One of my good friends Lauren just celebrated her 30th birthday. Now, Lauren is one of the hardest working women I know. She works an office job and is also a professional photographer (and voted as our city’s best in 2012), so I knew she needed an extra special cake to help celebrate this milestone birthday! After seeing an ombre cake on Pinterest, I knew I wanted to give one whirl. Now, don’t fret if you are thinking “that is way too detailed and complicated for me”. It’s not. It’s actually way easier than you think. Let’s get to the recipe, so I can show you how to make your own ombre cake!
Ombre Cake Recipe
- 3 boxes of French Vanilla cake mix
- 9 eggs
- 3 cups of water
- 1 1/2 cups melted butter
- 1 vanilla bean scrapped
- 3 tsp vanilla
Combine all of the ingredients until the batter is nice and smooth and free of lumps. Grease a 7″ round cake pan and fill it with the white cake batter. Now this is where your gradual coloring comes in. Using Wilton Gel Coloring, add a teeny bit and mix until the batter becomes a light pink. Pour another 7″ round cake pan filled of light pink batter. Bake the two cake pans as recommended on the back of the cake box (mine was for 350°F for 23 minutes).
Now add more pink coloring to your batter and mix until you get a darker pink, pour into a cake pan. For the last cake pan, my batter wouldn’t get any darker so I added a teeeeeny tiny bit of purple food coloring to darken the pink up then poured it into my cake pan. You also will have enough left over batter to make 12 cupcakes to go with your cake!
Once your four cakes have baked, set them aside to cool for 10 minutes, remove from the cake pans and allow to fully cool on a cooling rack. Now it’s time to prep your buttercream.
Ombre Buttercream Icing
- 2 cups room temperature butter
- 3-6 cups of icing sugar (depending how thick you like your icing to be)
- 4 tsp Madagascar vanilla
- 2 tsp Mexican vanilla
- 1 vanilla bean scrapped
- 1 tsp salt
- 2 tsp Wilton butter flavoring
- 1/4-1/2 cup heavy cream
Before we get into the instructions for the buttercream, I cannot stress enough how important it is to taste and go with adding ingredients. Do the wet ingredients one teaspoon at a time, taste and go. Start by whipping the cr*p out of the butter. I mean REALLY whip it… whip it good…This should take at least 5 minutes on a high speed until your butter gets nice and fluffy. Now add in your icing sugar one cup at a time. Continue to whip and add until you get a consistency you like. Add you vanillas, vanilla beans, salt and butter flavouring. Whip again. Slowly add your cream last. If your icing is too runny, add more icing sugar. Too Thick? Add more cream.
Now the fun part, time to build you cake! Make sure to level off all your cakes using a cake leveller (link below) – this ensures that the cake stacks nicely and most of all, looks great after your done.
Next up are your little buttercream roses. Load an icing bag with a Wilton 1M tip (and you’ll need a large coupler for this too – both are linked below) and start to pipe one row of white roses.
Now just like you did with the cake batter, gradually start to dye your icing. Add in a bit of food coloring, mix, pip on a row of roses, add more food coloring, pipe more roses until you are done!
The beautiful part of this cake may just be in the inside, because once you cut into it, lovely ombre layers are revealed. A rich pink down to an ivory white. Overall, the cake is a show stopper!
I hope this recipe shows that an ombre cake is actually pretty easy to make! I hope who ever the recipient of the cake is enjoys it as much as Lauren enjoyed hers!
Carlene
Rita Bridges
Your cake looks scrumptious! I don’t know if I can bake this for sure. I hope it’s ok. If I try? If you don’t mind I’m gonna post it on my Pinterest board. If you do mind please send me a message and I will remove it. Thanks, Rita B.
Hayley
A 7 inch round?? Where do I find a seven inch round?
Could you tell me how I mighht be able to make this cake in 8 inch or even 6 inch rounds??
Much appreciated!
bsinthekitchen
You can use smaller or larger sizes, it will just change the thickness of layers, and you may have to adjust a bit on the cooking time.
Renee
This cake is so beautiful I made it for my birthday. Everything turned out great, but the frosting wouldn’t stick to the cake very well. I did the crumb coat lightly, and followed the directions to a T for the frosting recipe. My family of course all loved it which is the important thing. But I sat there trying to think of what it was that I could have done to make the rosettes stick better….
bsinthekitchen
Make sure you’ve got a good crumb coating and allow the cake to COMPLETELY cool.