeat tartlets, caramel corn, cherry cheesecake and, in the middle of all that deliciousness, the dreaded fruitcake.The funny thing was it didn’t look like any fruitcake that I’d ever seen. There was no crusty frosting or almond paste on the outside. The cake part looked dark, rich and moist and the fruit was actually glistening.

True to his word, when the tea was served, Ralph presented me with a slicein front of his mom.I’m going to be honest; had I not liked it, I would have lied through my teeth. There was no way, with all of his family watching, that I was going to gag on their famous Christmas fruitcake!

I picked up a small piece and quickly popped it in my mouth. I figured I’d get it over with in one gulp.I know you know where this is going…The flavour and texture were off the charts! The fruitcake tasted exactly as it looked: just enough moist cake to hold together the luscious fruit.

It turns out, this recipe has been in Ralph’s family for over one hundred years. His great-grandmother, Grammy Price, taught his mom to make it when she was a little girl. Gram was a teetotaler so Ralph’s mom made a few adjustments to the original recipe. I asked her if her grandmother noticed the difference.

“She never said, but she always asked for a second slice…”

For years, Ralph’s mom gave us a whole fruitcake just before the holidays. She’s passed on her grandmother’s fruitcake steamer to me. It’s one of my most cherished gifts. Now, I have the honour and privilege to make fruitcake for her.

So here we go – Christmas 2014.The girls are coming home. They’ve asked to celebrate Coen’sfirst Christmas at the farm so I have a lot of work to do,starting with Nanny Hooton’s Christmas Fruitcake.

NANNY HOOTON’S FRUITCAKE

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THE FRUIT

2 lbs red cherries
2 lbs green cherries
2 lbs seeded raisins, separated
2 lbs pitted dates
2 lbs mixed fruit
1 lb pecans
½ – 750 ml bottle inexpensive Port

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THE STEPS:

  • Place all of the ingredients in a large mixing bowl and toss well.
  • Cover with a tea towel and leave to soak over night.

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THE CAKE BATTER

4 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon ground ginger
1 teaspoon ground cloves
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
1 ½ cup brown sugar
2/3 cup butter – the original recipe calls for vegetable shortening
8 eggs
1 cup fancy molasses
1 cup cold tea

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THE STEPS:

  • Grease your pans then line them with paper [waxed or parchment] then grease the paper – set aside.I used 2 – 6″ and 2 – 8″ round pans. The cook time stays the same because all of the pans were 2″ deep.

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  • Stir together flour, baking powder, salt, ginger, cloves and cinnamon – set aside.
  • In a large mixing bowl, beat butter and brown sugar until combined.
  • Beat in eggs, one at a time, until well incorporated.

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  • Beat in molasses and cold tea.
  • Fold in flour mixture until completely blended.
  • Add soaked fruit including any Port sitting in the bottom of the bowl. I use my hands because the batter is too heavy for a spoon to handle.

Christmas fruitcake - one hundred year old family recipe - bite (10)

  • Pour the batter into the prepared pans, full to the top, cover and steam for 2 hours. If you don’t have a fruitcake steamer, place a rack, brick or upside down cake pan on the bottom of a deep stock pot. Fill the stock pot with enough water to reach ¼ of the way up the fruitcake pan.
  • Preheat oven to 300*F

  • Place steamed fruitcake in preheated oven for 1 hour.
  • Remove fruitcake from oven to a cooling rack for 12 hours [TWELVE]

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  • Wrap them in cheesecloth. Sprinkle liberally with Port and seal the cakes in plastic wrap or in plastic storage bags. Once a week, brush the cakes with more Port.

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THE LOVE: Make sure the bowl you’re using to mix the fruit with the cake batter is big enough. You don’t want it slopping all over your counter!

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Thanks for reading.

Christmas fruitcake - one hundred year old family recipe - bite (15)

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Christmas Fruitcake

Rating: 3.2/5

( 115 voted )

Serves: 20 Prep Time: Cooking Time: Nutrition facts:200 calories20 grams fat

Ingredients

2 lbs red cherries
2 lbs green cherries
2 lbs seeded raisins, separated
2 lbs pitted dates
2 lbs mixed fruit
1 lb pecans
½ - 750 ml bottle inexpensive Port4 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon ground ginger
1 teaspoon ground cloves
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
1 ½ cup brown sugar
2/3 cup butter - the original recipe calls for vegetable shortening
8 eggs
1 cup fancy molasses
1 cup cold tea

Instructions

  1. Place all of the dried fruit, nuts and port nuts in a large mixing bowl and toss well.
  2. Cover with a tea towel and leave to soak over night.
  3. The next morning, grease your pans then line them with paper [waxed or parchment] then grease the paper - set aside. I used 2 - 6" and 2 - 8" round pans. The cook time stays the same because all of the pans were 2" deep.
  4. Stir together flour, baking powder, salt, ginger, cloves and cinnamon - set aside.
  5. In a large mixing bowl, beat butter and brown sugar until combined.
  6. Beat in eggs, one at a time, until well incorporated.
  7. Beat in molasses and cold tea.
  8. Fold in flour mixture until completely blended.
  9. Add soaked fruit including any Port sitting in the bottom of the bowl. I use my hands because the batter is too heavy for a spoon to handle.
  10. Pour the batter into the prepared pans, full to the top, cover and steam for 2 hours. If you don’t have a fruitcake steamer, place a rack, brick or upside down cake pan on the bottom of a deep stock pot. Fill the stock pot with enough water to reach ¼ of the way up the fruitcake pan.
  11. Preheat oven to 300*F
  12. Place steamed fruitcake in preheated oven for 1 hour.
  13. Remove fruitcake from oven to a cooling rack for 12 hours.
  14. Wrap the fruitcakes in cheesecloth. Sprinkle liberally with Port and seal the cakes in plastic wrap or in plastic storage bags. Once a week, brush the cakes with more Port.

Notes

THE LOVE: Make sure the bowl you’re using to mix the fruit with the cake batter is big enough. You don’t want it slopping all over your counter!

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Christmas fruitcake - one hundred year old family recipe - bite (2024)

FAQs

Can you eat 10 year old fruitcake? ›

That said, even though a decades-old fruitcake might taste like a leather shoe, eating it probably won't make you dangerously sick.

What is the best alcohol to soak fruit in for Christmas Cake? ›

What alcohol should you use? Strong, flavourful spirits with a high ABV are ideal for feeding fruitcakes. You can use rum, brandy or whisky for spice, or if you like citrus flavours, try an orange liqueur. Cherry brandy and amaretto will also work well if you prefer these.

Why was fruitcake outlawed? ›

At first, the cakes were mainly filled with nuts. When sugar became more widely available, candied preserved fruits were added. The addition of sugar made the dessert so “sinfully rich” that the church briefly banned fruitcake in the 1700s.

What ingredient in fruitcake makes it last so long? ›

The trifecta of sugar, low moisture ingredients and some high-proof spirits make fruitcakes some of the longest-lasting foods in the world.

Is fruit cake edible after 100 years? ›

The chemical composition of the cake makes it possible to keep it for a 100 years. Indeed, its density prevents bacteria and mold to proliferate and its alcohol content makes it more sanitized, which also has an impact on its conservation.

Can fruitcake last 25 years? ›

It lasts longer than you think

According to Mental Floss, fruitcake has quite the shelf life. The tasty, holiday treat can age 25 years and still be enjoyed, as long as it's stored in an airtight container.

Why does fruit cake have a bad reputation? ›

Part of the reason this dense, often dry cake has the reputation it does is due to that no one finds that dried fruit in the middle to be appealing. Secondly, the actual cake itself has a minimal flavor and required at least one cup of tea - if not several - in order to get through just a few bites.

Does anyone still eat fruitcake? ›

The website Serious Eats reports that over 2 million fruitcakes are still sold each year, so someone is clearly eating them.

Is fruitcake healthy for you? ›

We might like to pretend, based on its name, that fruitcake is a reasonably healthy sweet option, however this is not the case. Fruitcake tends to have high butter, sugar and syrup content, making it high in both fat and calorie content. The same goes for Panettone- the Italian bread that has become a holiday favorite.

What is the difference between fruitcake and Stollen? ›

In Germany, fruitcakes (known as Stollen) don't quite resemble their American counterparts. Fruitcake vs. Stollen: Flattened with a chewy crust, Stollen is often baked more like a traditional loaf of sourdough bread.

Why do you soak fruitcake in alcohol? ›

Alcohol serves as a preservative

Almost any recipe that calls for soaking fruits for a long period of time, that is several days, weeks, or months, will use some sort of liquor to soak the fruits.

Does fruit cake get better with age? ›

Like Fine Wine, Fruitcake Get Better With Time

But before you RSVP to bring dessert, you must plan ahead. Like we said, aging a fruitcake will take a little time. The most common duration to properly age a fruitcake is about three months.

Can you eat a 30 year old fruit cake? ›

Yes, a fruit cake could actually become the tough hard doorstop of fabled infamy. Ignore it long enough, say beyond 2 months, and this antique tradition will start to dry out. Harden. Awwww, lose flavor.

How long is fruit cake safe to eat? ›

How to Store Fruitcake Without Alcohol? Fruitcake without alcohol won't last as long, however, its shelf life can still be maximized through proper storage techniques. Our fruitcake can last up to one month on your countertop, four months in the fridge, and six months in the freezer.

Can you eat a 10 year old cake? ›

Before indulging in a decade-old slice, a thorough visual and olfactory inspection is paramount. Any signs of discoloration, off-odors, or visible mold growth are clear indicators that the cake should not be consumed.

Can you eat out of date fruit cake? ›

The best thing to do is look at the cake. If there are any signs of mould, or if the cake has a fermented, sour or odd smell, then it is safer to discard the cake. But if there are none of these then the cake sould be fine as rich fruit cakes can be kept for longer.

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