Spice Cake with Sea Foam Frosting is a recipe I found years ago in an old cookbook with contest winning recipes. This particular cake was a winner at The Los Angeles County Fair. That of course lured me in, as did the name -- Sea Foam Frosting. It sounded so old fashioned! Since finding this recipe, I have made it twice and plan to keep it in rotation. It's kind of different and the frosting makes it special.
Spice Cake
First, a little about the cake. It's a spice cake without nuts or raisins. It bakes up flat and is sweet and dense. The last time I made it I forgot to add ¼ cup of flour and it sank a little (you can see it in the photo). Still a good cake, though! Another thing I did was add mace. I don't know if it was the mace, but all of a sudden I had this taste memory of Little Debbie Spice Cakes. They must have used mace. I haven't had one in at least 20 years, so it was interesting having that taste memory. The Little Debbie Cakes looked like this.
More About the Frosting
As for the frosting, Sea Foam Frosting is like Seven Minute Frosting, but made with brown sugar instead of granulated so it has a bit of a caramel-molasses flavor. You can make it in a double boiler or use a mixing bowl set over a pan of water. The first time I made the cake I used a mixing bowl. Since then I've purchased a double boiler. While a double boiler is more convenient, a mixing bowl is deeper and has more room. So I recommend just setting a mixing bowl over (but not touching) simmering water. It's even more convenient if you use a stand mixing bowl, because after 7 minutes you can stop using the hand mixer, put bowl on mixing stand and let the whisk attachment finish the job.
The Sea Foam Frosting is very sweet and so is the spice cake itself. It's even better after it sits for a while. End result -- a blue ribbon worthy cake.
Update: I'm keeping this recipe as it is with shortening, but if you want to try a version with butter, there is a new one on Spruce Eats which looks good! The frosting is also similar, but it calls for more salt and includes some corn syrup.
Recipe
Spice Cake with Sea Foam Frosting
Ingredients
- 2 ¼ cups cake flour sifted after measuring (270 grams)
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- ¾ teaspoon baking soda
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon cinnamon
- ¼ teaspoon each - cloves and ginger
- ⅛ teaspoon ground black pepper
- ⅛ teaspoon of mace optional
- ¾ cup shortening, butter flavor or regular or a mix
- 1 cup granulated sugar (190 grams)
- ¾ cup firmly packed dark brown sugar (150 grams)
- 3 large eggs room temp
- 1 cup buttermilk ****
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Sea Foam Frosting
- 2 egg whites
- 1 ½ cups firmly packed light brown sugar (300 grams)
- ⅓ cup water
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- ⅛ teaspoon salt
Garnish
- caramel sauce (Like Hershey's Sundae Sauce)
- Cinnamon Chips
Instructions
- Sift together pre-sifted flour, baking powder and baking soda. Stir in salt and spices (cinnamon, cloves, ginger, black pepper, and mace if using). Set aside.
- In a bowl, using medium speed electric mixer, beat shortening and both sugars until mixed. Increase speed to high and beat until fluffy. Add eggs, one at a time, beating for 30 seconds after each egg. Using a mixing spoon or lowest speed of blender, add flour and buttermilk/vanilla mixture alternately, beginning and ending with flour.
- Divide batter evenly between two cake pans and bake for 28 minutes (up to 33) or until cake tests done with a wooden skewer or pick (moist crumbs/no batter). Cool in pans for 10 minutes. Invert onto cooling racks.
- Prepare sea foam frosting. Put some water in bottom of a double boiler and bring to a simmer. In the top of the double boiler, Combine egg whites, light brown sugar, and ⅓ cup water. Set the top of the double boiler over the bottom. Alternatively, use a metal bowl (preferably one that goes with a stand mixer) and just prop it over a saucepan of simmering water.
- Using a hand held mixer (one hand holding mixer, other hand holding bowl with a hot pad to keep it still), beat until soft peaks form. This should take about 7 minutes. Remove from heat, add vanilla and salt; continue beating until it is spreadable.
- Spread icing over top of one of the cooled cakes. Stack the second cake on top. Cover entire cake. Drizzle with caramel sauce and sprinkle with cinnamon chips.
- Note: Original recipe called for 3 (9 inch) round layers, but I prefer thicker layers of cake and used 2.
Anna says
Malinka, thanks for trying this one! I need to take some better photos of it because it is so good.
Malinka Franklin says
Excellent recipe. The frosting perfectly compliments the spices in the cake. This is the best spice cake I've tried. Thank you for sharing this recipe!
Sue says
This was the traditional birthday cake & frosting in my family back in the day
Rrita says
I dont know how to do icing
Heather says
I found this recipe in a old cook book I got at a flea market a few years ago. It is called 'Southern Living 1981 Annual Recipes'. I made it last night and oh my goodness...it was sooooo good! I'm glad someone took pictures because I had no idea what it was supposed to look like. I made mine in a bundt pan and I think it turned out quite nicely.
kailas says
Even if you and your family don't like pumpkin, a fantastic new dessert, Pumpkin. you will taste the moist cake, with cream icing, and with the traditional pumpkin pie, Pumpkin spice Cake will appear heavenly, yes, heavenly. Trust me!
Kimberly says
This cake was a big hit with my co-workers. It was pretty and tasty. I agree with you, Anna, that it is better the second day. This cake did fall a bit in the center of both layers, but I didn't try to even the layers out, and the frosting hid everything.
Anj says
This looks beautiful. When I was a girl our neighbor would make sea foam frosting (and it was always green). She would put a glob on a piece of waxed paper and hand it to us when she had some left over.
Anna says
Hi Meredith,
That's a good question. I believe this frosting would be delicious with chocolate cake. However, if your husband is not interested in something marshmallowy, then this one might not be quite his style either. It is rather marshmallow-like, but flavored with brown sugar.
mrsminik says
Frosting looks really good...do you think that it would go well w/ a chocolate layer cake? Hubby wants me to make the cake that's on the cover of Dorie Greenspan's "Baking from My Home to Yours" for his b-day this weekend, but he doesn't want the featured "marshmallow" icing (though, if you ask me, it sounds delish!)
-Meredith
Anna says
Carole, it has the same flavor, but it is creamy and light like whipped cream. The other kind is baked and is kind of chewy. My grandmother's Seven Minute Icing used to harden up over after a day or two, so maybe this will too.
carole says
The frosting is the same as the topping for the Donnie Cookies. No matter what you call it, it is good.
In the cookies the topping is baked while the frosting is not.
sandra says
OK I must admit that when I saw the name of the frosting I thought it was going to be green because the color of the dress that my mother wore to my oldest brother's wedding (in 1975) was called sea foam green.
sandra says
OK I must admit that when I saw the name of the frosting I thought it was going to be green because the color of the dress that my mother wore to my oldest brother's wedding (in 1975) was called sea foam green.