During a summer of misspent youth, I worked in a small café where I was first introduced to Hummingbird Cake. Of course, it was love at first bite. Rich with butter and cream cheese, but tangy with pineapple and bananas, Hummingbird Cake is the perfect blend of salty and sweet. It’s cheerfully decadent.
Hummingbird Cake is a Southern Treat
I tweaked the original version two ways: My reference recipe had too much frosting, and for my taste it was too sweet. Neither of these attributes seem objectionable at first. But trust me, you can have too much frosting which slows you down from eating more cake.
The second tweak was changing the recipe to include only butter, as opposed to the “salad oil” of the original recipe. I like butter, and I know you do too. If this is admittedly a rich, decadent cake, why scrimp?
Small Tweaks Equal Big Results
Having room temperature ingredients may seem a little weird, but soft butter, cream cheese and room temp eggs help the batter combine with just a spoon. A delicate cake is made when you don’t overwork the batter. Electric mixers can overwork a cake very quickly and make it chewy. Be kind and gentle to your batter and you will be pleased with the rewards.
I think this recipe will translate well if you want to use a 9”x13” baking pan (33cm x 23cm) but I haven’t tried it. I did test this cake several times, just to make sure my tweaks on the original recipe wouldn’t disappoint. You know, research. It was time well spent.
PrintHummingbird Cake
- Prep Time: 20 minutes
- Cook Time: 30
- Total Time: 50 minutes
- Yield: 16 servings 1x
- Category: Pastry
- Method: Baking
- Cuisine: Southern US
Ingredients
3 cups cake flour (375gr)
1 ½ cups sugar (300gr)
1 tsp. salt (4gr)
1 tsp. baking soda (6gr)
1 tsp. ground cinnamon (2gr)
3 eggs, room temperature
1 ½ cups butter, room temperature (345gr)
2 tsp. vanilla extract (10ml)
8 oz. can crushed pineapple, undrained (227gr)
1 cup chopped pecans or walnuts (100gr)
2 cups chopped bananas (450gr)
Frosting:
12oz cream cheese, room temperature (340g)
¾ cup butter, room temperature (172gr)
1 lb. powdered sugar (500gr)
2 tsp. vanilla extract (10ml)
Instructions
Heat your oven to 350°F (176°C). Prepare three 9” (23cm) round cake pans by buttering the insides well and dusting with flour. If you can, cut three 9” (23cm) rounds of parchment paper to line the bottom of each cake pan so the cake releases easily from the pan after baking.
To make the cake:
Stir together the cake flour, sugar, salt, baking soda and ground cinnamon in a large mixing bowl. In a separate bowl, whisk together the eggs and butter. Combine half of the egg mixture with the dry ingredients, and stir to combine well. (If you choose to use your electric hand mixer for combining the batter, do not overwork the batter.) Add the remaining egg mixture and stir until the batter is well combined. Add the vanilla extract, pineapple, 1 cup of chopped pecans (or walnuts) and bananas. Stir well.
Pour the batter in even amounts into the baking pans. If you can, it helps to weigh each pan to confirm an equal amount of batter is added to each pan. Place the equally filled pans in the preheated oven, and bake for 25-30 minutes, until a toothpick comes out clean when tested. Remove the cake pans from the oven and allow to cool for about 10 minutes. Carefully remove each cake from its pan, and cool completely.
To make the frosting:
Combine the frosting ingredients once the cake has completely cooled. Using an electric hand mixer, combine the cream cheese and butter. Whip until smooth, about 1 minute. Stir in the powdered sugar until well combined.* Add the vanilla and whip the frosting for 30 seconds with the electric mixer until light and fluffy.
Frost the cake by dividing the frosting into two portions. Use one portion to fill the layers of the cake, and the other portion to frost the top and the sides of the cake. Top the cake with 1 cup of chopped pecans (or walnuts.)
Notes
*To avoid a cloud of sugar, use a spoon to stir together the cream cheese mixture with the powdered sugar. Once the powdered sugar is incorporated use the electric hand mixer to whip the frosting until its light and fluffy.
Hope
I have actually made your recipe and live the tweeks. It’s my all time favorite cake. I certainly love the rustic look. I made it for work and used slightly staggered sized cake layers. Actually used the lids to pampered chef stoneware roasters LG & am & avrg cake pan. The look was stunning. Thanks
Melissa Guerra
Thanks for your sweet note Hope! My first job in a restaurant featured Hummingbird Cake. It’s a sentimental favorite. I am so glad you enjoyed it!
MG
Bonnie Reynolds
I am making this today. Isn’t 1 1/2 cups butter 339 grams? I’ve started using my scale to cook a lot and I believe 460 grams is 2 cups. Please advise. Thanks,
Bonnie
Melissa Guerra
Hi, I changed it back to read 345 grams. good catch, thank you!!
Danielle
It’s not changed! Made this today from Germany using the gram conversions in the recipe and didn’t come across this comment until it was too late.
Melissa Guerra
Most humble apologies Danielle! Thank you for bringing this to my attention! I must have not saved the change correctly. I appreciate you trying the recipe, and am just so sorry for the incorrect mount! BEst wishes, and thank you again!
MG
Cindy
Hello! I making this cake tonight to bring to family dinner. I used baking soda. I hope that’s right because in the directions it says baking powder. It is such a wet mixture. I will let you know how it tastes. I love your Instagram account and always look forward to your posts. My Best, Cindy
Melissa Guerra
Thanks Cindy! Let me know how the cake turned out. Baking powder has baking soda in it, but the extra rising action of baking powder should make the cake a little fluffier. Thanks for your kind words, I always love hearing from people that follow me. Again, drop me a note about the cake – it is a wet batter, but the recipe has never failed me! Best, MG