Almond Cream Cake
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Light, moist and velvety, this Almond Cream Cake has a homemade cooked, whipped frosting that pairs perfectly with the almond cake. Decorate the cake simply with sliced almonds.
If you’re looking at this cake and happen to remember the pinkalicious cake we shared, you’ll think that we’re in an almond kind of mood. It’s true. We do love our almonds.
We posted this cake recipe back in 2015, but I wanted to give this cake the credit that it was due and give it a little update for you.
About this Almond Cream Cake Recipe:
- Flavor: This is a white cake with a simple, sweet flavor. It has a slight taste of almond, but you could easily switch that out for vanilla if you’d like. The frosting and the cake are not overly sweet…which makes it dangerous to have around.
- Texture: Box mix cakes tend to be light and airy, but this homemade cake has more of a dense, velvety texture. It’s sturdy, but that doesn’t mean it is dry. It’s moist. And the smooth frosting will melt in your mouth.
Homemade White Cake
First of all, this almond cream cake is a completely homemade white cake. That means from scratch. No boxed mix. I love boxed cake mixes because they turn out perfectly nearly every time. But making a cake from scratch has always been this challenge that I’ve wanted to tackle.
In finding a delicious recipe for white cake (which happens to be my favorite flavor), we had several failures. I wanted a moist cake, but I wanted it to have a light crumb and be thick, but not heavy. We tossed aside several different attempts, but when I saw how this cake baked up? I knew this was it. For a homemade cake, this one beat the rest. Its velvety and moist. Can you see the texture in this photo?
Cake Flour or All-Purpose Flour
The recipe uses cake flour instead of all-purpose flour. All purpose flour has more protein in it (10-12 grams in all-purpose as opposed to 8 grams in cake flour), which forms gluten when you mix it. The less gluten there is, the more tender the cake is.
The starch in the cake flour helps to stabilize the cake. There’s more science behind the reasons you should use cake flour when baking a cake. Although I like learning the science behind baking and sharing it with you, sometimes it is just easier to let the experts explain it.
Whipped Frosting
The second special part of this cake is the frosting. Although we love our buttercream recipe, I was wanting to try something a little different for this cake. I’ve always loved whipped frosting because it is less sweet than many store-bought buttercreams.
I searched for a delicious whipped frosting and came across this recipe that got rave reviews. It’s a cooked flour frosting…something I had never tried before. This frosting takes a bit of time to make, but one spoonful and you may just be hooked.
How to Make Cooked Flour Frosting
When you make the frosting, it is important to follow the directions carefully.
- Cook the milk and flour together over medium heat until the mixture is very thick and resembles mashed potatoes. Don’t undercook this! It took about 10 minutes for me to get my mixture to this texture. Stir constantly while it is cooking so it doesn’t burn on the saucepan.
At this point you’ll probably be questioning how in the world this is going to taste good on your precious cake. Trust me. It will. Here are the steps after the flour & milk mixture is cooked.
- Let the flour and milk mixture cool to room temperature and add the almond flavor. You can speed up the process by placing the pan on ice if you’d like. It cools within minutes if you use this trick. Also, stir the frosting a few times while it is cooling. This will prevent a film from developing over your frosting. Stirring it and even placing plastic wrap right on top of the frosting will help to keep your frosting smooth.
- While this is cooling, take the granulated sugar and put it through your food processor to make the grains of sugar finer. Why do this? In the next step, you’ll cream the butter and sugar together until there is no graininess left. It will take less time if you process the sugar first. Or you can use a superfine sugar.
- Whip the butter and sugar together for about 5 minutes, then add the cooled flour mixture. Beat the mixture with the wire whisk attachment for a good 5 minutes, scraping the sides of the bowl as needed. The mixture will go from having a separated look to coming together into a beautiful whipped cream. Just when you think it isn’t going to work it will start getting fluffy. Go ahead. Sneak a little taste. Just be warned that you may not be able to stop eating it.
We wanted a nice, thick layer of frosting on our almond cream cake. If you’d just like a thin layer of frosting you can halve the frosting recipe.
Decorate a Cake with Almonds
You can leave the almond cream cake a pure, snowy white if you’d like, or press some sliced almonds onto the sides. Arrange a few whole almonds on the top . Make it your own and be proud of it!
I’d say our first try at making cooked frosting was a success. What about you? Have you ever tried homemade whipped frosting or from-scratch cakes? I’d love it if you shared any other hints for homemade cakes or whipped frosting with us!
Recipe Variations
- This cake is excellent with a raspberry sauce filling inside.
- Instead of the cooked flour frosting, try a buttercream frosting or cream cheese frosting.
Next, try our dark chocolate cheesecake, almond raspberry bars, cranberry almond cookies, or almond apple bread pudding.
Almond Cream Cake
Light, moist and velvety, this Almond Cream Cake has a homemade cooked, whipped frosting that pairs perfectly with the almond cake. Top with sliced almonds.
Servings 15 servings
Prep Time 50 minutes
Cook Time 45 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 35 minutes
Ingredients
- 3/4 cup egg whites plus 3 tablespoons*
- 1 cup salted butter room temperature, 8 ounces
- 1 1/2 cups granulated sugar 300 grams
- 3 cups cake flour* (345 grams) spooned & measured carefully
- 1/2 teaspoon salt 3 grams
- 2 teaspoons baking powder 6 grams
- 1 cup milk 2% milkfat, 8 ounces
- 1 teaspoon almond extract 4 grams
Frosting:
- 1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour 83 grams
- 2 cups 2% milk 16 ounces
- 1 1/2 teaspoons almond extract 6 grams
- 2 cups granulated sugar 400 grams
- 2 cups salted butter softened, 1 pound
- Sliced almonds and whole almonds for decorating
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350ºF. Grease and flour 2 8" round cake pans.
- Using a stand mixer, beat the egg whites with the whisk attachment until they are stiff and form peaks. This may take a minute or two. Pour the egg whites into another bowl and place them in the refrigerator until you're ready to add them to the batter. ¾ cup egg whites
- Using the same bowl that you used to beat the egg whites, place the softened butter in and cream for about 2 minutes (using the beater blade attachment) until it is white in appearance. 1 cup salted butter
- Add the sugar to the butter and beat until fluffy (about another 1-2 minutes). 1 ½ cups granulated sugar
- In a small bowl, combine the flour (measured carefully*), salt and baking powder. Set aside. 3 cups cake flour*, ½ teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons baking powder
- In another bowl, combine the milk and almond extract. 1 cup milk, 1 teaspoon almond extract
- Add the dry ingredients to the butter/sugar mixture alternately with the milk.
- Add the stiffly beaten eggs to the cake batter. Fold the egg whites in gently. Do not over mix at this point. If you do, your cake will become more dense.
- Pour the cake batter equally into the prepared cake pans. Bake the cakes for 25-27 minutes or until the top bounces back when you touch it.
- Allow the cakes to cool for 10 minutes, then loosen the edges and remove them from the pans to a wire rack, allowing them to cool completely.
- While the layer cakes are cooling, prepare the frosting. In a saucepan, whisk the flour into the milk over medium-low heat until it thickens. Stir it constantly, lowering the heat to low if needed. The consistency should be very thick, like mashed potatoes. This step took about 12-15 minutes. ½ cup plus 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour, 2 cups 2% milk
- Remove the pan from the heat and set the pan in a bowl of ice for 5-10 minutes to quicken the cooling process. The temperature of the mixture should be at room temperature. Stir in the almond extract. 1 ½ teaspoons almond extract
- If you have a food processor, process the white sugar for a minute or so so that the granules become finer. 2 cups granulated sugar
- While the mixture is cooling, cream together the butter and processed sugar using a stand mixer with the whisk attachment until light and fluffy. Do this for 5 minutes until the sugar is completely creamed and there is no graininess left. 2 cups salted butter
- Add the cooled flour mixture and beat it until it all combines and looks like whipped cream. This will take about another 3-5 minutes of beating. Keep scraping the sides of the bowl while the mixture is beating together so that everything gets well incorporated. Once the mixture has the texture of fluffy whipped cream, you are ready to ice the cake.
- Once the cakes are cool, place one cake on a cake plate. Spread frosting on top of that layer, then place the other cake on top of the frosted cake. Use the remainder of the frosting to frost the top and sides of the cake.
- Decorate the sides and top with sliced and whole almonds, as the picture shows, if desired. Sliced almonds and whole almonds for decorating
Video
Notes
- This is about 6-7 large egg whites. *Some are having problems with the cake being too dense. This can happen when you mistakenly add too much flour. When you measure the flour, spoon it from the flour container gently into the measuring cup. Do NOT pack it down at all. This technique will help you not put too much flour into the cake.
- If you only have unsalted butter you can use it, but add ¼ teaspoon salt.
Nutrition
Calories: 650kcal | Carbohydrates: 70g | Protein: 6g | Fat: 38g | Saturated Fat: 24g | Cholesterol: 102mg | Sodium: 444mg | Potassium: 178mg | Sugar: 49g | Vitamin A: 1215IU | Calcium: 94mg | Iron: 0.5mg
I made this cake for Christmas Eve. I baked the cake layers a day ahead. The first batch of cooked flour and milk didn’t thicken enough-I put them both in the pan at the same time. I tried a second time by heating the milk first, then slowly stirring in the flour. That thickened better, but the most thickening seemed to come from cooking it a long time to cook the liquid off. I used superfine sugar in the icing and it did require several minutes of beating to achieve a smooth texture without graininess. The cake was beautiful and… Read more »
Hello!
This recipe looks awesome!
I have a question though, I’m in the middle of trying to make this cake, and in the step before adding the egg whites, the “cake batter” seems more like a dough. It doesn’t seem to have enough liquid. Is this the desired texture at this step?
Thanks!
Question about the eggs whites… You list 5 egg whites and in parentheses you show 3/4 c plus 3 tablespoons. Doesn’t seem like 5 egg whites it approaching a full cup…..
Thank you so much for sharing this recipe! It looks amazing. Pinned it and trying it for a wedding cake, covered in Marzipan. All of your cakes seem heavenly!
Hi I am going to make this cake right now to try it out and see if its as perfect as it looks =p I have a question though, I don’t have a food processer and I couldn’t find “extra fine” sugar at the store, when I asked for help finding it the woman looked at me like I was insane. So could I just add the sugar when the flour/milk mixture is still warm so it melts and is evenly distributed? or would that mess up the science and come out funky? Thanks for your help!
I just made the frosting for cupcakes. Oh. My. Goodness. I’ve been making buttercreams for ages, but THIS is absolutely amazing! Here’s a link to the picture of the cupcakes. Your frosting is the talk of my workplace. I can’t wait to try the cake, too! https://www.facebook.com/Pintesting/photos/a.270223166435504.1073741825.215509441906877/421039881353831/?type=3&permPage=1
I would put this frosting on every cake I made if I could. You are so right about one taste of it- it’s like HoHo filling!
Handy tip: whip the egg whites first and set aside in a different bowl. No need to wash the mixer bowl, just mix cake and fold in whites when you n eed them!
I can’t wait to try this recipe! All of your cakes look lovely. Thank you for sharing your family recipes!
i plan to make a wedding cake for a dear friends wedding and was wondering if this cake might be a possible 3 tier round wedding cake.. I would need the frosting to look elegant and stay in place or be piped from a pastry bag. Also does this frosting require refrigeration? Thank you in advance for taking the time to respond!! This cake looks absolutely lovely!
I have made this icing in the past for my homemade Red Velvet Cake. I have found that as the flour mixture is cooling, be sure to stir it so a film doesn’t form on top and make the icing have little, nasty bits instead of the smooth , fluffy consistency.
Ive been making this frosting for years now but may I suggest using superfine sure. You can skip the processing step and it comes out perfect!
Your cake looks amaizing! 🙂
I have a question, I’m from Holland and I don’t know which is the difference between cake flour you use for the cake, and white flour you use for the frosting.
I’d like to give a try to this cake, but I don’t want to make a mistake 😉
Thank you!
I hear ya, Shannon. It scared me at first, too, but I made two batches and they both turned out fine! You can do it!
I have used a similar frosting recipe for years. I used it on a red velvet cake. The one I make also has coconut and pecans in it. Mine also used shortening instead of butter. Mercy you can eat it with a spoon it is so good. It is also good on a chocolate or carrot cake.
This really looks good.