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You are here: Home / Cake / Pumpkin Fruit Cake

Pumpkin Fruit Cake

46 Comments

Pumpkin Fruit Cake is so deliciously moist and fruity, the perfect way to use up your pumpkin carvings! Makes a great base for a celebration or Christmas cake.

Pumpkin Fruit Cake

I was recently on a mission to find a bird bath for my mother in law’s 80th birthday. Having not found one, my daughter and I decided to visit the farm on the same site and take a look at all the glorious pumpkins they had for sale. Meanwhile my husband and son drove off to another garden centre to look for the bird bath.

To kill the extra time we had my daughter and I went back into the garden centre and I found myself flicking through all the cook books they had for sale. The one on Budget Meals by BBC GoodFood immediately jumped out at me and there I found a recipe for a Fruit Cake using apple.

I memorised the recipe and wrote it down when I got home. My family is divided where dried fruit is concerned so I tend to avoid using it as only myself and my son love it.

Pumpkin Fruit Cake

A few days later I was fortunate enough to win a box of assorted flours from Marriages via the Tea Time Treats Challenge run by What Kate Baked and Lavender & Lovage. My flour arrived by courier at 5.30pm and by 8pm I made a snap decision to make my mother in law a birthday cake based on the recipe I’d seen.

Left over pumpkin recipe Marriages Flour,, birthday cake, halloween, autumn leaf icing, quick, easy

Having just celebrated Halloween I had a bowl full of pumpkin carvings from the pumpkin my daughter carved so I decided I was going to use this as I was bored of making soup. I peered in my box of flours and decided the Light Brown Organic Self Raising would be perfect for the job instead of white flour.

Then I remembered a box of ready-to-roll icing which I hadn’t used yet, a block of marzipan which had been on offer plus some currants which I hadn’t been opened. This was all coming together nicely I thought.

Pumpkin Fruit Cake

I baked the Pumpkin Fruit Cake and it came out of the oven smiling – so far so good. The next morning I set about decorating it. This is where I got a bit stressed. I had googled cakes and was thinking of doing something on a par with my Fondant Rose Biscuits but my icing had other ideas.

I think I over blitzed it in the microwave and my Wedgewood blue turned into cracked looking plasticine – oops. My white had turned into a brick as I hadn’t covered it properly so I was left with all the really bright colours. Oh well this cake hadn’t been planned so why fret over a change of colour I thought – let’s just go with it!

Pumpkin Fruit Cake

As I didn’t have enough of any one colour to ice the whole cake I had to ice it like I’d done the marzipan – top and sides separately. The leaves were to cover the seam.

I think I’ve made a Christmas cake twice in my life and so my knowledge of decorating is zero so this was very much a make it up as you go along exercise. Once decorated I then had the worry that it might  not taste any good. Did people even put pumpkin in cakes, I googled after the event and saw that they did!

I surprised my mother in law with the cake when she came round for tea and half apologised that it might not taste any good. I needn’t have worried – she loved it and I have to say it was great. My Christmas cakes were always dry so I gave up making them but this was moist and fabulous. The following day we all went out for lunch with numerous family members and everyone was raving about the cake when we had tea later, even people who don’t normally eat fruit cake!

Pumpkin Fruit Cake

As this Pumpkin Fruit Cake was made from leftover pumpkin and ingredients that I had in my cupboards that needed using up I am entering it into Credit Crunch Munch which I run with Fuss Free Flavours and being hosted by Dinner with Crayons this month. I am also entering Tea Time Treats which is hosted by Lavender & Lovage this month & alternately with What Kate Baked as the theme is dried fruit and I think it’s very fitting as my flour came about from my winning entry from last month! I am entering Made with Love Mondays run by Javelin Warrior as this cake is made from scratch. Then finally I am entering the One Ingredient challenge where the theme is fruits of the vine run by Franglais Kitchen who is hosting and How to Cook Good Food.

For more recipes that use up leftover pumpkin or squash check out the following:

  • Pumpkin & Ginger Jam
  • The Best Roasted Pumpkin Seeds Recipe (boil & roast method)
  • Quick Spelt Butternut Squash Cake
  • Curried Pumpkin Soup
  • Roast Pumpkin Hummus
  • Pumpkin Sage & Parmesan Financiers
  • How to prepare pumpkin (How to cook, bake or roast pumpkin) 

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Pumpkin Fruit Cake (Pinterest Image)

Pumpkin Fruit Cake on a wire rack.
4.8 from 5 votes
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Pumpkin Fruit Cake

A deliciously moist fruit cake with added pumpkin which is quick and easy to make.
Course Snack
Cuisine British
Keyword cake, easy, pumpkin
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour
Total Time 1 hour 10 minutes
Servings 16 - 20
Author Camilla Hawkins

Ingredients

  • 200 g Unsalted butter softened
  • 200 g Dark brown muscovado sugar
  • 200 g Light brown self raising flour I used Marriages Organic
  • 1 tbsp Black treacle
  • 3 Eggs
  • 2 tsp Mixed spice
  • 1 tsp Baking powder
  • 150 g Pumpkin grated
  • 300 g Currants

Instructions

  1. Pre-heat the oven to 180°C.
  2. Grease and line a 20cm round baking tin with baking paper.
  3. Mix the first 8 ingredients together in a food mixer until well combined.
  4. Fold in the currants.
  5. Bake for 50 mins – 1 hour until a skewer comes out clean and firm to touch.
  6. Decorate if required.

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Paul Wilson

    05/12/2014 at 12:06 am

    Great way to use pumpkin – much underrated in my opinion.

    Reply
  2. Jane Middleton

    16/11/2014 at 10:17 pm

    Lovely cake for the autumn

    Reply
    • Camilla

      17/11/2014 at 4:46 pm

      Thanks, it really is moist and delicious:-)

      Reply
  3. Anne Dalzell

    09/10/2014 at 12:00 pm

    I’ve only ever made pumpkin pie once and my dog ate it!!

    Reply
    • Camilla

      11/10/2014 at 11:54 pm

      Yes you have to be so careful with pets around! Dogs worse than cats though as cats only like meaty/fishy things!

      Reply
  4. Lorne Bedford

    05/10/2014 at 2:58 pm

    This looks delicious x

    Reply
  5. Bev

    25/06/2014 at 12:02 pm

    Stunning colours!

    Reply
    • Camilla

      25/06/2014 at 12:55 pm

      Thank you, a lucky accident:-)

      Reply
  6. Paul Wilson

    05/02/2014 at 9:56 pm

    Great use for pumpkin.

    Reply
  7. Nazima

    16/12/2013 at 10:13 pm

    Lovely lovely colours Camilla and a wonderful cake. Am sure it must have been so moist and delicious.

    Reply
    • Camilla

      17/12/2013 at 3:20 pm

      Thank you Nazima, it really was:-)

      Reply
  8. Wendy Tolhurst

    19/11/2013 at 11:49 pm

    I would love to try this cake – I had promised my son we would try and cook with pumpkin this year but, due to a bad back, I din’t get out to buy one. Can you buy pumpkin in the UK apart from in the run up to Halloween as I’m not sure if you added tin pumpkin (which for some reason I believe is available) it would have the same effect in this cake.

    Reply
    • Camilla

      20/11/2013 at 9:41 am

      I don’t know about tinned Pumpkin, it might work but the pumpkin was very wet and so added lovely moisture to this cake. I have seen tiny pumpkins in the shops from time to time so maybe you can get hold of one of these:-)

      Reply
  9. Herbert Appleby

    18/11/2013 at 11:10 pm

    I wonder if this would work with honey roast parsnips for a Christmas theme , what do you think?

    Reply
    • Camilla

      19/11/2013 at 10:09 am

      No, you need the wetness from the pumpkin for the moisture.

      Reply
  10. Ben Potts

    18/11/2013 at 9:44 pm

    This looks delicious! Can’t wait to give it a try.

    Reply
    • Camilla

      19/11/2013 at 10:10 am

      Thanks – hope you enjoy it as much as we did:-)

      Reply
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