Dessert Medium American

Classic carrot cake

A moist, spiced carrot cake with walnuts and a thick cream cheese frosting — the old-fashioned Easter centerpiece that tastes better two days later.

A two-layer carrot cake with cream cheese frosting, chopped walnuts pressed into the sides, and whole walnuts on top.
Prep
25 min
Cook
35 min
Total
1h 30m
Serves
12

Carrot cake is the Easter cake that earns its place on the table year after year. Spiced, moist, studded with walnuts, and crowned with a generous layer of cream cheese frosting — it's the dessert you don't mind eating for breakfast the next morning. Fresh grated carrots, room-temperature ingredients, and patience during cooling are the whole game. Make it Saturday, serve it Sunday, and finish the leftovers with your Monday coffee.

Classic carrot cake

Makes 2 nine-inch layer cake

Serves 12

Ingredients (24)

Cream cheese frosting

To finish

You'll need

  • Two 9-inch round cake pans
  • Parchment paper
  • Box grater or food processor
  • Large mixing bowl
  • Medium bowl
  • Whisk and spatula
  • Stand or hand mixer (for frosting)
  • Offset spatula (for frosting)
Source these from local growers See growers + what's in season →

Instructions

Nutrition

Estimated per serving · 1 slice
720 Calories
7 g Protein
85 g Carbs
40 g Fat
3 g Fiber
62 g Sugar
450 mg Sodium
Ingredient intelligence

What to look for when you shop

Best varieties

  • Nantes — sweet, crisp, reliable; the standard baking carrot
  • Imperator — long, slender, widely available
  • Danvers — sturdy and sweet; heirloom option
  • Chantenay — short and extra sweet
  • Rainbow carrots (mixed) — same flavor, more color if sliced into garnish

Ripeness

Carrots should be firm with smooth skin and crisp, bright green tops if attached. Limp or bendy carrots have lost sweetness and moisture. Medium-sized carrots (1 inch diameter) are ideal; giant ones can be woody in the center.

Imperfections are fine

Minor cracks, forked shapes, and rough exterior are all fine — they're getting grated. Wonky farmers'-market carrots are often sweeter than uniform grocery ones.

Good substitutions

  • Swap carrots for grated zucchini — classic zucchini cake
  • Swap half the carrots for grated apple for apple-carrot cake
  • Swap raisins for dried cranberries or chopped dates
  • Swap walnuts for pecans, which are slightly sweeter

In season

Carrots are sweetest from fall through spring (storage carrots). Spring carrots with tops attached are particularly good for this cake. Young fresh spring carrots from a local farm elevate the whole dessert.

How much to buy

About 1 lb carrots — 4 to 6 medium, or 1 bunch with tops.

From a grower near you

Find your carrot grower and dairy on CollectiveCrop

Carrot cake lives and dies by its carrots. Bagged pre-shredded carrots are dry and tasteless; a year-old storage carrot has lost most of its sweetness. A young spring carrot from a grower near you — with the feathery tops still attached — is sweet enough to eat raw, which means it's sweet enough to carry a cake. CollectiveCrop is how you find the farm growing them right. Two pounds of the real thing makes the cake taste like a specific place.

  • In season Fall – Spring (fresh); year-round from storage
  • For this recipe 1 lb carrots + 4 eggs + 1 1/4 cups butter (cake + frosting)
  • Freshness Picked within this week
  • Imperfects welcome Second-grade produce works great here
  • Diet-friendly vegetarian
  • While you're there Farm eggs · Local butter · Cream cheese from a local dairy · Walnuts or pecans from regional orchards · Buttermilk from a local creamery

At the market

About 1 lb carrots — 4 to 6 medium, or 1 bunch with tops.

Best varieties

  • Nantes sweet, crisp, reliable; the standard baking carrot
  • Imperator long, slender, widely available
  • Danvers sturdy and sweet; heirloom option

Good to know

Tips

  • Toast the walnuts before adding. A 5-minute toast at 350°F triples their flavor and prevents them from tasting raw in the finished cake.
  • Room-temp ingredients are non-negotiable for the frosting. Cold cream cheese + cold butter = lumpy frosting. Soften both for 2 hours on the counter.
  • Sift the powdered sugar. Unsifted sugar makes lumpy frosting that won't smooth out no matter how long you beat it.
  • Chill the frosted cake for 30 minutes before slicing — the frosting firms up and you get clean, bakery-quality cuts.
  • This cake tastes dramatically better on day 2. If serving for an event, bake the day before.
  • For a sheet-pan version, use a 9×13-inch pan; bake 40 to 45 minutes. Frost directly in the pan for a crowd.
  • A splash of bourbon (2 tablespoons) in the batter adds wonderful depth.

Storage

  • Refrigerator: 5 days in a cake keeper or wrapped.
  • Freezer: unfrosted layers 3 months; frosted cake 3 months.
  • Room temperature: not recommended frosted (cream cheese requires refrigeration); unfrosted layers 2 days covered.

Reheating

  • Not applicable — served cool or at room temperature.
  • For serving: remove from fridge 30 to 60 minutes before eating.

Make ahead

  • Bake layers up to 3 days ahead; wrap tightly and refrigerate.
  • Make frosting up to 2 days ahead; refrigerate, then re-whip before using.
  • Assemble and frost up to 1 day ahead.
  • Freeze unfrosted layers up to 3 months.

Variations

  • Spice-forward: double all the spices for a gingerbread-carrot cake hybrid.
  • Cream-filled version: add a thin layer of whipped cream (1 cup heavy cream whipped with 2 tbsp sugar) between the cake layers under the frosting.
  • Coconut carrot cake: fold 1 cup unsweetened shredded coconut into the batter.
  • Pineapple upside-down twist: add 1/4 cup pineapple syrup (from the can) to the batter.
  • Cupcakes: divide among 24 cupcake liners; bake at 350°F for 22 minutes.
  • Bundt version: bake in a 10-cup bundt pan at 350°F for 50 minutes; drizzle with cream cheese glaze instead of frosting.
  • Carrot ginger cake: add 2 tbsp fresh grated ginger with the carrots.
  • Healthier version: swap 1 cup all-purpose flour for 1 cup whole wheat; reduce both sugars by 1/4 cup each.

Swaps

  • Gluten-free: use a 1:1 GF flour blend.
  • Dairy-free: swap buttermilk for plant milk + 1 tbsp vinegar; use vegan cream cheese and butter for frosting.
  • Vegan: see dairy-free above plus use 4 flax eggs (4 tbsp flax + 12 tbsp water, rested 5 min).
  • Nut-free: omit walnuts or swap for toasted pumpkin seeds.
  • Lower-sugar: reduce brown sugar to 1 cup and granulated to 1/2 cup; frosting sugar to 3 cups.

Frequently Asked Questions

What kind of carrots work best?

Fresh carrots, grated yourself on the large holes of a box grater. Pre-shredded bagged "matchstick" carrots are dry and flavorless — avoid them. Standard orange carrots are perfect; rainbow carrots add color but taste the same.

Should I squeeze liquid from the carrots?

No — the moisture in fresh grated carrots is what makes carrot cake moist. Only squeeze if the carrots are unusually watery (from being stored too long). Otherwise, grate and add directly.

Can I use a food processor to grate the carrots?

Yes, using the shredding disc. You'll get more consistent pieces than by hand, and it's faster. Don't use the regular blade — it purees the carrots into a mush that makes soggy cake.

Why is my carrot cake dense?

Usually overmixing or too much flour. Stir the wet and dry ingredients just until combined. Measure flour by spooning into the cup and leveling — don't scoop the cup through the bag (this packs in too much flour).

Can I make carrot cake ahead?

Yes — and it tastes better the next day. Bake layers up to 3 days ahead, wrap tightly, and refrigerate. Frost the day of serving or the day before. Flavors deepen overnight.

Can I freeze carrot cake?

Yes. Freeze unfrosted layers, tightly wrapped, up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge before frosting. Frosted cake also freezes (3 months) but the frosting texture suffers slightly.

Do I have to add pineapple or raisins?

No — those are optional. Pineapple adds moisture and tropical flavor; raisins add sweet bite. This recipe includes pineapple but leaves raisins optional. Classic Southern versions include both; West Coast versions often skip them.

How long does frosted carrot cake last?

5 days refrigerated, covered. Cream cheese frosting requires refrigeration. Bring to room temperature 30 to 60 minutes before serving for best flavor and texture.

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