Three layers of carrot cake start this delicious cake. The carrot cake is made with basic cake ingredients plus grated carrots and nuts. Homemade cream cheese frosting is made with butter, vanilla, powdered sugar and of course cream cheese. For a fancier finish, additional chopped nuts are pressed into the sides of the cake after frosting.
Course
Dessert
Cuisine
Southern
Prep Time30minutes
Cook Time35minutes
Total Time1hour15minutes
Servings12people
Ingredients
2 ¼cupsself rising flour
1tspbaking soda
1 ½tspground cinnamon
2cupssugar
1cupvegetable oil
4large eggs
3cupsgrated carrots
1 ½cupschopped walnutstoasted and divided
Cream cheese frosting
2package(8oz) cream cheese,softened
½cupbuttersoftened
16ozbox powdered sugar
1tspvanilla
Instructions
Sift together the self-rising flour, baking soda and cinnamon. Set aside.
Line 3 greased 9 inch round cake pans with parchment. Grease parchment.
Beat sugar and oil at medium speed until smooth. Add eggs, 1 at a time, beating until blended (scrape down sides). Add flour mixture, beating at low speed just until blended and stopping to scrap down sides. Fold in carrots and 1 cup walnuts. Spoon batter evenly into pans.
Bake 350 F for 30 to 35 minutes or until toothpick comes out clean. Cool in pan 10 min, remove from pans. Cool completely on a wire rack.
Make the frosting by beating cream cheese and butter at medium speed until fluffy; gradually add powdered sugar, beating well. Stir in vanilla.
Spread frosting between layers and on top and sides. Arrange ½ cup walnuts around outer edge of top of cake.
Recipe Notes
I use pecans instead of walnuts, just a personal preference. If you don’t have self rising flour, instead of 2 ¼ cups self rising flour mix together: 2 ¼ cups all purpose flour, 2 ¼ tsp baking powder, 1 ⅛ tsp salt and ½ tsp + ⅛ tsp baking soda. Then follow the recipe for everything else. To evenly pour cake batter into prepared pans, I put 2 cups of batter per pan. When frosting the cake, I make a crumb layer (which is a thin layer to keep the crumbs from coming through the frosting) and put the cake in the refrigerator for 10 minutes. I repeat another thin layer of frosting and refrigerator for 10 minutes, and repeat it once more. Then I chill the cake for 15-20 minutes, then I can push the ½ cup pecans into the frosting without it becoming a sticky mess and the pecans hold still better. This took trial and error, I would lose a lot of frosting that would drip down the cake while I was trying to frost it, and my hands would be a sticky mess trying to get the pecans to stay in place.