White Velvet Cake
If you're in search of the perfect homemade white cake recipe, you must try this White Velvet Cake!
It has become our new go-to. This cake is light, velvety soft, flavorful, and super moist.
Table of Contents
What Makes this White Cake Special?
There are lots of reasons to love this homemade white cake recipe!
We've made several "velvet cakes" lately, including our Lemon Velvet Cake, Vanilla Velvet Cake, and Chocolate Velvet recipes- they all have a common "secret ingredient" of softened cream cheese which gives the cakes a soft, velvety texture.
Our Homemade Strawberry Cake ,Almond Cream Cake, and Cream Cheese Pound Cake recipes contain cream cheese in the batter as well. (Make sure to add these to your list for another time!)
We find that the cream cheese in the cake batter results in cake layers that are softer, creamier, and have added richness while still maintaining a fluffy texture.
As an added bonus, the extra acidity from the buttermilk in today's White Velvet Cake recipe softens the strands of gluten, resulting in an even more tender cake.
Since we're making a White Cake recipe today, we used egg whites in order to keep the color nice and light. The egg whites also result in a lighter more delicate crumb.
*Don't miss our full collection of Velvet Cake recipes!
How to Make White Velvet Cake
This white velvet cake is very simple to make, and it yields about 7.5 cups of batter- enough for three fluffy 8 inch cake layers.
You can find the full printable cake recipe further down in this post, but here is a quick rundown of our steps!
- Preheat the oven to 325 degrees F. Grease and flour three 8 inch pans. We like to add a circle of parchment to the bottom of each pan to ensure that nothing sticks!
- Separate Egg Whites Go ahead and separate your eggs and place the six egg whites in a bowl to the side. (You won't be using the yolks.)
- Flour Mixture: In a medium bowl, whisk the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt for 30 seconds and set aside.
- Buttermilk Mixture: In another bowl, add the buttermilk, vegetable oil, and vanilla extract. Set aside.
- Butter & Cream Cheese: In the bowl of your mixer, add the butter and cream cheese and mix at medium speed until smooth.
- Add the Sugar: Gradually add the sugar and mix at medium speed for 2-3 minutes.
- Egg Whites: Mixing on low speed, add the 6 egg whites one at a time (it's fine to estimate), mixing to incorporate after each addition.
- Adding Dry and Wet Ingredients Alternately: With the mixer on low speed, alternately add the flour mixture and the buttermilk mixture, beginning and ending with the flour mixture (We did 3 additions of the dry mixture, 2 additions of wet)
- Fill the Pans: Mix the batter just until well combined- be careful not to over-mix. Divide the batter between the three prepared 8 inch cake pans.
- Time to Bake! Bake at 325 degrees F for 28-30 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean or with just a few crumbs attached. Let cool for 5-10 minutes in the pans on a wire rack before turning out. *Baking times may vary slightly
Whipped Cream Filling
We've been going through a homemade whipped cream filling phase lately- we just love it! So, we whipped up a quick batch of sweetened whipped cream for our White Velvet Cake. It is really simple to make and tastes sooo good.
However, there are many fillings that you could use with this recipe- from fruit fillings to buttercream fillings and more. Everything pairs well with white cake!
If you've never made whipped cream filling before, here is a quick rundown of our steps. It has a bit of added sweetness from the confectioners sugar and a hint of vanilla.
- First, chill the mixing bowl and beaters/ whisk attachment in the freezer for 10 minutes.
- Pour the whipping cream, powdered sugar and vanilla extract into the chilled mixing bowl. Begin mixing on low speed gradually increasing to medium high speed.
- Mix until the cream begins to thicken and stiff peaks form- be careful not to over-mix. At "stiff peak" stage, peaks form and hold their shape when beaters are lifted. This is when it's ready.
Classic Vanilla Buttercream
We kept things very simple for our vanilla frosting. This is our go-to recipe for American Buttercream. It is a simple combination of butter, powdered sugar, milk (or cream), salt, and vanilla.
You can use this Vanilla Buttercream as a filling or frosting, and it pipes great too!
It is a crusting vanilla buttercream recipe. It develops just a very light, thin "crust"- something that you would only notice if you are a fan of the Viva Paper Towel method of smoothing, which allows you to lightly smooth over the frosting once it has set.
We most often use the Hot Knife Method of smoothing buttercream these days, when we need a smooth finish. However, lately we are doing lots of textured techniques instead (like our ridged buttercream cake video). Really, anything goes! Have fun with it.
- In the bowl of your mixer, mix the softened butter until smooth. Blend in the vanilla extract.
- Add half of the powdered sugar and most of the milk. Mix at medium speed until the powdered sugar is incorporated.
- Next, add the remaining powdered sugar and milk and mix at medium speed another 3 to 4 minutes scraping the sides of the bowl occasionally. Then, I slow down the mixer (#2 on the Kitchenaid) and mix for 1 to 2 minutes. This slower mixing will help eliminate air pockets in the buttercream. The texture will become very smooth.
- This vanilla frosting recipe can be doubled or halved.
- If the consistency of your buttercream is too thin, add more sugar. If the consistency is too thick, add a bit more milk!
A Note About the Brand of Confectioners Sugar
**Buttercream should never be grainy. Some brands of confectioners sugar work better for buttercream frosting than others.
The difference can be a matter of the type of anti-caking agent the brand uses, pure cane sugar vs. beet sugar (cane is preferred), and more. We have always had great results when using Dominos and US Sugar (from Costco) brands for our frostings.
Assembling the White Velvet Cake
- Now it's time to put this beautiful white velvet cake cake together! If you are assembling the cake on the same day that the layers were baked, make sure that your cakes have completely cooled before assembling and frosting.
- Place the first cake layer on your cake plate or pedestal. Pipe a dam of buttercream about ¼ -½ inch from the edge of the cake using a disposable piping bag with the tip snipped away (or a ziplock bag with the corner snipped away).
- The purpose of the dam is to prevent the filling from escaping when the layers are stacked.
- Spread the whipped cream within the dam and repeat for the second layer. Then top with the third cake layer. Fill in any gaps between the cake layers with buttercream.
- Next, I like to apply a crumb coat (thin coat) of frosting and chill for 15-20 minutes in the freezer (or longer in the refrigerator) to firm things up. Chilling is an optional step but it makes it easier to apply the final coat of frosting without the layers shifting.
Decorating the White Velvet Cake
- I applied the final coat of frosting and added texture with an offset spatula. I piped a bead border using a round tip 3 to the base of the cake, and then made a simple piped daisy design around the top edge.
Here's the finished cake! Don't you just want to dive in? We hope that you enjoy this popular cake recipe as much as we have.
Make sure to check out our full collection of cake recipes and cake decorating tutorials! You. may even like to create a more rustic, naked cake design. The decorating options are endless.
More Vanilla Cakes
In addition to today's delicious White Velvet Cake, we have several delicious vanilla cakes for you to try! Just a few of our favorites are Vanilla Buttermilk Cake, Homemade White Cake, and Yellow Cake!
Have you made this? We would LOVE for you to leave a ⭐️ rating as well as a comment and photo below! We really appreciate your feedback!
White Velvet Cake
Ingredients
- 8 oz (226g) cream cheese, softened (we used one 8 oz package, full fat.)
- 1 ½ sticks (168g) unsalted butter, softened
- 2 cups (400g) sugar
- 6 egg whites room temperature
- 3 cups (342g) cake flour See notes if substitution is needed.
- 2 teaspoons (8g) baking powder
- ½ teaspoon (3g) baking soda
- ½ teaspoon (3g) salt
- 1 cup (242g) buttermilk (See Notes for substitution)
- ¼ cup (54g) vegetable oil (We use canola oil)
- 2 teaspoons (8g) Clear Vanilla Extract (You can use real vanilla extract if you would rather but the cake will not be quite as light in color)
Whipped Cream Filling
- 1 cup (240g) heavy cream
- ¼ (29g) cup powdered sugar
- 1 (4g) teaspoon vanilla extract
Classic Vanilla Buttercream
- 2 sticks (226g) unsalted butter, softened. slightly softened but cool to the touch and holding it's shape
- 6 cups (690 grams) powdered sugar You can adjust the sugar amount up or down based on your consistency preferences.
- 2 tsp. (8g) vanilla extract (use clear imitation vanilla if you like a whiter frosting)
- ⅓ cup (72g) milk or cream, more if needed
- ½ teaspoon (3g) salt
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 325 degrees F. Grease and flour three 8 inch pans, adding a circle of parchment or wax paper to the bottom of each pan.
- Go ahead and separate your eggs, saving only the 6 egg whites for this recipe. Set them in a bowl to the side.
- In a medium bowl, whisk the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt for 30 seconds and set aside.
- In another bowl, add the buttermilk, vegetable oil, and vanilla extract. Set aside.
- In the bowl of your mixer, add the butter and cream cheese and mix at medium speed until smooth.
- Gradually add the sugar and mix at medium speed for 2-3 minutes.
- Mixing on low speed, add the 6 egg whites one at a time (it's fine to estimate), mixing to incorporate after each addition.
- With the mixer on low speed, alternately add the flour mixture and the milk mixture, beginning and ending with the flour mixture (We did 3 additions of the dry mixture, 2 additions of wet)
- Mix the batter just until well combined- be careful not to over-mix. Divide the batter between the three pans.
- Bake at 325 degrees F for 28-30 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean or with just a few crumbs attached. Let cool for 5-10 minutes in the pans on a wire rack before turning out. *Baking times may vary slightly.
- This recipe makes 7 ½ cups of batter.
- Can be used for cupcakes but they have no dome. Our recipe for Homemade White Cake or Vanilla Cupcakes will bake up slightly fuller (with small dome).
For the Whipped Cream Filling
- Chill the mixing bowl and beaters/ whisk attachment in the freezer for 10 minutes.
- Pour the whipping cream, powdered sugar and vanilla extract into the chilled mixing bowl, begin beating on low speed gradually increasing to medium high speed.
- The cream begins to thicken (approx. 1 ½ minutes) and stiff peaks form- be careful not to overmix. This happens fairly quickly! At "stiff peak" stage, peaks form and hold their shape when beaters are lifted. This is when it's ready.
For the Vanilla Buttercream
- Cream the (slightly softened) butter until smooth. Blend in the vanilla.
- Add half of the powdered sugar and most of the milk. Beat at medium speed until the powdered sugar is incorporated.
- Add remaining powdered sugar and milk and mix at medium speed another 3 to 4 minutes scraping the sides of the bowl occasionally. I slow down the mixer to very slow. (#2 on the Kitchenaid) for 1 to 2 minutes. This will help eliminate air pockets in the buttercream. The texture will become very smooth.
- This recipe can be doubled or halved.
- Yields approximately 4 ½ cups of frosting.
- If your buttercream is too thin, add more sugar. If the consistency is too thick, add a bit more milk.
To Assemble the Cake
- Place the first cake layer on your cake plate or pedestal. Pipe a dam of buttercream about ¼ -½ inch from the edge of the cake using a disposable piping bag with the tip snipped away (or a ziplock bag with the corner snipped away).
- Spread the whipped cream within the dam and repeat for the second layer. Then top with the third cake layer. Fill in any gaps between the cake layers with buttercream.
- Next, I like to apply a crumb coat (thin coat) of frosting and chill for 15-20 minutes in the freezer (or longer in the refrigerator) to firm things up. This makes it easier to apply the final coat of frosting without the layers shifting.
- I applied the final coat of frosting and added texture with an offset spatula. I piped a bead border using a round tip 3 to the base of the cake, and then made a simple piped daisy design around the top edge.
What a great cake thank you so much.
Hi! Can this recipe be doubled?
Made this cake for our son’s 43rd birthday. Everybody loved it - so much so that they took all of the remaining cake home with them and left us with 2 small pieces! I added a 1/8 tsp of Almond flavoring to the frosting - and they said, “It tastes like a Wedding Cake!” This Mom scored BIG with her kids & grandkids! 😂
The cake was good, make no mistake, but believe it or not - it was BETTER on the 3rd day! All joking aside. My suggestion? Make this cake 2 days before you want to serve it. It has to be the cream cheese that does this - I have a Cream Cheese Poundcake recipe that we love - and it does the exact same thing! It gets more moist as it sits. Who knew?! 🤷♀️
I made this cake for a luncheon with friends. It was so moist and delicious. I will use only this recipe for any white cakes I bake in the future. I wish you could have seen the smile come over my friends face the minute they took that first bite. I followed the recipe. The cake did not stick, it did not crack. I did not have to level off the top. All three layers were perfectly even. This cake is going to be at every holiday event I attend. Thank you!
Hi Sheila! Thank you so much for your review, we're so happy to hear that you all loved it! xo
Could this recipe be used in stacking? I want to make a two tiered cake (6” over 8”)for a birthday and this recipe sounds delicious :) thanks!
I made this cake for a my first wedding cake that I sold. everyone was amazed by how good it was. They loved the flavors and how moist it was. I made three 8" layers and used 1 1/2 x the batter to get three 2" thick layers. it came to 777g for each pan. Then I used four 6" pans for the top tier of the cake. but only used 3 of the four cakes. I also put some almond extract in the frosting. it was half and half. Make sure after creaming the sugar and butter and eggs together that you mix by hand the buttermilk and flour. you do not want to over mix it.
the flowers on the cake are made of white chocolate. each petal was hand made and placed to create a flower. each flour had about 14 petals.