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Gingerbread Cake: Dark, Stormy, and Forgiving

Updated on June 10, 2026 By Mia Caldwell
Gingerbread Cake

There is something deeply satisfying about pulling aย dark and stormy gingerbread cakeย out of the oven at midnight the kind of cake that fills your entire house with the scent of warm spices, dark rum, and the quiet confidence of someone who absolutely has their life together.

This recipe layers bold ground ginger, rich unsulfured molasses, and fizzy ginger beer into a deeply moist, tender crumb that stays soft for days. Then it gets blanketed in a cloud of dark rum buttercream and finished with a reckless drizzle of butterscotch sauce, because some evenings simply demand that level of commitment.

Whether you’re baking for a holiday crowd or just yourself on a Tuesday night in pajamas, this is theย moist gingerbread cake recipeย that forgives every mistake and impresses absolutely everyone.

Why You’ll Love This Recipe

  • It hides your mistakesย  A generous layer of rum buttercream covers uneven layers, cracked tops, and minor architectural disasters without judgment.
  • No fancy technique requiredย The batter comes together in a stand mixer while you contemplate your life choices.
  • It feeds a crowdย Thisย moist gingerbread cakeย serves 16, which means leftovers for breakfast and absolutely no regrets.
  • Stays soft for daysย The ginger beer keeps the crumb incredibly tender, making this ideal for making ahead before a holiday gathering.

Tools You’ll Need

Nothing fancy, I promise.

  • 8-inch round cake pans – You need two of these, unless you want to bake one, wash it, and bake the other, which sounds like torture.
  • Stand mixer or hand mixer – For the buttercream, unless you want an intense arm workout that leaves you sweating in the kitchen.
  • Whisk – Essential for making sure the dry spices do not clump up into little hidden balls of fire.

Ingredients

For the Cake

  • 2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour – Spoon and level it, do not scoop it like you are digging for treasure.
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons baking soda – Check the expiration date, I once used expired soda and made a brick.
  • 1 tablespoon ground ginger – Do not skimp here, we want it to actually taste like ginger.
  • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon – Adds that warm holiday background noise.
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground cloves – Very strong, do not accidentally dump a tablespoon in.
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt – Balances out all the sugar we are about to add.
  • 1/2 cup unsalted butter – Softened to room temperature, not melted into a sad puddle.
  • 1/2 cup dark brown sugar – Packed tight.
  • 1 cup unsulfured molasses – Make sure you use the right type of molasses, do not use blackstrap unless you want it to taste like an old shoe.
  • 2 large eggs – Room temperature helps them mix in without curdling the butter.
  • 1 cup ginger beer – The spicy kind, not ginger ale.
  • 1/4 cup dark rum – The stormy part of the dark and stormy.

For the Rum Buttercream & Sauce

  • 1 cup unsalted butter – Again, softened, we are making frosting, not soup.
  • 4 cups powdered sugar – Sift it if you have the patience, I usually do not and just mix it longer.
  • 3 tablespoons dark rum – Adjust to your personal stress levels.
  • 1/2 cup store-bought butterscotch sauce – We are already making a cake from scratch, give yourself a break on the sauce.

Instructions

Preheat your oven and prepare to make your entire house smell like a holiday candle.

  1. Prep the pans: Grease and flour two 8-inch round cake pans. If you skip the parchment paper circles in the bottom, half your cake will stay in the pan and you will be eating scraps for dinner.
  2. Whisk the dry stuff: In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, baking soda, ginger, cinnamon, cloves, and salt. If a few clumps of flour survive, that is between you and the bowl, nobody else needs to know.
  3. Cream the butter and sugar: In a large mixer bowl, beat the butter and brown sugar until light and fluffy. This takes about 3 minutes, which is just enough time to wash the measuring cups you already dirtied.
  4. Add the wet ingredients: Beat in the molasses and eggs one at a time. It might look a little curdled at this point, but do not panic, it will come together.
  5. Alternate dry and wet: Turn the mixer to low. Add the dry ingredients in three parts, alternating with the ginger beer and rum. Do not turn the mixer on high or you will be wearing a ginger beer and flour facial mask.
  6. Bake the cakes: Divide the batter evenly between the pans and bake at 350ยฐF for 30-35 minutes. A toothpick should come out clean.
  7. Make the buttercream: While the cakes cool entirely, beat the butter, powdered sugar, and rum until fluffy. If you frost a warm cake, your frosting will melt into a sad, boozy puddle.
  8. Assemble and drizzle: Frost the cooled cake layers, then aggressively drizzle the butterscotch sauce over the top right before serving.

โ™ฅ The Misfit Tips!

  • Brown the beef first – I skipped browning the meat once to save time. The texture turned out weirdly gummy and the fat pooled at the top. Always brown the beef first, even if it adds ten minutes to your prep.
  • Upgrade the mustard – Swap the basic yellow mustard for Dijon if you want a slightly sharper profile.
  • Batch cook – Make a double batch on Sunday and freeze half in a zip-top bag. Future you will be thrilled on a busy Thursday night.

Troubleshooting Guide

Something went sideways? Been there. Here is how to fix it.

  • Problem: My cake sank in the middle
  • Why:ย The oven door was opened too early, releasing heat before the structure set
  • Fix:ย Fill the crater generously with extra rum buttercream. Nobody will notice, and they will actually thank you for the bonus frosting.
  • Problem: The frosting is too runny
  • Why:ย Kitchen is too warm, or the rum measurement was generous
  • Fix:ย Add powdered sugar half a cup at a time until it firms up, or refrigerate the bowl for 15 minutes before re-whipping.
  • Problem: The cake is stuck in the pan
  • Why:ย The parchment paper step was skipped
  • Fix:ย Run a butter knife firmly around the edges, tap the bottom of the pan on the counter, and if it breaks โ€” congratulations, you are now making aย dark and stormy gingerbread trifle. Layer the pieces with cream and butterscotch in a glass bowl and call it intentional.

Perfect Pairings

This dark rum gingerbread cake deserves a worthy companion:

  • A cold glass of milk obviously
  • A strong black coffee on a slow Sunday morning
  • Vanilla bean ice cream to cool down the warm spice hit
  • Your favorite holiday movie marathon on a Tuesday night
  • Whatever rum you didn’t use in the frosting, poured generously
  • Fridge. Store the cooked meat in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The flavor deepens by day two as the sauce absorbs further into the beef.
  • Freezer. Transfer the cooled meat mixture into a freezer bag and freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge before reheating.
  • Reheat. Warm the meat in a saucepan over medium heat. Add a small splash of water if the sauce looks too thick after refrigerating.
Gingerbread Cake

Dark and stormy gingerbread cake

Spiced, ginger beer-infused sponges, a rum-spiked buttercream and butterscotch sauce with a lively drink on the side make for three layers of Christmas joy.
Prep Time 55 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 20 minutes
Servings: 16 servings
Course: Dessert
Calories: 478

Ingredients
  

  • 120 ml ginger beer
  • 65 g black treacle
  • 175 ml vegetable oil plus extra to grease
  • 290 g plain flour sifted
  • 2 1/2 tsp baking powder
  • 1 tsp bicarbonate of soda
  • 290 g light soft brown sugar
  • 1 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 2 tsp ground ginger
  • 1/2 tsp ground allspice
  • 1/2 tsp fine salt
  • 200 ml buttermilk
  • 3 medium eggs
  • zest of 2 limes
  • 3 tbsp dark rum
  • 40 g unsalted butter
  • 60 g dark soft brown sugar
  • 1 tsp ground ginger
  • 1 tbsp golden syrup
  • 75 ml double cream
  • 1/2 tsp sea salt flakes
  • 150 g softened unsalted butter
  • 190 g icing sugar
  • 225 g full-fat soft cheese
  • juice of 1 lime
  • 2 tbsp dark rum

Equipment

  • 8-inch round cake pans
  • Stand mixer or hand mixer

Method
 

  1. Prep the pans
    Preheat the oven to 350ยฐF (175ยฐC). Grease and flour two 8-inch round cake pans, and line the bottoms with parchment paper circles. Skipping the parchment means half your cake stays fused to the pan, and you end up eating crumbles over the sink.
  2. Whisk the dry ingredients
    In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, baking soda, ground ginger, cinnamon, cloves, and salt until the spices are evenly distributed. According to The Spruce Eats, properly whisking dry ingredients before adding them to wet ingredients prevents overmixing and ensures even spice distribution throughout the batter.
  3. Cream the butter and sugar
    In a large mixer bowl, beat the softened butter and dark brown sugar on medium-high speed for about 3 minutes, until the mixture is noticeably lighter in color and fluffy in texture. This step builds the structure of your gingerbread layer cake.
  4. Add the wet ingredients
    Beat in the molasses and eggs one at a time, scraping down the sides of the bowl between additions. The mixture may look slightly curdled at this point this is normal and will resolve once the flour is added.
  5. Alternate dry and wet
    With the mixer on low speed, add the dry ingredients in three parts, alternating with the ginger beer and rum (two additions of liquid, three of flour). Begin and end with the flour mixture. Keep the mixer on low high speed with liquid batter creates a flour and ginger beer facial mask.
  6. Bake the cakes
    Divide the batter evenly between the prepared pans and bake for 30โ€“35 minutes, until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Let the cakes cool in the pans for 15 minutes, then turn out onto a wire rack to cool completely at least one full hour before frosting.
  7. Make the rum buttercream
    Beat the softened butter on medium speed until smooth and creamy. Add the powdered sugar one cup at a time, then add the dark rum and beat on high for 2โ€“3 minutes until light and fluffy. If it's too thick, add a teaspoon of heavy cream. If too soft, refrigerate for 15 minutes before using.
  8. Assemble and drizzle
    Place the first cooled cake layer on a serving plate and frost the top generously. Add the second layer and frost the top and sides. Right before serving, drizzle the butterscotch sauce aggressively over the top and let it run down the sides. Presentation is entirely chaos and that is exactly the point

๐Ÿ™‹โ€โ™€๏ธ Frequently Asked Questions

โœ… Yes, and skipping this step noticeably changes the result. Browning the beef builds flavor through the Maillard reaction, a chemical process that creates hundreds of flavor compounds raw meat simply doesn’t have. It also removes excess fat before it melts into your sauce. Ten minutes in a skillet is worth it every single time.

๐Ÿ’ก Tomato paste mixed with a little water and a splash of Worcestershire sauce works as a substitute and produces a less sweet, more savory result. Crushed tomatoes also work if you add a teaspoon of sugar to compensate for the missing sweetness. The ketchup base is the easiest route, but the recipe adapts well to either swap.

๐Ÿ“Œ Three to five hours on low gives the sauce enough time to thicken and the flavors enough time to meld into the beef. At three hours the sauce is good. At five hours it’s noticeably richer. Don’t push past six hours or the brown sugar starts to scorch against the edges of the insert.

๐Ÿ‘‰ The cooked meat mixture freezes well for up to three months in a sealed freezer bag. Thaw it overnight in the fridge and reheat in a saucepan with a splash of water to loosen the sauce. The flavor holds up after freezing better than most slow cooker dishes. Never freeze the assembled sandwiches since the buns turn to mush.

โœจ Brown lentils replace the ground beef cleanly in this recipe. Add one cup of vegetable broth to compensate for the moisture the beef would have contributed, and reduce the cook time to 2 to 3 hours since lentils break down faster. The sauce clings to lentils the same way it clings to beef, and the final texture reads as genuinely hearty rather than like a compromise.

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