A tried-and-true family recipe with classic Ermine Frosting, the original cooked flour buttercream icing, traditional to heirloom Southern Red Velvet cakes.
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We went over to Mama and Daddy’s for supper yesterday and when I walked through to door there sat the layers for a red velvet cake cooling on racks. awwwwwwww yeeeaaahhhhhh…
I’ve eaten a lot of red velvet cake in my day but I have to tell you, this recipe is, hands-down, my favorite. The cake is super moist and, well, velvety. And the icing reminds you of something your grandma would have made.
If you’re looking for a true, authentic, Southern red velvet cake recipe, this cake is what you’re looking for!
A lot of people associate red velvet cake with cream cheese frosting – and since I never met a cream cheese frosting I didn’t like, that’s A-OK with me. But our old fashioned family recipe for red velvet cake uses what some folks call a cooked frosting or boiled icing.
And I love it.
You boil flour, sugar and milk together to make the base, let it cool, then mix it with butter to make a butter cream that will blow your mind!
WHAT IS ERMINE FROSTING?
Also called boiled icing, cooked buttercream, flour frosting and probably a few other names, Ermine Frosting is a buttercream that starts with a simple base made from boiling milk, flour and sugar together to make a thin paste.
Once the boiled mixture is completely cool, it is whipped with room-temperature butter to make a buttercream.
Ermine Frosting is very stable and doesn’t have to be refrigerated (though, you can if you want). It stands up to humidity and fluctuating temperatures really well which is likely why it's so popular in the South.
NOTES ON MAKING RED VELVET CAKE
- Yes, I have heard red food coloring is the devil and anyone feeding it to their kids should be drawn and quartered. If you don't want to use it, you should probably not try to make red velvet cake.
- Cake flour is best for a soft, tender cake but regular AP flour works in a pinch.
- You can make this into 3 8-inch layers BUT you will need to increase the frosting recipe to have enough to ice all three layers.
- Use real, salted butter in this and all my recipes.
TIPS FOR THE BEST ERMINE FROSTING
- Any flour will work with the frosting.
- The cakes and flour mixture for frosting MUST BE COMPLETLEY COOL before making frosting or icing the cakes.
- The butter for the frosting needs to be at room temperature but not too soft. You want to be able to easily put your finger in it, but also still be able to pick it up - when you can do both of those things, it's the perfect temperature.
- For brighter, whiter frosting, use clear vanilla extract.
- I have better results using a hand-held mixer to make the frosting. The giant whisk of the stand-mixer can deposit sizeable air bubbles and the paddle attachment doesn't aerate it enough. If using a stand-mixer, use the whisk attachment then stir with a rubber spatula to smooth out any large air pockets.
- If the frosting seems too thin, the ingredients are too warm. Let it cool more then mix again.
- If the frosting seems curdled, the butter is likely too cool. Just keep mixing and it will eventually smooth out.
Recipe for How to Cook Red Velvet Cake with Ermine Frosting
Mama's Red Velvet Cake with Ermine Frosting
Ingredients
- 1/2 cup butter, at room temperature
- 1 1/2 cups sugar
- 2 eggs
- 2 tablespoons cocoa powder
- 1 1-oz. bottle red food coloring
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 2 1/4 cups cake flour
- 1 cup buttermilk
- 1 1/2 teaspoons baking soda
- 1 tablespoon white vinegar
- 5 tablespoons flour
- 1 cup sugar
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 1 cup milk
- 1 cup butter, at room temperature
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Grease and flour 2 9-inch round cake pans.
- Cream butter and sugar with an electric mixer at medium-high speed until fluffy and smooth (about 4 minutes). Add eggs, one at a time, mixing after each addition. 1/2 C butter, 1.5 C sugar, 2 eggs
- Meanwhile, mix cocoa powder, food coloring, vanilla extract and salt together in a small bowl to make a thin paste; add to butter mixture then mix until well combined. 2 Tbsp cocoa powder, 1 oz food color, 2 tsp vanilla, 1 tsp salt
- Starting and ending with flour, gradually add flour alternately with buttermilk to butter mixture until well combined. 2.25 C cake flour, 1 C buttermilk
- Mix baking soda and vinegar in a small bowl (it will foam - that's OK!) then fold into batter by hand until well combined. 1.5 tsp baking soda, 1 Tbsp vinegar
- Pour batter into prepared pans then bake at 350 degrees for 25 minutes or until cooked through. Cool completely then frost with Ermine Frosting (Cooked Buttercream).
- Store in an air-tight container at room temperature.
- Add flour, sugar and salt to a small saucepan then whisk to break up any lumps. Whisk in milk then heat and stir over medium-high heat until mixture just starts to bubble. 5 Tbsp flour, 1 C sugar, 1/4 tsp salt, 1 C milk
- Reduce heat to medium-low then cook and stir 1-2 minutes or until thickened (about the consistency of pudding). Remove from heat then stir in vanilla. Cool completely, stirring occasionally to prevent a skin from forming on top. 1 tsp vanilla
- Once the cooked flour mixture is COMPLETELY COOL (no warmer than 70 degrees), move on to the next step.
- Whip butter with an electric mixer at medium-high speed until fluffy (about 2-3 minutes). 1 C butter
- Gradually add cooled flour mixture, 2 heaping tablespoons at a time, mixing at medium speed until fully incorporated before adding more.
- Continue mixing until creamy, well combined and spreadable.
Notes
Any questions you may have are likely answered in the post above the recipe.
Thank you! Finally someone blogs about the best frosting for Red Velvet. I do not understand why so many people think Red Velvet goes with cream cheese frosting.
ReplyDeleteWe always made this cooked frosting. We call it Ermine Frosting. Any other is just not true Red Velvet.
I agree! NO cream cheese frosting on red velvet cake or cupcakes!
DeleteWell, well....you learn something new everyday. I've never tried this cooked buttercream frosting. I always thought you put cream cheese frosting on red velvet cakes. Will this recipe be enough to cover the entire cake?
DeleteI have been making Red Velvet cakes for 45 years and this is the first time I have seen the correct recipe for it. The only difference is powdered sugar is used in the icing. The recipe also calls for you to cut each layer with a thread to make 4 layers. We always refrigerated this cake. I have made green and blue velvet cakes also. The icing is awesome on an orange cake.
DeleteYou are absolutely correct! One change I made years ago was the use of Confectioner's Sugar instead of regular, granulated sugar. It mixes in so much more quickly and completely. This frosting is light, fluffy, creamy and is not sickeningly sweet like cream cheese frosting is.
DeleteI have avoided making Red Velvet because as a kid my friends mom who was from England made the best RV cake ever. I've never had any other I liked. The problem was the frosting! I dislike cream cheese frostings on cake. I decided to try my hand and started looking for different kinds of frostings and found this! This is what I've missed since I was a girl. Thank you for the recipe! My husband is about to be a happy camper.
DeleteThis looks absolutely delightful! I'm really excited to try the frosting recipe. This recipe is a keeper for sure!
ReplyDeleteI'm going to try the frosting first on my husband's chocolate birthday cake! yum!
ReplyDeleteI'm going to try the frosting first on my husband's chocolate birthday cake! yum!
ReplyDeleteI think the pictuers look great!! Good enough for me to make this cake this weekend for my husbnds birthday! And I call my youngest Angel Baby too!! :)
ReplyDeleteDo you REALLY?! I've never met anyone else who used that name! Love it!
DeleteOh my Goodness!!!!!! This sounds so yummy! Can't wait to make it and that frosting is so yummy! Thank you for sharing your Mama's recipe.
ReplyDeleteDiane M.
Love your recipes Mandy....but your posts are the best...you have the most fabulous sense of humor....
ReplyDeleteI've made this cake and icing for 60 yrs , Can't imagine putting cream cheese frosting on it. YES you can use regular flour . I use this icing on all my cakes. Oh my goodness so so yummy.
DeleteDelicious. Red Velvet cake is my husband's favorite and this looks better than my recipe. We are having a surprise 65th bday party for him and to check it out I made a sample one for him before I make it for his party. He loved it! He said it was the best I had ever made. So now I have a question. I am making Texas sheet cake for the chocolate lovers and would love to put this on the menu too. Do you think I could make sheet cakes out of this as well? I think it would be fabulous but wanted your opinion. Thanks for all the new ideas. This midwestern cook loves them.
ReplyDeleteYes, totally! Obviously, you'll have to adjust the cooking time but I'm sure you'll figure it out. I almost always make my cakes in 13x9 pans. It's just so much easier to store and transport that way!
DeleteAnd give your husband a BIG FAT KISS for the compliment and tell him Happy Birthday!
DeleteHi Mandy,
DeleteI found your blog and aside from LOVING your recipes your post notes and hints have me absolutely rolling, tears down the cheeks rolling. Most recently I did the stir fry egg roll post...BINGO! Another winner. My daughter will be having her "leaving the 30's behind" birthday in a couple weeks. Red velvet is her most favorite and I just know you've given us a winner....Again!!<3
My husband's favorite cake just got better with your recipe! I'm going to make this for him for Valentine's Day. I'll even try the boiled frosting. I must confess, though, I LOVE cream cheese frosting. Thanks for another great recipe!
ReplyDeleteThis is the recipe that my family has made forever. So many family get-togethers and memories. I always feel bad for the people that think cream cheese frosting is the way to go. Once you try the cooked buttercream you will never go back.
ReplyDeleteHello from Montreal,Canada! Is it necessary to use the whole bottle of food coloring? I was wondering if the batter would still be red if I cut it down to 1-2 Tablespoons?
ReplyDeleteI *think* one ounce is only 2 tablespoons. I could be wrong, but I think that's right. You're certainly welcome to use less - it won't change the flavor!
DeleteThere's always room for Red Velvet Cake. Love it.
ReplyDeleteOH My...I would love to try this recipe! My daughter loves red velvet. We have always used the box mix. I would so love to try homemade. Looks delicious!!
ReplyDeleteFinally, a recipe with the frosting my grandma made for red velvet cake! I always make it this way. I don't know when cream cheese frosting became the go-to.
ReplyDeleteI have always wanted to make a red velvet cake from scratch and icing too.....well, I tried this and it was so easy and delicious!!!!! I can truly say I have not been disappointed with your recipes...thanks for this awesome recipe and the many many others!!!
ReplyDeleteMakes me just want to lick my screen!
ReplyDeleteno cream cheese frosting on my Red Velvet cake. My aunt always made the frosting with all purpose flour and Crisco, not butter. Will have to try your version of the frosting.
ReplyDeleteWe call this frosting Mock whipped Cream. It is good but cream cheese is better. I use 8 oz. of cream cheese and 8 oz. salted butter. Alan Jackson has the best red velvet cake recipe ever!
ReplyDeleteThis looks scrumptious! However, how could I use red beets in place of the food coloring? I cannot and never would use red food coloring as it is formulated from bugs. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteRed beets would change consistency and flavor. Just leave out the red food coloring. But I bet you already knew that answer, didn't you?
DeleteYeahhhhh! My mama made this cake for me every year on my birthday. The icing is the best!!! Thank you for bringing back some great memories =)
ReplyDeleteinstead of the 9 inch pans, would this work in a large bundt cake pan.... ? this looks really good
ReplyDeleteAwesome recipe luks simply delicious will try soon I m big fan of urs I hv tried many of your recipes and came out really well. thanks.
ReplyDeleteHebbars
http://hebbarskitchen.com/
This looks like the cake my mom made me every year for my birthday. I haven't had this cake in 12 years. I will have to check my recipe to see if it is the same recipe.
ReplyDeleteWow am going to make this for Easter yum!!
ReplyDeleteYes, this is the frosting my mama always made, too! I make it exactly by her recipe, but somehow it doesn't taste quite the same. :( I always knew there was a red velvet cake in the making when it was time for homecoming at church. I wasn't the only one - several of the women would sneak their servings and hide them in the church kitchen before the eating started. Wonderful memories....
ReplyDeleteI made this for the first time tonight,followed the recipe closely and..........it was absolutely amazing!!!! Moist,chocolatey loveliness. Thanks for a fab recipe.
ReplyDeleteThere is absolutely NOTHING in the world like red velvet and Ermine frosting. I've only ever had it with cream cheese frosting once, and never again! The cream cheese kills the delicate chocolate flavor. Ick! This is the exact recipe my grandma and my mom have used for many years and now my sons all ask for it for all of their birthdays. In fact, I will be making 100 red velvet cupcakes for my son's graduation party this Saturday along with 100 fresh strawberry shortcake cupcakes. Gonna be a busy girl!
ReplyDeleteHi Mandy! Great name! ;) I just love your blog! I moved to the lowcountry from TN about 5 years ago and just could not jump on the grits wagon. That is until I tried your shrimp and grits! Wowza! So delicious! I have a question about the butter. Say all I have is unsalted and I wanted to be cheapo peapo and not buy any more, how much salt would you recommend adding to the icing to make up for the missing salt in the butter?
ReplyDeleteHi! I'd say 1/8 tsp should do it :)
DeleteCream cheese is good for a lot of things, but it destroys a good Red Velvet Cake.
ReplyDeleteErmine frosting all the way!! There is no other viable RV frosting in the world.
My red velvet cake recipe has this icing and we love it....this recipe was given to me many years ago...and it was an old recipe then...it was called Waldorf Astoria cake
ReplyDeleteI have an old cookbook with the Waldorf recipe. Wondering if it’s the same recipe? I haven’t tried it yet!
DeleteThe icing is amazing! Had to make a double batch to cover the cake properly. Definitely a keeper recipe.
ReplyDeleteJudging from the comments, I must the the only one who screwed this one up. I had this planned for my Thanksgiving dessert (I'm not a pie fan). I made it today, the day before and it was just awful. The actual cake was only very faintly red and it had an artificial taste. The icing was the real loser though. The flour/milk cooled to a gelatinous mess. When I added it to the sugar/butter and vanilla, it mixed but would never break up all the way, leaving small clumps with a gummy mouthfeel. The whole thing together left a really awful aftertaste. Luckily, my local bakery has fantastic cakes because after this disaster, I didn't have the heart to try again with a different recipe. Ug.
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful cake! And I love cooked buttercream frosting. I haven't made it in a while, I need to change that!
ReplyDeleteI happened upon this recipe and love that the icing isnt cream cheese. I always thought the cream cheese icing was just too sweet for this cake. Havent tried it yet but hopefully soon. I will let you know how it turned out. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteOh my gosh! Ive never seen RV Cake without cream cheese icing YUK! Except for my Moms. Similar to your recipe. Its made with canned milk.YUMMYYY! Taste like a heavy whipped cream icing! I guess both our Moms were great cooks. (Mom will be 97 in April) Peepers Mommy near PITTSburgh PA. ❤
ReplyDeleteI almost cried when I made this cake. I finally got it right. This recipe is absolutely perfect. Thank you Mandy!
ReplyDeleteCan I use this recipe for cupcakes?
ReplyDeleteThis is almost the exact recipe my great grandmother and grandmother used for Red Velvet Cake during the Great Depression. That recipe has been passed down through many members of our family. My Mom and I still make it by the recipe from the G.D. The only variation from this recipe is we don't use any eggs in the batter as the soda and vinegar are used to create volume in the layers. We do bake the cake in two or 3 layers and frost with the custard "buttercream" Ermine frosting.
ReplyDeleteYou can also make oatmeal sandwich cookies using this same frosting between two freshly baked oatmeal cookies. My kids and grandkids love them!
No bake icing-easy, yummy, convenient, thank you -Erin
ReplyDeleteNo refrigerate icing-WONDERFUL, easy, convenient, yummy. Thank you -Erin
ReplyDelete