Gingerbread Bundt Cake Recipe
This cake is cozy, a little rough around the edges, and exactly the kind of thing you bake when you want your house to smell like autumn for the next three days. It’s a gingerbread bundt: spiced, moist, with a crackly little crust and a glaze that gets sticky in all the right spots. If you like ginger, molasses, and a cake that’s not trying too hard to be fancy, this one’s for you.
My husband basically demands this for anything that could be classified as “special” — birthdays, weird midwinter Tuesdays, the rare Sunday when we both make coffee at the same time. The first winter I made it he ate half a slice and declared it “officially holiday-approved,” which is his highest compliment. The kids dip pieces into coffee (don’t judge) and my neighbor always smuggles a wedge away when she sees me pulling it out of the oven. It’s become our fall/winter default: comforting, forgiving, and oddly celebratory for being so humble.
Why You’ll Love This Gingerbread Bundt Cake Recipe
– It smells like a blanket and a woodstove and makes guests forget about anything else you’re serving.
– The texture is moist and tender but holds up to a thick glaze—no sad, soggy cake here.
– It’s easy to tweak: more spice, less sugar, or a boozy twist if you’re feeling dangerous.
– Feels fancy enough for company but takes less brain power than a pie.

Kitchen Talk
I’ll confess: the first time I tried a bundt pan I treated it like any old loaf tin and panicked when half the batter stuck to the ridges. Lesson learned — grease every nook like you’re trying to get that cake out of witness protection. Also, warming molasses slightly makes it pour like a dream and saves you from scraping globs off the spoon. Once I forgot to cool the cake and tried to glaze hot cake; the glaze slid off like it was fleeing the scene. Let it sit. Be patient. And if you ever run out of buttermilk, I have thrown in yogurt and survived.
This Gingerbread Bundt Cake was wonderfully moist and full of warm, cozy spices that made it perfect for the holidays. The balance of ginger and molasses gave it a rich depth without being overpowering, and the simple glaze added a lovely finishing touch. It was easy to make and definitely a new favorite in my recipe rotation!
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Shopping Tips
– Baking Basics (Flour/Sugar/Leaveners): Use all-purpose flour for a tender crumb; check your baking powder/soda dates — old leaveners = sad, flat cake.
– Fats & Oils: Real butter gives flavor; melted butter mixes in seamlessly and keeps texture rich if you’re not vegan.
– Spices: Fresh ground ginger and cinnamon make a big difference — pre-ground is fine, but sniff it first (if it smells faint, replace).
– Eggs: Room temperature eggs mix more evenly into batter; take them out 20–30 minutes before baking if you remember.
– Nuts & Seeds: If you add pecans or walnuts to the glaze or batter, toast them for better flavor and crunch.
Prep Ahead Ideas
– Mix the dry ingredients (flour, spices, leaveners) a day ahead and store in an airtight container so assembly is quick.
– Make the glaze or frosting up to 48 hours in advance and refrigerate; bring to room temp and whisk before using.
– You can bake the cake the day before and leave it unglazed, tightly wrapped; glaze the morning of serving for fresher texture.
– Store batter? I avoid refrigerating mixed batter because leaveners lose oomph — better to prep components separately and combine when ready.

Time-Saving Tricks
– Use a microwave or low heat to loosen molasses and butter for quicker mixing.
– Measure dry ingredients into a bowl and whisk together to save sifting time (works 90% of the time).
– If you’re in a rush, skip fancy decorations: a simple powdered sugar dusting or drizzle of glaze looks great and is fast.
– Use a silicone bundt pan for easier release and less greasing hassle when time’s tight.
Common Mistakes
– Not greasing the bundt pan properly — I once used only a spray and mourned the missing cake. Grease + flour or use a buttery spray and be generous.
– Glazing while cake is too warm — glaze will run off. Let it cool to just-warm.
– Overmixing batter — it tightens the crumb; stir until combined and no more. I did this once and had a dense brick; learned to stop at “no pockets of flour.”
– Cutting into it too soon — stuffing the knife in while it’s hot makes it fall apart. Wait 20–30 minutes for easier, cleaner slices.
What to Serve It With
– Scoop of vanilla ice cream or a dollop of whipped cream for decadence.
– Crème fraîche or a tangy yogurt drizzle to cut the sweetness.
– Coffee, chai, or hot mulled cider — classic partners.
– Simple salted caramel sauce for pouring over slices.
Tips & Mistakes
– Use room-temp wet ingredients for even mixing.
– Don’t skip the little tap on the counter after pouring batter to knock out air bubbles.
– If the center is underdone but edges are brown, tent with foil and keep baking a bit longer at a lower temp.
– For shiny glaze, strain it to remove lumps or undissolved sugar.
Storage Tips
Wrap cooled, unglazed cake tightly in plastic and store at room temperature for up to 2 days; glazed cake keeps better in the fridge for 4–5 days. Slices freeze beautifully — wrap each slice in parchment and place in a freezer bag. Cold cake is totally fine for breakfast; it’s actually lovely with a smear of butter and a cup of coffee. No shame in sneaking a slice straight from the fridge.

Variations and Substitutions
– Swap some or all of the butter for neutral oil if you want a slightly lighter, moister crumb.
– Use molasses for that deep, classic flavor; if you only have dark corn syrup, it’ll work but the flavor is different.
– For gluten-free, replace with a 1:1 GF flour blend and add a teaspoon xanthan if your mix doesn’t include it.
– Make it boozy: brush the cooled cake with a little rum or brandy before glazing. I did this once and instantly became the coolest neighbor on the block.
Frequently Asked Questions

Gingerbread Bundt Cake Recipe
Ingredients
Main Ingredients
- 1 tbsp softened butter for greasing the pan
- 1 tbsp all-purpose flour for dusting the pan
- 2.5 cup all-purpose flour
- 1 tsp baking soda
- 1 tsp baking powder
- 0.75 tsp kosher salt
- 2.5 tsp ground ginger
- 1.5 tsp ground cinnamon
- 0.5 tsp ground cloves
- 0.25 tsp ground nutmeg
- 0.25 tsp ground allspice
- 1 tsp finely grated orange zest optional but lovely
- 0.75 cup unsalted butter, softened
- 0.75 cup packed dark brown sugar
- 0.25 cup granulated sugar
- 3 large eggs room temperature
- 0.75 cup unsulphured molasses
- 2 tsp vanilla extract
- 1 cup buttermilk room temperature
- 0.5 cup hot water
- 1 cup confectioners’ sugar for glaze
- 1.5 tbsp milk for glaze, plus more to thin
- 0.5 tsp vanilla extract for glaze
Instructions
Preparation Steps
- Heat oven to 350°F. Butter and flour a 10–12 cup Bundt pan.
- Whisk flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt, ginger, cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, allspice, and orange zest.
- Beat softened butter with brown sugar and granulated sugar until light and fluffy.
- Add eggs one at a time, beating briefly after each addition.
- Mix in molasses and vanilla until fully combined and glossy.
- Stir in dry ingredients in two additions, alternating with buttermilk. Begin and end with dry.
- Blend in the hot water just until the batter is smooth and pourable.
- Scrape batter into the pan, smooth the top, and tap to release bubbles.
- Bake 45–55 minutes, until a tester comes out clean from the center.
- Cool 15 minutes on a rack. Invert, then cool completely before glazing.
- Whisk confectioners’ sugar, milk, and vanilla until thick but pourable.
- Drizzle glaze over the cooled cake. Let set 15 minutes before slicing.
Notes
Featured Comments
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