Walnut Cake

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5 from 36 votes
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My triple-tiered walnut cake recipe features a fluffy, moist spice cake laced with crunchy walnuts and covered in a thick cream cheese frosting. It’s egg-free and made in one bowl!

Want more desserts with walnuts? Try my walnut brownies, baklava cheesecake, or oat flour banana bread next. 

frosted walnut cake with crushed walnuts on top.

My family likes to push me to the limits of my creativity–and I accept said challenge. 

Inspired by my spice cake, I wanted a cake that’s creative yet filled with familiar flavors we can all agree on. With crisp walnuts and a tangy cream cheese frosting, the results are a richly flavored cake with an irresistibly moist texture…and did I mention it has three tiers?!

Table of Contents
  1. Why I love this recipe
  2. Ingredients needed
  3. How to make a walnut cake
  4. Arman’s recipe tips
  5. Storage instructions
  6. Frequently asked questions
  7. More impressive tiered cakes
  8. Walnut Cake (Recipe Card)

Why I love this recipe

  • A deceptively easy cake recipe. Don’t let the size fool you. This entire cake is made in one mixing bowl, and the steps are just as easy as any other cake recipe. 
  • Egg-free. And if you use vegan cream cheese, it’s dairy-free too!
  • Warm, spiced flavor. The cinnamon, brown sugar, and walnuts mesh perfectly together, infusing every bite with warming flavors. 

Ingredients needed

  • Flour. You can use cake flour if you want, but I think all-purpose flour is just fine. Use gluten-free flour if needed, but make sure it has xanthan gum added. 
  • White sugar AND brown sugar. I used a mix of both sugars, but if you want a more caramelized flavor and a darker sponge, use only brown sugar. 
  • Baking soda. To create bubbles and help the cake rise. Don’t use baking powder, as it won’t have the same effect. 
  • Cream of tartar. When combined with baking soda, cream of tartar helps produce more bubbles and results in a lighter cake.
  • Vinegar. This also reacts with baking soda to mimic what eggs would do. Use white or apple cider vinegar. 
  • Oil. Any neutral-flavored oil will work. If not dairy-free, use unsalted butter. 
  • Milk or water. I used unsweetened almond milk, but water yielded similar results. 
  • Walnut halves. Finely chopped. Avoid toasted or salted walnuts as they could overpower the cake. 
  • Cinnamon. To complement the walnut flavor. 
  • Vanilla extract. A must for any cake. 
  • Salt. To balance the flavors. 
  • Cream cheese frosting. I find the subtle tartness pairs SO well with the sweet and moist cake. Of course, vanilla frosting is also fine.

How to make a walnut cake

I’ve included step-by-step photos below to make this recipe easy to follow at home. For the full printable recipe instructions and ingredient quantities, scroll to the recipe card at the bottom of this post.

cake batter in a bowl.

Step 1- Mix the batter. Combine the dry ingredients (minus the walnuts) in a large bowl, then whisk in the wet ingredients until smooth. Stir in the walnuts, just enough to get them mixed in. 

baked cakes on a cooling rack.

Step 2- Bake. Pour the batter mixture into three pans and bake until a toothpick inserted comes out clean. 

Step 3- Cool and frost. Let the cake layers cool on a cooling rack. Once cool, stack them with sheets of frosting between each cake layer and on top. Chill until set. 

walnut cake.

Arman’s recipe tips

  • Bake a single-layer cake. Cut the ingredients into thirds. 
  • Don’t overmix the cake batter. The more mixing, the more air gets lost, making for a dense and chewy cake. This is especially key when you add the walnuts, as too much mixing will make them sink to the bottom. 
  • Toss the walnuts in flour. I tested several methods to see which yielded an even distribution of walnuts in the cake. Adding them straight in worked fine for me, but if you want, you could lightly warm them in the oven at 350F, then toss them in flour before folding them into the cake. 
  • Let the cakes completely cool before frosting them. Otherwise, the frosting will melt and slide off. 
  • Make a vanilla buttercream frosting. Use an electric mixer to cream butter, powdered sugar, vanilla extract, and a splash of milk until smooth. 

Storage instructions

To store: Store any remaining cake in an airtight container at room temperature for 2-3 days or in the fridge for up to 2 weeks. 

To freeze: Place the cake in a freezer-safe container and freeze for 3 months. 

walnut cake on a plate.

Frequently asked questions

How do you keep walnuts from sinking into a cake?

The best way to prevent walnuts from sinking is to roughly chop them and also use the most fresh walnuts possible.

More impressive tiered cakes

walnut cake recipe.

Walnut Cake

5 from 36 votes
My triple-tiered walnut cake recipe features a fluffy, moist spice cake laced with crunchy walnuts and covered in a thick cream cheese frosting. It’s egg-free and made in one bowl! Watch the video below to see how I make it in my kitchen!
Servings: 16 servings
Prep: 1 minute
Cook: 25 minutes
Total: 26 minutes

Ingredients  

Instructions 

  • Preheat the oven to 180C/350F. Lightly grease three 8-inch cake pans and set aside.
  • In a large mixing bowl, add the flour, white sugar, brown sugar, cinnamon, baking soda, cream of tartar, and salt and mix well. Next, add the oil, vanilla, vinegar, and water and mix until combined and smooth. Fold through the walnuts at the end.
  • Distribute the batter evenly amongst the three pans. Bake the cakes for 25-27 minutes, or until a skewer comes out clean.
  • Let the cakes cool completely, before spreading frosting on them and layering them up. Refrigerate the cake for 30 minutes to set.

Notes

TO STORE: Store any remaining cake in an airtight container at room temperature for 2-3 days or in the fridge for up to 2 weeks. 
TO FREEZE: Place the cake in a freezer-safe container and freeze for 3 months.

Nutrition

Serving: 1servingCalories: 295kcalCarbohydrates: 51gProtein: 6gFat: 22gSodium: 383mgPotassium: 175mgFiber: 2gVitamin A: 3IUVitamin C: 0.1mgCalcium: 43mgIron: 3mgNET CARBS: 49g
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: American
Author: Arman Liew
Tried this recipe?Give us a shout at @thebigmansworld or tag #thebigmansworld!

Originally published December 2022, updated and republished October 2024

Arman Liew

I’m a two time cookbook author, photographer, and writer, and passionate about creating easy and healthier recipes. I believe you don’t need to be experienced in the kitchen to make good food using simple ingredients that most importantly, taste delicious.

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5 from 36 votes (34 ratings without comment)

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Comments

  1. 5 stars
    This cake does not disappoint! I have to say, I’m very impressed, I’ve tried other no flour/no refined sugar recipes but none have been this good. The cake is delicious, moist and fluffy, which is good with or without frosting. Seriously, five stars! 😊

  2. This looks so good, it sounds right up my street. You are slowly but surely filling my summer off university with recipes to make. I absolutely love dates but I think classic banana pecan is my fave fruit and but pairing. I never even thought to try the dates and tea combo!

  3. Dates are my jam, not a day goes by that I don’t eat them… In fact I think if I had to pick one food it would be dates!
    However, I have never ever found dates that were as nice as the ones I had in Oman… They were just in a league of their own! I remember going to the date market and being surrounded by massive jute bags full of them… And the sweet smell in the air… Heaven!

  4. This looks amazing– and love your mom conversation commentary. It’s great to be proud of where you come from. Honestly, living in Malaysia, suddenly I think everything from America is better than what I find here..!

    I always buy dates in Australia and bring them back to Malaysia- not because they are better, but because they are so much cheaper there. I love to use them as a sweetener and in baked goods– I got my husband’s mom’s date loaf recipe when we were there at Christmas, but it’s so unhealthy! I am going to see how he likes this 🙂

  5. This looks magical. I don’t like regular dates, but dried out Medjool dates are HEAVEN. I eat WAY too many of them.

  6. I’m a Dates junkie! I They are my favorite dried fruit. There are around 450 kinds of Dates! To be honest, the ones from Saudi Arabia are amazing, you have the dried ones, moist ones, dipped in Dates molasses, mini ones, fruitful ones.. the list is endless. I’m a recipe developer myself and been working with dates lately, coincidence! The pairing of walnuts is nice, next time you can try cardamom or anise powder to the dry mix, they work together extremely well!
    If I ever travel to Australia, I’ll get you the real deal Dates!
    Cheers from Kuwait!

    1. Wait, 450?! Fala, that is crazy!

      I’ll need to hunt those down from Saudi Arabia now!

      Thanks for stopping by 🙂

  7. I love love love dates and dried fruit in general. When I went to Turkey, I pretty much subsisted off dried dates and figs. And I agree with your mum…they taste different over there!

    1. Omg- Anywhere in the middle East, you’d get amazing dried fruits, you’ll need to try Persian ones, SO GOOD!

  8. Dates and walnuts, a top notch combo! Hope mine comes out alright even though I just have boring ol’ regular dates 😉

  9. Dates are addictive with peanut butter. I dare you to try it. Anyways, I love putting them in truffle recipes but yes, they’re a bit too sweet on their own! This breakfast cake is really interesting because I never would’ve thought of putting them in a cake with walnuts! Yummy!

  10. This looks amazing! And dates? I’m obsessed, always have been…they’re an idea pre-workout energy boost and medjool dates stuffed with almond butter for life. Can’t wait to try this!

  11. Agree that dates alone don’t do it for me but in baked goods they really shine! Need to use them more, I get a bit lazy 🙂

  12. I got into dates for a while when I scored a bag of them on sale. When I finished the bag, I simple didn’t get more. I most often use them in baked goods so this recipe looks great!

  13. I like this canoodling you’ve got going on here… breakfast cake is always a win in my book.

  14. wait now I really want to buy some persians dates! I also am not a fan of eating dates by themselves but they are pretty magical in baked goods and this cake looks pretty darn magical! Your Mom sounds so hilarious lol.

  15. Wait. Cake for breakfast? Say what? Yes, please! But only if it’s before 10:30. After 10:30, that cake becomes lunch. 😉 Seriously, though, good looking cake here, mate. Like you, I’m not a fan of dates by themselves, but I can totally roll with them inside of baked goods. Baked goods topped with cinnamon frosting that is.

  16. Your mom would kill me. The only dates I’ve ever bought are the ones that are the Sun maid pre-chopped ones haha. I’ve never eaten them on their own, but I bet they taste good in breakfast cake!

  17. The next time I go to our local Persian grocery store, I’m for sure getting dates and walnuts. I trust your mom. Also, I think my mom would love this cake (esp. with your coconut cream frosting)!
    I don’t think I’ve ever eaten a date on its own. If I did, it was cold and hard…like my heart. I DID try a bacon-wrapped, goat cheese-stuffed date a couple weeks ago and that was amazing!!

    1. Dates and walnuts were my favorite oatmeal mix-ins as a kid, so this cake is like childhood. Yesss. I still love dates, but since they’re so sweet, if I’m eating them straight-up, I always add savory stuff… like nut butter and bacon. Bacon is a good choice.

    2. Wait, you have a local Persian grocery store? I’m jealous!

      I’m glad you’ve acknowledged your type of heart.

  18. I love that your mom is so connected to her heritage! I think it is so cool you got to grow up learning about your heritage.