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Mini Christmas Bundt cakes

by Stela Kordić

Christmas is just around the corner, and you are still clueless about which cakes and cookies to make this year? I have a quick and easy solution for you, and it comes in the form of these mini Christmas Bundt cakes with clementines and almonds.
These little cakes are velvety, soft and extremely moist but wait until you taste them! Hints of citrus, vanilla, and rum will, without a doubt, put a smile on your face. 🙂

Mini Christmas Bundt cakes dusted with icing sugar


What is a Bundt cake?

Interestingly, Bundt cakes are not tied to any particular recipe but get their name after the mould they are baked in. In the 1950s and 1960s, an American cookware manufacturer Nordic Ware got inspired by the shape of a traditional European cake called Gugelhupf and started producing similar-looking aluminium pans, under the trademarked name “Bundt”. The Bundt pans soon became a big hit, and the Bundt cakes were born.
The brioche-like Gugelhupf is in Germany, Austria and Swiss, also called “Bundkuchen”, which explains the reason behind the name Bundt.

While Gugelhupf follows a specific yeast-based recipe, Bundt mould can be used for various ones, even for ice creams or savoury-based dishes.

There is something more to these particularly shaped moulds than pure aesthetics. The whole in the middle allows the cakes to cook faster and more evenly, which works exceptionally well with deep cakes.

Today, the market is flooded with Bundt-style moulds in different sizes and materials. Even though the aluminium ones are classic, I prefer silicone ones, which I find much easier to handle and clean. Which ones do you like more?


What makes these Bundt cakes so special?

Since you know Bundt cakes don’t follow one specific recipe, you probably ask yourself: “What can I expect from these little cakes?”. These Christmas Bundt cakes were inspired by the classic recipe for French shell-shaped cakes called Madeleines. If you don’t know what Madeleines are, imagine airy, fluffy pillows with a melt-in-your-mouth sensation.

These little Bundt cakes share the same fluffiness as Madeleines, but they are moister and richer in flavour thanks to the clementine juice, rum extract and almond butter.
Besides being delicious, they will look adorable when served for a family gathering or a Christmas party with friends.

The cross-section of a mini Christmas Bundt cake dusted with icing sugar


And, of course, they are quick and easy to make. While the batter for classic Madeleines needs to rest in the fridge for a few hours before being baked, that is not the case when making these little cuties. The batter is best when baked straight away and comes out of the oven in only 15 minutes.
So, for those of you who love making Madeleines, this will be a very easy one. But for those of you, Madeleines are something completely new; in the next section, I will touch on the crucial steps when baking these Christmas treats.

Ingredients for the mini Christmas Bundt cakes with clementines, almonds and olive oil


What goes inside these mini Christmas Bundt cakes?

  • Eggs
  • Granulated sugar
  • Almond flour
  • All-purpose flour
  • Olive oil
  • Almond butter (made from roasted almonds)
  • Clementine juice (mandarin and orange juice are also very good options)
  • Clementine zest
  • Baking powder
  • Vanilla extract
  • Rum extract
  • Salt


How to make these Christmas Bundt cakes?

Preparation tips

  • Use a mini Bundt cake mould made from cast aluminium or silicone. I find it is much easier to handle them in a silicone mould, but the aluminium ones are also a great option.
  • The eggs should come to room temperature before you add them to the mixture because they will bind much better with the rest of the ingredients.


Mix eggs with sugar

The most important part when making these mini Bundt cakes is mixing eggs with sugar correctly. Crack the eggs into a stand mixer bowl and gradually add sugar at a lower mixing speed. When all the sugar is incorporated, increase the speed and mix it until the “ribbon stage”, which will take approximately 5 minutes.

What does the ribbon stage mean? It is a name for the state when the eggs and sugar turn into a pale, thick, but very foamy batter. Lift the whisk attachment on your stand/ hand mixer, and if the batter falls in a continuous ribbon-like shape, you will know that you’ve reached the right consistency.

Eggs and sugar mixed in a stand mixer until the "ribbon stage"


What if I don’t have a stand mixer? Don’t worry; you can still use a hand mixer and achieve the same results, but it will take you a bit longer, close to 8 minutes.


Fold in the dry ingredients

Weigh out all the dry ingredients and mix them well to ensure they are evenly combined. Add them to the egg-sugar mixture little by little, folding them gently in with a spatula. The egg-sugar mix is full of air, and by incorporating the dry ingredients too vigorously, you will risk losing the fluffiness of the batter. Also, If you through them all at once, you can get an uneven, lumpy batter.

The process of gradually folding the dry into the egg-sugar mixture using a spatula


Incorporate the wet ingredients

After incorporating the dry ingredients, add the wet ones all in one go. Continue the same folding process to get an even mixture that is still aerated. Because of the weight of the wet ingredients, the mixture will lose a bit of volume, but that is how it should be.

The process of incorporating the wet ingredients into the mixture
The batter is almost ready to go inside the moulds.

Bake the Bundt cakes

Before you start filling up the moulds with the prepared mixture, grease them with butter or olive oil and dust them with all-purpose flour. Thanks to the flour, the cakes will have more defined edges, and it will be much easier to take them out of the mould once baked.

Mini Bundt silicone mould greased and dusted with flour


Start filling up the moulds, leaving ¼ of the mould empty, giving them enough room to rise.
Bake the cakes for 15 minutes or until golden brown and start releasing from the edges. You will achieve the best results with the fan setting on.

Mini Bundt silicone baking moulds filled with the mixture and ready to be baked


Rest the Bundt cakes

After you take the Bundt cakes out of the oven, leave them to rest for 10 minutes before taking them out of the mould. I like to dust them with icing sugar while still in the mould, preventing them from sticking to a plate you plan to serve them on.

Baked mini Christmas Bundt cakes resting in the silicone baking mould
This is how Bundt cakes look after 10 minutes of resting in the mould.

How to serve and enjoy these Christmas Bundt cakes?

My favourite way to serve these fluffy cakes is by dusting them with icing sugar and dipping them in tea or coffee. They absorb the icing sugar after a few hours, so I recommend dusting them right before serving.

Christmas bundt cakes 2
Looks like someone already stole some!

Let me know if you try this recipe! Drop a comment and tag your photo with @stelasfoodstories on Instagram. I’d love to see your creations!

Dietary Labels

Mini Christmas Bundt cakes

Difficulty:

These little Christmas Bundt cakes are velvety, soft and extremely moist but wait until you taste them! Hints of citrus, vanilla, and rum will, without a doubt, put a smile on your face this Christmas!...

Prep time 15

Cook time 15

Total time 30

Digital scale

Stand mixer or Hand mixer

Mixing bowl (if using a hand mixer)

Sieve

Spatula

Cutting board

Paring knife

Citrus juicer

Microplane

Mini Bundt cake mould

Keep the screen ON

Servings:

6

Ingredients

2 small-sized eggs

45 g granulated sugar

Dry ingredients:

45 g all-purpose flour

15 g almond flour

2.5 g or 0.5 tsp baking powder

pinch of salt

Wet ingredients:

30 ml clementine juice

15 ml or 1 tbsp olive oil

15 g almond butter

2 g or 1 tsp clementine zest

1 ml or 0.25 tsp vanilla extract

1 ml or 0.25 tsp rum aroma

icing sugar, for dusting

Instructions

Step 1

Heat the oven to 160 °C with the fan setting on. Add the eggs into a stand mixer bowl. Start mixing at a lower speed, slowly incorporating sugar. When all the sugar is incorporated, increase the speed and mix for about 5 minutes until you get a thick fluffy mixture falling in a ribbon-like shape.

Complete step

Step 2

In the meantime, weigh and sieve dry ingredients into a bowl. Weigh out wet ingredients and whisk them until incorporated.

Complete step

Step 3

Fold dry ingredients, little by little, into the egg-sugar mixture. Next, add the wet ingredients all at once and gently fold them in until the batter is even.

Complete step

Step 4

Grease the mould with butter or olive oil and coat them with sieved all-purpose flour until the whole surface is evenly covered. Fill up the mould to ¾. Bake the mini Bundt cakes for 15 minutes or until the surface is golden and the edges start separating from the mould.

Complete step

Step 5

Rest these mini bundt cakes for 10 minutes after taking them out of the oven. Serve them with dusted icing sugar next to a cup of espresso.

Complete step

How to store these Christmas Bundt cakes?

Even though these Bundt cakes are incredibly moist, they tend to dry out quickly if not covered. Luckily, once you serve them to your guests, they will vanish in a matter of seconds; at least, that is what happened to my photoshoot batch:)
So, to keep them moist, store them in an airtight container and enjoy them in the next three to four days.

I’m sure these mini Bundt cakes will be an absolute winner in your house this Christmas! They are easy to prepare and take only 30 minutes, making them the perfect holiday treat.
If you try the recipe, I would love to hear your thoughts and impressions! And, of course, if you have any questions or doubts, leave a comment below, and I will be more than happy to help you out.

Merry Christmas!

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