wikiHow is a “wiki,” similar to Wikipedia, which means that many of our articles are co-written by multiple authors. To create this article, volunteer authors worked to edit and improve it over time.
wikiHow marks an article as reader-approved once it receives enough positive feedback. This article received 12 testimonials and 92% of readers who voted found it helpful, earning it our reader-approved status.
This article has been viewed 130,784 times.
Learn more...
Fruitcake is a type of cake people traditionally bake for holidays or other celebrations that gains its distinctive flavor through the addition of spirits. Most fruitcakes are composed of cake batter, dried or candied fruits, and nuts. Basting fruitcake with rum or other alcohol also provides moisture and helps preserve the cake. You add rum to fruitcake both before baking through soaking the fruit and after baking by applying directly to the cake and to a cheesecloth.
Steps
-
1Place the dried and candied fruit you will be adding to the cake batter in a measuring cup or sealable container. Follow your chosen fruitcake recipe to determine the amount of fruit you should use.
-
2Pour dark rum over the fruit. The rum should completely cover the fruit. Cover with plastic wrap or container lid.Advertisement
-
3Soak the fruit in rum for at least 24 hours at room temperature before baking your fruitcake. 72 hours of soaking is ideal, but check the fruit each day and add more rum if needed so that it doesn't dry out.
-
4Add rum soaked fruit to your cake batter and reserve the soaking liquid.
-
5Bake fruitcake and let cool completely. Leave it in its baking pan.
-
6Brush reserved rum across the top of the fruitcake with a pastry brush.
-
7Place a piece of plastic wrap large enough to cover the entire fruitcake on your work surface.
-
8Dampen a cheesecloth with rum and place it over the plastic wrap.
-
9Unmold the fruitcake onto the cheesecloth. Wrap the cake with the cheesecloth and then brush with some additional rum.
-
10Pull the plastic up and around the cheesecloth covered cake. Make sure you pull it tightly against the cake.
-
11Cover the cake with 2 layers of aluminum foil. Place cake in an airtight container and store at room temperature.
-
12Let the fruitcake cure. Fruitcakes typically take at least a month to cure, which is when the alcohol mellows, but most traditional recipes recommend 3 months.
-
13Baste fruitcake with rum.
- Unwrap and baste the fruitcake with rum every 1 to 2 weeks if you do not plan to store the cake long. You can sprinkle the rum directly over the cake or brush it onto the cake with a pastry brush.
- Maintain the moist texture and flavor of your fruitcake during longer curing periods by thoroughly brushing with rum at least every 3 months. Tightly rewrap the cheesecloth, plastic wrap and foil.
-
14Finished.
Community Q&A
-
QuestionI soaked the fruits in rum for a couple of days, but when I baked the cake, it got very smoky. Is this normal?Community AnswerI am guessing that the smoke was actually from something burning on the floor of your oven, not from the cake itself. The alcohol evaporating wouldn't cause smoke and it would be relatively minor if it did.
-
QuestionCan l use something else in the place of alcohol?Community AnswerAlcohol is an unnecessary additive to fruitcake. Bake your cake on the middle rack with 2+ cups of water in another pan on the bottom rack. This will increase the volume AND moisture content of your cake. Store it in foil, airtight for 1 to 3 months and serve. Everyone will enjoy it.
-
QuestionCan I boil the fruits first then soak with brandy?Community AnswerIf you intend to make them softer, steam them to desired texture. Boiling will weaken their flavors.
Warnings
- If you don't baste the fruitcake with rum or other alcohol during storage, it can dry out and lose its flavor.⧼thumbs_response⧽
- Although you can choose to store a fruitcake in the freezer, don't freeze your fruitcake before you cure it. Freezing stops the seasoning process.⧼thumbs_response⧽
Things You'll Need
- Fruitcake recipe and ingredients
- Measuring cup or sealable container
- Rum
- Pastry brush
- Plastic wrap
- Cheesecloth
- Aluminum foil
- Airtight container
References
- Beranbaum, Rose Levy. The Cake Bible. New York: Harper Collins, 1988.
- http://www.finecooking.com/articles/how-to-make-fruitcake.aspx
- http://www.joyofbaking.com/FruitCake.html