Tag: red velvet cake

  • Red Velvet White & Blue Cake

    Red Velvet White & Blue Cake

    One issue with 4th of July cakes….

    ….So many of them can take HOURS to assemble! 

    Have you seen the ‘flag cakes’ with striped red and white cake layers and a blue cake ring near the top? They’re SO fun to cut into; they’re visually stunning and a great way to celebrate the 4th – but man! They take SO long to put together! I made a ‘flag cake’ like the one I mentioned with my nieces a few years ago, and holy smoke. It took us about a million years to finish! 

    I feel like July 4th always kind of sneaks up on me. Maybe because it’s so close to the beginning of the month…? (Or maybe because I get busy and don’t always plan ahead so well?) Regardless – sometimes I want a dessert that goes together quickly! 

    4th of July cakes are a visually appealing and delicious way to celebrate the holiday. But that doesn’t mean making one has to take up hours and hours of your time! This cake doesn’t involve multi-colored cake layers, crazy fondant work, drips, or any finicky decorating. Stack and frost your layers, add some frosting swirls and sprinkles – and you’re done! 

    Alllllright, my scratch cake purists – just skip this section and move on to the recipe card! 😉 

    A time-saver option here – this ‘Red Velvet White & Blue cake’ can be made from scratch OR doctored-up mixes!
    If you’d rather use cake mixes, I recommend two red velvet mixes. Substitute 1 cup of melted butter for the oil, replace the water with buttermilk, and add two extra eggs! The cake layers will be a little less rich than a scratch recipe, but making the substitutions I mentioned work well enough I sometimes have trouble telling the difference. 

    Regardless, this cake is easy to decorate, festive, and delicious! Recipe below! 

    (Disclosure: As an Amazon associate I may earn from qualifying purchases, and my posts often contain affiliate links. If you click a link and make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you!) 

    Don’t forget to pin this recipe for later! 

    4th of July Cake pinterest pin

    Red Velvet White & Blue Cake

    Sometimes Red Velvet doesn't get enough credit! This Red Velvet White & Blue Cake made a delicious, fun, and super easy 4th of July dessert!
    Prep Time25 minutes
    Cook Time37 minutes
    Decorating time30 minutes
    Total Time1 hour 32 minutes
    Course: Dessert
    Cuisine: American
    Keyword: Red Velvet 4th of July Cake, Red Velvet Cake, Red Velvet Memorial Day cake, Red Velvet White and Blue Cake
    Servings: 16 servings
    Calories: 743kcal
    Author: Sarah H

    Ingredients

    Red Velvet cake layers

    • 2 ¾ cups all-purpose flour
    • ½ cup unsweetened cocoa powder
    • 3 cups granulated sugar
    • 2 ½ teaspoon baking powder
    • 1 teaspoon salt
    • 1 cup unsalted butter (or 2 sticks, room temperature)
    • 1 cup egg whites (about 7 large egg whites, or use egg whites from a carton to avoid wasting the yolks)
    • 1 1/2 cups buttermilk (room temperature)
    • 1 Tablespoon vanilla extract
    • 2 Tablespoons vegetable oil
    • Red gel food coloring (I used a few tablespoons of Americolor Super Red; you can use as much as you’d like to get the shade of red that you’re after!)

    Cream Cheese Buttercream Frosting

    • 6 ounces cream cheese (¾package; softened)
    • ¾ cup butter (1 ½sticks, softened)
    • 5 cups powdered sugar
    • 1-2 Tablespoons milk
    • 2 teaspoons clear vanilla extract
    • ¼ teaspoon salt if using unsalted butter
    • 5-6 large drops Navy blue gel food coloring (save and add later; color the remaining frosting to decorate after the cake is frosted)

    Decorations

    • Red, White, & Blue sprinkle mix (I used a discontinued mix, but ‘Old Glory’ by SprinklePop is very similar and available on Amazon!)

    Instructions

    Red Velvet cake layers

    • Preheat oven to 350°F. Prepare three 8 inch round pans with baker’s floured spray (or grease and line with parchment rounds).
    • Mix together all dry ingredients (flour, cocoa powder, sugar, baking powder, and salt) in a stand mixer with a paddle until fully combined.
    • Mix chunks of room-temperature butter slowly into the dry mix, on a low speed. Continue to mix until no large chunks of butter remain, and the mixture becomes crumbly.
    • Pour in egg whites, and mix until just incorporated. Mix in the buttermilk on a low speed. Add in vanilla, oil, and gel food coloring, and mix at a low speed until fully incorporated. Scrape down the sides of the bowl with a spatula, then beat on medium high for about 30 seconds.
    • Divide batter evenly between the prepared cake pans (I find a kitchen scale helpful for this part). This guarantees your layers will bake to be the same height.
    • Bake for 34-37 minutes (or until a toothpick comes out clean). Allow cake layers to cool for 10-15 minutes on a wire cooling rack before removing from pans. Cool completely before frosting. Set in the fridge or freezer to accelerate the cooling process if desired. (This is a great time to make your frosting!)

    Cream Cheese Buttercream Frosting

    • Beat together softened cream cheese and butter; slowly add in powdered sugar alternating with milk until frosting reaches desired consistency. Add vanilla and salt if needed and beat until well combined.

    Assembly

    • Once your cakes are cool, level them (if needed). This can be done with a cake leveler or a large serrated knife and a ruler. These cake layers bake fairly flat though; I didn’t trim much from the tops.
    • Place a smear of frosting on your cake circle (to keep the cake from sliding while you decorate it) and center your first cake layer in the center of the circle. Spread the layer with frosting, and add the next layer on top. Repeat the process with your remaining cake layers.
    • Now you’re ready to crumb-coat . If you’re unfamiliar with crumb-coating, it’s just what it sounds like – spreading a thin layer of frosting over the entire outside of the cake to keep crumbs out of your final layer. I usually do this with my large offset spatula.
    • Once your crumb coat has set (this takes about 5-10 minutes in the fridge), add your final layer of frosting and smooth. I like to use a large offset spatula and pastry cutter/bench scraper for this part, and I made this layer fairly thin for a ‘semi-naked’ cake look. I wanted the red of the red velvet to show!

    Decorating

    • Add your navy gel color to your remaining frosting. (A mix of royal blue, black, and a tint of purple makes a good navy shade if you have those colors!)
    • Transfer colored frosting to a large piping bag fitted with a large star tip (most similar to Wilton’s 1M in my set), and pipe large swirls around the top of the cake. I find it easiest to space 4 swirls at quarter intervals at first and then fill in between them.
    • Add sprinkles to your liking – I started with larger ones on top of the frosting swirls and then added smaller ones to the swirls and the top of the cake, and added a sprinkle rim to the base.
    • I thought the sides looked just a little plain, so I added some smaller sprinkles to the sides – you can do this with a Crisco-coated finger or by just ‘throwing’ them at the cake! Either works but somehow the second one’s more fun!
    • Annnd you’re done! High-five yourself – and enjoy the holiday!

    Video

    Notes

    (Please note nutrition information is an estimate, and may not be exactly accurate. Counts for all fields will be lower if the full batch of frosting is not used.) 

    Nutrition

    Serving: 1slice | Calories: 743kcal | Carbohydrates: 98g | Protein: 9g | Fat: 35g

    Mentioned in post: Cream Cheese Buttercream Frosting 

    Did you make this Red Velvet White & Blue cake? 

    Let me know how it went – or find me on Pinterest or on Instagram and tag @IntensiveCakeUnit in your photo! 

    You can also add a comment or a recipe rating at the bottom of the page! 🙂

    Other recipes you may love…

    (Click / tap the photos to be taken to the recipe pages!)

  • Heart and Skull Cake

    Halloween – it’s coming!!! 

    Finally the time of year when we all get to make creepy, gory, ghoulish cakes – like this Heart and Skull Cake – and nobody bats an eye. 😉

    Haha, bats. Pun not intended. But I’m not going to edit it out either! 😉

    Okay, back on track. I love making center-filled cakes, and I reeeeally wanted to fill a Halloween Cake with red jelly. I saw an Instagram video last year (@chelsweets) of a cake filled with red jelly, and ohhhhh man – soo crazy cool!!!  It looks kinda like blood spilling out of the cake – hence this cake’s semi-cheesy name 😉 

    Recipe for this Heart and Skull Cake below!

     

    (Disclosure: As an Amazon associate I may earn from qualifying purchases, and my posts often contain affiliate links. If you click a link and make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you!) 

    Heart and Skull Cake

    A creepy black-frosted raspberry jelly-filled Red Velvet cake that 'bleeds' when you cut into it!
    Prep Time30 minutes
    Cook Time37 minutes
    Decorating time45 minutes
    Total Time1 hour 52 minutes
    Course: Dessert
    Cuisine: American
    Keyword: Halloween Cake, Halloween cake recipe, Halloween desserts, Halloween Drip Cake, Heart and Skull Cake
    Servings: 16 servings
    Calories: 778kcal
    Author: Sarah H

    Equipment

    Ingredients

    Red Velvet Cake Layers

    • 3 cups flour
    • ¼ cup cocoa powder
    • 3 cups granulated sugar
    • 2 ½ teaspoon baking powder
    • 3/4 teaspoon salt
    • 1 cup unsalted butter 2 sticks, room temperature
    • 1 Tablespoon vanilla extract
    • 5 eggs
    • 1 ½ cups buttermilk room temperature
    • 2 Tablespoons vegetable oil
    • Red gel food coloring – to desired color

    Black Cocoa Cream Cheese Frosting

    Cake filling

    • 1 cup red raspberry jam
    • crumbled center from one of your cake layers

    Black Chocolate Ganache Drip

    Red ganache drip (optional)

    Instructions

    Red Velvet Cake Layers

    • Preheat oven to 350°F. Prepare three 8 inch round pans with baker’s floured spray (or grease and line with parchment rounds).
    • Mix together all dry ingredients (flour, cocoa powder, sugar, baking powder, and salt) in a stand mixer with a paddle until fully combined. Mix chunks of room-temperature butter slowly into the dry mix, on a low speed. Continue to mix until no large chunks of butter remain, and the mixture becomes crumbly.
    • Pour in eggs, and mix on low until just incorporated. Mix in the buttermilk in two installments, on a low speed. Add in vanilla, oil, and red gel food coloring, and mix at a low speed until fully incorporated. Scrape down the sides of the bowl with a spatula, then beat on medium high for about 30 seconds.
    • Divide evenly between prepared cake pans. Allow cake layers to cool for 10-15 minutes on a wire cooling rack before removing from pans. Cool completely before frosting. Set in the fridge or freezer to accelerate the cooling process if desired. (This is a great time to make your frosting!)
    • Once your cake layers have cooled, level them and use a glass or medium-sized biscuit cutter to remove the center from two of the three cake layers.

    Black Cocoa Cream Cheese Frosting

    • Beat together softened cream cheese and butter; slowly add in powdered sugar alternating with cocoa powder and milk until frosting reaches desired consistency. Add vanilla, food color, and salt if needed and beat until well combined.
    • Note – frosting’s color will deep if left to sit for several hours or overnight – this lets you get a deeper color with less gel food coloring!

    Assembly time!

    • Your two cored cake layers will be your bottom two – center your first layer on your cardboard cake circle, and spread a layer of frosting over it. Fill with raspberry jam and add crumbled cake crumbs – the most cake crumbs you add, the more solid your center will be and the slower it will drip out of your cake. If you want it to run out quickly, leave the cake crumbs out.
    • Add a layer of frosting over the second cake layer, repeat the filling process, and put the final layer on top!
    • Now you’re ready to crumb-coat . If you’re unfamiliar with crumb-coating, it’s just what it sounds like – a thin layer of frosting over the entire outside of the cake to keep crumbs out of your final layer.
    • Once your crumb coat has set (this takes about 5-10 minutes in the fridge), add your final layer of frosting and smooth. I like to use an offset spatula and bench scraper for this part. Once your cake is covered, place it into the fridge or freezer to set the frosting.
    • Okaaaay……on to the drip(s)!

    Black Chocolate Ganache Drip

    • Place chocolate chips in a heat-proof bowl. Place whipping cream in a small saucepan and bring almost to a boil over medium/low heat. Pour over chocolate chips and let rest for 2 minutes, then stir until smooth and silky. Add gel food coloring and stir until color is even.

    Red ganache drip (optional)

    • Place heavy cream and white chocolate chips in a microwave-safe bowl, and microwave on 50% power in 30-second intervals until smooth, stirring in between. Stir in gel food coloring.

    Decorating

    • Allow ganache mixtures to cool to a moderate temperature – they should still be liquid but feel only lightly warm. Use a squeeze bottle or spoon to drizzle black chocolate ganache around the upper edge of your cake, pausing every inch or so to let more ganache fall in a drip down the side of the cake. Return cake to the fridge or freezer to set the drips.
    • The fun part!! Turn the glass upside down, and press it into the top of your cake – it should be in deep enough to stay upright in the top of the cake, but leave at least a bit of the glass rim above the cake top so you can drizzle the red drip mixture underneath it. With a squeeze bottle or spoon, drizzle red ganache mixture under the rim of the glass and away from the glass toward the edge of the cake, letting it fall over the edge to make another set of drips.
    • Stand back and admire your work! Refrigerate until ready to serve – this cake is *super* fun to cut for a big group so they can watch all the jam ooze out everywhere!

    Video

    Notes

    Please note nutrition information is an estimate and may not be exactly accurate.

    Nutrition

    Serving: 1serving | Calories: 778kcal | Carbohydrates: 103g | Protein: 8g | Fat: 38g

    Did you make this Heart and Skull Cake? 

    Send me an email and let me know how it went – or make my day and find me on Pinterest or on Instagram and tag @IntensiveCakeUnit in your photo!

    You can also add a comment or a recipe rating at the bottom of the page! 🙂

    Mentioned in post – 
    Black Cocoa Cream Cheese Buttercream

    Other recipes you may love…

    Pictured: Candy Corn Cupcakes, Halloween ‘Eyes in the Fog’ Cake, Jack O’ Lantern Cake
    (Click / tap the photos to be taken to the recipe pages!)