Gumdrop Fruitcake, an Old Canadian Recipe | Kitchen Frau (2024)

Gumdrop Fruitcake - a classic Canadian prairie recipe that will turn even the most unwilling into a fruitcake lover. A light caramelized batter studded with chewy gumdrops and sweet fruits. It's a Christmas jewel.

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The Canadian Food Experience Project (December, 2013)

The Canadian Food Experience Projectbegan June 7, 2013. As we,the participants, share our collective stories across the vastness of our Canadian landscape through our regional food experiences, we hope to bring global clarity to our Canadian culinary identity through the cadence of our concerted Canadian voice. Please join us.

This month's topic is:A Canadian Christmas: A Prairie Tradition

The Old and Much-Loved Gumdrop Fruitcake Recipe from my Friend's Mom's Landlady's Mother in Yorkton, Saskatchewan

A big mug of milky tea, Christmas carols filling the air, and a thick slab of sweet, dense fruitcake - I am in Christmas heaven. The stresses and panic of holiday preparations melt away and leave me nothing but the gumdrop-fruity flavour of this treasured holiday treat. The colours and flavours and feelings of the whole Christmas season snuggle together in each moist and heavy, fruit-studded slice.

Ahhh, that's what I was looking for. Exactly that. I take another sip of tea and look out the window at the snowy winter wonderland.

We all have our favourite holiday foods - the ones that instantly bring back sweet memories of Christmases past. For me that was my mom's Pfeffernüsse, poppyseed Strudel and Honig Kuchen and my mother-in-law's fruit-studded toasting bread and gingerbread cookies. But it was also this: my own family's favourite fruitcake made from a recipe which came from my friend's mom's landlady's mother in Yorkton, Saskatchewan. Phew. That is some pedigree.

My children are crazy for this fruitcake, as were any guests that tasted it. This was unexpected, because as a child I hated fruitcake. First of all, I didn't really care for raisins, and secondly fruitcakes were always heavily spiced and strong-tasting and their texture was weird. They made me shudder. (I suspect I wasn't the only child that felt like that.) I thought fruitcakes were something just old people liked.

As I grew older, I did learn to tolerate fruitcake. I even had fruitcake as my wedding cake, just because that was the tradition then - I guess fruitcake was sturdy enough to handle the weight of the icing and the layers. Plus, a piece of plastic-wrapped fruitcake wedding cake was sturdy enough to handle being tucked under a single girl's pillow and slept on all night so that she could dream of her future husband. Nobody really ever ate it those little wrapped squares of wedding cake.

I never came to love fruitcake, though, until my friend Judy convinced me to try her family's recipe. The tide turned. I was hooked. My kids were just little, and they loved it too. They never knew that kids were supposed to shudder and gag when forced to eat fruitcake. To them, fruitcake was delicious (I suspect it had something to do with the gumdrops). It became part of our family's Christmas tradition. They await it eagerly every year, taking big slabs in their school lunches, swiping hunks of it as it sits on the counter, and enjoying it when it's offered for dessert or visitors.

Origins of the Canadian Gumdrop Fruitcake

This Christmas cake recipe has stood the test of time. Judy got it from her mother, Frances Slater. It had been their beloved family fruitcake recipe, prepared by her mom and dad together every year, while Judy was growing up. Frances, in her early twenties, had moved from smalltown Canora, Saskatchewan to the city of Yorkton to work in the office at the local dairy. She got settled into a boardinghouse with two other young career girls. This would have been in the late 1940's or early 1950's. The fruitcake recipe came from their landlady, Mae Tunnicliffe, and all that is known about it is that it was an old recipe of Mae's mother. I like to think it went back even a few generations before that.

The beauty of any family recipes is that you make them your own. I think this recipe has been tweaked a few times, with each person adding their special touch. Judy says it used to have candied pineapple in the recipe, and also that her family doubled the original amount of gumdrops. I cut down the sugar by a bit (the original recipe had 2¼ cups sugar), and added the vanilla, rum extract and the frozen orange juice concentrate.

I'm not sure what makes this cake so special. Maybe it's the rich, simple batter scented with orange and brandy. Maybe it's those bursts of chewy, yummy gumdrops. Or the lack of spices to muddle the flavours. Maybe it's the long slow baking which turns the pale, cream-coloured batter into a caramelized, amber vehicle for the raisins, almonds and fruit.

Maybe it's all of these things combined.

Fruitcake Notes

Make this cake at least two weeks before Christmas, or even two months before so the flavours can really age and mellow. The longer it ages, the more complex and smooth the flavour gets.

Fruitcake keeps forever (almost). You've probably heard the long-ago stories of fruitcakes packed in tins and sent off to students in boarding schools or young British ladies packing a tin of fruitcake in their trunks when they set off on their intrepid globetrotting stints. In fact, I've been hoarding one of last year's fruitcakes, tucked into the back of the downstairs fridge, perfectly aged and fully flavoured. I pulled it out last week to enjoy while my new batch is aging and steeping in brandy in preparation for this season's feasting. The year-old cake is divine - I don't want to share it!

You can use rum instead of the brandy in the cakes, or just use orange juice to make them non-alcoholic. My kids never minded the alcohol - I don't think they noticed it. The optional finishing step, to wrap the cakes in cheesecloth and douse them in rum or brandy to age, adds a complexity to their flavour and a smoothness to their texture, but is by no means necessary.

Baker's gumdrops or baking 'fruitlets' are not always easy to find. But yes, you can freeze gumdrops - I buy extra and freeze them, in their original sealed bag tucked inside another sealed freezer bag, for up to two years. Baking gumdrops are sturdier than regular jujubes, but soften up as the cake ages.

*In the last few years I have adapted this cake to be gluten-free and it is just as delicious as the original! I've even made a corn-free version for one of our daughters, (quartering the recipe) using minced dried fruit soaked in brandy instead of the cherries and glacéed fruit, and Sun-Rype® Fruit Source Minibites instead of the gumdrops. It turned out very well, too. I have tried using other gluten-free flours, but found the slices a little more crumbly than when I used my own gluten-free flour mixture or the suggested blend in the recipe below.

How to Make a Gumdrop Fruitcake

Toss all the fruits and nuts with some of the flour, so they don't stick together in clumps in the cakes. You'll need a very large bowl for this.

Mix up the batter and pour it over the fruits. Now it's time to get in there with your hands - the best tools for mixing a large batter like this.

(Get yourself a young, muscled, teenage boy to help, if you can find one -the chance to nibble a few gumdrops is usually a good motivator.)

The mixture will be very stiff.

Grease and flour your loaf pans and divide the batter evenly among them. You can use a scale to make sure they're even.

Press the mixture into the pans, smooth the tops and shape them with a stiff rubber spatula.

You can decorate the tops with candied cherries and almonds if you like.

Long, slow baking turns them into these beautiful jewels.

How to Age and Flavour Your Cakes with Brandy or Rum

You can do the traditional aging of the fruitcakes. They get soaked in rum or brandy and this just makes for a delicious flavour and helps the cakes keep for many months. You'll need to start at least a month before Christmas to get the best flavouring in (but in a pinch, even a couple weeks will work).

Wrap your cooled cakes in several layers of cheesecloth and set them into a sealable container or heavy-duty zip-top plastic bags. Drizzle the top of each wrapped cake with 2 to 3 tablespoons of brandy or rum. No need to make sure it is all soaked in. The alcohol will slowly wick around the cake as it is stored and soak all the sides. Seal the containers or bags and store in a cool place (a fridge or coldroom work well, or set them on the concrete floor of a cool basem*nt) for several weeks to several months before serving. If you'd like to douse them with more brandy or rum in a few weeks, go for it. If they are doused several times, they will keep much longer.

This is the cake I kept for one year. It was aged like a fine wine - Christmas cheer any time!

This Gumdrop Fruitcake recipe is adapted from Frances Slater's recipe, original source - Mae Tunnicliffe's mother. When Frances' daughter, my friend Judy, first gave me the recipe, she swore me to secrecy, and I did keep it secret for many years but now, with her permission, I pass it on to you.

If you'd like to try another delicious fruitcake, how about a beautiful German Stollen, that famous Christmas fruit bread loaded with nuts and raisins, subtly spiced, and filled with a creamy, nutty marzipan center? This version is an easy no-yeast one, with clear instructions and photos for how to shape it (also gluten-free).

Or maybe you'd like Panforte, the Italian Christmas Cake? It's chewy and almost candy-like but not too sweet, rich with spices, nuts, fruit, and honey - and it's absolutley quick and easy to make (the gluten-free version works great, too!).

Guten Appetit and Happy Holiday Baking!

* * * * *

Gumdrop Fruitcake, an Old Canadian Recipe | Kitchen Frau (17)

Gumdrop Fruitcake

Margaret Bose Johnson

A classic Canadian prairie recipe that will turn even the most unwilling into a fruitcake lover. Gumdrop fruitcake has a light caramelized batter studded with chewy gumdrops and sweet fruits. It's a Christmas jewel.

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Prep Time 1 hour hr

Cook Time 3 hours hrs

Total Time 4 hours hrs

Course Baking

Cuisine Canadian

Servings 4 large loaves

Equipment

  • 3 loaf pans (4½ x 8 inches/11.5cmx21.5cm) plus 3 small loaf pans (3 x 6 inches/ 7.5cmx15cm), or use 4 larger loaf pans

  • a very large bowl to mix the batter, or use a roasting pan, canner, or clean wash basin

  • cheesecloth, if you want to soak and age the finished cakes with brandy or rum

Ingredients

Fruit Mix:

  • 3 lbs (1.36kg) sultana raisins
  • 1 lb (454gms) dried currants
  • 1 lb (454gms) baker's gumdrops (sometimes called 'fruitlets')
  • 1 lb (454gms) red candied cherries, plus a few extras for garnish
  • 1 lb (454gms) blanched slivered almonds, plus a few extras for garnish
  • 8 oz (½lb/225gms) mixed glacéed fruit and peel
  • 1 cup (140gms) flour (or brown rice flour for gluten-free)

Batter:

  • 2 cups (400gms) sugar
  • 1 lb (454gms) salted butter, room temperature
  • 12 large eggs
  • 1 teaspoon fine sea salt
  • ½ cup (120ml) orange juice or brandy (I use ¼ cup/60ml thawed frozen orange juice concentrate plus ¼ cup brandy or rum)
  • 1 tablespoon pure vanilla extract
  • 1 tablespoon rum extract or brandy extract optional
  • cups (385gms) regular flour or gluten-free flour blend (for gluten-free, instead of the blend you can also use: 1 cup/140gms sorghum flour + 1 cup/140gms tapioca starch + ½ cup/75gms millet flour + ¼ cup/30gms ground golden flax seeds)
  • cheesecloth and additional brandy or rum to soak the cakes optional

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to 275°F (140°C).

  • Grease and flour 3 loaf pans (4½ x 8½ inches/11.5cmx21.5cm) and 3 small loaf pans (3 x 6 inches/7.5cmx15cm). If they are non-stick pans, you can just grease them and omit the flouring. Mine slide out easily, but if your pans have lost the non-stick ability and you think the cakes may stick, you could line the pans with parchment paper as an extra precaution. You can also prepare 4 large loaf pans and 1 small one. Or 3 loaf pans if you have even larger sized ones.

Prepare the Fruit Mix:

  • Mix the fruit and nuts with the 1 cup flour or rice flour in a very large bowl - Frances always used a large roaster to mix it all up in. Use your hands to do this, making sure all the raisins are separated and the fruit is all coated with the flour. Set aside.

Make the Batter:

  • In the bowl of a stand mixer, beat the butter and the sugar until they are light and fluffy. Add the eggs, salt, orange juice, brandy and flavourings. Beat until well incorporated. Mixture will look curdled, but that is okay.

  • Add the flour (or gluten-free mix of flours) and beat, slowly at first, then at medium speed, for 2 to 3 minutes, until the batter is well mixed.

Mix the Fruitcake:

  • Pour the batter over the floured fruit mix, scraping the bowl clean with a rubber spatula. Mix the batter with the fruit until it is all evenly combined.

  • The only way to do this efficiently is with clean hands, lifting and folding the ingredients in from the bottom and sides of the bowl or roaster and bringing them to the center. The mixture will be very stiff.

  • Divide the mixture among the pans. If you feel like weighing the amounts to keep them equal, 2½lbs/1140gms will be the right amount for the large pans, and 1¼lbs/570gms will fit in the smaller pans. If your pans are larger than that, adjust the amounts accordingly.

  • With a stiff rubber or plastic spatula, or flat wooden paddle, press the dough down into the pans so it is solidly packed and there are no air spaces. Then shape the tops of the loaves so they are mounded slightly higher in the middle. Round and smooth the tops of the cakes. Make sure the pans are no more than¾ full.

  • Cut the reserved candied cherries in half and press a few of them into the tops of the cakes to decorate them. Sprinkle with the reserved slivered almonds to garnish the cakes.

  • Bake the cakes, rotating them halfway through if your oven has hotspots, for 3 hours for the large cakes, and 2 hours for the small cakes. The time they take can vary greatly with your oven. Start checking them about½ hour before the recommended time to see how they look. You want the colour to be a nice deep caramelly, nutty, colour, but not dark brown, or they will taste burnt. The cakes are actually done before the time is up, but the longer baking time is needed to produce the caramelization of the batter which really enhances the flavour.

  • In my oven, the cakes are finished about 15 minutes before the recommended time, but every oven is different and if you use different sized pans, the time will also be affected.

  • As the cakes bake, the melted butter will start bubbling up around the edges, but don't worry about that because it will soak back into the cakes as they cool in the pans.

  • Leave the cakes to cool in the pans for 10 to 15 minutes, then turn them out onto racks to finish cooling.

  • Wrap the cooled cakes tightly with plastic wrap and store them in heavy plastic zip-top bags or airtight containers in a cool place. They are best if they can sit for a week or two before you eat them. The flavours will mellow and they slice more smoothly. The cakes can also be refrigerated or frozen for up to a year.

Optional Finish - Soaking with Brandy or Rum:

  • When cool, cut several layers of cheesecloth to a size to fit around each cake. Wrap each cake, with the ends overlapping underneath. Place the cakes into a plastic storage container or zip-top bag.

  • Drizzle the top of each wrapped cake with 2 to 3 tablespoons of brandy or rum. No need to make sure it is all soaked in. The alcohol will slowly wick around the cake as it is stored and soak all the sides. Seal the containers or bags and store in a cool place for several weeks to several months before serving. If you'd like to douse them with more brandy or rum in a few weeks, go for it. If they are doused several times, they will keep much longer.

  • Makes about 11¾ lbs of gumdrop fruitcake - 3 large and 3 small, or variations thereof. Enough for Christmas gifting (or sneaking it out of storage and enjoying a big slab with a cup of tea any time in the coming year).

Notes

Baker's gumdrops or baking 'fruitlets' are not always easy to find. They can be found in the in the baking section in some supermarkets, and can also often be found in bulk food stores with the baking ingredients. I buy extra and freeze them for several years. They are sturdier than regular jujubes, but soften up as the cake ages.

Make this cake at least two weeks before Christmas, or even two months before so the flavours can really age and mellow. The longer it ages, the more complex and smooth the flavour gets.

You can use rum instead of the brandy in the cakes, or use just orange juice to make them non-alcoholic.

If soaked in brandy or rum and well-wrapped, the cake will keep for up to a year if refrigerated. The cake can also be frozen.

Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

If you like my recipes, follow me on Instagram, Pinterest, Twitter, and Facebook. You’d make my day!

You might also like:

Rouladen, A German Christmas Tradition

Peanut Brittle Cravings

Decadent Little Truffles

Make Chai Tea Syrup for Gift Giving

* * * * *

View pastCanadian Food Experience Projectentries here:

June, 2013:My First Authentic Canadian Food Memory:Buttery Sauteed Mushrooms with Spruce Tips and Chives

July, 2103:A Regional Canadian Food:Saskatoon Roll or Saskatoon Cobbler and How to Freeze Saskatoon Berries

August, 2013:A Canadian Food Hero in Northern Alberta, andPickled Beets and Creamed Vegetables

September, 2013:My Cherished Canadian Recipe:Evans Sour Cherries in Brandy

October, 2013:Preserving, Our Canadian Food Tradition -Sweet and Spicy Apple Butter

November, 2013:The Canadian Harvest: Quinoa Harvestand Recipes (Quinoa Onion)

Gumdrop Fruitcake, an Old Canadian Recipe | Kitchen Frau (2024)

FAQs

What is the oldest fruitcake ever found? ›

Even older is the fruitcake left behind in Antarctica by the explorer Robert Falcon Scott in 1910. But the honor for the oldest known existing fruitcake goes to one that was baked in 1878 when Rutherford B. Hayes was president of the United States.

How did fruitcake get a bad reputation? ›

When commercial mass production of mail order fruitcakes resulted in dry bricks being delivered to people's homes as a last-minute Christmas gift. When Johnny Carson made his infamous joke on "The Tonight Show"about how there's only one fruitcake in the world and it's passed from family to family.

How do you keep gumdrops from sinking? ›

Prepare a 9" bundt pan by coating it completely in shortening and then lightly flour it. Chop the gum drops up in about 1/4 cup of flour. The flour helps coat them and stops them from sticking when they are cut, and also helps the gumdrops from sinking in your cake.

What does aging of fruitcake do? ›

Tannins ooze out of the dried fruit, chemically changing the cake's composition to produce a fruity and spicy taste. Some bakers recommend intentionally aging fruitcakes for a few weeks to months in a cool, dark place to enhance the taste and texture.

Is fruit cake edible after 100 years? ›

The chemical composition of the cake makes it possible to keep it for a 100 years. Indeed, its density prevents bacteria and mold to proliferate and its alcohol content makes it more sanitized, which also has an impact on its conservation.

Why was fruitcake outlawed? ›

Fruitcakes were so rich, they were considered sinful and were outlawed in Europe in the early 18th century. Restrictions eased later in the century.

How old was the fruitcake lady when she died? ›

Marie Rudisill died in Hudson, Florida, on November 3, 2006, at the age of 95, just before the publication date of her last book, Ask the Fruitcake Lady: Everything You Would Already Know If You Had Any Sense, on November 7.

What is the derogatory meaning of fruitcake? ›

Slang. a crazy or eccentric person; nut.

Why does fruit sink in a fruitcake? ›

Have you ever had fresh or dried fruit sink to the bottom of a cake or loaf? Don't worry, it's a common problem and generally happens when the cake batter isn't heavy or thick enough to hold the weight of the fruit as it bakes.

Do gumdrops go bad? ›

As long as the packaging remains sealed, most gum products have a shelf-life of six to nine months.

What are gum drops called? ›

Gumdrops are a type of gummy candy. They are brightly colored pectin-based pieces, shaped like a narrow dome (sometimes with a flattened top), often coated in granulated sugar and having fruit and spice flavors; the latter are also known as spice drops.

What alcohol is best in fruitcake? ›

What alcohol should you use? Strong, flavourful spirits with a high ABV are ideal for feeding fruitcakes. You can use rum, brandy or whisky for spice, or if you like citrus flavours, try an orange liqueur. Cherry brandy and amaretto will also work well if you prefer these.

Should fruitcake be refrigerated? ›

For best quality, a fruit cake that is tightly wrapped with aluminum foil or saran warp can be stored for up to 1 month in a cool, dark pantry, 6 months in the refrigerator, and 12 months in a freezer. Check often for signs of spoilage, and if mold or off-odors develop, discard the cake.

Why is fruit cake so expensive? ›

According to supply and demand, as demand goes up, prices usually go up as well. The rest of the year, very few people are buying fruitcake, and as a result they lower the prices to entice people to buy it outside of their regular patterns.

What is the very old fruitcake? ›

A 141-year-old fruitcake, baked by Fidelia Ford, in 1878, sits in the home of Dorothy Ford, in Tec*mseh, Mich. Fidelia died before the cake was served and the family, out of respect of her memory, decided not to eat it and has instead passed it down for generations.

What is the 141-year-old fruitcake? ›

Michigan Family Holds On To 141-Year-Old Fruitcake : NPR. Michigan Family Holds On To 141-Year-Old Fruitcake They are keeping the fruitcake to honor Fidelia Ford, an ancestor who baked it in 1878. The cake doesn't set a record. The Detroit News says the record belongs to a cake found in an Egyptian tomb.

What is the oldest cake in the history? ›

The world's oldest known cake, baked during the reign of Pepi II in Egypt between BCE 2251 and 2157. Alimentarium, Vevey, Switzerland.

What is the oldest fruit to exist? ›

Scientists and historians have found evidence of fig cultivation dating back over 11,000 years ago in Jericho on the West Bank.

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