This Eggnog Cake with cream cheese frosting and white chocolate ganache is just the thing to warm you up this Holiday season!
Our Christmas stuff is up! Finally! I am SO excited.
We’ve been holding off because we were having a good chunk of the place painted last week and didn’t want to have the holiday decorations taking over. But now the painting is finished and it’s full-on Christmas mode in the Liv for Cake household.
Our stack of holiday movies has been unpacked, dusted off, and neatly piled in our tv room so we can start making our way through our favorites.
We have a few movies that we watch every year on specific days, because we’re crazy like that.
The Holiday (my absolute fave) usually kicks off the first night of Christmas break, and National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation gets watched twice — the night we put the tree up (which is usually mid-November) and again on Christmas Eve. It’s a classic!
Some of our holiday movies don’t get as much love as they deserve.
Remember all those stop motion ones when we were growing up? Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer, Santa Claus Is Coming to Town, etc. All of those are in our collection, but we almost never watch them.
They’re just not the same for some reason. And why does Rudolph seem so epically LONG these days? I’ve tried to watch it, but it’s like never-ending.
Old classics like It’s a Wonderful Life, White Christmas, and Holiday Inn rarely get watched as well, but I love having them in our collection.
A recent new fave of ours is Arthur Christmas — super cute and fun!
And another less-known fave of mine is While You Were Sleeping (does anyone know that one??). It’s totally cheesy, but I love a good Sandra Bullock movie.
And, of course, no Christmas is complete without at least one viewing of Mickey’s Christmas Carol and the various holiday Disney shorts.
Wow, I’ve rambled on for 4 paragraphs about Christmas movies. Don’t even get me started on our Christmas decorations. That’s a whole post unto itself.
How to make this Eggnog Cake
Alright, this is it. This Eggnog Cake is my last eggnog recipe of the season. Are you sick of them yet?
Totally understand if you might be, but for some reason I was on an eggnog kick this year. I go through phases with stuff, and I guess this year it was eggnog’s turn.
The cake recipe itself uses over a cup of eggnog in the batter as some brown sugar and nutmeg. The flavor and texutre of the cake is amazing. You will love it!!
Ganache Drip
I love the naked cake style, and if you’ve been following Liv for Cake for a while, you know that I love a drippy ganache!
White chocolate is actually not my favorite, so this is my first time using it in a ganache, but I think it worked great on this Eggnog Cake.
In hindsight, I should have made the ganache with eggnog instead of cream (duh). So I recommend doing that instead.
Not totally sure how it would work, but I’m thinking it would be ok and add some extra flavor — in case you’d like to amp up the eggnog even more, it’s something you could try.
Cream Cheese Frosting
Also, I forgot to put nutmeg in the frosting (lol).
I fully intended to, as it pairs so well with eggnog (there is nutmeg in the cake), but I was in a rush (as usual) and I thought that I didn’t need to grab my recipe notebook because the frosting was the same as I’d used on the Gingerbread Cake from last week.
Except that after I put the cake together, I realized that I specifically wanted to make the frosting a bit different and add nutmeg to it (sigh). Oh well! It’s delicious as-is, but a bit more nutmeg couldn’t hurt, should you feel inclined to add some.
I am really happy with how this Eggnog Cake turned out! It is delicious and looks better than I thought it would, which almost never happens.
The eggnog flavor really comes through, and the sweet cake pairs really well with the tangy cream cheese frosting. The white chocolate ganache adds both flavor and flair. A perfect cake for the holiday season!
Notes & tips for this Spiked Eggnog Cake:
- Dec 15, 2019 – Recipe revised to make taller layers. The layers should bake up to be 2″ tall in three 6″ cake pans.
- The recipe as-is will also work in two 8″ pans. For three 8″ pans, 1.5x the recipe.
- To make cupcakes, all you need to do is reduce the baking time — start checking at 15mins or so.
- The cooled cake layers can be baked ahead of time, double wrapped in plastic wrap, and frozen for up to 3 months. Take out 2-3 hours before assembly.
- The frosting can be placed in an airtight container and refrigerated for 1 week for frozen for 3 months. Bring to room temp and rewhip before using.
- You can leave the rum out or replace it with vanilla or rum extract if you’d like a kid-friendly cake.
- I forgot to include the nutmeg in my frosting but had intended to have it in there!
- If the ganache is too thick (mine was a bit), add in a tsp of heavy cream until it gets to a thin enough consistency.
- You will have some rum simple syrup leftover. You can use this to sweeten/spike cocktails or hot beverages like coffee or hot chocolate.
- Learn how to keep your cakes moist using Simple Syrup.
- To help ensure your cake layers bake up nice and flat, check out my How to Bake Flat Cake Layers post!
Eggnog Cake
Ingredients
Eggnog Cake:
- 2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
- 2 1/4 tsp baking powder
- 3/4 tsp salt
- 3/4 tsp nutmeg ground
- 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon ground
- 3/4 cup unsalted butter room temperature
- 3/4 cup granulated sugar
- 3/4 cup light brown sugar packed
- 3 large eggs room temperature
- 1 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
- 1 1/4 cup eggnog room temperature
Rum Simple Syrup:
- 1/2 cup water
- 1/2 cup granulated sugar
- 1 Tbsp rum
Cream Cheese Frosting:
- 1 1/2 cup unsalted butter room temperature
- 8 oz cream cheese full fat, room temperature
- 4 1/2 cups powdered sugar
- 1 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
- 3/4 tsp nutmeg * ground, optional
White Chocolate Ganache:
- 3 oz white chocolate chopped
- 1 oz heavy whipping cream or eggnog
Instructions
Eggnog Cake:
- Preheat oven to 350F and grease and flour three 6″ cake rounds, line with parchment.
- In a medium bowl, whisk flour, baking powder, nutmeg, cinnamon, and salt. Set aside.
- Using a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat butter until smooth. Add sugars and beat on med-high until pale and fluffy (2-3mins).
- Reduce speed and add eggs one at a time, fully incorporating after each addition. Add vanilla.
- Alternate adding flour mixture and eggnog, beginning and ending with flour (3 additions of flour and 2 of eggnog). Fully incorporating after each addition. Do not overmix.
- Spread batter evenly into prepared pans. Smooth the tops with a spatula.
- Bake for approx. 30-35mins or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out mostly clean.
- Place cakes on wire rack to cool for 10mins then turn out onto wire rack. Poke holes into the warm cakes and brush with some of the cooled rum simple syrup to moisten them***. Allow cakes to cool completely.
Rum Simple Syrup:
- Place sugar and water into a small saucepan and cook over high heat until simmering and sugar is dissolved. Remove from heat and stir in rum. Allow to cool slightly before using on cake.
Cream Cheese Frosting:
- Beat butter and cream cheese until fluffy (2 mins). Add powdered sugar one cup at a time. Add vanilla & nutmeg and beat until fluffy (3 mins).
White Chocolate Ganache:
- Place chopped chocolate and cream (or eggnog) into a microwave safe bowl. Stir to combine. Microwave for 20 seconds, stir. Microwave in 10 second intervals, stirring in between, until smooth and silky. Set aside to cool and thicken slightly before using on cake.
Assembly:
- Trim the tops of the cakes slightly to remove the "crust". Brush each cake layer with about 2-3Tbsp of simple syrup.
- Place one layer of cake on a cake stand or serving plate. Top with 2/3 cup of frosting. Repeat with remaining layers and apply a thin coat of frosting all over the cake. Use a bench scraper to smooth the sides. Chill for 20mins.
- Using a teaspoon, drip ganache along the edges then fill in the top and smooth. Chill for 15mins. Sprinkle with nutmeg and top with rosettes if desired I used a 1M tip.
Notes
** If the ganache is too thick (mine was a bit), add in a tsp of heavy cream until it gets to a thin enough consistency.
*** You will have some rum simple syrup leftover. You can use this to sweeten/spike cocktails or hot beverages like coffee or hot chocolate.
Originally published on Dec 4, 2016
Ailsa says
This is too much a great recipe. I will make this one eggnog cake on my mother’s birthday. Thank you so much.
Olivia says
Thanks so much Alisa!
Laurie Siegmund` says
So, I have had a request from a co-worker that she loves spice cakes. It is just beautiful. Would this qualify? Also, I find that homemade cakes so dry and dense! I don’t eat sweets and haven’t taken the loving care like I have with savory food to perfect. Is this light and fluffy??
Olivia says
Hi Laurie! I think it would depend on what your co-worker considers a spice cake. This one has spices in it, but is not as spice flavoured as something like a gingerbread cake or full on spice cake. All of my cakes are more on the dense side because that’s how I prefer them. They should not be dry though, only if overbaked.
heidi gordon says
Love this cake. Have made it several times. Have a question. I would like to make it at a later date. Can you freeze the cake layers and assemble later? Has anyone tried to?
Olivia says
Hi Heidi! You can totally freeze the cake layers. Just wrap them well in plastic wrap and freeze for up to 3 months.
Abby says
Thank you so much for this recipe. I wanted to let you know that I made it but tweaked it a little bit and it came out amazing. When I read the comments about it being a dense cake I wanted it light and fluffy so I switched a few of the ingredients. To make 4 8″ pans, I doubled the recipe. But I used two and a half cups all-purpose flour and two and a half cups cake flour. I also used three and a half teaspoons of baking powder and one teaspoon baking soda because I wanted to add buttermilk. I did one and a half
cup eggnog and one cup buttermilk. It’s really light and fluffy and not crumbly and taste amazing.
Olivia says
Hi Abby! So happy you liked it 🙂
Heather Maclean says
Hi you had mentioned in your feed that you may be doing this as a bundt cake this year, my favourite.
What size of pan would you use and how long would you bake it for?
Thanks so much!
Olivia says
Hi Heather! I’m going to increase the recipe (Change the Servings to 16 to get the amounts) and bake it in a 10cup Bundt pan (the Heritage Bundt pan from Nordic Ware – love this one!). A larger 12 cup pan will work too though. It will probably take 45-50mins to bake through. Or you can just use my Rum & Eggnog bundt recipe for ease. The ingredients are slightly different, but the result will be similar. The Bundt recipe will be a bit more on the dense side. Let me know how it turns out!
Sarah says
Oh my giddy aunt! Someone else actually knows the movie “While You Were Sleeping”?!! I ADORE that film ♡♡♡ Watched it twice in a row just the other day! Anyways, the cake looks great except I have never tried eggnog before and have no idea what it tastes like 🙂
Olivia says
Hi Sarah! YES! I am so glad at least one other person knows what I’m talking about LOL. I made Ryan watch it for the first time last year, it’s such a perfect holiday movie, but it’s NEVER on any oliday movie lists. People are missing OUT. And eggnog, meh I don’t like it on its own, but it’s SO good in cakes 😉
Christina M. Kaucnik says
I made it just now and my layers are thin as well. Disappointing. I should have read comments first. There was not much batter for 3 cake pans.
Olivia says
Hi Christina! Thanks for your feedback. The cake layers should be about 1.25″ to 1.5″ tall in three 6″ pans (as pictured). However, I’ve taken your feedback and that of others and revised the recipe to bake up taller layers. I hope you loved the flavour!
Eleanor Marynuik says
Hi Liv
I made the Egg Nog Cake as per the recipe but my layers are not very high, they are about 1 inch each. When I look at the picture the cake seems higher, so I made it again, still each of the layers are not very tall….I also made the gingerbread cake and the layers are great. I can’t figure out if I have done something wrong or if the cake is not as tall as others. I used new baking powder and cake strips for baking, so I am stumped!
Thanks
Ellie
Olivia says
Hi Eleanor! My layers were just over 1″ tall here, maybe 1.25″. These days I make my cakes a bit taller — I may modify this recipe to account for that. If you’d like taller layers, adjust the Servings to 18 (the flour should then read 2.25 cups). Those will bake 2″ tall layers.
Dana says
This looks delicious. Would there be a way to incorporate eggnog in the Cream Cheese Frosting without affecting the texture?
Olivia says
Hi Dana! I don’t think so 🙁 Cream cheese frosting is already on the softer side so adding eggnog will thin it out too much. You could try eggnog flavouring like this: https://amzn.to/2ONHQ5g I don’t have experience using it myself as I prefer to use natural flavours when possible, but the LorAnn brand has a good reputation in general.
Beth says
My husband is a big fan of eggnog so I made this cake for him as soon as eggnog came out in the store this year. He said it was his favorite cake EVER and insisted I make it again for family Thanksgiving. I did use the eggnog in the ganache as you suggested and it turned out great! Thank you for sharing such a delicious and pretty cake!
Olivia says
Hi Beth! I’m so happy to hear that you both loved it! It truly is one of my favourite cakes for the holiday season 🙂
Lauren says
I love this cake! I baked it for Christmas and it was a huge hit–great recipe! I don’t think my layers rose very well, however, as they were a bit dense. Do you have any suggestions for techniques to ensure good rising? Also, do you recommend any books that cover the technical/sciencey aspects of the ingredients and which would help with troubleshooting and better understanding baking?
Thank you!!!
Olivia says
Hi Lauren! So glad you liked it! The cake is a bit more on the denser side, but shouldn’t be too dense. This can sometimes happen from overmixing the cake batter. Take a look at my friend Janice’s post here for some great baking science books! https://www.kitchenhealssoul.com/5-science-baking-cooking-books-satisfy-inner-nerd/
Pam hartman says
I made this cake for New Years Eve and it was wonderful! I did use eggnog in place of the cream in the ganache.
Olivia says
Hi Pam! So glad you liked it and that you tried the eggnog in the ganache!
Luann Danielski says
I made the cake with Bob’s Red Mill gluten free flour. I also used Lactaid Egg Nog. The cake turned out delicious. I also crushed a candy cane and sprinkled on the ganache. Very pretty on the white frosting and tasty.
Olivia says
Hi Luann! Thanks so much for the tips. Glad it turned out!
Audrey Eastwood says
Do I need to adjust this recipe for high altitude?
Olivia says
Hi Audrey! You would likely need to adjust. I’ve never baked in high altitude, but here are some tips: https://www.kingarthurflour.com/learn/high-altitude-baking.html
Sophie says
If I were to make this for 3 9” layers, how much should I increase the recipe by? Thanks!
Olivia says
Hi Sophie! Converting pan sizes is always tricky. Here’s a site I use as a guideline: http://www.joyofbaking.com/PanSizes.html
Taneatha says
I have spiced rum instead of plain rum. Will that work?
Olivia says
HI Taneatha! Yes, that should work fine!
Christy says
I’ve read all the comments and I do not have the 6″ tins but can sub the 2 9″ and will double the recipe. My question is will I be ok to not double the syrup – it seems like you said there would be extra of that. The ganache is for the top so maybe don’t double that? But guessing I should double the cream cheese icing? What would be your suggestion?
Olivia says
Hi Christy! Yes, it should be fine to not double the syrup or the ganache, but I would double the frosting just in case 🙂
Sidonie says
Hi Liv. Did you use Homemade eggnog in this recipe?
Olivia says
Hi Sidonie! No, I used store-bought.
Raven says
Made this cake last week and it was delicious! I have eggnog extract, so I added that to the batter and the frosting to amp up the eggnog effect. I omitted the rum simple syrup due to it being a work function, but I bet that addition would have been extra delicious and the simple syrup would have upped the moistness factor. Still, I’m grateful the cake was not dry without it. Excellent flavor.
Olivia says
Hi Raven! Thanks so much for the feedback, I’m so happy that you liked it!
Whittney says
How would you adjust the cooking time on this for cupcakes. Also, these will be for kids, do you suggest I use rum extract instead or just skip the syrup?
Olivia says
Hi Whittney! I would check the cupcakes at 15mins or so, depending on the size of them. And yes, I’d either skip it or use extract 🙂