This carrot cake with cream cheese frosting is amazingly flavourful without being overly sweet. You won't able to stop eating it! It's quick and easy to make and you don’t even need a mixer for the batter because it comes together in bowls using a whisk and a spatula. The frosting smooths beautifully and can be decorated just like buttercream!
Why This Carrot Cake Recipe Is So Easy
One of the things I love about this carrot cake recipe is that it’s mixed by hand. There’s no need to pull out a mixer, which makes the process faster and the cleanup easier.
Instead of creaming butter and sugar, you’ll simply mix the ingredients in two bowls: one for the wet ingredients and one for the dry ingredients. Once both are prepared, the dry ingredients are stirred into the wet ingredients to form the batter. This method keeps the cake tender and moist without requiring any special equipment. You will need a cheese grater to grate the carrots, or a food processor if you have one!
This carrot cake with cream cheese frosting is a very flexible recipe when it comes to cake size. The same batter works perfectly for either a two-layer 8-inch cake or a three-layer 6-inch cake, and the same amount of frosting will fill and frost either size.
How to Mix the Carrot Cake Batter
Start by preparing your cake pans. Grease the pans well so the cakes release easily after baking. (If you want to make cupcakes instead, try my one bowl carrot cupcakes!)
In your first bowl, mix the wet ingredients together. Use a whisk to combine everything until smooth and evenly blended. Because this cake is mixed by hand, you don’t need to worry about overmixing at this stage.
In a second bowl, combine the dry ingredients. Stir these together so the spices and leavening are evenly distributed throughout the flour.
Next, add the dry ingredients to the bowl of wet ingredients. Fold the ingredients into each other gently with a spatula or spoon just until everything is combined. The batter should look thick and smooth.
When you can't see the flour anymore, add the grated carrots. Freshly grated carrots work best because they add moisture and a natural sweetness to the cake. If you like a bit of crunch in your carrot cake, you can also add chopped nuts like walnuts or pecans at this stage.
Once everything is mixed, divide the batter evenly between your prepared cake pans.
Baking Your Carrot Cake Layers
This recipe works beautifully for two different cake sizes. If you’re making an 8-inch cake, divide the batter between two pans for a classic two-layer cake. If you prefer a taller cake, divide the batter between three 6-inch pans.
Spread the batter evenly in the pans and bake until the cakes are set in the middle and a toothpick inserted into the centre comes out clean. Let the cakes cool in their pans for a few minutes before turning them out onto a wire rack to cool completely.
Cooling the cakes fully before frosting is important so the frosting doesn’t melt when it touches the cake.
Why This Cream Cheese Frosting Works So Well
Carrot cake with cream cheese frosting is a classic flavour combination because the tanginess of the cream cheese balances the sweetness of the cake beautifully.
However, traditional cream cheese frosting can sometimes be quite soft, which can make it tricky to spread smoothly onto a cake or to use for decorating.
My favourite solution is to start with a stiff buttercream base and then fold cream cheese into it at the end. This method creates a frosting that still has the rich tangy flavour of cream cheese but with a much more stable consistency.
How to Make Stable Cream Cheese Frosting
Begin by making a thick buttercream base. Beat the butter and powdered sugar together until the frosting becomes smooth. It will be very stiff because you'd normally add milk at this stage to thin it out, but don't! You'll need it to be stiff.
Now add the cream cheese. Instead of beating it in aggressively, gently fold the cream cheese into the buttercream until it’s fully incorporated. Folding rather than whipping helps keep the frosting smooth and prevents it from becoming too soft.
The result is a beautifully creamy frosting that spreads easily onto the cake while still holding its shape.
Assembling the Carrot Cake with Cream Cheese Frosting
Once your carrot cake layers are completely cool, it’s time to assemble the cake.
Place the first cake layer onto your cake board or serving plate. If you're going to drive anywhere with the cake, I recommend spreading some frosting onto the board or plate first. This will act as glue to attach to the cake and hold it in place.
Spread a layer of cream cheese frosting over the top of the first cake layer. Add the next cake layer and if you’re making a three-layer cake, continue with another layer of frosting and the final layer of cake.
Put the cake into the fridge for 30 minutes or the freezer for 15 minutes before frosting it. Cold cake is firmer and less crumbly so it will be easier to frost afterwards.
How to Frost a Carrot Cake with Cream Cheese Frosting
Finish by spreading frosting over the top and around the sides of the cake. Because this frosting has a buttercream base, it’s much easier to smooth neatly compared to traditional cream cheese frosting.
If you struggle with smooth frosting, add texture instead by dragging a spatula or the back of a spoon around the cake. It's easier to make this look neat compared to smooth frosting, and it looks just as pretty!
Decorating a Carrot Cake with Cream Cheese Frosting
Decorating options are endless for this carrot cake with cream cheese frosting. Add sprinkles, flowers, a cake topper... Or pipe tiny carrots to divide the cake into portions! I used a small (#4) round piping tip for these and I scooped out a few spoonfuls of the buttercream before adding cream cheese. This consistency is much easier to pipe with than after adding the cream cheese.
Pipe zigzags of orange buttercream onto a piece of parchment or wax paper, which is much easier than piping straight onto the top of the cake. Pipe a few green spikes at the top of each carrot and then put them into the freezer for 10 minutes to chill and harden. Now you can pick them up and place them onto your cake!
This cake is always a crowd favourite. If you want to make cupcakes instead, try my one bowl carrot cupcakes! You'll find the recipe below and you can toggle the ingredients between Metric measurements (grams) and US (measuring cups and spoons).
Keep the cake in the fridge for up to 3 days and take it out 3 hours before serving, to allow it to warm up to room temperature. Enjoy!
This lightly spiced carrot cake with tangy cream cheese frosting is amazingly flavourful, not too sweet, and easy to frost! Use this recipe to make a two-layer 8 inch cake or a 3-layer 6 inch cake.
Ingredients
UnitsScale
For the cake:
1 1/3cupvegetable oil
1cupwhite sugar
1cupbrown sugar
4 eggs
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
2cupsall-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon cinnamon
3cupscarrot, grated
1cupwalnuts or pecans, chopped (optional!)
For the cream cheese frosting:
2 cupsunsalted butter, softened
8 cups powdered sugar
2 teaspoons vanilla
1/2 teaspoon salt*
1cupcream cheese, softened
Instructions
Make the cake:
Stir the oil and sugars together. Add the eggs and vanilla and stir to combine.
Add the dry ingredients: flour, baking soda, salt and cinnamon. Stir as few times as possible, just until you can’t see the flour in the batter anymore.
Add carrot and nuts if you're using them, and fold into the batter with no more than 5 strokes of your spatula.
Divide the batter between two greased 8 inch pans or three greased 6 inch pans.
Bake at 325F or 160C for 30 minutes, until the cakes spring back slowly when you poke them or a toothpick poked into the middle of a cupcake comes out clean. Let the cakes sit in their pans for 5 minutes before turning out onto a wire rack to cool.
Make the cream cheese frosting:
Take butter and cream cheese out of the fridge a few hours before using to allow them to soften.
Using a mixer on the lowest speed, mix the butter and powdered sugar until smooth.
Mix in vanilla and salt.
Add cream cheese and fold in using a spatula.
Put it all together:
Spread some frosting onto the middle of a cake board or plate and press your first layer of cake down onto it, to attach it.
Spread frosting to cover the top of the cake layer, as filling. Lower your next cake layer on top. If you're making a three layer cake, repeat with another layer of filling and the final cake layer.
Put the cake into the fridge for 30 minutes or the freezer for 15 minutes to chill. Then spread cream cheese frosting over the top and sides of the cake. Smooth with a cake scraper or add texture by dragging an offset spatula (palette knife) or the back of a spoon around the cake.
Store this cake in the fridge for up to 3 days but serve at room temperature by taking it out of the fridge 2-4 hours before slicing.
Notes
*If you use salted butter, leave out the salt from the frosting.
Save this carrot cake with cream cheese frosting recipe to Pinterest for later:
Make a stand up rainbow cake using different piping tips, rainbow colours mixed in just one bowl, and only one layer of cake.
Prepare piping bags for the stand up rainbow cake
Start by mixing your colours for the filling and frosting of this cake. To mix them using one bowl without washing in between colours, follow an order you probably wouldn't expect. I'm using one batch of my 4 Minute Buttercream for this cake. Start with a bit less than a cup of buttercream in the bowl. Add yellow food colouring, mix it in, and scoop it up. Then add a bit less than a cup of plain white buttercream to the bowl and tint it orange. Mix it, scoop it up, and add more white buttercream. Continue with pink or red next (which should be about twice the amount of buttercream than the other colours), then purple, blue, and finally green. For each colour, scrape around the bowl to mix in all of the previous colour into this new colour. That's the reason for mixing the colours in this order - the colours naturally blend into each other.
Prepare six piping bags with different piping tips to create texture for this buttercream rainbow cake. Petal tips, star tips, and flower tips all create different effects, so using a variety of tips makes each colour look different even if you repeat the same technique. For example, use a 104 petal tip for ruffles, a 2D closed star tip for flowers, a 32 open star tip for shells, a Russian flower tip for detailed flowers, a 4B larger open star tip for bigger shells, and a 1M star tip for a different texture of shells.
Fill each piping bag with one of the rainbow buttercream colours you mixed earlier and twist the tops closed so they’re ready to use.
Fill the stand up rainbow cake with colourful buttercream piping
You'll need a single round cake layer to make this stand up rainbow cake. I used an 8 inch layer of my Perfect Chocolate Cake, drizzled with simple syrup to keep it extra moist for serving the next day.
Slice the cake layer in half to create two semicircles. Pipe the buttercream filling between the cake halves in rainbow order, starting with red or pink on the outside. Continuing with orange, yellow, green, blue and purple. Piping the filling instead of spreading it is a great way to practice using each piping tip and to get comfortable with the consistency of your buttercream before decorating the outside of the cake.
Place the second semicircle of cake on top of the filling to complete the cake shape.
Make the rainbow cake stand up
Pipe a line of buttercream onto a cake board and flip the cake over so the flat cut side of the cake sits on that line. Press the cake gently into the buttercream so it sticks securely. This creates the upright structure that gives the stand up rainbow cake its shape.
Add a rainbow crumb coat
Apply a crumb coat to the stand up rainbow cake using the same piping bags you used for the filling. Instead of piping neatly, simply squeeze the buttercream onto the cake in rainbow arcs that match the colours you’ll pipe later. Matching the crumb coat colours to the final decoration helps hide any small gaps in the piping.
Use an offset spatula (angled palette knife) or a cake scraper to smooth the buttercream across the front, back, and top of the cake.
Decorate the stand up rainbow cake with piping
Put the cake into the fridge for 30 minutes to set this crumb coat before piping on it. By setting the crumb coat, you'll trap any crumbs that have come off the cake. Now they won't get into your piping.
Pipe purple buttercream ruffles
It's easiest to begin decorating the stand up rainbow cake with the purple buttercream using the petal tip. Starting in the middle of the cake gives you the most space to angle the piping bag to pipe ruffles. Hold the piping bag so the narrow edge of the petal tip faces outward away from the cake. Move the piping bag slightly back and forth as you squeeze to create ruffled buttercream texture. Pipe these ruffles along the centre of the cake on both sides.
For the rest of your colours, use these techniques in any order.
Pipe buttercream flowers
To pipe flowers onto your stand up rainbow cake, use a closed star tip like a 2D. Hold the piping bag with your wrist twisted so your thumb is close to your forearm. Then squeeze while twisting your wrist upwards to spin the bag clockwise. This motion allows the petals to fan out from the centre of the flower. You might notice small gaps between the flowers and the rainbow crumb coat underneath helps hide those spaces.
Add shell borders for the easiest texture on the stand up rainbow cake
I think shells borders are one of the easiest buttercream piping techniques. Using an open star tip like the #32 tip I'm using with my green buttercream, squeeze the piping bag and pause briefly so the buttercream attaches tot he cake and rises up. Then release pressure and swipe down and away to create the tail of the shell. Pipe the next shell over the tail of the previous one to continue the pattern along the cake.
Pipe flower details with a Russian piping tip
Russian piping tips (also called 'flower nozzles') add detailed flowers with each squeeze. Russian tips can take a little practice, so the piping you did for the filling earlier helps you get used to them. If the buttercream at the end of the piping bag has crusted slightly and won’t stick to the cake, squeeze a small amount out first to expose fresh buttercream before piping onto the cake.
Use different piping tip sizes and shapes for variety on the rainbow cake
Using both large and small open star tips (like the #32 I used for green and a 4B for orange) creates differed sized shells on your cake. Using the same piping technique with different tip sizes is an easy way to create variety without needing to learn a new technique.
Another way to add variety is to use a different piping tip shape with the same shell technique. For the pink buttercream I'm using a 1M tip to pipe a shell border with a different texture to the shells piped with open star tips.
Finish the stand up rainbow cake with piping on top
Use the pink or red buttercream from the top section of the rainbow for the entire top of the cake as well. I think piping onto the top of the cake is the quickest and easiest part because you’re piping downward instead of sideways, so the piping feels more comfortable and goes quickly.
How to store and serve a stand up rainbow cake
Store the stand up rainbow cake in the fridge until a few hours before serving. Chilling the cake keeps the buttercream decorations firm and protects the texture of the piping. Take the cake out of the fridge about 3 hours before serving so the cake and buttercream can come to room temperature. This is when both the flavour and texture taste their best!
Slice the stand up rainbow cake diagonally to reveal the colourful buttercream filling and piping inside each slice.
I hope this tutorial has been useful! Ask me any questions in the comments and visit my cake school to learn hundreds more cake decorating techniques and designs. You can also watch a video of this tutorial:
The batter of this rainbow cake recipe is the perfect consistency to make easy rainbow rings in each cake layer. It has a beautiful vanilla flavour and it's light and fluffy and absolutely delicious! It's also egg free, which is perfect for egg allergies or if you've run out of eggs.
Making the cake is insanely easy. You'll find the ingredients in the teal box below and you can toggle the measurements between metric (grams) and US (measuring cups). Whisk together the dry ingredients in one bowl and the wet ingredients in another bowl, and then whisk them all together.
For this rainbow cake recipe's layers, divide the batter into six bowls and add food colouring to each one, folding it in gently. Over-mixing will make the cake layers taste dense. I love these gel food colouring sets because they make such bright and bold colours in cake batter and also in buttercream!
Grease 3 or 4 6" cake pans and pour the bowls of batter into the middle of each pan, starting with red and following with orange, yellow, green, blue and purple.
Bake at 325F (160C) for 30 minutes. To check that they're baked, poke the middle of each cake gently and if the cake slowly springs back up, it's ready!
Turn the cakes out onto a wire rack and leave to cool completely, about an hour.
Layer with your favourite filling and frosting (I love my 4 Minute Buttercream), decorate, and enjoy! Visit my cake school to learn hundreds of cake decorating techniques and designs 🙂
This rainbow cake is so much fun to cut into! It has a beautiful vanilla flavour and it's light and fluffy and absolutely delicious! It's also egg free, which is perfect for egg allergies or if you've run out of eggs.
Ingredients
UnitsScale
1 3/4cupsall purpose flour
2cupswhite sugar
2 teaspoons baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
2cupsmilk*
1 tablespoon vanilla extract
2/3cupvegetable oil
2 tablespoons white vinegar
Instructions
1. In a large bowl, whisk dry ingredients together (flour, sugar, baking soda, and salt).
2. In another bowl, whisk wet ingredients together (milk, vanilla, oil, and vinegar)
3. Pour the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients and whisk together until combined.
4. Divide the batter between 8 small bowls and add a few drops of food colouring to each bowl (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and purple), folding the colour gently into the cake batter with a spatula and avoiding over-mixing.
5. Grease 4 six inch cake pans. Starting with red, pour 1/4 of the bowl of batter into the middle of the cake pan. Continue with the rest of the colours, pouring 1/4 of each into the middle of the cake pan. Repeat with the rest of the cake batter for the remaining cake pans.
6. Bake at 325F (160C) for 30 minutes. To check whether cakes are baked, poke each one gently in the middle and if the cake springs back up slowly, it's baked!
7. Turn the cakes out onto a wire rack and leave to cool for about an hour. Optionally, trim the top and bottom off each cake to remove any caramelization. Layer with your favourite filling and then frost and decorate!
Notes
I recommend storing your finished cake in the fridge for up to 3 days. Move it from the fridge to room temperature about 3 hours before serving, to let the cake, filling and frosting warm up and soften and that's when the cake will taste its best!
*To make this cake vegan, use almond milk or soy milk instead
You can also watch a video of this rainbow cake recipe here:
Valentine’s Day cake ideas don’t need to be complicated to look impressive. In this tutorial I’m sharing three fun cake designs using simple techniques and everyday tools. I’ll walk you through each design step by step, starting with how to frost a cake properly.
How to frost a cake for Valentine’s Day cake ideas
To start, pipe or spread a small dot of buttercream onto the middle of your cake board. I use my 4 Minute Buttercream for all of my cakes! Place your first cake layer on top. This anchors the cake so it doesn’t slide around while you work. Alternate cake layers with your filling and then chill the cake in the freezer for 15 minutes or the fridge for 30 minutes. This firms up the cake before frosting.
Next, add a crumb coat, which is a thin layer of buttercream that traps any crumbs coming off the cake.
Chill the cake again before spreading on the final layer of frosting. Because the crumb coat has set, no crumbs will get into this layer.
Spread the frosting on fairly thickly and make sure it rises above the top edge of the cake. This extra height will help you create sharp angles at the top later. Reach as far as you can around the cake and pull long, smooth spins of the turntable to smooth the sides.
Warming your cake scraper with hot water, a hair dryer, or a blowtorch will make the frosting even smoother.
To level the top edge, swipe sideways without pushing down. This will flatten the buttercream, without creating bulges. Then put the cake in the fridge for 30 minutes to set the frosting before decorating.
#1 Cute character Valentine’s Day cake ideas using pointillism
Let’s start by turning an image into a cute edible character on a cake. For this technique you’ll need a toothpick and a piping bag. If you have a small round piping tip, great, but if not, you can cut a tiny hole in the end of a piping bag or even use a sandwich bag.
After chilling the cake so the frosting is firm, lightly score your design onto the surface using a toothpick. You can draw freehand while looking at your image or print it out, cut it out, and trace around it. Gently brush off any buttercream crumbs with a paintbrush or kitchen towel.
Tint a small amount of buttercream for each colour in your design. I like using gel food colouring because it’s concentrated and creates bold colours. A cupcake pan is perfect for tinting small amounts of buttercream quickly and make cleaning up a breeze! Small bowls work just as well but take a bit longer to clean afterwards.
To make black buttercream, add a small amount of black gel colouring to any colour of buttercream. Microwave it for 5–10 seconds to darken it, then chill it back to room temperature. Stir until smooth and it’s ready to use.
Pipe dots using a small round tip (or a cut piping bag). Hold the tip slightly away from the cake, squeeze to let the buttercream attach, then release pressure as you pull away. This dotting technique is called pointillism and it’s a great way to create detailed, multicoloured Valentine’s Day cake ideas without stencils, fondant, or transfers.
Pipe one colour at a time, switching colours as needed. If you don’t have multiple tips or couplers, simply wash and reuse your piping bag and tip. Try to pipe the dots at the same angle for the whole cake, so that the peaks or points on the dots all point in the same direction.
This technique is incredibly forgiving and very effective.
#2 Valentine’s Day cake with stencils
For this next design, all you need is a piping bag without a tip and a piece of parchment or wax paper. Start by frosting your cake using a layered piping technique. I like to call this 'lazy piping' because it's so quick and easy! Layer different buttercream colours into one piping bag, pushing each colour down to the end with a cake scraper.
Pipe rings around a crumb coated cake from the bottom of the cake upwards. After each colour, the next colour will come through to create a gradient effect.
Smooth the top with an offset spatula and then use a cake scraper around the sides. To blend the colours more gradually, wiggle a spatula or spoon between them and then scrape until smooth. Chill the cake while you prepare a stencil.
Trace a clip art image onto parchment paper and cut it out to create a stencil.
Wrap this tightly against your chilled cake and the cold frosting will prevent it from sticking. Spread buttercream over the stencil and scrape away the excess, then peel it off to reveal the design. Clean up any smudges with a toothpick.
To finish, pipe a simple border on top using a star tip. Starting and ending the border at the back of the cake helps hide the seam. I love fun Valentine’s Day cake ideas like this that don't rely on using pink and red.
#3 Valentine’s Day cake with piped hearts
For a more traditional Valentine’s look, outline hearts on a chilled cake using cookie cutters, paper cutouts, or a toothpick.
Tint buttercream in several shades, starting with the lightest colour and working darker so you can mix everything in one bowl.
Pipe around the heart outlines using round or star tips. My favourites are #363 for rosettes, #16 for tiny stars, and #3 for tiny dots.
For neat piping, keep your bag about ¼ to ¾ full. Make sure the buttercream is stiff enough to hold its shape but soft enough to pipe easily. In colder weather, microwaving buttercream for a few seconds can make piping easier.
To add height and colour, pipe leftover buttercream onto cling film, roll it into a log, and place it into a piping bag fitted with a large star tip. Pipe multicoloured swirls around the top of the cake to tie the whole design together.
How to transfer and display your Valentine’s Day cakes
To move any of these Valentine’s Day cake ideas onto a cake stand or platter, chill the cake first. Add a small amount of buttercream to the middle of the stand, which will act as glue. Then slide an offset spatula under the cake to lift it off the board and lower it onto the stand.
Final thoughts on Valentine’s Day cake ideas
I hope you’ve seen some Valentine’s Day cake ideas that you’d like to try. These designs are all about using simple techniques to create cakes that look detailed and festive.
To learn hundreds more cake designs and techniques, visit my cake school where you'll find online courses and memberships to take your cake decorating skills to the next level!
If you want to improve your cake decorating skills in 2026, you’re in the right place. Whether you struggle with smooth frosting, bulging cakes, piping that loses its shape, or colours that never look quite right, these are some of the most common cake decorating problems and they all have simple solutions.
In this tutorial I’m sharing 10 practical ways to improve your cake decorating skills using techniques I rely on every day. These tips will help you create cleaner, neater, more professional-looking cakes without fancy tools or complicated methods.
Cake Decorating Skills for Straighter Cakes: Chill Before You Pipe
Piping onto cakes adds height and texture, but it can also cause bulges. This can be filling bulging out between cake layers, or frosting bulging around the top of the cake under the weight of piping.
To improve your cake decorating skills and avoid this, chill your cake in the fridge for 30 minutes before piping. Chilling firms up the frosting so it can support the extra weight. This keeps the sides of your cake straight and smooth instead of bulging or sagging.
Build Cake Decorating Skills Without Pressure by Piping Off the Cake
If piping is a challenge, don’t pipe straight onto the cake and risk scraping it all off. Instead, trace around your cake pan onto parchment or wax paper and pipe into that ring. Put the piping into the freezer for about 10 minutes to chill and set.
Once chilled, lift the piping and press it onto your cake. Use a small dot of fresh buttercream as glue if needed. This is a great way to improve your cake decorating skills because you can choose only your best piping results and avoid mistakes on the cake itself.
Expand Your Cake Decorating Skills by Improving Flavour, Not Just Design
Improving your cake decorating skills isn’t just about how cakes look. Flavour matters too! If you usually stick to chocolate or vanilla, try something new like chocolate chip cookie dough cake, coconut milk cake, or flavoured buttercream. You can add lemon curd, freeze-dried strawberries, caramel, or crushed Oreo cookies to buttercream for easy flavour upgrades.
Experimenting with flavours helps you grow your confidence and creativity as a cake decorator. You’ll find all of these recipes here on my website!
One Cake Decorating Skill That Changes Everything: Smooth Frosting
Smooth frosting is the number one cake decorating skill people ask me about. To get rid of air bubbles and make frosting incredibly smooth, use heat to warm a metal cake scraper. You can use a hair dryer, a blow torch, or hot water. The warm metal will leave buttercream impossibly smooth!
Improving your cake decorating skills often comes down to technique, for example changing the angle of your cake scraper or how high you spread frosting up the sides of the cake. For a full breakdown of these techniques, join my YouTube membership for exclusive access to my Perfectly Smooth Frosting course.
Cake Decorating Skills for Neat Cake Messages
Neat messages instantly improve your cake decorating skills. Before piping, outline your message lightly with a toothpick so you can adjust spacing and alignment.
Chilling the cake also helps. When the frosting is cold and firm, you can touch up letters with a toothpick without damaging the surface of the cake.
Time-Saving Cake Decorating Skills: Freeze Cakes Between Steps
Running out of time is one of the biggest cake decorating challenges for most bakers. The solution is freezing cakes between steps so you can spread the work out over days or even weeks.
After baking and cooling cakes, wrap them twice in cling film or plastic wrap and freeze them. You can also assemble and frost cakes before freezing. Freeze them uncovered for one hour to set the frosting, then wrap in two layers of plastic wrap and return to the freezer for up to two months.
Move cakes to the fridge the night before decorating so they thaw gradually. Always let cakes come to room temperature before serving for the best flavour and texture. When properly wrapped and thawed, previously frozen cakes taste just as good as freshly made ones.
Dark Buttercream Colours Without the Bitter Taste
If you’re trying to achieve deep colours like red or navy, use these tricks instead of more food colouring.
Tint buttercream lighter than your target colour, then microwave it for 5-10 seconds. Melting the butter deepens the colour instantly. Chill the buttercream in the freezer for 5 minutes to bring it back to the right consistency. Letting it rest (covered) for an hour or two will deepen the colour even more. These tricks will darken your buttercream without affecting the taste.
Temperature Control for Better Piping
If your piping starts neat but becomes soft and blobby, the warmth of your hands is melting the buttercream. This affects many cake decorating skills, from dotted designs and borders to messages and flowers.
Put your piping bag into the freezer for one minute, then continue piping. Colder buttercream is stiffer and holds its shape much better, giving you neater results.
Prevent Condensation and Bleeding Colours
Many cake decorating skills, like stencilling or detailed piping, require cold, firm buttercream. However, condensation can form when there’s a big temperature difference between the cake and the room.
Work in a cool room whenever possible and avoid moving cakes from the fridge into a warm environment. Condensation droplets can cause colours to run and stain the frosting, undoing your hard work.
Improve the Presentation of Your Cakes
Presentation is usually the first impression of your cake so the cake boards and boxes you choose are important.
Affordable cake boxes can be bought in packs online. To use your standard boxes for tall and tiered cakes as well, use this hack. Cut two short diagonal slits into opposite sides of the lid. Push the center flap inside the box while leaving the sides outside. This raises the lid so it fits neatly over taller cakes without crushing decorations.
Final Thoughts on Improving Your Cake Decorating Skills
Improving your cake decorating skills doesn’t require expensive tools or complicated techniques. Small adjustments like chilling cakes, controlling buttercream temperature, and planning ahead can make a huge difference.
To learn more cake decorating tips, techniques, and designs, visit my cake school for online courses and memberships!
This cake gingerbread house is surprisingly simple to make, with a clever trick that makes the edible glass windows glow like real candlelight. It’s built from round cake layers that are easy to bake and frost, finished with a snowy roof and edible glass windows that look magical once the cake is assembled.
This step-by-step tutorial will show you exactly how to bake, assemble, frost and decorate a cake gingerbread house. It’s a fun Christmas cake idea whether you're an expert or a beginner cake decorator!
Preparing the Cake Layers for the Cake Gingerbread House
For the cake layers I'm using my Very Vanilla Cake recipe baked in four 6 inch pans. Once they're cool, cut out the middle of three of them using a 2 inch cookie cutter. This will make just enough space to put an electric candle or tealight in the middle eventually.
Making the Edible Glass Windows
To make edible glass, pour sugar and water and corn syrup into a stainless steel pan and heat over medium. If you can't find corn syrup you can use glucose but it will make the glass a bit foggy. The corn syrup or glucose will keep the glass hard so it doesn't melt.
Place a candy thermometer in the sugar mixture and watch the temperature as it cooks. When it gets to 310° F, plunge the pan into a pot of iced water to stop the cooking process. Then pour the mixture into a square silicon mold. I used an ice cube tray for those big square ice cubes that are so trendy in cocktails. They're the perfect size for the windows on this cake gingerbread house! Make four squares, or five to have an extra just in case.
Quick tip: don't wait more than a few seconds to move the sugar from the iced water to the mold! The sugar will thicken fast and then it won't pour easily into the mold.
When these cool after about 30 minutes you can pop them out of the mold easily. They'll be about the same height as each of your cake layers, which makes making the windows really easy later.
Starting the Assembly
Make chocolate buttercream by melting chocolate chips and then after they cool, add them to butter, powdered sugar or icing sugar, salt, and vanilla. Set aside about a cup of white buttercream first for decorations on the gingerbread house later. You'll find the recipe for this cake at the bottom of the page!
Trace around your cookie cutter onto the middle of a 6 inch cake board and cut out that little circle. Spread some buttercream onto the cake board and press your first cake layer down onto it, one of the ones with a hole in the middle. Put this onto a bigger cake board - mine is 10 inches wide.
Spread chocolate buttercream on top of this cake layer and into the hole, too. You want to cover all of the surfaces, which will stop the cake from drying out because the buttercream will lock the moisture into the cake.
Building the House Structure and Adding Internal Supports
Hold one square of edible glass against the edge of another cake layer. Cut the cake on either side of the square and remove this piece to make space for a window. Save the removed cake for later! Do this three more times to make space for 4 windows. Leave one section of cake bigger than the others to leave space on that section for a door.
Before you continue, trace around a window onto parchment paper or wax paper. Fold that paper in half twice and then cut out the square, which will make four square pieces of paper. You'll use these for the windows later.
Press one section of cake down onto the chocolate buttercream and hold a window up next to it to measure where to place the next piece of cake. Repeat for the other two windows.
Spread chocolate buttercream in between the sections of cake to cover the sides where you cut. Then slide the windows into the gaps you left so that they're as close as possible to the outer edge of the cake.
Spread chocolate buttercream onto the top of this cake layer and also onto the top of the third cake layer with a hole in the middle. Spread it around the hole in the middle too, and flip this over to go on top of the cake.
Wrap the cake in cling film or saran wrap and put it into the fridge for 30 minutes or the freezer for 15 minutes. This will chill the cake so it firms up. Next, use a piece of non-slip mat or a ring of tape to hold the cake in place on its smaller cake board on top of the larger cake board.
Then you'll need the four pieces of parchment paper you traced and cut out earlier. Press one onto each window to cover and protect the edible glass and keep it shiny.
Now spread a layer of buttercream onto the top of the cake and push four boba straws or wooden dowels into the cake. This is necessary to support the weight of the roof, so it doesn't sink down into the bottom of the house. Cut the straws or dowels to be the same height as the cake.
Place a cake board on top, pushing it down to stick it to the chocolate buttercream. This board should be the same width as the cake so it will be invisible later. The board, resting on the support straws or dowels, will hold up the roof.
Adding the Roof to the Cake Gingerbread House
Use more buttercream to attach the final cake layer on top. This is the cake layer without a hole in the middle. Then arrange the cake scraps on top to form the roof. These are the parts you cut out to make space for the windows and also the round pieces from the middle of the other cake layers. Attach them to each other by spreading on buttercream as glue to make a pile on top of the cake.
Put the whole cake into the fridge for another 30 minutes or the freezer for 15 minutes to chill. Then use a serrated knife to trim around the pieces of cake to make a cone shape for the roof.
Frosting and Decorating the Gingerbread House Cake
Crumb coat the outside of the cake by spreading a thin layer of buttercream over it. This traps any crumbs that come off the cake. It doesn't need to be neat because it's going to be covered up soon.
Put the cake back into the fridge for 30 minutes to set the crumb coat. Then spread another layer of buttercream over the roof and the walls of the house. Since the roof is cone-shaped, a cake comb isn't the best way to get it smooth. A piece of acetate is ideal since it can curve around easily and leaves the surface smoother. A cake comb is fine for the bottom of the house, though. Don't worry too much about the join between the walls and the roof because it's going to be covered up soon.
To peel the parchment off the windows, press gently with a toothpick until you find the edge and then peel it off. The windows underneath will be clean instead of smeared and smudged with buttercream.
You can decorate the house however you like. I put the leftover chocolate buttercream into a piping bag with a #8 medium round piping tip to pipe a frame around each window. Pipe along the top and the sides but not the bottom edge if you want to add buttercream snow like I did!
Tinted about 2 tablespoons of the buttercream to make a door. I chose red but darker brown or green would also look nice! Cut a door shape out of parchment paper to make a stencil and press it against the frosted cake. Then spread the red buttercream over it and peel the stencil off. Piping little dots of chocolate buttercream around the door gives it a nice trim. For a doorknob I used a flat round gold sprinkle.
Adding Snow and Decorative Details
Add some milk to the rest of the white buttercream so that it's soft and smooth and easy to stir. Use a small round piping tip to pipe this buttercream along the bottom edge of each window. Piping blobs and drips will make it looks like snow that's starting to melt.
I used a piping tip to score semicircles or scallops onto the roof to give it a tiled look. Then I piped buttercream snow over the lines with a small round piping tip, wiggling the lines and piping some drips to make it look like snow. I added a few simple details to the walls of the cake gingerbread house like dots around the windows.
Finishing the Cake Gingerbread House and Serving
As a finishing touch, put a spoonful of powdered sugar into a sieve and tap it over the cake. This will dust it with what looks like snow. Put the cake into the fridge to chill and set and then it's time to add the candle light.
Slide an offset spatula or palette knife underneath the cake and pick it up on its little cake board. Put a battery operated tealight or electric candle onto the middle of the big board and then lower the cake down over it. Attach the boards together with some buttercream so the cake doesn't slide around when you carry it.
I piped some of the leftover chocolate buttercream around the bottom of the cake to cover up the join of the cake on its little cake board. I love the flickering candle light you can see through the windows. And you can eat every part of the cake, including the windows.
To serve the cake, cut down into the roof until you feel the knife hit the cake board in the middle and slice up the roof. And then lift up the cake board in the middle and slice the bottom part of the house.
FAQs
How do you make edible glass windows for a cake? Heat sugar, water, and corn syrup to 310°F. Lower the pan into a pot or bowl of ice water and pour into a silicone mold. Once cooled, the sugar becomes clear, hard windowpanes perfect for a cake gingerbread house.
Can I make this cake gingerbread house ahead of time? Yes! The cake layers can be baked in advance and frozen for up to a month, or kept in the fridge for 2-3 days. You can also assemble the cake before freezing or refrigerating it. Wrap the cake in two layers of cling film or Saran Wrap to protect it while it's chilling. If you bake, assemble, frost and decorate the cake all in one day, put the cake into the fridge and it will stay perfectly fresh for 2-3 days. Add the powdered sugar snow just before serving.
What cake flavour works best for a gingerbread house cake? Any sturdy cake works well. Vanilla, chocolate, and gingerbread cake are all great choices. Avoid very soft or fluffy cakes since they’re harder to carve.
What buttercream is best for frosting a gingerbread house cake? My 4 Minute Buttercream is ideal because it's stable at room temperature and easy to smooth over carved cake shapes. The door stencil will only work on a crusting buttercream like this, because peeling the stencil away will damage soft and sticky frostings like whipped cream.
How do you get the candlelit effect inside a cake? Create a hollow core by cutting circles from three of the cake layers. When stacked, this forms a cavity where you can place a battery-powered candle or tealight. The edible glass windows allow the candlelight to shine through beautifully.
This cake gingerbread house is surprisingly simple to make, with a clever trick that makes the windows glow like real candlelight.
Ingredients
UnitsScale
For the cake:
1 1/2cupsunsalted butter*
2cupswhite sugar (granulated sugar)
6 eggs
1 tablespoon vanilla extract
3/4cupbuttermilk
3 tablespoons vegetable oil
3 1/2cupsplain flour (all-purpose flour)
1 tablespoon baking powder
1/2 tablespoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt*
For the buttercream:
2 1/2cupsunsalted butter at room temperature*
2lbpowdered sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt*
1/2 tablespoon vanilla extract
3 tablespoons cream or milk
3/4cupsemi-sweet chocolate chips
For the windows:
1/2 cup sugar
3 tablespoons light corn syrup or glucose
1 tablespoon water
For the decorations:
1 tablespoon powdered sugar (icing sugar)
a few drops of red food colouring
1 gold or silver sprinkle for the doorknob
Instructions
To make the cake layers:
Using a mixer with a beater/paddle attachment (not a whisk), beat room temperature butter and sugar on medium speed until pale and creamy, about 2 minutes. Scrape down to the bottom of the bowl once during mixing to make sure no butter or sugar is stuck at the bottom.
Add eggs one at a time, mixing on the lowest speed after each addition for 30 seconds. Scrape down to the bottom of the bowl to make sure everything is incorporated before adding the next egg.
Add vanilla and mix for about 30 seconds to combine.
In a small bowl or measuring jug, mix room temperature buttermilk and oil. Add half to the butter mixture and mix on lowest speed to incorporate.
In a bowl, sift flour, baking soda, baking powder and salt. Add half of the flour mixture to the mixing bowl and mix on lowest speed to incorporate, scraping down to the bottom of the mixing bowl to check that batter is evenly mixed. Repeat with the remaining buttermilk mixture and then finish with the remaining flour mixture.
Grease four 6" baking pans with non-stick oil spray or butter. Divide batter equally between the cake pans.
Bake at 160ºC or 325ºF for 38 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted into the middle of the cake comes out clean.
Leave cakes to cool in their pans for 10 minutes. Use a spatula to loosen the cakes from the edges of the pans and then turn onto a wire cooling rack. Leave to cool completely.
To make the buttercream:
Sift the sugar to remove any lumps and check that the butter is at room temperature - you should be able to slice through it easily with a spatula.
In a mixer with a beater (paddle) attachment, mix butter for a few seconds until smooth. Add a quarterof the powdered sugar and salt (if using) and mix on the lowest speed until incorporated, about one minute.
Scrape down to the bottom of the mixing bowl with a spatula to loosen any butter and sugar and add the next quarter of powdered sugar and mix for another minute on low.
Scrape down to the bottom of the bowl, add another quarter of the powdered sugar, mix for one minute on low, scrape, and add the final quarter of the powdered sugar. Mix for one more minute on low, adding the vanilla once everything is mixed together and continuing to mix until it's incorporated.
Add the milk or cream and mix for about 30 seconds until it's combined with the buttercream.
Scoop up about 1 cup of buttercream and set aside in an airtight container or cover a bowl tightly with plastic wrap.
Melt chocolate chips in a heatproof bowl in the microwave at 70% power for 30 second intervals, stirring after each interval until smooth. Let it cool to room temperature and the stir into your main bowl of buttercream to make chocolate buttercream. Check the consistency and add more milk or cream a tablespoon at a time until the buttercream is smooth and easily stirred.
To make the windows:
Mix the window ingredients in a small pan over medium heat. When it starts to simmer, stop stirring and place a candy thermometer in the pan.
While the sugar mixture is cooking, fill a larger pan with water and ice.
When the sugar mixture reaches 310F, immediately plunge the pan into the iced water to stop the cooking process. (Don't wait longer than a few seconds because the sugar will thicken and harden fast!) Poor the cooked sugar into a cubed silicone mold to make 4-5 square windows. Be careful - it will still be very hot! Set aside to cool.
To assemble the cake gingerbread house:
Follow the step by step instructions with photos in the blog post 🙂
Notes
*If you use salted butter instead, omit the salt in the recipe
Looking for more cake decorating ideas?
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Air pockets, indents, uneven top edges, and weird texture lines that just won't go away! In this tutorial I'll show you the most common frosting mistakes I see and what causes them. Most importantly, I'll show you how to fix them!
Before we get into the smoothing part, let’s do a quick recap of how to prepare your cake. Start by layering your cake and fillings on a cake board at least 2 inches bigger than your cake. Attach the bottom layer to the cake board with a dab of buttercream to hold it in place. Give it a crumb coat and let that set so it's firm. If you need a refresher on how to layer and crumb coat a cake, see my in-depth tutorials on those steps.
Now let’s move on to the final coat of buttercream, where the frosting mistakes can start.
Frosting mistake #1: Not spreading buttercream to the edges
The first mistake is not spreading buttercream all the way to the edges of the cake. On the top of the cake this creates gaps around the edges. Around the sides, if the buttercream isn't high enough you’ll have shallow patches near the top and that top edge won’t look sharp or straight.
So once you've spread buttercream to cover to top of the cake, push it beyond the edges. Around the sides, push the buttercream up to form a lip or wall around the top edge of the cake. This is essential for creating a sharp top edge later.
The top cake in the image below doesn't have enough buttercream on the top or around the sides. Lower down you'll see that I’ve added more buttercream and spread it beyond the top edge. That gives me enough to work with when it’s time to smooth the frosting.
Frosting mistake #2: Jerky turntable movement
The next mistake is using short, jerky turns of the turntable. This might not seem important but it's impossible to get smooth frosting if you do this! When you stop and re-start the turntable every few inches, the edge of your cake comb presses into the buttercream with each stop. You can see this clearly in the image below, where there are several vertical dents. Instead of short spins, reach as far as you can around the turntable each time you spin it. Aim for a long, smooth rotation so your cake comb glides around the cake without digging into the frosting.
Frosting mistake #3: Using a damaged cake comb
You may have noticed two frosting mistakes in the image above. As well as vertical dents, there's a horizontal line going all the way around the cake. This is caused by a cake scraper that has been damaged by dropping or knocking against something hard. When the straight edge is dented or dinged, that bump will leave a line or trail in the buttercream.
Run your finger along the edge of your comb to feel for a sharp piece sticking out. If you have one, switch to a different cake comb, one that’s smooth and undamaged. Metal combs are generally more durable than acrylic or plastic, so they’re less likely to get damaged like this.
Frosting mistake #4: Uneven application of buttercream
Before using a cake comb or cake scraper, you'll need to spread buttercream to cover your cake. If you apply it unevenly, some areas won’t have as much frosting. When you scrape around your cake to smooth the frosting, those shallow areas show up as gaps or patches. Fix these by scraping more times around the cake to remove the thicker layers until everything levels out.
Frosting mistake #5: Using too much pressure when smoothing
There are several frosting mistakes you can make with your cake scraper and the most common is using too much pressure. This creates tiny air bubbles or tears in the buttercream, especially if your frosting is a bit stiff. You can see little pockmarks in the photo below, leaving the surface looking textured instead of smooth. To avoid this, use very light pressure as you scrape and let the turntable do the work.
A quick fix for the little tears is to warm up your cake comb to help it glide more smoothly. I like to use a blowtorch or hair dryer to warm the metal slightly, or you can dip the comb in hot water and dry it off. Just make sure the comb is warm, not hot, so you don’t melt the buttercream or cause it to bulge. You’ll feel the difference as it glides over the cake and fills in any tiny air bubbles.
Frosting mistakes #6: Pressing down instead of swiping sideways
When you get to the top edge of the cake, swipe across the top edge to leave it. One of the common frosting mistakes here is pressing downwards. This causes bulges underneath the surface and makes the edge look wobbly. Instead of pushing down, swipe sideways across the top, pushing the excess buttercream away from the edge and then lifting it off.
Frosting mistake #7: Not cleaning your tool
The next issue is swiping the top of the cake with a messy tool. This happens when you don’t wipe your offset spatula or palette knife clean between swipes. Any buttercream that’s left on the blade gets dragged back across the cake, leaving behind a messy line or textured streak.
After each swipe, take a second to clean your tool before swiping again. If you forget and drag buttercream back onto the edge, just clean your tool and swipe again!
Frosting mistake #8: Stopping too soon
And finally, one of the most common frosting mistakes is... stopping too soon! When you've worked your way around the top edge of the cake, you might assume it's level but look closely! Get down to eye level and spin the cake, staring at the top edge as it spins. When you look closely you’ll see little bumps or dips, usually in between two swipes. You need to keep swiping over those dip or blips, wiping your tool clean after each time. Spin the cake again until the entire top edge is straight all the way around.
It takes a bit of time and patience to get super smooth frosting on a cake. Once you know what to look for and what to avoid, it becomes a lot easier. These 8 frosting mistakes are incredibly common but now you know how to fix them, your cakes will look smoother and more professional.
Tell me in the comments what part of smooth frosting you struggle with! And visit my cake school to learn hundreds of cake decorating techniques and designs with my online courses and memberships!
There’s nothing more frustrating than a cake that keeps shifting while you’re trying to frost it. Sometimes the whole cake moves on the board or the layers start sliding apart to make the cake lean. Either way, it makes decorating messy and stressful. If you're wondering how to stop cakes from sliding, you’re in the right place! In this tutorial I’ll show you why cakes slide and how to prevent it from happening!
Problem 1: The Cake Isn’t Attached to the Board
One of the main reasons cakes slide happens right at the start, when you’re layering your cake. When you stack your cake layers with filling in between, it might look sturdy but if the bottom layer isn’t attached to the cake board, the whole cake can shift around. This happens because as you spread or smooth frosting, you’re pushing against the cake. Without anything securing it to the board, the pressure nudges it sideways. This makes it much harder to get neat, smooth frosting.
The solution is simple: use buttercream to “glue” the cake to the board. Spread a small amount of buttercream in the centre of your cake board before you layer your cake. Then place your first cake layer on top and press down gently. Now alternate between cake layers and filling to assemble the cake. Once the buttercream sets, it will hold the cake in place so it won’t move while you frost and decorate.
To speed up the setting of the buttercream "glue", put the cake in the freezer for 15 minutes before you frost it. If you prefer, you can put it into the fridge instead for 30 minutes. Chilling the cake will also make it less crumbly. Now frosting it will be much easier! I love to use my 4 Minute Buttercream to frost my cakes because it's easy to make, delicious, stable, and gets super smooth!
Problem 2: Soft Filling Between Cake Layers
Maybe you’ve attached the cake to the board and it’s still sliding. In that case, the filling between the cake layers could be the problem. If the filling is soft, like fresh buttercream, it will allow the cake layers above and below to move. The pressure of spreading frosting around the outside can nudge the upper layers sideways. This happens even if the bottom layer is secure. As the layers shift, the cake starts to lean. If you keep scraping with your frosting smoother, it will never look straight.
To fix this, wrap the cake in cling film or Saran Wrap and gently push the layers back to the middle of the board. Now your cake will be straight. Then put it in the fridge for about 30 minutes. Once chilled, the filling will firm up and hold the layers in place. Then you can safely unwrap it and apply your final coat of frosting without worrying about the layers moving.
How to Stop Cakes From Sliding in the First Place
The best ways to stop cake layers from moving is to secure the bottom layer to the board and let your cake chill at key points. Here’s the sequence I use:
Attach the first layer to the board with buttercream
Stack your layers and add filling
Chill before spreading on your crumb coat
Chill again before adding your final coat of frosting
The extra step of chilling might feel like it slows you down but it actually saves time in the long run! With a secure cake, you won’t have to keep stopping to fix leaning or sliding.
Cake Decorating Troubleshooting
Check out my tutorials to help with other common decorating issues like buttercream cracking and frosting bulges. And to improve your cake decorating skills, visit my cake school to learn hundreds of cake decorating techniques and designs!
Save this tutorial to Pinterest for later with one of these pins:
From fitting tall cakes into short boxes to piping perfect decorations without any fancy tools, these 10 cake decorating skills will save you time and make your cakes look more professional.
Each of these cake decorating skills is simple to learn and uses tools or materials you probably already have at home. These techniques will help you build confidence and improve your results right away.
1. Cake Decorating Skills for Tall Cakes and Short Boxes
If your cake is too tall for your box, here’s the hack you need! Don't buy extra tall cake boxes just for an occasional tall or tier cake. Instead, use the boxes you already have! To make the cake fit, cut two diagonal slits into opposite sides of the lid. The shorter the slits, the taller the box will become. Push the middle flap (between the slits) inside the box, leaving the outer flaps on the outside. This raises the lid enough to cover your tall cakes neatly without crushing your decorations.
2. No Tools? Try These Hacks for Cake Decorating Skills
No tools? No problem! You can still achieve smooth, professional-looking frosting and piping. Use a ruler instead of a cake scraper by resting the short end on your turntable or cake board. Push down as you press the edge gently against the cake and spin the board. For a makeshift turntable, use the ring from under your microwave plate.
And to add piped details even if you don’t have piping bags or tips, fill a ziplock bag with buttercream. Snip off one corner and pipe dots, lines, or messages!
3. Make Your Own Stencils for Easy Custom Designs
Instead of buying expensive cake stencils that you’ll probably only use once, make your own! Draw your design or message onto parchment or wax paper and cut it out, keeping the paper around it in one piece. This will become your stencil.
To use stencils on cakes you'll need a 'crusting' buttercream, like my 4 Minute Buttercream. Chill the frosted cake for at least an hour before using your stencil. Wrap it around the chilled cake and then spread frosting over it, working from the outer edges towards the middle. This stops frosting from sneaking underneath.
Scrape off the excess frosting with an offset spatula, palette knife or cake scraper. Then peel away the stencil and admire your perfectly neat design!
4. How to Turn Cupcakes into Mini Cakes
Mini cakes are trendy, fun, and easy to make without buying special pans. Just bake cupcakes and peel off the wrappers to make easy mini cake layers! Optionally, slice them in half to create extra layers for more layers of filling in between.
Spread some buttercream onto your cake board as glue to hold the first cupcake in place. Assemble the cake and then chill it in the fridge for 30 minutes (or the freezer for 15) before frosting. The cold, firm buttercream stops the cake sliding around or tipping over while you decorate.
5. Fixing Runny Frosting with Textured Buttercream Techniques
We’ve all added too much milk or cream cheese to buttercream and ended up with frosting that’s too runny to smooth. Instead of starting again, skip the smooth frosting and choose texture instead! Try twisting the back of a spoon gently over the surface of your frosting to create soft arcs:
Another option is to press it lightly against the cake while spinning to imprint horizontal grooves, like eon my Banana Layer Cake. These rustic, textured designs are just as beautiful as smooth frosting.
6. Toothpick Tricks for Neater Designs and Messages
A toothpick is one of the most underrated cake decorating skills you can learn. Use it to sketch outlines before filling with piping, using the pointillist technique. Or fill the outline with frozen buttercream tiles to create a mosaic cake design.
For messages, trace the letters with a toothpick first to make sure they’re centered on the cake. It’s a small step that makes a big difference in how neat your message looks.
If you’re nervous about piping directly onto a cake, pipe your decorations onto parchment paper or wax paper first. Swirls, rosettes, or flowers can be piped, frozen for 10 minutes, and then transferred to your cake once they’re firm. This way, you can choose the best-looking ones and place them exactly where you want them. No pressure, no mess, no wasted buttercream.
8. Quick Lunchbox Cakes
Lunchbox cakes are an easy and affordable way to package and transport individual portions of cake. They're perfect for a gift or a surprise school or work lunchtime treat. You could also sell these single portions at a bake sale without needing extra packaging supplies.
Start by assembling your mini cake on a small square of parchment or wax paper. Then lift and lower it into a takeout container. Add some piping on top, close the lid, and you’ve got a portable dessert!
9. Homemade Chocolate Toppers for Unique Designs
Make your own edible cake toppers using just melted chocolate! Spoon melted chocolate into a sandwich bag and snip off a small corner. Now pipe a number or letter onto parchment or wax paper. Add a toothpick to the base and pipe a little more chocolate over it to secure it. Sprinkle coloured sugar or sprinkles over the top while it’s still wet. Once it sets, peel it off the paper and push it into your cake. These are fun, colourful, custom toppers that stand upright beautifully.
10. Cake Decorating Skills for Tier Cakes Without the Waste
Tiered cakes look elegant but aren’t always practical if you don’t need the extra portions. To save money and prevent waste, use a styrofoam cake dummy to fake any of the tiers. Attach it to a cake board with a dab of buttercream and chill it to set that 'glue'. Then frost and decorate it just like a real cake. You’ll get all the height and style of a tiered cake without the cost or leftovers. And you can scrape and reuse the dummy as many times as you like!
Cake Decorating Skills and Hacks
I hope you've enjoyed these 10 cake decorating skills that make your life easier and your cakes look better. Tell me in the comments which one you’re going to try next and visit my cake school to learn hundreds more cake-decorating techniques and designs. See you there!
You’ve spent hours frosting and decorating your cake, only to check on it later and discover cracks in the frosting. If you’re dealing with buttercream cracking, the good news is it’s completely preventable once you understand what’s causing it.
In this tutorial I’ll walk you through three reasons buttercream cracking happens. I'll also show you exactly how to stop it from ruining your cakes.
Buttercream cracking from cakeboard movement
When you first spread buttercream onto your cake it’s soft. I love my 4 Minute Buttercream and use it for all of my cakes! But after about 30 minutes in the fridge or a few hours at room temperature, the surface firms up. This is called crusting. Buttercream loses that slightly sticky texture and sets into a firm outer layer that feels dry when you touch it.
If the buttercream moves after it’s crusted, it can crack. And one of the most common causes of that movement is a bending cakeboard. Thin cakeboards can flex under the weight of the cake, especially when you're carrying it. Even a slight bend can shift the buttercream just enough to cause hairline cracks around the base of the cake.
How to prevent this: The easiest fix is to support your cakeboard properly. For a thin cakeboard, hold it with one hand underneath the middle to support the weight of the cake. Even better, use a thicker, sturdier board that doesn’t bend at all. That simple change will prevent the movement that causes buttercream cracking.
Temperature changes can cause buttercream cracking
Another cause of buttercream cracking is temperature shock. Many cake decorating techniques require a cold cake, meaning it needs to sit in the fridge or freezer. When you take the cake back out, it moves from cold to warm suddenly. At room temperature the buttercream and the cake itself expand, but not at the same rate. That difference in how they warm up can lead to cracks forming hours later.
Cracks don’t affect the taste but are really frustrating when you've spent time and effort making your cake look pretty.
How to prevent buttercream cracking: Avoid moving your cake straight from the fridge or freezer into a warm room. Instead, transition it gradually. Start by moving the cake to a cool room or part of the room, away from direct sunlight. Let it sit there for a couple of hours before moving it into a warmer environment. The slower the change in temperature, the less likely you are to see cracks form in your buttercream.
Stacked cakes without support = cracked buttercream
The final reason for buttercream cracking happens when you stack cakes but forget to add supports.
For tier cakes, each upper tier needs two things:
A cakeboard underneath it that’s exactly same size as the cake.
Some kind of support system in the tier below to hold up that cakeboard.
Without those supports, the top cake will gradually sink into the one below it. After a few hours or during transport, the weight will cause pressure that pushes down through the buttercream, creating visible cracks in buttercream frosting.
How to prevent this: Use dowels or boba straws as internal supports. Place four or five in the bottom cake in a circle where the top tier will sit. These supports act like legs under the top cakeboard, keeping the weight from pressing directly into the frosting below. As a result, your buttercream stays smooth and crack-free. Check out my tutorial on how to make a tiered cake for more details!
Final thoughts on buttercream cracking
Cracks in buttercream are frustratingly common but preventable once you understand what causes them: movement, temperature changes, and lack of support. Plan ahead by choosing a strong cakeboard, managing your temperature changes carefully, and always supporting stacked cakes properly.
If you’ve got questions or want to share your own cake disasters and successes, leave a comment! I’d love to hear from you!
Now that you know how to avoid buttercream cracking, your cake designs can shine! Visit my cake school to learn hundreds of cake decorating techniques and designs with my online courses and memberships!