Carrot Cream Cheese Cake Recipe

I loved this carrot cream cheese cake so much after tasting it, I made it twice in a row!

Carrot Cake Sliced 

Let Them Eat Cake

Recently, I finished a book called “Eat Cake: A Novel” by Jeanne Ray and it was a fast and easy read. Being a baker myself, I enjoyed the main character’s love of baking. One particular portion of the book resounded with me and I actually highlighted it because I agreed with the sentiment of it. I will quote it here for you:

“Cakes have gotten a bad rap. People equate virtue with turning down dessert. There is always one person at the table who holds up her hand when I serve the cake. ‘No, really, I couldn’t,’ she says, and then gives her flat stomach a conspiratorial little pat. Everyone who is pressing a fork into that first tender layer looks at the person who declined the plate, and they all think, ‘That person is better than I am. That person has discipline.’ But that isn’t a person with discipline, that is a person who has completely lost touch with joy. A slice of cake never made anybody fat. You don’t eat the whole cake. You don’t eat a cake every day of your life. You take the cake when it is offered because the cake is delicious. You have a slice of cake and what it reminds you of is someplace that’s safe, uncomplicated, without stress. A cake is a party, a birthday, a wedding. A cake is what’s served on the happiest days of your life.”

I couldn’t put it any better. As someone who bakes, I love to share my cakes with others. Part of the reason I bake is to see someone else biting into my cake and then seeing the look of enjoyment on their faces as they taste the love and care that went into the baking of the cake. To see the affirmation that what I baked was worth it, that it was delicious and comforting. This is why I would never malign anyone who offers me a home-baked piece of cake even if I didn’t like it very much (though I seldom find home-made cakes to be bad).

Don’t be a Hater

Recently, I had a friend who shared a carrot cake that she had made. I’m not a particular fan of carrot cakes and Nate is even more a hater of it (for Nate, he just can’t find enjoyment in any cake that is called a carrot cake). But I accepted the slice and the first mouthful forever changed my opinion of carrot cakes.

It was moist without being overwhelmingly so, sweet without being cloying, with just the right amount of tang from the cream cheese that was hidden within (yes, it was not covered in cream cheese like most carrot cakes, but had it layered between the cake).

I LOVED that cake and immediately asked for the recipe which she graciously shared with me. And she was so happy that I enjoyed her cake so much.

I returned home and raved about it to Nate telling him that it was a cheesecake with carrot in it which made him sniff and say, you’re trying to cover that it’s a carrot cake. Undaunted, I set about getting all the ingredients and then baked it not just once, but twice, over a period of three days..

Esther Grating Carrots for My Second Cake

Esther grating carrots for carrot cake

The first time, I made it for guests who came to dinner, and the second time, I made it to bring to a friend’s house for a party. Nate took a slice the first time, and didn’t say very much. The second time, at the friend’s house, he took another slice and then said, “I like it very much and even though it’s a carrot cake, I must say that it’s very good.”

Wow, what a concession!

This cake is a really dense cake which doesn’t use any leavening ingredient other than the creaming of butter, sugar, and eggs. Everything else (the grated carrot, cranberries/raisins, nuts, flour) is just folded into the dough and then baked. Though dense, the cream cheese adds the tangy element that balances out the rest of the ingredients. I never have problems finishing off a slice of this cake. Once you take that first bite, you just cannot resist the rest of it.

Carrot Cream Cheese Cake Recipe

Prep time: 30 min Cook time: 1 hour

Ingredients:
A:

250g butter, at room temperature
150g sugar
4 eggs
220g all-purpose flour
100g walnut, chopped
100g raisins
200g carrots, grated
1 tsp cinnamon
B:
150g (or 250g if you want) cream cheese, at room temperature
50g sugar
1 egg

Method:
1. Preheat oven to 350 F or 170 C.
2. Cream butter & sugar till fluffy then add eggs one at a time, scraping down after each egg.
3. Fold in flour to mixture, add in chopped walnuts, raisins, grated carrots & cinnamon and mix well.

Making Carrot Cake Batter

Making Carrot Cake Batter

4. In a separate bowl, cream ingredients in B till smooth for the cream cheese portion.
5. Butter and flour a 9 inch baking pan. Divide the carrot cake mixture (A) in half, pour in first half into the pan, then pour in cream cheese mixture. Finally, add in the rest of the carrot cake mixture (A) by placing small mounds all over the top and gently smoothing the batter flat–don’t worry if you don’t cover the cream cheese portion well, just try to get most of the cream cheese portion covered by the cake mixture.

Assembling Carrot Cake

Assembling Carrot Cake

6. Bake for about 50-55 minutes or until cake tester comes out clean.

Baker’s Notes

A few observations I have made after baking this cake for several times:

1. If you like your cake to be very moist, use the fine grater when you grate the carrot for this cake. That will make the cake texture more fine and moist. If you like a cake with more of a crumb, use the large grater to grate your carrot. This will give a drier consistency (still moist but maybe less fruit-cake like in texture).

2. Even though the original recipe calls for only 150g of cream cheese, you can use the whole 250g block which will give an even better balance of tangy-sweet flavours (if you want to save the rest of the cream cheese for your bagels, that’s fine, but for me, if I leave some cream cheese behind, I inevitably end up tossing it as I don’t use it plain for much else).

3. When smoothing on the second half of the carrot cake dough after putting on the cream cheese layer, it is easier to plop down small mounds all over the top and then gently pushing the batter to cover the cream cheese. It’s ok if some of the cream cheese shows up at the edges.

4. Be careful not to overbake. If you overbake, the cake won’t get dried out but the texture of the cream cheese portion will become less creamy.

Carrot Cake Slice

Carrot Cake Slice

Cheers, Annie

Have you ever had a dish that you initially hated, but now love? Leave us a comment and tell us about it!

For its use of carrots, I am entering this post in the Weekend Herb Blogging roundup, organized by Haalo and hosted this week by Fragoliva.

Check out these other carrot cake recipes:

Carrot Cake Cookies by Baker’s Royale
Carrot Cake Cupcakes by The Cilantropist
Carrot Cake Pancakes by Smitten Kitchen
Carrot Cake, Brazilian Style by Nasi Lemak Lover

17 thoughts on “Carrot Cream Cheese Cake Recipe”

  1. Now, this sounds perfect for my solar demonstrations — a carrot cake that I don’t have to frost before serving, AND my visitors get their vegetables!!! Every time hubby enjoys a slice, remind him that he’s getting his veggies and being good… hee hee. Love this recipe and will definitely try it. Thanks for sharing and so glad you’ve made a convert. Come visit when you can.

  2. Wow, that does look lovely– it certainly does look and sound life-changing.

    I also loved the little paragraph you shared with us, about losing joy from abstaining from cake. Such a practical, true, not to mention delicious, way of putting it in perspective!

  3. Wow, this sounds amazing. I do like carrot cake, so you don’t have to sell this to me! But it may take me awhile before I get around to making this as I am not the dedicated baker as you so I don’t have a kitchen weight (gasp) so I now must convert all your grams into cups. 🙂

  4. Hmmm…I just may have to make this. It’s a brilliant idea! For the record, I didn’t like the idea of carrot cake, either. There’s usually so much oil in it which I think is gross. But I do enjoy it now in little tiny quantities once every blue moon!

  5. Wow, last time I made a carrot cake, it was a major production with layers and fillings and cream cheese frosting. And admittedly, when most people eat carrot cake it is because of the cream cheese frosting! Your recipe above is great because it sandwiches the cream cheese in the cake, making the whole process much easier and the cake very portable.

  6. Im also not a fan of carrot cake but your description made me
    want to rush to the kitchen ASAP!

    THANKS for sharing the recipe!
    Divine

  7. I love you incorporated vegetables into baked goods. Now that I’m “trying” to be on diet and I want my kids to eat healthier food, I really like the idea of carrot in the cake. Looks really delicious and I can see why you baked twice in a row! 🙂 Cream cheese make the cake nice and creamy and extra delicious!

  8. I don’t make carrot cake often, however I do make carrot cupcakes a lot and incorporate a cream cheese batter in them; this cake sounds perfect and thank you for listing grams for the ingredients! so much more precise.

  9. This is the great desert for Christmas party. Heap of thanks for this recipe. Wishing you a Merry Christmas & Happy New year to your family. It’s yummy.

  10. Hi Annie/Nate, I’m interested in baking this cake. It sounds absolutely delightful! I was wondering how sweet is this cake. I usually reduce the amount of sugar as I dislike sweet cakes. Would this impact on the taste of the cake signicantly? Thanks 🙂

  11. Hi Guys,
    I tried your carrot cake recepy and it turn out delicious. Only thing is the cream cheese frosting disappeared in the cake and can’t see any white layer. It still taste super yummy. That’s my only concern. Is it suppose to be that way? And I started searching for the recepy for the cream cheese frosting and notice that your frosting uses “egg” where others used butter. Do you think you can share with me, it will be great. Oh I put raisins and cranberries.
    And want to share with you on the marble cake recepy, it’s tasty and turn out good. Made a second one but put a spoon of coconut oil in, it still good but moist. Love your receipts. Thanks for sharing.

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