There is no cake more Australian than Lamingtons! A moist butter sponge dipped in chocolate then coated with coconut, this is The Cake sold at every suburban bakery and weekend fundraisers.
You’ll get coconut everywhere making them and eating them. But that’s all part of the Aussie experience. It’s how we do it Down Under! 🇦🇺
Lamingtons – an Australian classic!
A soft buttery sponge cake coated all over with chocolate icing and coconut.
Even if you’ve never heard of these before, you just know it’s going to be good. We Aussies know great tucker – and this is as Aussie as it gets!! (OK, OK, maybe as Aussie as Pavs, Anzac Biscuits, Sausage Rolls, Party Pies, weekend sausage sizzles and Sunday Roast Lamb😇)
How to make Lamingtons
On the face of it, it sounds simple enough:
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make a buttery vanilla sponge cake
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cut into squares, dip into chocolate icing, coat with coconut
The one little extra step I add that is going to make your Lamington making life a total breeze is to mostly freeze the cake before rolling in icing. A firm, semi frozen piece of cake is much easier to handle when coating in icing and rolling in coconut. Try doing it with fresh sponge, and you’ll be battling crumbling cake as you try to coat it. Been there, done that, multiple times!
The cake will thaw as the icing sets and the cake is as fresh as it was straight out of the oven.
Here’s a bit more background to explain why I freeze the cake before coating – to make sure I fully convince you so you don’t skip that step!
Why I Freeze The Cake before coating
Lamingtons are one of those cakes that recipes say are easy to make, but most are just downright lying to you. The first few times I made them involved screeches of frustration and serious foot stomping.😤 I emerged on the other side looking like I’d been in a mud-wrestle with a plate of something that barely resembled the neat squares you see in this post.
The challenge is this: The sponge has to be tender and moist enough to eat plain, but trying to roll such a delicate cake in icing is a disaster. The cake crumbles into the icing, making it thicker and impossible to work with.
And once the crumbling begins, imagine the mess when you try to roll it in coconut.
The solution offered by traditional recipes is to leave the cake out overnight, essentially letting the outside become a bit stale so it’s easier to handle. This works pretty well – but the cake is a bit drier than ideal.
The 21st century solution:
FREEZE THE CAKE.
It’s even easier to handle for coating, and the bonus is that the cake stays fresh and moist – no need to leave it out to dry out!
This will change your Lamington Life forever.
Butter Sponge Cake for Lamingtons
The sponge cake for Lamingtons is a terrific recipe that I use as a base for other recipes (strangely, none that I’ve shared here – yet). Simply made with pantry staples, it’s soft and buttery, and not too sweet which is what we want because we get extra sweetness from the chocolate icing.
The big debate:
Do Lamingtons have jam and cream?
Classic Lamingtons made the traditional old-school way do not have jam or cream sandwiched in the middle. But you’ll come across many Aussies who won’t have Lamingtons any other way (some RecipeTin family members included).
My view – Lamingtons should stand as a great cake without any filling. Jam and cream is optional – it should make it over the top good!
If you’re a Lamington fan, I think you’ll approve of this recipe! The butter cake is moist, tender and buttery. The chocolate coating is thick enough so you get a great hit of chocolate, but thin enough so it soaks into the sponge, a sticky enough to glue on plenty of coconut.
The added bonus is that using the little trick to freeze the cakes before coating, they are neat and tidy so they look as great as they taste! – Nagi x
PS It will be messy making these. And that’s totally ok. Because it’s part of the great Aussie tradition that you get coconut “everywhere” when you’re making them and eating them!
PPS When better to make Lamingtons than for Australia Day??
Lamingtons
Watch how to make it
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Lamingtons
Ingredients
Butter Sponge
- 125 g / 4.5 oz unsalted butter , softened
- 1 cup (220g) caster sugar
- 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
- 3 eggs , room temperature
- 1 3/4 cups (260g) flour , plain/all purpose, sifted (Note 1)
- 3.5 tsp baking powder
- 1/2 cup (125 ml) milk (low or full fat)
Icing
- 4 cups (480g) icing sugar (confectionary sugar), sifted
- 1/3 cup (22g) cocoa powder
- 1 tbsp (15g) unsalted butter
- 150ml (1/2 cup + 2 tbsp) boiling water
Coating
- 3 - 4 cups desiccated coconut
Optional: Jam and Cream
- Strawberry jam
- 1 cup (250 ml) cream
- 1 tbsp white sugar
Instructions
Butter Sponge
- Preheat oven to 180C/350F (or fan forced 160C/320F).
- Sift flour and baking powder together.
- Grease a 20 cm x 30 cm / 8" x 12" cake pan. Line with baking paper (parchment paper), leaving an overhang on all sides (to make it easy to remove).
- Beat butter, sugar and vanilla with an electric mixer on medium high speed until light and fluffy - about 1 1/2 to 2 minutes.
- Add eggs 1 at a time, beating well after each addition so the batter is smooth, not curdled.
- Add half the flour and gently fold to combine, then stir in half the milk. Repeat with remaining flour and milk.
- Pour the batter into the prepared pan and bake for 25 minutes until a skewer inserted into the centre comes out clean.
- Stand for 5 minutes then use the overhang baking paper to lift the cake out onto a wire rack and cool completely.
Prepare Cake to Coat
- Cut cake into 15 squares (5 x 3), or 18 rectangles. Freeze for 1 to 1.5 hours. (Note 2)
Icing
- Combine the Icing ingredients in a heat proof bowl and mix until smooth. Should be a syrup consistency, but not watery. (Note 2)
Coating
- Place coconut in a shallow bowl or pan with a largish surface area (Note 3).
- Place a piece of cake in the icing and roll to coat using 2 forks. Transfer it into the coconut and quickly roll to coat all over in coconut. Transfer to tray.
- Repeat with remaining sponges.
- Stand for 1 to 2 hours, or until set. Then serve with tea and coffee!
Optional: Jam and Cream
- Beat cream and sugar until firm peaks form.
- Cut coated Lamington in half horizontally. Spread with jam then pipe or dollop on cream. Top with lid, keep refrigerated.
Recipe Notes:
No cream: Store in airtight container for 3 to 4 days, or freeze for 2 - 3 months then thaw before serving.
Cream: Store in refrigerator for 2 to 3 days. 5. Nutrition per serving. Barely adapted from this recipe from taste.com.au. Ingredients the same, the main thing I changed is the process (especially the coating process, to make it easier!)
Nutrition Information:
Originally published 2014. Post refreshed with better photos, recipe video and process steps added. No change to recipe!
More Aussie Tucker favourites
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Pavlova – Meringue cake with marshmallow centre topped with cream and berries
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Sausage Rolls – Juicy pork filling encased in puff pastry. We think ours rivals Bourke St Bakery!
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Party Pies – Mini pies filled with slow cooked beef
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Scones – One of the best things the English brought to our shores!
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Caramel Slice – chocolate, caramel and shortbread. Home run!
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Sunday Roast Lamb with Gravy – also try this amazing Slow Roasted Leg of Lamb!
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Big bucket of fresh cooked prawns with dipping sauces – a summer favourite!
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Browse the Australia Day recipes collection!
Life of Dozer
You think it’s hard making recipe videos? Trying make them with THIS in your line of sight….
Jill Jansen says
Made this the other day, but unfortunately my egg and butter mix curdled. I guess my kitchen is too warm. I still continued with the recipe, which seemed to “come right” when I added the dry ingredients, and while it was baking it looked fine. However, when I took it out to cool it collapsed in the middle. Had a taste of it and it tasted really good! Though I didn’t complete the lamingtons with the syrup and coconut. Will just eat the flopped cake as is!
I still give it 5 stars as the taste is fantastic and I’m sure if I made it in a cooler kitchen, it would come out fine.
Nagi says
Hi Jill, sorry you had issues here, were your eggs cold by any chance? N x
Jill Jansen says
I did take them out of the fridge to get to room temperature… but maybe they were still too cold.
Thiagarajah Mahindajit says
I really enjoy your recipe unfortunately you are in Sydney.
Thiagarajah Mahindajit says
Melbourne is also a beautiful place to live.
Nagi says
Fortunately for me! A beautiful place to live 🙂 N x
Anna says
I love your recipe so much! You’re such and amazing baker!
Nagi says
Thank you so much Anna!! N x
Thiagarajah Mahindajit says
Melbourne is also a beautiful place to live.
roberta smith says
I love your recipes. Your instructions are so good. Why, do you often use SR flour and in the same recipe, say you can use plain flour with the edition of baking powder? I am going to try your Lamingrton recipe.
Nagi says
Hi Roberta, the recipe uses plain flour with the addition of baking powder. You can, however use self raising if you like (as noted in the recipe notes) N x
Roberta Smith says
Why do you put both plain flour and SR flour quantities in your recipes?I love your recipes.
JK Grasso says
These look incredible, I’m dying to make them. I would want to freeze some of the finished lamingtons after full preparation. Any idea how long they can be frozen for without losing quality?
Teneka says
Nice but definitely not what I was looking for. I was hoping for a more traditional sponge cake texture and this is like a normal cake, not ‘lamington’ like as I was hoping. Still nice but if I tried this blindfolded I would not think it was a lamington.
Glory says
thank you sooooo much this recipe was so easy and so good we loved it xxx
Asma Rehan says
I’ve added 3.5 tsp baking powder to self raising flour. It’s in the oven but I’m nervous I’ve misread. Is that the case?
Nagi says
Hi Asma, yes you’ve misread unfortunately – the recipe calls for plain flour (to which baking powder is added). If you’re using self raising flour you need to omit the raising agent. N x
Karen Murry says
Hi, I haven’t made this recipe yet, but I have made several of your others, from Christmas salmon to scones using a blender and they’ve all been brilliant!
I’d like to try to make a ‘fairy bread’ version of these, so white icing and hundreds and thousands. How would you modify the icing recipe for that please?
I feel like ‘fairy bread’ lamingtons would be the ultimate Australian kids party treat – I’m hoping to make them for my sons first birthday 🙂
Andy says
I’d make a butter sauce and dip it in that before sprinkles. I’m tempted to try it!
Jodi says
What can I say but wow! These are the real deal you can make at home. Fantastic even though I added 3.5tbsp of baking powder to my cake mix instead of 3.5tsp. Whoops! 😬 I made it work.
Awais says
This was a hit with my family. They all loved it. Thank you for publishing such amazing recipes!
Mai says
Hi Nagi, am having a little lamington obsession lately (buying and eating with jam and cream) and delighted to have found your recipe! (hips say otherwise)
Question – can I freeze the sponge before icing for more than an hour? Overnight?
Nagi says
Hi Mai – and that’s a totally acceptable obsession to have! The purpose of freezing the Lavington is because the fresh sponge is too delicate to handle. If you’re leaving the cake out overnight, it’s not as fresh so should be easier to handle day 2 without the freezing step! N x
Sage says
Question. Do you freeze the lamingtons right after you coat them to get them to set, or do you let them stand on the counter to set?
Nagi says
Hi Sage, after they have been dipped I let them set on the bench at room temperature. N x
Sage says
Thanks! Im making these for a school project so this helps a lot 😀
Sophia Bradley says
This recipe was perfect for y school project
Rupa says
Silly Q – Do you measure the ingredients out before sifting (e.g. spoon the flour into the measuring cup)? Or do you sift them into the measuring cups?
Just the photo of them is making my mouth water!!
Nagi says
Hi Rupa, never a silly question! I measure then sift – it’s much easier that way! N x
Bek Poss says
This is always a hit! Have passed this recipe around a few times but you have to have it with cream and jam. Loving your recipes Nagi.
Gracie says
I’ve been doing themed dinner nights with my family, and decided to make an Australian night! I made these lamingtons, and let me tell you, my family was fighting over them! Thank you for sharing this wonderful recipe!
Jessie says
I gave up trying to use your site due to the number of adverts popping up and making it impossible to read the recipe.
Nagi says
Jessie – I’m so sorry, there is a tech glitch right now affecting some users. I’ve been complaining and complaining to get it fixed!! 😩
Maz says
Hi Nagi, would you know if this recipe would work with cake flour??
Marija Radovic says
Seriously THE BEST recipe amd the freezing tip = game changer 😁 I made extra and froze them immediately after dipping and coating with coconut, hubby said that they were amazing 🤩