Brandy Aged Fruitcake
Brandy Aged Fruitcake is so rich & delicious. Brandy softens the fruit and mellows the cake part of the fruitcake and it acts as a preservative. You’ll become a fruitcake convert.

Why do American’s hate fruitcake?
I get it, really. The fruitcakes that you find in the grocery and the big box stores are gross. I don’t know what the green things are in those cakes, and I’m pretty sure I don’t want to know.
I’m not surprised so many Americans think they hate fruitcake, even if they’ve never tasted it.
With this recipe, I’m on a mission to change as many American minds about fruitcake as I can.
Ingredients for making Aged Fruitcake:
Fruit & Nuts:

Cake Batter:

Ingredient notes:
- Dried Fruits: Use the best quality dried fruits and nuts for this cake. Candied orange peel and candied cherries can be found in the grocery store starting in the fall, but they are also available on-line.
- Alcohol: The alcohol is key to the flavor, texture and preserving for this cake. I prefer a high abv slightly sweet alcohol like brandy or rum. You can also use whiskey or bourbon. Don’t use lower abv liquid like wine for aging, you need the higher alcohol as a preservative.
- Brown sugar: This is a “dark” fruitcake which includes brown sugar rather than white sugar. Light or dark brown sugar is fine.
Scroll through the process photos and watch the video to see how to make, age and finish a traditional Christmas fruitcake:

- Mix the dried fruits and nuts with lemon zest, juice and brandy.
- Cover and set aside for at least 12 hours or up to 2 days.

- Add the eggs to the butter and sugar.
- Add the flour.
- Add the soaked fruit.
- Mix to combine then spread into the cake pan.
FAQs about making traditional aged fruitcake:
The alcohol moistens the cake and fruit, flavors the cake and acts as a preservative. It’s hard for bacteria to live in a high alcohol/low moisture cake.
I like to use brandy, but you can also use whiskey, bourbon, sherry or rum instead.
The liquor not only softens the fruit part of the fruitcake, it also softens and mellows the cake part of the fruitcake and keeps the cake from spoiling. There is no good substitute for the liquor in this recipe.
As the name Brand-Aged Fruitcake, implies, this recipe needs to be made several weeks, or even several months, before you want to serve it. I usually bake my fruitcakes by mid-October so they’re well-aged by Christmas.
The cake can be finished with a layer of marzipan and a layer of fondant or royal icing. But you don’t need to decorate the cakes at all. Fruitcake can certainly be served without any icing or marzipan.
Once the cake is aged, it can keep at room temperature for several months. Keep the cake wrapped in plastic and in a closed container like a cake tin. Once a week brush any cut edges or un-iced parts of the cake with more of the liquor used for aging.


Watch this video to see how to cover a cake with rolled fondant.
You’ll also love this Almond Filled Stollen on your holiday menu.
If you love this recipe please consider giving it 5 stars.
Brandy-Aged Fruitcake Recipe
Ingredients
- 1 ½ oz almonds (½ cup coarsely ground)
- 3 oz walnuts (1 cup chopped)
- 12 oz dark raisins (2 ¼ cups)
- 8 oz light raisins (1 ⅓ cups)
- 3 oz candied orange peel (⅓ cup)
- 3 oz candied cherries (⅓ cup)
- 6 oz zante currants (1 cup)
- 1 lemon (grated zest juice)
- 6 oz brandy (⅔ cup (plus more for aging, see note))
- 7 ½ oz all purpose flour (1 ½ cups, see note)
- 1 ½ teaspoon baking powder
- 1 teaspoon cinnamon
- ½ teaspoon nutmeg
- ½ teaspoon ginger
- ½ teaspoon table salt
- 6 oz unsalted butter (room temperature)
- 6 oz brown sugar (¾ cup)
- 4 large eggs (room temperature)
Decoration (optional)
- 8 oz apricot preserves (1 cup)
- 1 recipe marzipan
- 1 recipe rolled fondant
- recipe Royal Icing
- Marzipan holly and silver dragees for decoration
Instructions
- Combine 1 ½ oz almonds, 3 oz walnuts, 12 oz dark raisins, 8 oz light raisins, 3 oz candied orange peel, 3 oz candied cherries, 6 oz zante currants, with the zest and juice of 1 lemon. Add 6 oz brandy and toss to coat the fruit and nuts with the liquor. Cover the bowl and let it sit overnight.
- Preheat the oven to 350 °F. Line a 9"x 3" cake pan with a parchment round. (see note)
- Sift together 7 ½ oz all purpose flour, 1 ½ teaspoon baking powder, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, ½ teaspoon nutmeg, ½ teaspoon ginger and ½ teaspoon table salt. Set aside.
- In a large mixing bowl, cream 6 oz unsalted butter and 6 oz brown sugar until light and aerated. Scrape down the bowl and the beater. Add 4 large eggs, two at a time. Mix until combined then scrape down the bowl and the beater.
- With the mixer running on low speed, add the dry ingredients in 3 batches and mix until combined. Fold in the soaked fruit and all the liquid.
- Pour the batter into the prepared cake pan and spread it out to an even layer. Bake until a toothpick poked in the center of the cake comes out clean, about 55 minutes. As soon as the pan is removed from the oven pour ¼ cup of brandy over the top of the cake.
- Cool the cake to room temperature before removing from the pan. Wrap the cake in two layers of plastic wrap and set aside at room temperature.
- Once a week for at least 4 weeks, unwrap the cake and generously brush on all sides with more brandy. The cake can be served as is or you can ice and decorate the cake with marzipan and fondant.
Ice & Decorate the cake (optional)
- Unwrap the cake. Glue the cake to a cardboard cake circle using a dab of royal icing. Trim the cake cardboard to the same size as the cake. Place on another cardboard circle or serving plate.
- To finish with Royal Icing: Make a batch of fluffy royal icing. Ice the top of the cake with thick swirls of icing to resemble snow. Decorate with marzipan or fondant holly or other edible decorations. Wrap a wide ribbon around the sides of the cake.
- To finish with Rolled Fondant: Ice the cake with apricot preserves. Roll the marzipan to a 14" round. Roll the marzipan onto the rolling pin then transfer and unroll onto the cake. Trim the marzipan flush with the bottom of the cake and board. Brush the marzipan with brandy.
- Roll the fondant to a 14″ round and cover the cake over the marzipan. Trim the fondant flush with the bottom of the cake and board.
- Add dragees, stencils, glitter and marzipan holly or other decorations as you like.
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Hi I’m making this tomorrow but prefer a square cake? What size would you recommend? Thankyou
I would do an 8″ square.
I had a question…the flour for US flour is 1.5 cups…when converted to metric it’s 212 grams…which would be about 141 gr per cup. Most conversions I’ve seen are 120 grams of flour per cup.
I do use a scale for my baking – any advice on the amount of flour (using 120 grams per cup would equal 180 grams in the recipe vs. the 212 you list).
I’ve made other recipes and mine tend to come out crumbly…eager to try this one and want to get the flour right.
Thank you!
Nicole
If you use a scale use the weights provided in the recipe. The cup measurements are provided for the many US bakers who use volume measurements. Volume measurements will vary based on how you fill the cup. You can read this post to get detailed information about measuring ingredients for baking on specific information on how I convert volume to weight measures.
Oooh! I wish I had tackled this when I was healthy! Lol diabetes and allergies. But it’s lovely to imagine it!
It’s weird to include an ingredient that’s not actually possible to get in the target area for the recipe.
Currants are illegal to cultivate and import in the US (and I think Canada too). There’s a type of small grape whose raisins are called currants (zante currants, which are sometimes just labeled currants), but it’s not related to the actual currant family. You can import currant powder, and I think I’ve seen freeze dried available online, but yeah no currants.
Did you actually try to make the recipe before giving it a 3-star review? I use zante currants for this recipe and I think most bakers in the US understand what is listed in the recipe.
@EA, Hi, currants are no longer illegal in the USA.
Currants are fantastic, and you can buy them in the United States they carry a disease that is lethal to cedar trees that is why they can’t be grown here but they can be sold here the fruit is perfectly okay.
Hey Eileen! Love the recipe!! I’ve made it the last couple of Christmases and it’s been a huge hit. I’m going to try to make it in the 6″ pan this year. (One for me and one for parties) Any suggestions on a depth for the 6″ pan? Also, have you ever made this in a loaf pan? If so, what size?
Hi Dana, I’ve baked this cake in every size pan from 4″ to 12″. I’ve baked it in muffin tins and in a loaf pan. Whatever size pan you use, fill the pan no more than about 2/3 full. Of course the baking time will vary. The deeper the pan (like a loaf pan) the longer it will take to bake.