This easy fruit cake recipe is full of pecans, candied pineapple, candied cherries, dates, and just enough batter to hold it all together.
It's moist and sticky - more like a candy than a cake! It's a traditional fruitcake with old-fashioned flavor, and it's been a family favorite for generations.
Table of Contents
- This is the fruitcake of my dreams!!
- 🗝️ Key takeaways: why this recipe is your new favorite
- 🧾 Gather your ingredients: what you'll need
- 🔪 Step-by-step guide: instructions for success
- 🍴Must have tools: essential equipment
- 🎥 Watch and cook: step-by-step video tutorial
- 🥫 Leftover love: how to store fruitcake
- Marye's Tip o' the day
- 💭 Insider tips: things to know
- 👩🍳 Let's answer those questions: FAQs
- 🎄 Why Is Fruit Cake a Christmas Tradition?
- 📚 More Southern comfort: related recipes you'll love
- 📞 Wrapping it up: the last word
- 📖 Recipe
- old-fashioned fruitcake
- 💬 Comments
Save this recipe by clicking on the ❤️ heart on the right-hand side of the screen or in the recipe card.
🗝️ Key takeaways: why this recipe is your new favorite
- Sweet and chewy, this fruitcake is more like candy than a cake.
- This is a staple for the holidays at our house - I can't imagine Christmas without it.
- If you watch the video you'll see that putting the pecans in a food processor just doesn't work well. Coarsely chop them for the best results.
I grew up loving dark fruitcake. To be honest, I could never figure out why people didn't like it.
To me, there was nothing more delicious than a piece of my Mom's fruit cake - moist, chewy, and candy-like; thickly slathered with cream cheese or butter. Even better if it was sitting next to a cup of hot chocolate. Mmmmm - Christmas!
...And sugar overload.
That is, I didn't understand it until the fateful day when I tasted someone ELSE'S version of this traditional holiday cake. EWWWW!
I finally understood the jokes..the grimaces..the gagging. Right then I felt sorry for anyone who wasn't me, who didn't have access to this amazing stuff.
I mean, how could it be Christmas without it?
I used to sell this homemade fruitcake on eBay for $30 ...and that was twenty years ago or more! No one that has tasted this recipe doesn't like it...It is moist..and more chewy than cakey...there are no golden or dark raisins in it and no "junk" mixed candied fruit...
A few years ago I had the opportunity to interview the folks at Collin Street Bakery in Corsicana, Texas. I think they make the SECOND best fruitcake in the world. 😉
🧾 Gather your ingredients: what you'll need
The one thing that always amazes me about this old-fashioned fruitcake recipe is that there is almost nothing holding all of that sweet, sticky fruit together. Make sure you DO NOT buy fruitcake mix - you want to get each type of fruit called for individually.
This is an overview of the ingredients. You'll find the full measurements and instructions in the green recipe card (printable) at the bottom of the page.
- Candied Pineapple chunks are called for but sometimes I haven't been able to find it and used the rings instead. Just cut them in chunks. Red and green are the most festive if you can find them.
- Candied cherries are usually pretty easy to find. If you can use part red ones and part green ones it's prettier.
- Pitted dates are what makes this cake sweet and sticky. I prefer to get the diced dates but you can get pitted whole dates and dice them yourself.
- Pecans don't need to be toasted but I think they add more flavor.
- Sugar is just granulated sugar.
- All-purpose flour is what creates the batter that holds this together.
- Baking powder is one ingredient that I add because mom always did - but honestly I have no idea what it does here.
- Salt helps to balance the sweetness of all the candied fruit.
- Vanilla adds a rich dimension.
- Large eggs work with the flour to create the batter.
🔪 Step-by-step guide: instructions for success
This is an overview of the instructions. Full instructions are in the green recipe card at the bottom of the page. Click on the image to see it full size.
Mix chopped pecans, dates, and candied fruit.
Add in sugar, flour, baking powder, and salt. Mix well.
Whisk eggs and vanilla together. Mix into the fruit mixture.
Press into parchment lined loaf pans and bake according to instructions in the recipe card below.
🤫 Marye's secret for zhuzhing it up -
Showing my decadent side here - During the holidays one of my favorite breakfast treats is a slice of fruit cake smeared with cream cheese. Heaven!
zhuzh: verb. To make something more interesting or attractive
🍴Must have tools: essential equipment
- cutting board
- sharp knife
- parchment paper
- loaf pans, I use Pyrex 1-½ quart size glass loaf pans
- measuring cups and spoons
- mixing bowl
🎥 Watch and cook: step-by-step video tutorial
Hey y'all! Don't forget to check out my latest video where I guide you through each step of this delicious recipe. It's always great to have a visual guide, right? And as always, my cooking show, Restless Chipotle Kitchen, has got your back. If you're looking for more yummy ideas, dive into our full recipe collection on YouTube. You're gonna love it!
🥫 Leftover love: how to store fruitcake
Fruitcake stores really well at room temperature if it's wrapped in plastic wrap. I usually leave the parchment wrapped around it and then wrap it in a layer of plastic wrap or aluminum foil
It's fine for a month or so at room temperature, up to 6 months in the fridge, and for an eternity in the freezer.
Marye's Tip o' the day
Don't use the "mixed candied fruit". It isn't moist enough and your cake will be dry and tasteless.
💭 Insider tips: things to know
- The color may be lighter brown or a darker brown - it all depends on the dates that you get. It has nothing to do with the actual bake on the cake.
- Mixing the batter together with your (clean) hands is honestly the easiest way to get everything blended properly.
- Don't chop the pecans in a food processor. I tried that and it makes them too small. Just coarsely chop them with a knife.
- The pan of water on the rack beneath the fruit cake in the oven is important. Don't skip it!
👩🍳 Let's answer those questions: FAQs
Have other questions? Ask me in the comments!
Short answer: yes!
I have no clue where my mom got the recipe but she made it for her 6 siblings every single year.
Numerous fruitcakes were wrapped in waxed paper, then boxed, then covered with brown postal paper and tied with a string. It happened just after Thanksgiving just like clockwork. My job was holding my finger on the string so Mom could make the knot tight.
This Christmas cake was mailed overseas to my uncles during World War II ... it has been mailed overseas to my kids in the military. It always arrives perfectly intact and fresh.
You can make in November and let it sit in a cool place or make it closer to Christmas..either way it will be great.
A fruitcake that's stored properly can last for years - not at our house though because we eat it long before it has a chance to go bad.
Fruitcake will last a month or so at room temperature if it's properly wrapped. It will also keep for up to about 6 months in the refrigerator.
This traditional fruit cake recipe is moist because of the baking technique and we've eaten the last few bites of it a month or so after making it - it's not dry. Just keep it wrapped. Some people wrap it in a cheesecloth that's been soaked in rum or brandy - and that's a good way to ensure it doesn't mold if you are storing it at room temperature for a long time.
Short answer: nope. Fruit cake is high in calories and sugar so you probably shouldn't make a habit of having it for breakfast. Generally it's considered a holiday treat so whether or not it's healthy isn't usually a concern.
Let the cake cool and remove it from the pan. Leave the waxed paper on it and then wrap it in plastic wrap, then foil.
🎄 Why Is Fruit Cake a Christmas Tradition?
Fruitcake dates to ancient times when the Romans ate a satura cake, a mixture of barley mash, raisins, nuts, pomegranate, and wine.
Over time it evolved into fruitcake - with the candied fruit added to help preserve the finished cake during a season when fruit was not normally available.
It was popular in Victorian England, where it was called a "Christmas Cake" and the tradition was brought to the United States.
Fruitcakes were used as wedding cakes during Victorian times, as a matter of fact, partly because they could be made well ahead of time.
⏲️ Marye's time saving hacks -
Fruit cake is usually even better a day or two after it's made, and it will last several weeks, so I like to make it before the chaos of the holidays really gets going.
📚 More Southern comfort: related recipes you'll love
- Gingerbread House Party is so much fun for the kids! I've been doing it since the early 1980s. You make easy houses out of graham crackers and let them decorate with all kinds of candy. SO much fun.
- 50 Best Red Velvet Recipes because what's Christmas without red velvet? Seriously!!
- 91 Best Christmas Cookies means that not only do you have plenty to choose from but your holiday cookie tray are going to be amazing!
📞 Wrapping it up: the last word
This is the exact holiday cake my mom made. I have no idea where she got the original recipe but I do know that everyone who's tried it loves it!
I can't imagine a Christmas dinner without it and a batch of her homemade fudge.
If you're a fruitcake lover, or you know someone who is, give this recipe a try.
If you click on the number of servings in the recipe card you can adjust the measurements up or down for the exact number of servings you need.
If you love this recipe please comment below and give it 5 stars! ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
📖 Recipe
Old Fashioned Fruitcake Recipe
Print Pin Recipe Save Recipe Rate RecipeIngredients
- 1 pound pecans
- 1 pound dates, pitted and chopped
- ½ pound candied cherries, (red and geen)
- ½ pound candied pineapple, (red and green or yellow)
- ¾ cup sugar
- ¾ cup flour
- ½ teaspoon baking powder
- ½ teaspoon kosher salt
- 3 large eggs
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract, or 1 tablespoon rum, bourbon, or brandy
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 250° degrees (that is not a typo-TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY degrees)
- Place a pan ⅓ filled with boiling water in the oven to create steam. Put it on the rack under the rack where the fruitcake pans will got.
- Fill the pan with hot water as needed during baking.
- Spray two 9-inch loaf pans with cooking spray and line with wax paper or parchment paper.
- Spray wax paper with cooking spray.
- Chop dates and nuts.
- Add them to a large bowl.
- Sift dry ingredients over fruit and nuts and mix in with your hands.
- Beat eggs until light, add vanilla and pour over fruit, mixing well. (you will probably need to mix with your hands - it's messy.)
- Spoon fruit cake batter into prepared pans, pressing down gently to remove large air bubbles and spaces.
- Place the filled loaf pans onto the rack above the pan with hot water.
- Bake at 250 for 1 hour and 45 minutes.
- Let cool.
Notes
- To store: let the cake cool and remove it from the pan. Leave the waxed paper on it and then wrap it in plastic wrap, then foil. Store in a cool dark place.
- This fruit cake ships well. Just wrap it in waxed paper, then in aluminum foil.
- You can brush this with rum or brandy if you like but I never do - it's good without it.
- No need to let fruitcake age. It's delicious the same day it's baked.
- Don't use the "mixed candied fruit". It isn't moist enough and your cake will be dry and tasteless.
Nutrition Facts
Nutrition information is estimated as a courtesy. If using for medical purposes, please verify information using your own nutritional calculator. Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.
This recipe has been tested several times. If you choose to use other ingredients, or change the technique in some way, the results may not be the same.
First published December 22, 2011. Last updated September 14, 2024 for structure and editorial fixes as well as new images.
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old-fashioned fruitcake
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Mel N says
I will have to save and try this recipe. It looks like my mom's recipe, which I haven't been able to find. All the other recipes are for cakey fruitcakes. Not a good chewy one like this. Looking forward to giving it a try!
Rosanna Slade says
was this rosalynn carters fruitcake recipe?. it looks real close to it.
Marye says
I don't think so? My mom made this to send to her brothers overseas during WW2 and all the years after. It was a tradition in our family. I don't know where it came from.
H Kobtan says
The pecan is raw or roasted?
Marye says
Just plain pecans, straight from the shell
Bill Langell says
Hi
I use to love the collinstreet cake ( 50 years) but they have changed.
I don't care what they say.
It is so obvious, I'm sure others have noticed.
Are there Chat rooms where people discuss how to recreate their older recipes?
Around 1980's were the best, but even into the 2000's were still great.
Thanks
Peter says
Okay. Planning ahead for next season when I try to make this for the first time versus buying the Collin Street Bakery fruitcake. I'm not a big fan of dates are they noticeable and or is there a substitute for them or not. Thanks
Marye says
This is mostly dates and pecans. If you don't like dates you won't like this.
n. lily says
Marye- Thank you! It was delicious!
I’d still like to know if you recommend a total of 1/2 pound cherries or 1/2 pound of each color?
I have made fruitcake for years trying different recipes and YOUR’S is absolute best! No need for me to try another recipe! Thank you so much
Marye says
The recipe calls for 1/2 pound but I like to use 1/2 pound each. I made them wiht 1/2 pound total this year and I didn't like it as well
Leslie says
I am in process of making this fruitcake and hope it turns out well. The recipe directions don't reference the sugar (unless that is supposed to be powdered sugar and is included with the direction "Sift dry ingredients...") or candied fruit. Presumably, if it is powdered sugar, the recipe would say so, but...? Perhaps it won't much matter at which step I add the granulated sugar and candied fruit, but I'd have more confidence if the directions had been better reviewed prior to publishing.
Marye says
The sugar is part of the dry ingredients in this recipe. It is not powdered sugar or it would say so. The instructions have been reviewed many times and this is the first time this question was asked despite tons of comments and over 400 4 and 5-star reviews.
Debra says
I will attempt to make this today so I hope you are able to respond quickly. Thank you in advance. I was only able to find dried pineapple, not candied. It seems to be fresh and is sweet. Can I use it as is or do I need to do something to it to use it in this recipe?
Marye says
I've never used anything but candied pineapple so I really don't know how it would turn out. Sorry.
Ethel says
I made this fruitcake today and it is the best I ever had. Thanks so much for the recipe.
Carol says
Very easy instructions. I made this recipe about 2-3 years ago. This time NO ONE was selling red candied cherries! So I rinsed and dried maraschino cherries, chopped them, and added them as a substitute. I recommend them because they worked great and added a nice cherry flavor! The YouTube video is great too!
Michele says
I'm making this today(I LOVE fruitcake,but this will be my first attempt at baking one!) Can it be made in a bundt pan versus the loaf pans? If so,how should I adjust baking time? Thanks so much!!
Marye says
I've only made it in loaf pans so I am unsure about how it would do in a bundt pan.
Traci Wilson says
Michelle, were you successful with a bundt pan? If so what adjustments did you make? Thanks!
Arthur ray says
Do you sell them? Fruit cake
Marye says
Nope.
Lori says
Good flavours. For me it was a bit doughy
Gill says
I used X2 Bundt Pans and the recipe turned out perfectly. Very similar to The Collin Street Bakery fruitcake that we used to get shipped to UK, but better! Love ,love, love it!
Jenine says
This is the fruitcake of my dreams!! Thank you for sharing another great recipe Marye. I think this will make the table for my birthday also.
Jan Pryibil says
I would like to bake your fruitcake in small loaf pans. I’m wondering about the bake t8me these would need. Have you ever made them small? Thank you for a great looking fruitcake.
Marye says
I've never made them small. I'd start checking them at about 30 minutes.
Jan Pryibil says
I would like to bake in small loaf pans. Have you done this? Wondering about baking time. Looks yummy. Thank you!
Hazel says
Hi, is the temperature 250 celcius or Fahrenheit please, thank you
Marye says
Fahrenheit.
Valerie says
Would 2X recipe make 4 loaves or two? Making this again this year. They were wonderful last year.
Marye says
I think it would make about 4
Michelle says
I have a very similar recipe and love it!! Where do you get your fruit?
Marye says
Amazon or the local grocery store during the holidays.