Blotkake (Norwegian Cream Cake) Recipe (2024)

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Eric

I have made Bløtkake many times. My method is:- Seperate the eggs.
In a large mixing bowl, beat egg whites until fluffy, then gradually add the sugar, continuing to beat until stiff. In one medium bowl, beat the egg yolks and vanilla extract. In another, sift the flour and baking powder together. Gently fold the beaten yolks and the flour into the egg whites until the yellow swirls and any clumps of flour disappear. Pour the batter into the two pans, then bake until the centers spring back.

Francesca

If you warm the egg-sugar-vanilla mixture, you can get more volume. Put the eggs, sugar and vanilla in your mixer bowl and place bowl over (but not in) a pot of simmering water. Stir the mixture with your hand! You will feel the mixture warm up. You can monitor the mixture so it doesn't get too hot causing the eggs to cook. Also, you can feel the sugar melting. When the sugar no longer feels grainy and the mixture is evenly warm, put it on the mixer. You should get a lot of volume.

Jane

Bakeapple jam from Newfoundland-Labrador would be another option.
Bakeapples and Cloudberries are the same berry.

Kersti

I agree that the problem is in the beating. I have made sponge cake for many decades with only eggs, regular flour, sugar, and vanilla (no baking powder at all). But the egg yolks and whites are beaten separately.

Lise Bendixen

No need to separate the eggs, but they should be roomtemperature or a little warmer (leave 10 min in a bowl of hot tap water). In my experience whisking time is closer to 10 min. - sugar should devolve.

In Scandinavia we have special tins for this cake, but I lost mine and I suck at splitting the cake into layers. Instead I draw three circles on three pieces of bakings paper, and spread each with 1/3 of the batter. Then bake for aprox. 10 min. until golden and firm.

Joanne

Delicious! I have s bunch of Norwegian friends, and they said that strawberries, bananas, and kiwis are the fruits they use in assembling this cake. I made it with strawberry jam and sliced banana between the layers, and strawberries on top, and it was great. I made it for a Norwegian friend's birthday, and she loved it.
I had some trouble with the cake, and made 2 to get 3 layers. It did not rise well, but tasted good.

Rasma

I have lived in Norway for nearly 20 years and learned from my mother-in-law the secret to good bløtkake is BOILING WATER.

Bibbi's Bløtkake
Whisk 3 eggs and 3 dl sugar.
Add 1 dl BOILING water
Sift 3 dl flour and 2 ts baking powder, fold in

Grease and line spring pan with parchment paper, grease paper as well. Bake low in the oven 30 minutes 180 C. Slice horiz, soak w juice, let stand. Layer w canned or fresh fruit, and unsweetened whipped cream. Cake gets better as it stands and soaks.

Elin

It is not really a Norwegian bløtekake then, it is more like a sponge cake. The Norwegian bløtekake, is the same as a Genoise without the butter.
For a (Victoria) sponge you mix the egg white separately from the yolk, and then fold them, while the Genoise has you beat the eggs whole.
Bløtekake is similar to Fraisier, but we do not heath the egg mix. Use one spring pan, then cut in three. It makes it lighter, softer and more soaked (bløt).
Use a cream with ca 38% fat.
From Norway

Gemma

I feel like this spongecake recipe isn't very good. I think that if they would have had you separate the eggs and use less yolk and more whites, that would have been better. It was difficult to reach a fluffy consistency with so much yolk. If I make this again, I'm using a different spongecake recipe.

Linn

It is actually called Bløtkake!
Love, the Norwegian people

Kerry Molinari

Delicious cake. I made the mistake of assembling it just before i served it. It was a really hot Australian Christmas Day and I made it to salute the Norwegian family members. The sponge was still a bit dry but the while thing was indeed a "moist" cake the next day. So it is much better assembled at least half a day before serving.

Maggie

FWIW, baking powder definitely loses its oomph after a relatively short time. If you used a container that had been open for a while, that might be the problem.

Tricia

For lack of supplies I was forced to use lingonberry preserve instead of cloudberry and Cointreau instead of Chambord, but with those caveats I offer the following: at least double the amount of jam you add to the whipped cream for filling in the layers, & fill one of the 2 layers with straight-up preserves. Even with plenty of berries on top, the finished cake was one-note bland—pretty much straight whipped-cream flavor, much as I love the stuff—& needed more fruitiness.

pat

Cloudberry jam has REALLY big seeds. Tasty cake, easy to make, but next I will use raspberry jam.

Tess

Think I could use limoncello as the liqueur?

Jen

My kids always request a vanilla cake with fresh cream and berries for their bdays. I usually buy the Whole Foods Chantily cake (it’s delicious) but this year I felt inspired. As a first time maker of Blotkake, it turned out very well. I followed suggestions to beat egg whites separately to create volume. It worked! Lazy version… just did 2 layers separately in cake pans. If you have spring form, use them as the cake is a bit hard to remove.

MCV

I used half the amount of cream and 4 tablespoons of preserves and I still had a some filling left over!

Bonnie

My husband chose this as his birthday cake! Used creme de cassis and sprinkled sparingly. Delicious!

Bonnie

Such a delicious cake. My observations: 3 cups of heavy cream is a lot, I ended up with a ton left over and no use for it. I had barely enough batter for 2 layers, not enough at all for 3. I followed directions in one of the comments suggesting to whip the egg whites separately with sugar, beat the eggs and vanilla, and fold into the sifted flour with baking powder. Sponge cake came out great. I added a bit more confectioner's sugar to the whipped cream and also rolled the blackberries in it.

Katherine

Made as written for husband's birthday on Dec 31. It was a big hit, very festive, and a lovely change-up from all the chocolate we had been eating over Christmas. A glass of dry sparkling rosé topped with Chambord and a raspberry went beautifully with it.

dj cookie

How in God’s name did anyone make three layers out of this?

MCV

I used a medium-sized rectangular sheet and cooked the cake for about 10 minutes. I just cut the rectangle into 3 equal-sized smaller ones to make the three layers.

Maggie

Agree with all the notes that the yolks and whites have to be beaten separately. Did mine gluten free, and it worked great, no further adjustments needed.

Angela Skeie

The recipe looks correct, but the method is a bit off. 3-4 minutes for beating the eggs and sugar isn’t half as much as usually needed. True to the recipe, no need to separate the eggs (as others have suggested as we see in other sponge cakes more common in England, for example). Julia child put it best herself as she learned in her time spent in Norway, you should be able to spell the name “Ole” when you lift up the whisk and the ‘O’ should still be visible by the time you finish the ‘e.’

Angela Skeie

It should also be assembled a day in advance. “Bløt” means wet, and that is the main idea and what makes the flavors mingle and the taste and texture divine. I mix the jam with water and spoon it into the layers, then add the cream on top of each layer. Interestingly, cake flour doesn’t exist in Norway, but as the millings vary anyway, I am sure it isn’t wrong. Agree that many put bananas in the layers. Whatever is good according to the season works. Whipped enough, baking powder can be omitted.

Chef me

I added 4 teaspoons of preserves. A very good cake over all.

Kelly

For sponge cake, have eggs at room temperature, then beat them for about 15 minutes with superfine sugar. You don't have to separate them.

Tess

Think I could use limoncello as the liqueur?

Tess

I used Limoncello and it was delicious!

Ann

I am a barely competent baker. I made this recipe as written before reading the comments. I had zero trouble getting the batter fluffy & silky & amazing; it baked up beautifully! I imagine it just requires a little patience to get the batter to where it needs to be. I could have gotten three layers out of it, but decided on two. I made the cake for friends who are in recovery, so smashed raspberries to make the juice & mixed the pulp into the filling instead of jam. It was absolutely delicious!

Alcee

Mine didn't get much height either so I ended up with two layers. If I made it again, I'd double the amount of preserves. The only flavor came from the Chambord.

Rebecca H

I like the subtle sweetness of the cake, though could do with a bit more liqueur and a bit less cream.Combining advice, I separated the eggs and whisked the whites, sugar, and vanilla over hot water until warm--then continued off the heat until I had soft peaks. I then mixed a bit of the whites mix with the yolks, folded the whites in with the dry ingredients, and folded in the yolks mix. I did use baking soda and did grease and flour the pan. The result was a very strong rise and stable cake.

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Blotkake (Norwegian Cream Cake) Recipe (2024)
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