Spanish Bar Cake

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Spanish Bar Cake. A real old fashioned treat! A supermarket favourite from years ago, this simple raisin spice cake is easy to make, moist and utterly delicious. 

Spanish Bar Cake on a slate serving plate with coffee in the background.
Spanish Bar Cake.

Originally published December 2018.

A few weeks ago, I got a request from a reader for a recipe for Spanish Bar Cake. I had never heard of it before. 

She explained that it was a cake made by a supermarket bakery that she loved many years ago. I set off to do a little research on this cake.

Spanish Bar Cake was a very simple bar shaped raisin spice cake with an unfussy vanilla frosting. Being a fan of old time recipes, I certainly became quite interested in finding a recipe.

Spanish Bar Cake starts with boiled raisins, shown in saucepan.
Spanish Bar Cake starts with boiled raisins

Turns out this cake was made by Jane Parker Bakery and sold through the A&P supermarket chain in the US & Canada. The reader who sent me the request grew up in Ottawa.

I have since heard that it was available in Toronto when a friend was growing up there 20 or so years ago.

Spanish Bar Cake made with everyday ingredients like walnuts, spices, flour and sugar.
Spanish Bar Cake made with everyday ingredients

There were a few recipes I found on a few websites but none of them definitively said they were the original recipe.

I finally came across an old entry in an online food forum which claimed to have been gotten from Jane Parker Bakery.

The final folding of the Spanish Bar Cake batter.
The final folding of the Spanish Bar Cake batter.

The recipe was written for two 9x13 pans. Those two layers would have been frosted and stacked, then cut down the middle to produce 2 bar cakes.

What the Spanish inference relates to is completely lost on me, except if that's where the raisins came from.

 

Spanish Bar Cake old newspaper ad from 1960!
Spanish Bar Cake old newspaper ad from 1960!

Spanish Bar Cake, the result.

I cannot say with any certainty that this was the original recipe. The reader who tried it called it a "very good raisin spice cake" but not quite the flavour she remembered.

Spanish Bar Cake just out of the oven
Spanish Bar Cake just out of the oven

Memory is a funny thing though. We sometimes like to imagine things better than they actually were.

Then again, with such a widespread production of this cake, there may have been subtle differences in the recipe used regionally.

Spanish Bar Cake image with title text for social media.

She noted that a tablespoon of cocoa, which some recipes add, would make it the darker colour she remembered. She also said the flavour was not so intense as she remembered.

The intenseness of flavour in this recipe would really have to come from the spices.  My suggestion would be to add 1 tablespoon of cocoa to the dry ingredients and to up the amount of spices by half, if you want a more deeply flavoured cake.

So, for my taste, and Spouse's, who loves spice cake, this was a really delicious, easy to make cake.

Raisins for Hot Cross Buns shown in a white bowl.
Sultana Raisins are great in this recipe but you can use any kind you like.

We brought it to a friends house for dinner and it got rave reviews.  Next time I will try it with the adjustments I mentioned, but I would be more than content to enjoy it again, just as we made it.

Looking for more holiday baking inspiration?

If you love old fashioned cake recipes you may want to check out this collection with some everyday recipes like Cherry Pound Cake too.  Favourite Newfoundland Christmas Cakes here.

Best Newfoundland Christmas Cake Recipes

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Spanish Bar Cake image with title text for Pinterest
Spanish Bar Cake

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Spanish Bar Cake on a slate serving plate with coffee in the background.

Spanish Bar Cake

Yield: 12 or more servings
Prep Time: 20 minutes
Cook Time: 35 minutes
Additional Time: 2 hours
Total Time: 2 hours 55 minutes

Spanish Bar Cake. A real old fashioned treat! A supermarket favourite from years ago, this simple raisin spice cake is easy to make, moist and utterly delicious.

Ingredients

  • 2 cups water
  • 1 cups raisins
  • ½ cup vegetable shortening, or butter
  • 1 cup granulated sugar
  • 1 teaspoons baking soda
  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • ½ teaspoon ground cloves
  • ½ teaspoons ground cinnamon
  • ½ teaspoon ground nutmeg
  • ½ teaspoon ground allspice
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • 1 large egg, beaten
  • ½ cup chopped walnuts or pecans, (optional)

For the Frosting

  • 2 ¼ cups icing sugar
  • ¼ cup butter, at room temperature
  • ½ teaspoon pure vanilla
  • 1 to 2 tablespoons milk, more if needed

Instructions

  1. Heat the oven to 325 degrees. Grease a 9x13 baking pan and line it with parchment paper.
  2. Add the water and raisins to a saucepan. Bring to a gentle boil and simmer for 10 minutes.
  3. Add the shortening to the boiled mixture. Allow the mixture to cool to room temperature.
  4. Sift together the sugar, soda, flour, cloves, cinnamon, nutmeg, allspice and salt.
  5. Add the sifted ingredients to the cooled raisin mixture, along with the beaten egg and the nuts, if you are adding them.
  6. Fold gently until the flour is just incorporated into the batter. Do not over mix.
  7. Pour the batter evenly into the prepared pan and Bake for 30-35 minutes or until a wooden toothpick inserted into the centre comes out clean.
  8. Cool completely and ice with frosting if you like

To prepare the frosting

  1. Beat together the icing sugar, butter, vanilla and a tablespoon of milk until smooth.
  2. If necessary, add more milk until the frosting is a good spreadable consistency.
  3. Cut the cake in half, frost the first layer then top with the second layer and frost again. To get the characteristic lines on top, run the back of a fork over the top frosting in straight lines.
  4. This recipe also makes about a dozen cupcakes if you prefer.

Notes

The nutritional information provided is automatically calculated by third party software and is meant as a guideline only. Exact accuracy is not guaranteed. For recipes where all ingredients may not be used entirely, such as those with coatings on meats, or with sauces or dressings for example, calorie & nutritional values per serving will likely be somewhat lower than indicated.

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Rock Recipes a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites. Our product recommendations are almost exclusively for those we currently use or have used in the past.

Nutrition Information

Yield

12

Serving Size

1 slice (1/12 of the cake)

Amount Per Serving Calories 346Saturated Fat 2gCholesterol 13mgSodium 201mgCarbohydrates 64gFiber 1gSugar 38gProtein 2g

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118 Comments

  1. Oh, how well I remember this cake, yum yum!!! Here in Gainesville, FL we had A&P and what a treat to get one of these cakes, mother-in-law usually had one tucked back in reserve. Very fond memories of these. Have not made so can not rate but sounds right on the money! Will be trying soon

  2. My Father worked for the A&P company for 50 years. He used to being home the Spanish bars and I loved them. The workers could take home the missbakes as they called them. I can't wait until after the holidays to try this. It was a much darker co!or than the picture shows.

    1. My Dad also worked at the A & P and we got these all of the time ..so good. I must try this recipe should bring back some great childhood memories.

    2. @Theresa,
      I think it may have had some molasses (no more than 1/4 C)
      I, too, remember a darker color.

  3. Hi Barry,The recipe I remember as a child was almost like a moist sticky gingerbread with raisins and the colour was almost black.I am going to try your recipe and up the spices as you recommended.Will let you know how it turned out.Thanks.

  4. Hi Barry,
    Great recipe! As recommended, I upped the spices by making them rounded half teaspoons of each instead of level teaspoons. I did not add cocoa. Was it good? Well, it was sampled by the hubby and myself late last night after baking. And now it's been eaten as breakfast and for lunch today! Nothing else, just cake.He! He! So, I would say that's a MAJOR success!! Just like I remember it from the A & P when we lived in Toronto and then in Ottawa. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year and thank you so much for all your great recipes!

      1. You’re right! I read it again! I thought it was in two pans, like a layer cake. Ok!
        It’s one 13x9, cut in half, layered on itself. Thank you for clarifying that. It’s to be one of my Christmas desserts.

  5. What a thrill to see this recipe. I grew up in the Niagara region of Southern Ontario and this was always a favorite of mine. In fact, my brother and I were reminiscing about it recently. I'll have to make this and surprise him with it for xmas. BTW, I'm sure I saw something labelled as 'Spanish Bar Cake' at Sobey's last week. I'll have to do a comparison taste test.

    1. Really? At Sobey's?! I live in London Ontario so will check out my local Sobey's for this cake! Thanks for ;posting that tip!

  6. Hello again Barry,Made the cake this morning ,upped the spices ,added the cocoa,omitted the walnuts-another of your fantastic recipes to add to my files! I can see why you put the teapot in the photo.Goes wonderfully well with a good mug of tea.I think it will only taste better with age if lasts a few days.Merry Christmas and please keep your wonderful recipes coming in 2019

  7. I lived on Windsor Ontario for part of elementary school, parents bought this for a treat— that was first half of the fifties. I am not fond of spice cake now, but Inwould enjoy this still. I remember the raisins and the icing. Do you suppose there might have been a bit of orange zest in it?

  8. Thank you for posting this! This was and still is a favourite of my dad's and I. I have looked in every grocery and bakery and haven't seen it in years. Wl make it for us for sure this weekend!

  9. I also remember this cake but haven’t seen it around for awhile.
    It was so good
    I have been looking for the recipe now for a few years and will definitely try it
    I remember it being a medium color and not dark at all
    I look at your recipes all the time that is my hobby I collect recipes
    Keep georgina them coming
    Georgie

    1. Thank you for this recipe...my husband loved this cake. I have a recipe that is close but not quite there. Will be trying this one.

  10. Add to the cooled raisin mixture long with the beaten egg and nuts, if you are adding them.

    I do not understand : add cooled. Raisin mixture LONG.?

    Please explain.

  11. Hi Barry, My Canadian worked at an A&P bakery during the early 90s and he says Spanish spice cake involved taking all the bakery mistakes/imperfection from throughout the bakery, adding spiced batter and baking. Maybe the difference that people are remembering in the flavor is because of thid frugal trick. This was a great way for A&P to not have any waste in their bakeries. It must have been a very strong, spicy and loose batter that they used to Incorporate so many different baked goods and still get a consistent product.

  12. My father LOVED this cake! I think it was his favourite store bought cake! I always enjoyed it as well! Thank you for doing all of the research and leg-work to bring it to us!

  13. Hi Barry, I used to love this cake. Bought one about every two weeks until no more A &P store. I've tried making it and added more of each spice along with ginger and molasses. It is really close to original.

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