• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Frugal Gardening

Simple ways to save money while you garden

  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Garden Frugally
  • Buy These
  • Our Editorial Commitment
  • Navigation Menu: Social Icons

    • Facebook
    • Pinterest
    • Twitter

Frugal Family Activity: Snow Cake 

November 11, 2024 by Steph Coelho Leave a Comment

 

snow
123rf

The forecast is calling for heavy precipitation in the next few days, right in time for the new year. Most of us are still in vacation mode, and parents with children are probably wondering how they’ll entertain their children while school is still out. Unfortunately, the cold means there’s no garden to tend to, and unless you’ve installed cold frames and planned for a winter harvest, there’s nothing to pick from the ground. On fair days, when the weather has calmed and the sun is out, it’s an ideal time for outdoor activities like tobogganing, hiking, and skating. What happens when the snow falls fast and fills the streets and yards to the brim, though? Some stay holed up inside with a good book. Others play games or enjoy binge-watching Netflix. On days like those, there’s no opportunity to dig in the dirt. But whether you’re a parent wanting to entertain the kids or an adult looking for something different to do, there is one thing you can harvest after a winter storm. Snow!

My mother was, once upon a time, a preschool teacher. She still works with children and is a true kid-at-heart. I was recently reminded of an activity she used to do with her students and one that we would do at home. When the snow was fresh, we’d pop outside and find an undisturbed mound of the stuff and ‘harvest’ it for baking.

Yes. You heard that correctly. We’d bake a snow cake. The texture is dense, like a pound cake, and the taste was never really it’s shining attribute. But the fact that we were baking with snow was the real spectacle. I asked my mother to share her recipe with me so I could share it with you today on this New Year’s Eve. It’s a fun recipe to try with kids, and it sure beats feeling bummed about the lack of warm gardening-ready weather. 

Snow Cake

  • 1 cup of sugar
  • 1/2 cup of butter (margarine can be substituted)
  • 1/2 cup of milk 
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • 2 cups of flour
  • 1 cup of snow**

Directions

  • Preheat oven to 350F
  • Mix all ingredients until the batter is smooth
  • Pour into a baking pan of your choice
  • Bake for 30 to 40 minutes 
  • Remove from oven and let cool
  • Add your favorite icing 

**Make sure to scoop up fresh, clean snow. 

Please feel free to share photos of your snow cake or stories of making this recipe with your kids I’d love to see and hear them. 

Photograph of Steph Coelho.
Steph Coelho

Steph Coelho is a freelance writer gardening in zone 5b. She is a certified Square Foot Gardener and has taught various garden-related workshops. When she’s not digging in the dirt or writing, she’s cooking up fresh produce, running, or listening to her favorite podcasts.

Filed Under: recipe Tagged With: Budget-Friendly Treats, Frugal Family Activities, Snow Cake Recipe, Snow Day Ideas, Winter Family Fun

Previous Post: « What’s a Frugal Gardener to do in the Snow?
Next Post: Love Cooking? Here’s How Growing Herbs Indoors Can Change Your Kitchen Game »

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Struggling to get your garden off the ground? Put those days behind you with our special starter kit – perfect for thrifty green thumbs everywhere. Get growing and add a splash of color today!

Popular Posts

  • usda free seeds websiteHow To Get Free Seeds From The Government by Amanda Blankenship Seeds might seem like a small expense, but any seasoned…
  • Enviro Ice On PlantsShould I Use Enviro Ice On My Plants? by Kathryn Vercillo Every week, I receive food from Hungryroot. It's a great…
  • is shredded paper good for the gardenFrom Trash to Treasure: Transform Shredded Paper Into Garden Gold by Amanda Blankenship Should you use shredded paper as garden mulch? It might…
  • Enviro IceWhat Happens to Plants If You Use Enviro Ice on Them? by Amanda Blankenship About a year ago, I wrote our first article about…
Why Grass Clippings Can Carry Herbicide Into Vegetable Beds

Why Grass Clippings Can Carry Herbicide Into Vegetable Beds

Fresh grass clippings look like free garden gold. They hold moisture, break down quickly, and seem like the perfect mulch for tomatoes, peppers, beans, and squash. That bargain can turn into an expensive mistake when those clippings contain herbicide residue. Many gardeners discover the problem only after vegetables twist, curl, stop growing, or produce strange-looking…

Read More

The Cheap Mulch Materials That Can Damage Plants or Soil

The Cheap Mulch Materials That Can Damage Plants or Soil

Cheap mulch often looks like a smart way to stretch a gardening budget, but the lowest-priced option sometimes carries the highest hidden cost. Some materials rob soil of nutrients, spread pests, introduce weeds, or even release compounds that stress young plants. Saving a few dollars at the garden center means very little if flower beds…

Read More

How to Tell If You’re Watering Deeply Enough

How to Tell If You’re Watering Deeply Enough

A quick sprinkle may make the soil look wet, but appearances fool plenty of gardeners. Plants need moisture well below the surface, where most of their roots search for water, nutrients, and stability. Deep watering encourages stronger root systems that handle hot afternoons and dry spells far better than plants that rely on frequent shallow…

Read More

Can Tabletop Tomatoes Produce Enough Fruit to Be Worth the Space?

Can Tabletop Tomatoes Produce Enough Fruit to Be Worth the Space?

Tiny tomato plants sitting on a patio table look charming, but can they actually fill a salad bowl? The answer surprises many gardeners because the right tabletop tomato can produce a steady stream of flavorful fruit over an entire growing season when it receives proper care. That does not mean every miniature tomato deserves precious…

Read More

  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Garden Frugally
  • Buy These
  • Our Editorial Commitment
  • Navigation Menu: Social Icons

    • Facebook
    • Pinterest
    • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

Copyright © 2026 · Foodie Pro & The Genesis Framework