Budapest Coffee Cake
Budapest Coffee Cake features layers of a luscious sour cream cake batter with a brown sugar and chopped walnut filling. In the original recipe, from 1974’s Maida Heatter’s Book of Great Desserts, there were four layers of cake and three of the filling. To achieve the four layers of cake batter, meant spreading the layers extremely thin over the nut filling, which could be quite maddening. Additionally, the baked cake layers almost melded into the filling layers.
While preparing to make the original version after many years, a very simple solution dawned on me. Simply change the formulation to three layers of cake batter and two of filling. Happily, Budapest Coffee Cake ver 2.0 was a success. It was much easier to assemble and the moist cake layers are deliciously distinct from the filling.
Budapest Coffee Cake
Yield: 1 10“ cake | # of servings: 10 | Method: Creaming |
Ingredients
Nut filling:
¾ cup (5.25 oz / 149 g) firmly packed dark brown sugar
2 tsp (.15 oz / 4 g) ground cinnamon
1 tbl (.2 oz / 6 g) cocoa powder
3 tbl (.9 oz / 26 g) currants
1 cup (4 oz / 114 g) chopped walnuts
Cake batter:
3 cups less 2 tbl (12.75 oz / 362 g) all-purpose flour
1 ½ tsp (.3 oz / 9 g) baking powder
1 ½ tsp (.3 oz / 9 g) baking soda
½ tsp (.1 oz / 3 g) salt
¾ cup (6 oz / 170 g) unsalted butter, room temperature
1 ½ cup (10.65 oz / 302 g) sugar
3 large eggs, room temperature
2 tsp vanilla extract
2 cups sour cream
Icing:
2 cups (7.65 oz / 217 g) confectioners’ sugar
3 tbl warm water
Special tools and equipment needed:
- One 12-cup Bundt or tube pan
- Hand held or free-standing mixer with paddle attachment.
- 21†pastry bag with a .56“ plain tip (Ateco #807)
Pre-recipe preparations:
- Butter the Bundt or tube pan, or place a can of release spray with flour1 by your work area.
- Bring butter, eggs, and sour cream to room temperature
Directions
Nut filling:
- Combine all ingredients in a mixing bowl, and combine well.
- Set aside.
Cake batter:
- Stir dry ingredients together in mixing bowl. Set aside.
- On medium speed, cream butter and sugar until very light and fluffy, about 5 minutes.
- Beat eggs and vanilla together.
- Add eggs in 3 stages, beating until thoroughly incorporated. Scrape bottom and sides of bowl with plastic spatula and beat until smooth.
- On lowest speed, add the dry ingredients in three stages, alternately with the sour cream mixture in two stages, beginning and ending with the dry. Use a plastic spatula to scrape the sides and the bottom of the bowl and mix. Note – this is a fairly stiff batter.
Assembly and baking:
- Preheat the oven to 350 °F
- If using baker’s spray with flour instead of butter, spray the pan well.
- Pipe or spread just under one third of the batter into the pan.
- Mix the filling to evenly distribute the walnuts. Spread a layer of the nut filling on top of the batter. You want some of the filling to touch the sides of each well, as this adds to the appearance after baking.
- Pipe or spread another layer of the batter over the nut filling. Use a small offset spatula to spread the batter over any spots where the filling is showing through.
- Continue by spreading another layer of the nut filling, and then the final layer of batter. There will be three layers of cake and two of filling.
- Rap the pan of the counter to eliminate any air pockets.
- Bake until firm to the touch and golden brown, approximately 50 to 55 minutes.
- Remove from oven and let sit for 5 minutes. Place a cooling rack over the pan and flip upside down for the cake to release onto the rack. Let cool right side up.
Finishing:
- Place confectioners’ sugar in medium mixing bowl. Whisk in the water. The icing should be thick, but still be able to fall from a spoon. If too thick, add a few additional drops of water. If too thin, add more sugar at tablespoon at a time.
- The icing can be drizzled over the cake with a teaspoon, or piped over using a small pastry bag.
- Alternatively, the cake may simply be finished with a light dusting of confectioners’ sugar.
- Store at room temperature. Cake may be frozen.
Notes:
1 Use only a spray with flour, which are formulated for baking pan release. Examples are Baker’s Joy or Pam for Baking. Regular cooking sprays, such as Pam, should not be used as they will leave a residue on the pan.
Baker’s tips:
- Classic Bundt pans are available directly from Nordic Ware: Bronze Cast Bundt ® Pan – Nordic Ware or Toffee Original Bundt ® Pan – Nordic Ware.