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Free Cake Decorating MasterCourse | British Girl Bakes
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Free Cake Decorating MasterCourse | British Girl Bakes

Buttercream is a dream to work with, until it isn’t. In this tutorial I'll cover 10 common buttercream problems including cracking, melting, turning yellow, and bursting out of piping bags. With my tips and tricks you'll learn how to troubleshoot every single one and how to fix it so your buttercream is smooth, stable, and perfect for frosting, piping, flavouring, or freezing. I'll be using my 4 Minute Buttercream for all of my examples 🙂

1. One of the most common buttercream problems: air bubbles

Air bubbles happen when too much air gets mixed into your buttercream. This usually happens when mixing on high speed or if your buttercream rests for too long. Air bubbles also appear after chilling buttercream, when it returns to room temperature. If your buttercream looks spongey, it probably has air bubbles trapped inside.

To avoid this, always mix your buttercream on the lowest speed possible. Use a paddle attachment or beater instead of a whisk, since a whisk will beat in more air. But if the bubbles are already there you can stir them out. Use a spatula to stir aggressively, knocking the buttercream against the sides of the bowl to knock the air out. This really helps if your buttercream has been sitting for a while or has just come out of the fridge.

Smoothing air bubbles out of buttercream in a mixing bowl

Use one of my favourite buttercream hacks for really stubborn air bubbles. Scoop out about a third of your buttercream and microwave it for just 10 seconds. Then stir it back into the rest. This melts just enough of the buttercream to mix everything together smoothly, giving you the perfect texture with no air bubbles.

buttercream with air bubbles being microwaved

2. When piping turns droopy: a quick fix for warm buttercream

If your piping looked great at first but then starts to droop or lose its shape, it’s probably because of your hands. Their warmth while you're squeezing the piping bag can soften the buttercream as it starts to melt. This is especially common with flowers and detailed decorations that take a while to pipe and really need to hold their shape!

The fix is simple: put your piping bag in the freezer for one minute. Just one. Any longer and the buttercream will freeze against the metal piping tip, making it too hard to pipe. After a minute, your buttercream will be firmer and you’ll get clean, crisp piping again. Use it with any piping tips, even Russian Tips - get my tips for those in this tutorial.

Buttercream piping bag being chilled to improve piping shape

3. Why is my buttercream yellow?

Butter is naturally yellow so if you’re making an all-butter buttercream, it will have a yellow tint. That’s fine for some cakes but not if you’re aiming for a bright white frosting.

Here’s a clever colour trick: add violet! Take a toothpick, dip it into violet gel food colouring, and swipe just a tiny amount through your buttercream. Violet cancels out yellow and when you've mixed it in, you’ll end up with a bright white buttercream. This is so useful for wedding cakes! Make sure you use a toothpick instead of adding a full drop of violet to prevent turning the buttercream purple.

Adding violet food colouring to yellow buttercream to make it white

4. Oops, a dent! How to fix buttercream problems after frosting

You’ve spent ages smoothing your cake and it’s looking flawless… until someone (maybe you!) accidentally pokes it. It’s one of the most annoying buttercream problems but it’s surprisingly easy to fix.

Whether the frosting is still soft or it's already set, spread a small amount of fresh buttercream over the dent. To smooth it, use a small piece of acetate. This is flexible plastic used for cake decorating and it comes in sheets or rolls. Cut a small square, about 3 inches or 10cm, and gently scrape over the damaged area. It’ll follow the curve of the cake and blend the repair seamlessly into the rest of the frosting. The dent will disappear like it never happened.

Repairing a dented buttercream cake with acetate

5. The piping bag burst again?! Here's how to prevent it

If your piping bag bursts or the tip pops out mid-way through decorating, it’s probably because of how the piping tip was fitted. Disposable piping bags are sealed at the tip so they need to be cut properly to hold piping tips securely.

To prevent bursting bags, drop your piping tip into the bag and push it down to the end. Then score a line halfway up the piping tip with scissors and slide the tip out. Cut along the line you just made and then push the piping tip back down into place. Now the bag will hold it snugly and the tip won’t pop out no matter how much pressure you apply.

Piping tip fitted securely inside a piping bag to prevent bursts

6. The buttercream won’t smooth… now what?

Sometimes buttercream just refuses to get smooth, no matter how many times you scrape around the cake. If your frosting has shallow imperfections or little ridges that won’t go away, use heat to fix it!

Switch to a metal cake scraper and warm it up using a blowtorch, hairdryer, or hot water. Dry it completely so it’s warm and dry, not hot or wet. Now scrape gently around the cake. The warmth will melt the outer surface of the buttercream as you go, filling in imperfections and leaving behind a super smooth finish.

Smoothing buttercream frosting using a hot cake scraper

7. Hot weather buttercream problems: why it melts and how to stop it

If your buttercream melts or slides off the cake, you’re probably working in a hot kitchen or the cake is outside in warm weather. Just like butter melts, all-butter buttercream melts quickly in the heat.

A great way to prevent buttercream from melting is to swap half the butter in your recipe for vegetable shortening. This has different brand names in different countries, like Crisco or Trex. It’s much more stable than butter and won’t melt as quickly.

To keep the same buttery flavour, add half a teaspoon of clear vanilla extract, which gives your buttercream that rich, buttery taste without the sharpness of shortening. You can still tint it, pipe it, and smooth it just like you would with traditional buttercream but it’ll hold up much better outdoors.

Heat-stable buttercream frosting that holds its shape in hot weather

8. Buttercream cracking? This is why

Buttercream cracks when it sets and then gets moved. You’ll often see small cracks appear around the bottom edge of the cake, which are caused by the board bending under the cake’s weight. This can be especially noticeable if you’re using a thin cake board.

To prevent cracks, always support your cake board by holding it underneath with one hand, especially if it’s a large or heavy cake. Even better, use a thicker, sturdy cake board that won’t flex. Once your frosting is set, you want the whole cake to stay still to avoid any shifting or cracking.

Smooth buttercream frosting with no visible cracks

9. How to add flavour without causing buttercream problems

You can absolutely flavour buttercream with all sorts of ingredients! The key is to balance the amount of liquid you add. For anything runnier than buttercream like lemon curd, Nutella, peanut butter or cream cheese, add it one spoonful at a time. Stir and check the consistency after each spoonful so your buttercream doesn’t get too runny.

Adding flavour to buttercream frosting without losing its consistency

You're looking for a texture that’s still firm enough to hold its shape but soft enough to spread easily. If you want intense flavour without adding moisture, try using freeze-dried fruit powders like strawberry or pineapple instead of purées or juices. They add a lot of flavour without affecting the texture at all.

Different ingredients like freeze-dried fruit to flavour buttercream

10. Freezing buttercream the right way

I wish I had known earlier in my cake career that you can freeze buttercream in multiple ways. Whether you’ve got leftovers or you're planning ahead for a cake order, freezing is a great option.

You can freeze buttercream on its own in an airtight container or ziplock bag. Or freeze it already spread between cake layers by wrapping the whole cake tightly in cling film (plastic wrap). You can even freeze an entire frosted cake or even a cake decorated with piping or other buttercream details! To do this, place the cake in the freezer uncovered for about an hour until the buttercream is firm. Then wrap it securely in two layers of plastic wrap and return it to the freezer.

Freezing buttercream leftovers, a cake with buttercream filling, and a cake frosted with buttercream

When you’re ready to use or serve your buttercream cake, transfer it to the fridge the night before and then to room temperature a few hours before serving. Unwrap it as soon as you take it out of the fridge, before the buttercream softens so the plastic doesn’t damage your decorations. Cakes always taste best at room temperature so after taking it out of the fridge, wait at least 2 hours before serving.

Frozen decorated cake being thawed to serve

Final thoughts about buttercream problems

Buttercream can be tricky but with these quick fixes you’ll be able to troubleshoot any issue that comes your way.

To learn even more about buttercream (including how to make it flawlessly, colour it, flavour it, pipe it, frost with it and more) check out my online course The Basics of Buttercream. You'll find that and all of my other online courses on my cake school. I hope to see you there!

You can also watch a video of this tutorial on how to fix 10 buttercream problems:

https://youtu.be/Hvz2h_gh6lY

Whether you're selling cakes from home or running a full bakery, of course you'd like to earn more for the time, energy and love you pour into every cake. The good news? You don’t need to work twice as hard to make twice as much. Here are 10 simple ways to make more money selling cakes without burning out and I’ve used all of these strategies myself throughout my cake career, from baking in my kitchen at home to running a busy storefront and helping others grow their cake businesses.

Ready to grow your cake business? Here are 10 tried-and-tested cake business tips to help you increase your prices, sell more cakes, and create extra income streams with your cake skills.

Increase Cake Prices Without Losing Customers

1. Make more money sell cakes with customization

Let’s start with how to make more money for what you’re already doing. To raise your prices strategically, increase the value of what you offer.

One of the easiest ways to do this is through customization. You can charge more when you offer personalized cakes, from names or messages on the cake to specific colour themes or designs for birthdays, baby showers, weddings and other special occasions. As your skills improve, you can offer more advanced styles like sculpted or 3D cakes, double barrel tiers, fondant designs or on-trend looks like vintage piping or comic-style cakes. These extra touches let you increase cake prices compared to offering standard menu options.

10 cake business tips to help decorators make more money selling cakes, stand out, and raise their prices

2. Be unique to reduce competition and increase prices

Next, set yourself apart with something unique. When your cakes look and taste just like everyone else’s, you have to compete on price and that often means lowering it. But if you can offer something others can’t, like rare flavour combinations, fast delivery, or early adoption of trending styles, your prices can go up instead of down. For example, remember the striped cakes of 2019, comic cakes in 2022, or the recent wave of zodiac-themed vintage cakes? Being the only person in your area to offer something unique gives you a huge advantage.

3. Improve your cake decorating skills to make more money selling cakes

Of course, if you want to start offering more detailed or elaborate designs, that might mean improving your cake decorating skills. My online cake school is here to help with that! I teach hundreds of cake decorating techniques and designs in my online courses and you can try everything with a free 7-day trial of my AYCC membership. It’s the easiest way to gain confidence and watch your cakes (and your cake prices) improve.

4. Improve the reputation of your cake business

Don’t underestimate the power of your reputation. Encourage reviews on platforms like Google and Yelp with signs in your shop or stickers on your boxes. Be quick, helpful, and friendly when replying to messages and grow a presence on social media to show potential customers that others already love your cakes. Social proof builds trust and people are willing to pay more when they feel confident in what they’re buying.

Cake decorator building a strong business reputation to grow a cake business and increase orders

Cake Business Tips to Sell More Cakes

Let’s talk about how to sell more cakes without lowering your prices. Yes, dropping your prices could bring in more orders but that just means working harder for the same money. Instead, try these strategies to bring in more sales without reducing prices.

5. Word of Mouth

Word of mouth is free and incredibly effective. Take cakes to events, give them as gifts, or offer one as a prize for a local competition. Reach out to newspapers, magazines, blogs or local online communities to share your story or see if they’d feature your work. I started this way when I ran my home cake business and it really worked! Within a year I had more orders than I could handle and opened a storefront. Check out this tutorial on 10 things I wish I'd known when I first started making cakes!

Cake decorator growing her business by word of mouth by taking cakes to events to get more cake orders and make more money selling cakes

6. Use content creation to grow a following

If you’re into social media, start thinking about content creation. Sharing photos and videos of your cakes can bring in new customers while also growing your audience. Use location tags so locals can find you and post popular themes like Minnie Mouse or Mario cakes so potential customers see something they’d love to order. This is just scratching the surface! Content creation for bakers involves lighting, setup, strategy, editing, and much more. I teach all of this inside Creator Academy - join the waitlist now if you’re curious about building a cake business through content.

Cake decorator using photos and videos of cakes to grow her cake business and reach more customers to make more money selling cakes

7. Network and partner to make more money selling cakes

Networking is another brilliant way to grow. Partner with non-competing businesses like an ice cream shop, florist, or balloon decorator. Recommend each other to customers and create packages or cross-promotions to boost each other’s sales. You’ll be surprised how fast this kind of collaboration can grow your customer base.

Partnering with complementary businesses to cross-promote and increase cake sales, eg a cake shop partnering with an ice cream shop

8. Upsells and add-ons

Upselling is a quick way to make more from each customer. Offer matching cupcakes at a discount when someone orders a cake. Suggest a birthday smash cake alongside an order of cupcakes. And you can upsell decorations on cakes like cake toppers, custom characters, or adding an extra tier. The more you offer, the more you can earn from each order without finding a brand new customer every time.

Cake decorator adding upsells and extras to cake orders to increase overall sales and make more money selling cakes

Additional Income Streams to Make More Money Selling Cakes

Selling cakes isn’t the only way to make money as a baker. If you’ve built up skills decorating cakes, you can use those in other ways to create income streams that complement your business.

9. Teach cake decorating to others

Teaching is one of my favourite examples of how to make more money selling cakes. Host in-person cake decorating classes in your kitchen or at a local venue. Offer online classes on platforms like Zoom. You can teach a specific technique, recipe or full cake design. People love learning from someone with hands-on experience, especially if they've eaten your cakes or seen them on social media.

10. Create and monetize content of your cakes

Photos, videos and blogs can all bring in money if you share them in the right places. You can earn through platforms like YouTube, Instagram, Facebook or even your own website. If you’re already decorating cakes and sharing photos, why not turn those posts into profit? It can be more lucrative than cake sales and you don’t have to choose between the two, you can do both!

I teach everything you need to know to turn your cakes into content in my content creator course. Join the waitlist now and get notified when it becomes available later this year!

Cake decorator growing her following with videos and photos to make more money selling cakes
Cake decorator using content creation to grow her cake business and attract more orders

Final thoughts about how to make more money selling cakes

There are so many ways to grow a cake business, from increasing cake prices to upselling, marketing, teaching and content creation. You don’t have to do all of them at once but each one will take you closer to the income and lifestyle you want from your baking. I hope these cake business tips help you earn more from your cakes while doing what you love. Ask me any questions in the comments!

You can also watch a video of this tutorial on how to make more money selling cakes:

https://youtu.be/mpS_ZeSlvbY

From making edible toppers to painting and stamping, there are so many creative things to do with buttercream! In this tutorial I’m sharing 10 fun and unexpected buttercream decorating techniques to inspire your next cake design. I'll be using my 4 Minute Buttercream for all of the techniques in this tutorial.

Pipe and freeze decorations using buttercream

Buttercream has a unique quality that makes it perfect for this first trick. When it’s cold, it firms up enough to hold its shape. This means one of the things you can do with buttercream is pipe and then freeze it to create decorations you can handle like fondant. Pipe onto a tray lined with parchment paper or a silicone mat to make them easy to move later. Then pop the tray into the freezer for 10 minutes to freeze the buttercream. Once the shapes are frozen, you can pick them up and press them straight onto a cake. If your cake has already chilled and the frosting has set, use a dab of fresh buttercream as glue to attach the frozen pieces. This technique is much easier than working with fondant and it looks just as pretty.

Piped buttercream decorations frozen and then added to a cake, showing creative things to do with buttercream for cake decorating

Flat buttercream patterns with Facelift Frosting

Another buttercream technique that’s fun to experiment with is facelift frosting. I came up with this a few years ago and it’s still one of my favourite ways to get a flat, colourful pattern on a buttercream cake.

You start by piping a design onto a crumb-coated cake and then freeze it so the piped buttercream sets firm. Frost over the top and freeze again for 20 minutes to firm up the outer layer. Then take a warm cake comb and scrape around the cake several times. You can warm the comb by holding it under running water or dip it into a pan of hot water. If you have a metal cake comb, use a blowtorch or a hair dryer to heat the edge of it.

As you scrape the top layers of frosting off, the colourful design underneath is revealed. Unlike typical piped buttercream decorations, the details will be completely flush with the surface of the cake. This technique creates such a unique effect!

Facelift frosting technique showing frozen layers of buttercream revealed by scraping with a hot cake comb

Imprinted messages in buttercream

For messages on buttercream cakes, you can definitely pipe them but it takes practice to make them neat. Here’s a cleaner and more precise option: lettering sets. First, chill the cake for at least an hour and then let it sit at room temperature for 30 minutes. Now the buttercream frosting will be softened but still firm instead of sticky. Press each letter gently into the surface of the cake to leave an imprint. Make sure to press all over the letter so it stamps in evenly. Then lift the letters away to reveal a neat message. You can leave it as it is or paint inside the letters using edible metallic paint and a fine brush. If you don’t have store-bought paint, mix vodka with edible gold luster dust for a DIY version.

Lettering set pressed into buttercream cake to create neat words and messages

Sculpted cakes that look like fondant

Buttercream can be used for sculpted cakes that look like they’re covered in fondant. The secret is acetate. This flexible plastic sheet wraps around curved edges to smooth buttercream without leaving lines behind like a regular scraper does. It’s especially helpful for shaping characters or rounded cakes, like this Bulbasaur cake! If your buttercream starts to set or show air bubbles as you work, dip the acetate in warm water. Dry it off and the warmth of the plastic will smooth the buttercream more easily.

Acetate used to smooth buttercream over curved sculpted cake surfaces

Things to do with buttercream as paint!

Painting is another creative thing to do with buttercream. Chill your cake first, so the frosting is firm and will hold its shape as you paint. Tint small amounts of buttercream with gel colours and use a utensil to apply it. A palette knife is a popular choice but you can even paint with a knife, fork, and spoon! The buttercream consistency needs to be quite runny or loose for this technique. I love painting flowers because the shapes are simple and easily recognizable, even if you haven't had much practice painting! You only need a small amount of buttercream on your utensil to paint each shape. Make sure the cake stays cold and firm and if it starts to soften, put it back into the fridge for 15 minutes.

Cake decorated with painted buttercream using utensils for an artistic design

Make buttercream toppers with silicone molds

You can make beautiful cake toppers with buttercream using silicone molds. Instead of fondant or chocolate, spoon buttercream into your molds. Press it down firmly to fill every detail and smooth the surface flat. Freeze the molds for at least 30 minutes so the buttercream is completely solid and then gently peel the silicone away to release the shapes. Work quickly because they’ll soften fast as they warm up! If anything breaks, just press the pieces gently back together and they’ll stick as the buttercream warms up. Press them directly onto the cake for soft, colourful decorations that are completely edible.

Buttercream pressed into silicone molds to create 3D edible figures for cakes

Use the microwave to fix stiff or airy frosting

Buttercream melts when it’s warm, which might sound like a problem but actually makes it super useful for smoothing frosting. If your buttercream is too stiff or full of air bubbles, try this easy hack! Scoop out about a third and microwave it for 10 seconds. Then stir it back into the rest of the bowl. The melted buttercream will loosen the consistency and help knock out stubborn air bubbles. Now it will be easier to spread and smooth onto your cake!

Microwave trick to remove air bubbles and for smooth frosting

Make edible buttercream mosaic tiles

Another fun thing to do with buttercream is turn it into edible mosaic tiles. Spread different colours of buttercream onto a piece of parchment paper and freeze it until the buttercream is firm. Then use a sharp knife to cut it into small triangles. Draw a shape on your cake with a toothpick to use as a guide as you attach your buttercream tiles. Now press the frozen tiles onto the cake to fill in your shape like a mosaic. Decorating takes a while so it's best to freeze two trays of tiles and rotate them. This way you’re always working with cold, firm buttercream.

Frozen buttercream mosaic with colourful triangles arranged into a cake design

Wrap cakes in patterns with buttercream

Buttercream wraps are a clever way to create patterns around a cake, like these wavy stripes. First, spread or pipe your coloured buttercream pattern onto parchment paper and wrap it around your cake. Then put the cake into the fridge for about an hour, until the buttercream is cold and firm. Peel the parchment paper off to reveal the design underneath, which will stay attached to the cake. You’ll probably need to do a few touch-ups to fix any gaps or smudges, by spreading more buttercream over those areas and scraping with a warm cake comb. I teach this full technique in detail in my online course on 10 Cake Decorating Techniques.

Wrapped buttercream cake technique using parchment paper to transfer buttercream designs onto a chilled cake

Practical things to do with buttercream: freeze leftovers!

Finally, one of the most practical things to do with buttercream: freeze your leftovers. If you have extra buttercream in any colour, pop it into a ziplock bag or airtight container and freeze it for up to a month. To use it again, take it out the night before and let it come to room temperature. Once it’s soft you can re-tint it if needed and stir it well to knock out any air bubbles. This saves so much time on your next cake!

Storing leftover buttercream in containers for freezing and thawing to reuse later, showing practical things to do with buttercream

Your favourite things to do with buttercream?

With all these fun and clever things to do with buttercream, it’s easy to see why it’s such a popular choice for cake decorating. What will you try next? Tell me 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 on 10 things to do with buttercream:

https://youtu.be/qHQr92pKZok

Cake boxes can be surprisingly expensive, especially buying them in different sizes to fit every cake you make. From mini cakes to towering tiered cakes, it feels like you need a whole room full of boxes! But what if I told you that you only need one size cake box for nearly every cake you’ll make? These cake box hacks will save you money and free up storage space.

In this tutorial I’ll show you how to transport cakes safely and professionally using just one kind of cake box. Whether you're delivering a mini cake or a tall two-tier wedding cake, try these simple tricks!

Three different sized cake boxes

Why These Cake Box Hacks Work for Every Cake

It might seem like a mini cake needs a mini box and a tall cake needs a really tall one. But actually, a standard 10 inch cake box can be used for all kinds of cakes. That’s the size I use for everything from 4-inch mini cakes to tall, double-barrelled and tiered cakes.

Why 10 inches? Because most of my cakes are made with 8-inch cake layers and I place them on 10-inch cake boards. When the board fits snugly into the cake box, it won't slide around when you transport it.

Here’s how to use that same 10-inch box for cakes of all sizes and shapes, without your cakes getting damaged during delivery.

Cake Box Hack for Mini Cakes

Mini cakes are adorable and trendy and perfect for small celebrations. But mini cake boxes? Difficult to find and not very practical if you’re trying to save money and space.

Here's how to make a mini cake fit securely in a standard cake box.

Let’s say you’ve made a little 4-inch cake on a 6-inch board. Placing that into a 10-inch box sounds like a disaster waiting to happen, right? It would slide all over the place during transport – definitely not how to transport cakes safely!

Mini cake sliding inside a large cake box without cake box hacks

The trick is to secure the mini cake inside the big box:

Now your mini cake won't budge, even on the bumpiest car ride.

Non-slip mat placed on cake board before placing mini cake board on top

Tip: Always transport cakes on a flat surface like the boot of your car (trunk) or in the footwell in front of the passenger seat. Don't place it on a seat if you can avoid it because the angle can cause the cake to slip.

Cake box placed in car footwell using cake delivery tips

Cake Box Hacks for Tall Cakes and Tiered Cakes

Now for tall cakes, double-barrel cakes, tier cakes, and cakes with toppers that can’t be added later. Most cake boxes are about 8 inches tall, which is fine for single-tier cakes. But if your cake is taller or tiered, the lid will press down on the top of the cake.

Tall tier cake sticking out above standard cake box

Here’s a genius cake box hack that takes less than a minute:

  1. On one side flap of the lid, make a two diagonal cuts from the bottom edge towards the top. Do this on the opposite side of the lid as well. The shorter your cut, the taller the box will become.
  2. Now put the lid onto the box with the middle sections of the lid (in between the two diagonal cuts) tucked into the sides of the box. This lifts the lid up, making the box taller without damaging it.
  3. You can secure the lid in place with a sticker or a bit of tape if you’re carrying the cake outside.
Cutting diagonal slits in cake box lid for tall cake box hack

I’ve used this tall cake box hack to transport two-tier cakes, cakes with tall toppers, and double-barrel cakes. No custom boxes needed!

Cake Packaging Tips for Every Delivery

Whether you’re making cakes professionally or just as a hobby, these cake packaging tips will make your life much easier:

The Bottom Line on Cake Box Hacks

It’s easy to feel overwhelmed by all the different tools and packaging supplies for cake decorating. But honestly, you don’t need dozens of box sizes cluttering up your kitchen or cake studio. With these simple but game-changing cake box hacks you can deliver cakes of all shapes and sizes using just one kind of box.

If you found these tips helpful you'll love the online courses on my cake school. I'd love to help you grow your skills and confidence with cake decorating!

You can also watch a video of this tutorial on cake box hacks to save money:

https://youtu.be/H33KOPZ1PXM

If you’ve ever baked a cake and ended up with a domed top, you know the frustration! Trimming and levelling it before stacking layers wastes cake and makes your layers shorter. That’s where baking strips for cakes come in. These simple tools help you bake tall, flat cake layers every time so you can skip the trimming, save time, and get professional-looking results straight from the oven.

What Are Baking Strips for Cakes?

Baking strips are long strips of fabric with loops at one end. They're designed to wrap around the outside of your cake pans. When soaked in water before baking, they keep the outer edge of the cake tin cooler for longer. This means the cake bakes more evenly from the outside in, preventing domed cakes.

How to Use Baking Strips for Cakes

The process is simple but there are a few important cake baking tips to follow to get the best results.

First, fit your baking strip around your cake pan. Thread the end through both loops and pull it tight. Using both loops is essential! The second loop keeps the end of the strip up so it doesn't touch the hot metal of the oven and catch fire. Slide that loop all the way to the end to hold it in place.

Fitting baking strips for cakes around a round cake pan

Next, soak the strip in cold water. An extra cake pan works perfectly for this! Just fill it with water and press the strip down until it’s fully submerged. Let it soak for about five minutes while you grease your pans and prepare your cake batter. This ensures the fabric absorbs enough water to stay damp throughout baking.

After soaking, squeeze out the excess water so it’s damp but not dripping. If it’s too wet you’ll create extra steam in your oven. Wrap the strip back around your cake pan and it should fit perfectly if you adjusted it before soaking.

Soaking baking strips for cakes in cold water before baking

Use baking strips with any cake batter but you'll notice more of a difference with some recipes than others. I notice the most drastic difference with my Very Vanilla Cake layers - more about that next! When using baking strips your cake batter will bake more slowly so add 5 to 10 minutes to the recipe baking time. The extra time is worth it for the flat tops you’ll get!

Baking Strips vs No Baking Strips

To show the difference I baked two identical cakes, one with baking strips and one without. The cake with baking strips (on the left) is taller and has a perfectly flat top. The one without (on the right) is shorter and domed, which means you’ll need to trim it before stacking. After trimming, the layer baked without baking strips can be just half the height of the one baked with strips!

Side-by-side cakes showing difference with and without baking strips for cakes

Flat cake layers aren’t just prettier, they stack more evenly and have a better texture because they’ve risen evenly from the edges to the centre.

The Benefits of Using Baking Strips

To prevent domed cakes, baking strips are the best tool for baking even layers. They’re reusable, inexpensive, and work with any cake pan size. They’re also a huge time saver because you can go straight from oven to assembly without levelling the cake first.

Where to Get Baking Strips

Baking strips for cakes are available from most cake decorating shops and online baking supply stores. There are a few different brands and designs but they all work in the same way. I love these! I recommend choosing ones with adjustable loops so you can fit them snugly around different sized cake pans.

Final Thoughts

If you want your cakes to look beautiful both in and out, baking strips are a worthwhile investment. They prevent domed cakes, make layering cakes quicker and easier and give you beautiful, professional-looking layers with every slice. Once you try them, you’ll wonder how you ever baked without them!

You can also watch a video of this tutorial on how to use baking strips for cakes:

https://youtu.be/34Fn88ceigo

Decorating a cake can be just as much fun as baking it but it can also be incredibly frustrating if things don’t go quite to plan. Whether you’re struggling with messy buttercream, lumpy frosting, or piping gone wrong, these cake decorating tips will make your life so much easier. In this tutorial I’m sharing ten of my most-used cake decorating tricks that will save you time, fix common problems, and help your cakes look more professional.

Make Yellow Buttercream White Instantly

I adore my 4 Minute Buttercream but just like any butter-based frosting, it can look yellow instead of white. Here’s a trick that magically turns yellow buttercream white: use a tiny bit of violet food colouring.

Dip a toothpick into a bottle of violet gel food colour and drag that through your buttercream. Stir it in and you’ll see the yellow tinge disappear, leaving you with a much brighter white. The violet cancels out the yellow, like a colour correction filter! Just be careful because a little goes a very long way.

Making white buttercream by adding a touch of violet to yellow buttercream

How to Fix a Piped Border You Don’t Like

Let’s talk about borders. They can be really tricky if your buttercream is a bit too runny or too stiff, or you’re experimenting with a new piping technique. And if your hands are shaky like mine, getting a perfect border on the first attempt is tough.

The secret here is to chill the cake before you pipe. This way the frosting will be cold and firm when you pipe your border and if you don’t like how it looks, just scrape it off with an offset spatula. Because the frosting underneath is chilled, it won’t smudge or smear. Now you can try again with a different piping tip or style until you get the look you want. Game changer!

Piped border being scraped off a chilled buttercream cake

How to Get the Perfect Buttercream Consistency

Let’s talk about the texture of your buttercream. It can really make or break your cake! If it’s too stiff or full of air bubbles, it’s a nightmare to spread or pipe. Here’s a quick and easy way to fix it.

Scoop out about a third of your buttercream into a microwave-safe bowl and microwave it for 10 seconds. This will melt it slightly. Then stir it back into the rest of the buttercream. The melted portion loosens everything up, making the whole batch much smoother and easier to work with. This trick gives you that perfect spreadable consistency every time.

Microwaving a bowl of buttercream to soften the texture

Get Rid of Lumps in Buttercream

Forgot to sift your icing sugar? Don’t worry – there’s a fix. If your buttercream has annoying little lumps in it, grab an immersion blender (also known as a stick blender). Blitz the buttercream for a few seconds and the spinning blades will completely smooth it out. You’ll be left with silky, lump-free buttercream that’s perfect for frosting your cake or piping. This is a great hack if you notice lumps right before using the buttercream and don’t want to make a fresh batch.

Blending buttercream with a stick blender to smooth out lumps

Cake Decorating Tips for Piping without Explosions!

If you’ve ever had a piping tip burst out of the end of your piping bag mid-design, you’ll love this one. Here’s how to make sure your piping tip fits snugly and stays in place.

Drop the piping tip into a piping bag and push it as far down as it will go. Use scissors to score a line halfway up the tip, then push the tip out of the way and cut along that line. Now when you press the piping tip back down, about half of it should poke out through the cut in the bag. This is just enough to keep it secure while you pipe, no matter what shape or size tip you’re using.

Cutting a piping bag to fit a piping tip snugly

How to Fill a Piping Bag Without Getting Messy

Here’s a super simple but incredibly useful trick. Stand your piping bag in a tall glass and fold the top over the rim. This holds the bag open while you spoon in your buttercream, keeping your hands clean and giving you full control.

Only fill the bag two-thirds full so there’s room to squeeze without buttercream oozing out the top. Once filled, unfold the top, lift the bag up and twist the top tightly to stop air or buttercream escaping when you’re piping.

Filling a piping bag using a glass to hold it open

Cutting Neat Slices of Cake

If you've ever cut into a cake straight after baking it, you probably ended up with a sticky, crumbly mess. It might be soft and delicious but it’s difficult to cut cleanly. For neat slices, try this instead.

Chill your cake for at least an hour, then leave it at room temperature for another hour. Now the buttercream will have set, so it won’t stick to your knife. The cake will have warmed up to room temperature so it will have softened again to the perfect texture for eating. Dip your knife into hot water, wipe it dry, and slice. You’ll glide through the cake cleanly without dragging crumbs along the way.

A knife slicing through a chilled cake with clean layers

How to Make Buttercream Colours More Vibrant

Using a lot of food colouring to make dark colours like red or navy blue can cause un unpleasant taste in buttercream. Here are three tips to avoid using so much colouring.

Tint your buttercream to be lighter than your final colour. Then microwave it for 5–10 seconds to melt the butter slightly and the heat will deepen the colour dramatically. Once melted, stir well and then pop it into the freezer for five minutes. This will bring the buttercream back to the right consistency and the cold will also intensify the colour even more. Let it rest for an hour or two, and you’ll see the colour develop even further. It’s the easiest way to get bold colours without staining everyone’s teeth!

Deep red buttercream after using the microwave and freezer hacks and resting.

How to Store Leftover Buttercream

If you’ve got leftover buttercream, don’t throw it away! It can actually save you time next time you decorate a cake. Spoon your leftovers into ziplock bags or airtight containers and freeze them for up to two months. When you’re ready to use them, let them thaw at room temperature overnight. Once soft, stir them vigorously to smooth out any air bubbles, re-tint the colour if you need to, and you’re ready to decorate again.

Buttercream stored in a ziplock bag, frozen and thawed for later use

How to Fix Broken Cake Layers

Not every cake layer comes out of the pan in one perfect piece. If you’ve got a cracked or broken layer don't throw it away! Just fill in the gaps with buttercream.

Use buttercream to glue the broken pieces back together. Then stack and fill your layers as usual and then crumb coat. Once your cake is fully frosted, no one will ever know there was a missing chunk. The frosting hides everything and you’ll end up with perfectly straight sides and a smooth finish.

Broken cake layer being patched with buttercream before stacking

Final Thoughts on These Cake Decorating Tips

I hope these cake decorating tips make your decorating life easier, neater, and much less stressful. Knowing how to fix mistakes, work smarter with buttercream, and use your tools properly makes a huge difference. With these cake decorating hacks in your toolkit, you’ll be much more confident and prepared for anything that comes your way!

You can also watch a video of this tutorial on 10 Essential Cake Decorating Tips and Tricks:

https://youtu.be/SRhAt8YRpNM

If you’re new to cake decorating, you’re probably discovering how many small decisions go into making a cake look beautiful. This guide to cake decorating for beginners is packed with 10 simple tips that would have saved me so much time, money and frustration when I was starting out. These beginner cake decorating tips will help you avoid common pitfalls, work more efficiently, and even enjoy the process more! Some of these tips might really surprise you, from how to stop your buttercream from melting to how to store fully decorated cakes.

1. Choosing the right cake board

This might seem like a minor detail but it’s actually one of the most common cake decorating mistakes beginners make. Your cake board should be at least 2 inches wider than your cake. That means if your cake is six inches across, you’ll want to use an eight inch board. This may seem exaggerated but after adding your crumb coat and frosting, the cake will be wider than you expect.

A cake sitting on a cake board that’s too small, with the frosting reaching right to the edge

If your cake goes right up to the edge of the board, it’ll look cramped and messy. Moving it onto another board is tricky to do without damaging it. So if you’re ever in doubt, always choose the larger board. It gives your cake space to breathe and makes the final presentation look much neater.

2. Using the freezer

One of the best tricks in cake decorating for beginners is learning how to use your freezer properly. If you frost a cake when it’s at room temperature, the soft layers will slide around on the cake board. They'll also shed crumbs into your frosting. Here’s how to fix that.

Chilled, assembled cake on a turntable ready to be frosted

After baking and cooling your layers, spread a small blob of buttercream in the middle of your cake board. Press your first cake layer down onto it, which helps anchor the cake. Once the cake is stacked, pop it into the freezer for 15 minutes. This firms up the cake and the blob of buttercream so it stays in place while you frost it. It also means your buttercream will glide on much more smoothly without dragging crumbs. Check out this tutorial for more ways to use your freezer for cake decorating.

Frosting a cake that was chilled before decorating

3. Understanding room temperature in cake decorating for beginners

Here’s something I learned the hard way: room temperature really matters when you’re decorating cakes. When I moved to Texas I experienced freezing cold winters and 110°F summer days in an uninsulated garage studio. My buttercream couldn’t handle the extreme temperatures. In winter, the frosting was too stiff to smooth and in summer it melted off the cake.

When your buttercream doesn't behave even though you followed the recipe, it’s probably the temperature of your room. If it’s too cold, the buttercream in your bowl will feel stiff when you stir it. Your frosting smoother will leave texture behind as you scrape around the cake. It will tear the buttercream and you'll see small, shallow holes in the surface. Microwave the bowl of buttercream for 10 seconds, give it a stir, and repeat if needed.

A cake with stiff, rough buttercream that won’t smooth

If it’s too warm, the frosting will slide down the sides of your cake. Stick the bowl of buttercream in the freezer for a few minutes to firm it up. Getting the temperature (and therefore the buttercream consistency) right makes your decorating so much easier.

Buttercream frosting sliding off the sides of a cake

4. Quick tricks for bringing ingredients to room temperature

Recipes often call for room temperature butter and eggs, but that doesn’t mean you have to wait around all afternoon. Here’s how to get there quickly.

Microwave your butter for 10 seconds, flip it over, then another 10 seconds. Now your spatula should slice easily through each bar or stick of butter. For eggs, pop them in a bowl of lukewarm (not hot) water for five minutes. They’ll be ready to use and mix much more evenly into your batter. These little shortcuts will save you time and improve your baking results.

Butter being microwaved and eggs in a bowl of warm water

5. Do you really need fancy tools for cake decorating for beginners?

I used to think that the more cake decorating tools I had, the better my cakes would be. But you absolutely do not need a drawer full of gadgets to make beautiful cakes. In fact, you probably already own plenty of things that work just as well as “proper” tools.

For example, you can cut stencils out of parchment paper or create textured buttercream finishes with a spoon. I’ve decorated entire cakes using only everyday kitchen tools and the results looked as polished as when using professional tools. If you’re just getting started, don’t let a lack of tools hold you back. Focus on your technique instead – it matters so much more.

6. Mix colours in a cupcake tray to save time and washing up

If you’re using several different colours of buttercream, here’s a simple trick that will save you time in the kitchen. Use a cupcake tray to mix small amounts of coloured buttercream instead of separate bowls.

Now all your colours are in one place, they're quicker to use, and you only have one tray to clean at the end. When you’re working on more complex cake designs, little time-savers like this make a big difference.

Colours of buttercream mixed in a cupcake pan for easy clean-up for cake decorating

7. Break the process into stages for easier cake decorating

When you’re new to cake decorating it’s tempting to try and do everything in one day. But one of the most helpful beginner cake decorating tips is to break your cake process into stages.

You can:

This works especially well if you have a busy schedule or little ones at home. It’s much more manageable and you won't waste time waiting in between stages. You’ll end up spending less total time on the cake without feeling rushed.

Cake decorating schedule and planning for tasks like baking, frosting, and decorating

8. Freezing finished cakes – yes, you can do that!

This tip blew my mind the first time I tried it: you can freeze fully decorated cakes. Once your cake is finished, put it in the freezer unwrapped for 30 minutes. This firms up the frosting and decorations. Then wrap it in two layers of plastic wrap and freeze for up to two months.

To thaw, move the cake to the fridge the day before serving. On the day, take it out of the fridge two hours before you serve it and unwrap it straight away so the wrap doesn't damage your decorations. This will save you if events are rescheduled after you've already made the cake! It's also useful if you have scheduling conflicts and can't make the cake in the days just before an event. It’s an absolute game-changer.

Decorated cake in the freezer

And don’t worry – I’ve done blind taste tests and couldn’t tell the difference between a freshly baked cake and one that had been frozen for a week. As long as it’s stored and thawed properly, freezing doesn’t affect the taste.

Frosted cake wrapped in cling film and placed in the freezer

9. Price your work properly

If you’re selling cakes, this one’s important. Custom decorations take time, materials, and creative energy. If you don’t charge for them, you’re doing extra work for free. Whether it’s hand-piped flowers or fondant figures, make sure your pricing reflects the extras.

This might not feel like a decorating tip, but it’s part of valuing your work. My full tutorial on how to price cakes breaks this down so you can make a profit.

10. Don’t forget to charge for deliveries

Here’s another common mistake: forgetting to include delivery in your pricing. It’s not just the drive – it’s the time spent planning, coordinating, getting the cake to the venue safely, and then getting yourself back home again. There’s also petrol or gas, wear and tear on your car, and the stress of transporting a cake.

It’s completely fair – and necessary – to charge for this. If you’re taking cake decorating beyond a hobby, make sure you treat it like a business.

Final thoughts on cake decorating for beginners

There’s a lot to learn when you’re starting out, but hopefully these tips help you avoid some of the common cake decorating mistakes that I had to figure out the hard way.

If any of these tips were helpful, I’d love to hear from you. Leave a comment to let me know which one you’re going to try first, or share your own favourite tip for beginners. And if you want to keep learning, visit my cake school to learn hundreds of cake decorating techniques and designs.

You can also watch a video of this tutorial on cake decorating for beginners:

https://youtu.be/DD3isr2W0V8

After 13 years of cake decorating, I can confidently say that temperature can make or break your buttercream. You're probably reading this because you're wondering how to stop buttercream melting in hot weather. If your decorations have drooped, colours have run, or your cake has started to slide off the board, it’s almost always down to temperature, not your technique.

In this post I’m sharing my top buttercream melting tips so you can decorate beautiful cakes even on hot days, without the drama of melting buttercream.

1. Understand How Room Temperature Affects Your Cake

If your cake goes from the fridge into a warm room, you’ll likely see tiny droplets of condensation appear on the surface of your buttercream. This is often called “cake sweat” and it’s frustratingly common. It happens because the inside of your cake is still cold, while the outside warms up faster.

Cake covered in condensation with buttercream decorations bleeding colours

The good news? It’s easy to fix. Just dab the droplets gently with a paper towel and the condensation will stop as the inside temperature of the cake catches up with the outside.

Cake covered in condensation with decorator dabbing droplets off the frosting using a paper towel

How to Prevent Condensation

If you want to avoid this altogether, try these steps:

Cake being placed in the fridge during decorating to prevent and condensation

2. How to Stop Buttercream Melting with Warm Hands

Ever noticed your piping loses definition and starts to look a bit blobby? If it's not the room temperature or the temperature of your cake, it could be your hands warming the buttercream through the piping bag.

Here's a quick hack to fix it. Pop the piping bag in the freezer for just one minute and set a timer. This cools the buttercream enough to firm it up again, without freezing it solid. After a quick chill, your piping will be clean, neat and defined once more.

Chilled piping bag in freezer and neat piped buttercream decorations afterward

3. How to Stop Buttercream Melting When Cakes Are on Display

Even if you’ve decorated the perfect cake, all your hard work can melt away if the cake is displayed in a hot environment. This is one of the most common causes of buttercream disasters at summer events or outdoor parties. Here’s how to stop buttercream melting when it’s hot out:

Buttercream Recipe Tip

Use half butter and half shortening (like Trex or Crisco). Shortening is much more stable in heat than butter, but still allows you to get smooth finishes and neat piping.

Adapted buttercream that smoothes, pipes, and colours beautifully for hot weather

If you're familiar with the flavour of all-butter buttercream, you might notice a difference in the taste of this. To improve it, add half a teaspoon of clear vanilla extract to bring back the buttery flavour without the bite of shortening.

This half-and-half version of buttercream holds up much better in the sun. It's perfect for summer cakes or outdoor events. Look at the difference between these two cakes, sitting outside on the same day. The top cake is frosted with my 4 Minute Buttercream recipe for all-butter buttercream. The bottom cake is frosted with buttercream using the same recipe but with half of the butter replaced with shortening.

Melting buttercream cake beside a stable half butter, half shortening buttercream cake in the sun

Display Tips for Hot Weather

One cake melting in the sun and another cake sitting perfectly intact after following hot weather tips

How to Stop Buttercream Melting for Good

Whether you’re dealing with condensation, soft piping, or heatwave disasters, now you’ve got a toolkit of buttercream melting tips to protect your cakes. Knowing how to stop buttercream melting is all about preparation, awareness, and a few clever hacks and once you’ve got these down, warm weather won’t ruin your cakes.

Want to take your decorating skills even further? Check out my online cake school for detailed courses on hundreds of cake decorating techniques and designs.

Watch a video of this tutorial on how to stop buttercream melting:

https://youtu.be/_GBlIFRZ0hU

Sprinkles are fun, nostalgic, and instantly make anything feel like a celebration. In this sprinkle cake tutorial I'll show you how to bake sprinkles into your cake and swirl them through your frosting for a colourful effect. Whether you call it a sprinkle cake or a funfetti cake, this one’s guaranteed to get smiles.

This step-by-step guide is perfect for beginner to intermediate bakers, so if you’ve ever wondered how to make a sprinkle cake that actually looks as good as it tastes, keep reading – you’re in exactly the right place.


Baking the Sprinkle Cake Layers

Start with your favourite vanilla cake batter and rainbow sprinkles. I like to use rods or jimmies instead of tiny nonpareils for the biggest bursts of colour. I'm using Supernatural sprinkles with no artificial dyes 🙂 And although I love chocolate cake, using a pale batter will make the sprinkles really pop. Try my favourite buttery 8 inch Very Vanilla Cake or the 6 inch version at the bottom of this sprinkle cake tutorial!

making a sprinkle cake by folding sprinkles into batter, pouring it into pans, and cooling baked cakes on a rack

Once your batter is mixed, it’s time to add the sprinkles. About a quarter cup is perfect for a 6 or 8 inch cake. Fold them in gently with a spatula – don’t stir too hard or you’ll over-mix the batter which can make the cake taste dense.

Now divide your batter evenly between two or three cake pans and bake according to your recipe instructions.

Once the cakes are out of the oven, leave them in the pans for around 10 minutes – just until you can handle them without burning your fingers. Then turn them out and let them cool completely on a wire rack.

If your cake layers have domed while baking, level them first for a neater and more stable cake. Use a serrated knife to slice back and forth in a sawing motion across each cake.


Filling and Stacking the Cake

Time to make your filling and frosting! I’m using my 4 Minute Buttercream – it’s sweet and creamy and it smooths and pipes like a dream. It also takes food colouring really well, so you can tint it whatever shade you like.

To assemble the cake, choose a cake board that’s at least 2 inches wider than your cake. I’m using an 8 inch board for my 6 inch cake. Dab a bit of buttercream onto the middle of the board to hold your cake in place like edible glue. Place your first cake layer on top and spread a layer of buttercream over it using an offset spatula. If you’ve got a turntable, now’s the time to use it – it makes this part so much easier.

Stack the rest of your layers, adding buttercream in between. Then put your cake in the fridge for at least 30 minutes (or 15 minutes in the freezer) so it firms up. This makes frosting much easier and neater.

Assembling a sprinkle cake with buttercream filling between each layer

Crumb Coating the Cake

While your cake is chilling, tint your remaining buttercream any colour you like. I chose a soft yellow to match my nails!

To check if your cake is ready for the crumb coat, take it out of the fridge and hold the cake board at an angle - almost sideways! If the cake stays in position on the cake board, the buttercream has set and it's ready to frost.

Cake chilled and ready on a board with essential tools to frost a sprinkle cake: offset spatula, cake comb, and turntable

Once your cake is cold and firm, you'll need your frosting tools. An offset spatula or angled palette knife is ideal for spreading buttercream onto the cake, preferably a large offset spatula that's about 13 inches long (including the handle). You'll need a cake comb (also called a frosting smoother or icing scraper) and a turntable. You'll find a list of all of my favourite tools here!

What is a crumb coat? It's a base layer of frosting that traps crumbs and gives your cake a smooth outline. Start by spreading buttercream over the top, pushing it over the edges to completely cover the top. Then hold your offset spatula at a 45 degree angle as you spin the cake to flatten the top.

Next, work your way down the sides. I like to spread the frosting up past the top edge of the cake slightly to form a lip – this helps you get sharp corners later on.

Crumb coating a sprinkle cake with a thin layer of buttercream, smoothing with a cake comb

Use a cake comb or frosting scraped to smooth the sides of the cake. It doesn’t have to be perfect because it's about to be covered up with another layer. Use your offset spatula to swipe sideways across the top to level the frosting there. Chill the cake again for 30 minutes so the crumb coat sets.


Decorating with Sprinkle Buttercream

Here’s where the real fun begins. This is the part sometimes called funfetti cake decorating. First, scoop out about half a cup of buttercream and set it aside. You’ll use that later for piping and it needs to stay sprinkle-free or it’ll clog the piping tip.

Now fold sprinkles into the rest of your buttercream, stirring until the they're mixed through evenly. Then spread this sprinkle frosting over the crumb coat – top first, then down the sides. Use a slightly thicker layer than the crumb coat so you’ve got enough to smooth and shape.

Buttercream frosting on a sprinkle cake, with sprinkles mixed in, being smoothed and top edge flattened

Scrape around it with your cake comb again, smoothing it out and filling in any gaps. Your cake comb might drag sprinkled around the cake, leaving a trail behind in the frosting, but as you scrape again and again those trails will disappear.

For the top edge, use your offset spatula to swipe inwards from the outer edge to the middle. Clean your spatula between swipes so that you don't drag smears of buttercream back onto the neat top edge. Chill the cake again for 15 to 30 minutes to set the buttercream before piping onto it.


Piping the Finishing Touches

Now it’s time for the finishing touches. Drop a star shaped tip into a piping bag and spoon in the buttercream you set aside without sprinkles. I'm using a 4B piping tip. Choose the front of your cake – where the sprinkle frosting looks its best – and start piping your border a quarter of the way around the cake to the left or right. This way, the join of the beginning and end of the border will be tucked away at the side.

Hold the piping bag just above the cake and squeeze while pushing away slightly, then pull back and away to form a wave. Repeat all the way around the cake, overlapping the 'tail' of each wave with the next one. The last one won't look quite the same because there's no room for a tail and nothing to overlap it. That's why you started the border in the least visible place on the cake! Use a toothpick to neaten the last wave and gently press the end into the first wave.

Piping a decorative shell border on a sprinkle cake using a 4B piping tip

If you’ve got leftover buttercream, you can pipe a border around the base too. Or store leftover buttercream in a ziplock bag in the freezer for a month!


How to Store Your Sprinkle Cake

Your finished sprinkle cake can be stored in the fridge for two to three days without drying out. The buttercream frosting seal in the moisture and keeps it tasting fresh. But don't serve this cake cold! Take it out of the fridge about 2 hours before serving so the buttercream and cake warm up and soften. That's when they'll taste the best!

A slice of sprinkle cake showing colourful sprinkles inside both the cake layers and frosting

This cake is perfect for birthdays, celebrations, or honestly just a Tuesday that needs a bit of sparkle. I hope this sprinkle cake tutorial has given you all the information you need to create a colourful, joyful sprinkle cake!

Watch a video of this sprinkle cake tutorial:

https://youtu.be/hSzwImGOcmY
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ultimate sprinkle cake recipe

Ultimate Sprinkle Cake


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  • Author: Emily
  • Yield: a three layer 6 inch cake 1x

Description

This is a rich, buttery cake with sprinkles baked into the cake batter and inside the frosting!


Ingredients

Scale

For the cake:

3/4 cup unsalted butter
1 cup white sugar (granulated sugar)
3 eggs
1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
6 tablespoons buttermilk
1 1/2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 3/4 cups plain flour (all-purpose flour)
1/2 teaspoons baking powder
3/4 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 cup rainbow jimmies or sprinkle rods

For the buttercream:

1 1/2 cups unsalted butter
4 1/2 cups powdered sugar (icing sugar)
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilla
1-2 tablespoons whole milk (full fat)
gel food colouring (optional)
1/4 cup rainbow jimmies or sprinkle rods


Instructions

To bake the cake:

  1. 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.
  2. 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.
  3. Add vanilla and mix for about 30 seconds to combine.
  4. Add room temperature buttermilk and oil and mix on lowest speed to incorporate.
  5. In a bowl, sift flour, baking soda, baking powder and salt. Add 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.
  6. Pour sprinkles into the batter and fold in gently with a spatula.
  7. Grease three 6 inch baking pans with non-stick oil spray or butter. Divide batter equally between the cake pans.
  8. Bake at 160ÂşC or 325ÂşF for 30 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted into the middle of the cake comes out clean.
  9. 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:

  1. Mix butter and sugar together at low speed for 4 minutes, scraping down to the bottom of a the mixing bowl a few times, until smooth. Add vanilla and salt and mix to combine.
  2. Add milk 1 tablespoon at a time until the buttercream is the consistency of peanut butter or stiff whipped cream. 
  3. Optionally, tint the buttercream using food colouring.

To put the cake together:

  1. Spread a bit of buttercream onto the middle of a cake board or flat plate or platter. Press the first cake layer onto the buttercream to secure it in place.
  2. Spread about 1/3 cup buttercream to cover the top of the cake layer and then place the next cake layer on top. Spread another 1/3 cup buttercream on top and then add the final cake layer. If you have time, put the cake into the fridge for 30 minutes or the freezer for 15 minutes before frosting it.
  3. Spread half of the remaining buttercream to cover the cake with a crumb coat. Smooth with a cake comb or offset spatula. Let this set in the fridge or freezer for 15-30 minutes.
  4. Set aside about 1/2 a cup of the remaining buttercream and cover with plastic wrap for piping later. Stir sprinkles gently into the rest of the buttercream.
  5. When the crumb coat has set, spread sprinkled buttercream over the cake and scrape around a few times with a cake comb. Spread more buttercream over any indents or shallow areas or trails caused by the sprinkles and scrape around the cake with your cake comb again. Repeat until the frosting is smooth. Flatten the top edge by swiping sideways with an offset spatula or angles palette knife.
  6. Chill the cake for 15-30 minutes in the fridge or freezer before piping a border onto the top. This prevents the weight of the piping causing bulging or drooping frosting.
  7. Serve this cake at room temperature. You can refrigerate it for 2-3 days but take it out of the fridge at least 2 hours before serving.

Travel with a cake can be nerve-wracking. Will it melt? Slide around? Get ruined before it even arrives? Whether you're heading to a party, an event, or any trip with a homemade creation, these cake travel hacks will help you deliver your cake safely and stress-free.

From car trips to international flights, here are 10 clever tips for how to travel with cake so it arrives looking as good as it tastes!

Keep Cakes Cold When Travelling by Car

For how to travel with cake in a car, the most important thing is to keep the cake cold. Buttercream firms up in the fridge, acting like glue to hold the cake together. A cold cake is sturdier and far less likely to shift, smudge, or collapse on the journey.

Chilled cake with firm buttercream after being refrigerated

For long distances or driving in hot weather, keep your cake in the fridge for several hours or overnight before you drive. You can even place it in a cooler to keep it cold on the road. I once drove a cake 150 miles to Yosemite National Park on a scorching 110°F day and thanks to the cooler and a chilled cake, it arrived absolutely perfect!

How to Travel with Cake Using an Upside-Down Tupperware

If you don’t have a cake box, don’t panic. A Tupperware container works surprisingly well! Instead of lowering your cake into the container (and risking squashing a side or poking a finger into it), try this: turn the lid upside down and place your cake on that. Then lower the container down over the top and press it into the lid to seal it.

Cake positioned on an upside-down Tupperware lid with container lowered over it

This trick keeps the cake secure and is super easy to carry. Because it’s airtight, it helps the cake stay fresh and moist during your journey. Check out this tutorial for tips on how to make min cakes.

How to Travel with Cake without It Sliding Around

When a cake is in a box that’s too big for the cake board, it can slide around and bash into the sides. Especially when braking or turning in the car. To stop that from happening, make sure the cake board fits the box snugly.

If your cake is on a smaller board, you can place it on a larger board and use either a piece of non-slip mat or some tape to hold it in place. That way, it won’t budge, even with sudden movements.

Cake box with a non-slip mat underneath to stop the cake sliding

Cake Box Hack to Fit Tall Cakes

Have a tall cake without enough room in the box? Here's a clever hack! Cut two short diagonal slits into one side of the box lid, then repeat on the opposite side. When you put the lid on the box, push the middle section of the lid down into the box. The slits will allow the sides of the lid to lift up, raising the height just enough to fit your tall cake without squashing it.

Cake box with raised lid using diagonal slits to fit a tall cake

This is perfect for cakes that are just a few inches too tall for the box. The hack will allow you to use the boxes you already have, avoiding having to buy custom packaging.

How to Travel with Cake without a Box: Tray Bake Cakes

If you don’t have cake pans or a cake box, you can still travel with a cake! Just pour your cake batter into a casserole dish or any oven-safe baking dish and bake it right in that instead. It will take a little longer to bake since ceramic heats more slowly than metal.

Once it’s cooled you can decorate it directly in the dish. Spread or pipe frosting on top, add some sprinkles or decorations, and the cake is ready! You can carry it by hand to your destination and serve it straight from the dish!

Tray bake cake made and decorated in a dish for easy transport and serving

How to Travel with Cakes in the Car

When figuring out how to travel with cake in a car, where you place the cake makes a big difference. The boot (or trunk) of the car is usually the safest place because it’s flat and often lined with a non-slip surface. The passenger footwell is another great spot because it's flat and easy to access.

Avoid putting cakes on car seats, which are usually slanted. If you absolutely have to, level the seat with something like a blanket or towel so the cake doesn’t slide off the incline while you drive.

Examples of how to transport a cake in a car using the trunk, footwell, and levelled car seat

Use a Cake Safe for Tiered, Tall or Sculpted Cakes

Travelling with a tall, tiered, or sculpted cake? A Cake Safe is a total game changer. It’s a sturdy box with thick walls, metal rods that lock everything in place, and a central dowel that goes through the cake to hold it steady.

The panels lock together securely so nothing shifts around and you can transport even the most fragile designs without worry. This is one of the best investments if you deliver cakes regularly. Here's my tutorial for this Pokemon Bulbasaur Cake.

Tall cake being packed into a Cake Safe for secure transport in a car

Now let’s talk about flying with cakes! Whether you're packing a cake in your hand luggage or in a suitcase, these next three hacks will help you travel by plane with your cake looking and tasting perfect.

How to Travel with Cake in a Suitcase

For my 10th wedding anniversary I took a chocolate cake on three flights from the US to Peru and it still tasted amazing! Here’s how I did it:

Bake two cake layers and wash the pans you used. Trim the tops flat and cut around the edges so there’s space around them for frosting. I used around cookie cutter an inch smaller than the cake. Stack and fill the cake and then frost it and put it in the freezer for an hour.

Once it’s fully chilled and firm, line one cake pan with cling film and place the cake inside. Wrap the whole cake in cling film and lower another cake pan down over the top. Now the cake is protected and won’t move around! Freeze it until you travel and carry it in a lunchbox or cooler.

Frosted cake wrapped and placed in cake pans for suitcase protection

I packed my cake (within the cake pans) inside a large ziplock bag to prevent condensation. I flex with it in my checked luggage from Austin to Atlanta to Lima to Cusco - no problem!

How to Travel with a Naked Cake

If you want something simpler, stack and fill your cake but skip the outer frosting. Wrap the cake in cling film and place it inside a cake pan (or two, for extra protection). You can pipe decorations later if you bring buttercream in a piping bag.

Freeze the cake before your trip and pack it in a cooler with an ice pack. It will thaw gradually and be ready to decorate or serve when you arrive. This option is great if you’re short on time or packing space but still want a homemade cake at your destination.

Cake wrapped in cling film, frozen and packed in cake pans to travel in a suitcase

Travel with Frozen Cake Layers to Assemble Later

If you’ll have time to assemble the cake after you arrive, travel with the layers only. Wrap and freeze each one and pack them in a cooler in your luggage.

This saves time on your trip compared to baking the cakes layers when you get there. It lets you frost the cake however you like, without worrying about how well the decorations will travel. That’s exactly what I did for the cake I drove to Yosemite. I made the layers in advance, froze them, and then flew to my in-laws' and decorated the cake there before driving to my destination.

Frozen cake layers in a cooler, ready for assembly at destination

Those are my 10 hacks for how to travel with cake, whether by car, by plane, or even in your suitcase! I hope these tricks give you the confidence to take your cakes anywhere without stress or damage.

Which of these cake travel hacks will you try next? Let me know in the comments! And if you want to learn even more cake decorating techniques, check out the online classes and memberships on my cake school. See you there!

You can also watch a video of this tutorial on How to Travel with Cake:

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