Ermine Frosting is an easy and delicious buttercream made with flour, sugar, milk, and butter. It may sound a little strange but, trust me, it’s delicious!
I may never go back to Swiss Meringue Buttercream again.
I can’t believe I’m saying that, but it’s true! And I can’t believe it’s taken me this long to try Ermine buttercream. I don’t know why I thought it would be complicated to get right. It’s the easiest frosting I’ve made aside from American buttercream.
What Is Ermine Frosting?
Ermine Frosting is an old fashioned French-inspired buttercream recipe. It’s also known as flour buttercream, heritage frosting, or boiled milk frosting.
The first step is cooking the flour, sugar, and milk into a thick paste (or roux). The texture is similar to pudding.
Once that’s cooled, you add it to your whipped butter… and that’s it! Super easy and delicious. The frosting is silky smooth and not too sweet.
Ermine buttercream was traditionally the frosting used on a Red Velvet Cake, though cream cheese frosting is more popular with it these days.
How to make Ermine Frosting
Making flour buttercream is very simple. The process is similar to that of German Buttercream, but it requires fewer steps.
STEP #1 – MAKE THE ROUX/Pudding
Place the flour, sugar, and salt into a medium pot. Whisk to combine.
Add milk and vanilla.
Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until the mixture boils. Continue cooking while stirring constantly for 1-2 more minutes until the mixture thickens to a pudding-like consistency.
Step #2 – Cover and Cool
Pour into a bowl and place plastic wrap directly on top of the mixture to prevent a skin from forming. Cool to room temperature.
You can make this a day in advance and refrigerate overnight. Bring to room temperature again before using in the buttercream.
If you’d like to cool it faster you can pour it onto a plate instead and cover it in plastic wrap. Or pop it into the fridge once it’s cooled a bit. But be sure it bring it to room temperature if it gets too cold.
STEP #3 – BEAT BUTTER UNTIL PALE & FLUFFY
Whip it for a good 3+ minutes on high. I use a paddle attachment because I like that mine scrapes the sides of the bowl, but you can use the whisk attachment if you prefer.
STEP #4 – ADD FLOUR MIXTURE
Slowly add the (room temperature) flour mixture, about 1 Tbsp at a time, while the butter is whipping. This is kind of like adding butter to a Swiss meringue buttercream. Incorporate it slowly.
STEP #5 – WHIP UNTIL FLUFFY AND SMOOTH
Once all of the mixture is incorporated, whip the buttercream on high for 2-3 minutes until it is smooth and fluffy. Add any other flavorings.
If you feel like your buttercream is too soft at this point (mine was), pop the whole bowl into the fridge for 20-30mins (or freezer for 10mins) and give it a good rewhip.
It should be perfectly pipeable.
Flavoring Flour Buttercream
You have a few options when it comes to flavoring the buttercream. You can infuse the milk — I talk about this a bit in my Pastry Cream post — or you can add flavor at the end. Here are some options:
Add either to the milk mixture before cooking or to the buttercream at the end:
- 1/4 cup freeze-dried berry powder
- 1/4 cup peanut butter powder
- 2 Tbsp instant espresso powder
- 1/4 cup cocoa powder
Add to the buttercream at the end:
- 6 oz cooled, melted chocolate (will make the buttercream softer)
- 2 Tbsp instant espresso powder dissolved in 1 tsp hot water (cool before adding)
- 1/4 cup caramel or dulce de leche (will make the buttercream softer)
- 1/4 cup lemon curd (will make the buttercream softer)
Another option for lemon or any other citrus is to beat the butter with 1 Tbsp citrus zest before adding the pudding.
Does Ermine Frosting need to be Refrigerated?
Like most buttercreams, Ermine frosting will be fine at room temperature for a day or so; beyond that, it should be refrigerated.
I like to store mine in an airtight container in the fridge, but if I’m freezing it I spread the buttercream on a large sheet of plastic wrap, wrap it up, flatten it, and place it in a freezer bag.
Bring it to room temperature and give it a good rewhip before use. Be sure it’s completely at room temperature (but not too soft) before rewhipping. See troubleshooting section below if you run into issues.
Troubleshooting Ermine Buttercream
Ermine frosting is easy to make, but you can run into issues with it at times. As with all buttercream recipes, it’s important that your ingredients are at room temperature (but not too warm/soft) or this can wreak havoc on your buttercream.
Here are some common problems as well as my tips and suggestions on how to avoid/fix them:
- My frosting is too soft. This happens either if your butter is too soft or the flour mixture was still warm. Pop the whole bowl and whisk into the fridge for 20mins (or freezer for 10mins) and rewhip. Depending on how warm it was, you may need a couple of sessions in the fridge.
- My frosting is curdled. If your butter or flour mixture are too cold, this can cause the buttercream to curdle. If you keep whipping it, it will come together.
- My buttercream still looks curdled. If whipping didn’t get it to come together, you need to warm it up a bit. You can do this by either placing the bowl briefly over a pot with 1-2″ simmering water, or warm the sides of the bowl with a hairdryer. You can also try to microwave 1/4 cup of the buttercream for a few seconds then drizzle it back into the buttercream with the mixer until it comes together.
- It’s too sweet. You can add a bit more salt to help cut the sweetness, or cut back on the sugar next time you make it.
- The buttercream gets hard in the fridge. This is normal. Just like the butter it’s made from, it will firm up to the consistency of butter in the fridge. When you let it come to room temperature it will soften again.
- It tastes too buttery. The buttercream should be light and fluffy, not thick and greasy. If yours tastes like you’re eating a stick of butter, it probably just needs some more whipping.
Ermine Frosting FAQ
- Can I make it in advance? Yes. The frosting can be placed in an airtight container and refrigerated for 1 week or frozen for 3 months. Bring to room temperature and rewhip before using.
- How do I make it more/less sweet? You can reduce or add sugar to the recipe if you’d like to adjust the sweetness. You can also add powdered sugar at the end to add more sweetness or stiffen it up. It will change the texture though.
- How do I flavor it? Refer to the Flavoring Flour Buttercream section above.
- Can I color it? Yes! Just add color like you would to any buttercream recipe. I recommend color gels or powder for best results.
- Can I make it Gluten-free? Yes. Just use your favorite GF flour blend.
Ermine buttercream is perfect for those of you who don’t like the sweetness/gritty texture of American buttercream but want something a little easier than a meringue buttercream.
It is a little softer than meringue buttercreams, but I found it very easy to work with and easy to pipe. You just might need to chill it for a bit if you find it too soft.
The buttercream has a yellow tint to it due to the butter, but you can check out this post on How to Make White Buttercream.
I’m so excited for you guys to try this one. Let me know how you like it!
Looking for more tutorials?
- How to Make Swiss Meringue Buttercream
- How to Make German Buttercream (Custard Buttercream)
- How To Make Ganache
- How to Make Pastry Cream
- How to Bake Flat Cakes
- How to Make White Buttercream
Tips for making this Ermine Frosting
- This recipe makes enough to frost and decorate a two-layer 8″ cake or a three-layer 6″ cake.
- Make sure your flour mixture and butter are both at room temperature before combining.
- The frosting can be placed in an airtight container and refrigerated for 1 week or frozen for 3 months. Bring to room temp and rewhip before using.
- Learn how to keep your cakes moist using Simple Syrup.
- To help ensure your cake layers bake up nice and flat, check out my How to Bake Flat Cake Layers post!
Ermine Frosting (Flour Buttercream)
Ingredients
Ermine Buttercream:
- 1/2 cup all-purpose flour
- 2 cups granulated sugar
- pinch salt
- 2 cups milk
- 2 tsp vanilla extract
- 2 cups unsalted butter room temperature
- other flavoring optional (see Notes)
Instructions
Ermine Buttercream:
- Place sugar, flour, and salt into a medium saucepan. Whisk to combine.
- Add milk and vanilla, stir to combine. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until the mixture boils. Continue cooking while stirring constantly for 1-2 more minutes until the mixture thickens to a pudding-like consistency. Remove from heat.
- Pour into a bowl and place plastic wrap directly on top of to prevent a skin from forming.
- Cool to room temperature.*
- Using a stand mixer or hand mixer, beat the (room temperature) butter on high until pale and fluffy (3 mins).
- Add the (room temperature) pudding mixture 1 Tbsp at a time, incorporating well after each addition. Add other flavoring (optional). Beat for 2-3mins until smooth and fluffy.
- Store in an airtight container in the fridge for 1 week or freeze for up to 3 months. Allow buttercream to come to room temperature and rewhip before use.
Notes
- 1/4 cup freeze-dried berry powder
- 1/4 cup peanut butter powder
- 2 Tbsp instant espresso powder
- 1/4 cup cocoa powder
- 6 oz cooled, melted chocolate (will make the buttercream softer)
- 2 Tbsp instant espresso powder dissolved in 1 tsp hot water (cool before adding)
- 1/4 cup caramel or dulce de leche (will make the buttercream softer)
- 1/4 cup lemon curd (will make the buttercream softer)
Liz says
I made this today and it definitely has a silky smooth texture and it’s not too sweet. I’ll be using this as my go to!
Olivia says
Hi Liz! So happy you liked it. Thanks for the feedback!
Kate says
Hi
Any tips
I have pulled butter icing out of fridge and it looks like it’s curdled when I have whipped it again
Please help
Urgently would be greatly appreciated
Thank you
Olivia says
Hi Kate! I talk about this in the troubleshooting section of the post.
kat down under says
I used one batch of this recipe for naked frosting of a 2 tiered stacked cake with raspberry filling and OMG everyone who attended the event has asked for the icing recipe! You’re amazing, so is this recipe!
Olivia says
Hi Kat! Yay! SO happy to hear everyone loved it 🙂
Krista says
I’d love to try the cake and filling recipe you used. Could you share it?
Kat says
Holy heck I’m throwing out the buttercream recipes now!!
I just made this to go with vanilla sponge and raspberry filling, almost didn’t have enough to cover my cakes because hubby and I kept “tasting” it out of amazement.
Some tweaks- I substituted 50g of shortening for butter because where I live it’s crazy warm outside the fridge. Also, I melted 100g of white chocolate and stirred it into the flour mixture at the very end, this worked perfectly to incorporate the flavour and I got no floppy heavy aftermath from adding heavy chocolate at the end.
Thanks so much for all your game changers 👌
Olivia says
Hi Kat! So glad you love it. Thanks so much for the feedback and tips!
Araby says
THANK YOU for the Zesty butter tip. This is my new favorite recipe ❤️
Olivia says
Hi Araby! So glad you love it. Thank you!
Ali McIntosh says
I’m making my sister a birthday cake and she prefers SMB, but the rest of us hate how buttery it is (and I generally make American, because it’s so quick, but again- too buttery). She’s made me cakes with ermine before, so I decided to go that route, and used this recipe. Easy to follow and it turned out well! I infused the milk with mint leaves (she asked for a mojito cake, so it’s a mint frosting, lime curd between the layers, and I used a lime/mint sugar in the cake itself). I simmered the milk and leaves the night before I made the ermine, and then left some leaves in the milk until I was ready to use it. I think I’ll be making this from now on!
Olivia says
Hi Ali! So happy you loved this one. And thanks for all your tips!
Tammie says
Hi Olivia. Love your name btw. That was my mama’s name 😇 I just read the entire article on this frosting but before I came to your site I read another. I’m a bit confused. In her article she said it was best to use this type of buttercream the day you make it. She also said the longer you wait to use it the harder it becomes to frost and pipe. I was surprised not to see anything of that nature mentioned in your recipe. So one of my questions is… is that information true? My other question has to do with flavoring. I plan to flavor this pineapple. I do have a bag of freeze dried pineapple that I can turn into powder but I’m not sure if that’s going to give me the level of pineapple flavor I’m looking for. I have a recipe for a pineapple curd. It calls for a certain amount of pineapple juice to be reduced. Once that’s done it creates a pretty thick paste like consistency. Do you think it would work if I added some of that reduction to this frosting just in case I need to in order to get that pineapple flavor I’m looking to achieve? Hope to hear back from you soon as I would love to make this as soon as possible. Thanks!
Olivia says
Hi Tammie! I haven’t had issue storing this frosting and using it at a later date. I find pineapple flavouring a bit difficult to get to come through. I would try adding a combination of both. But just add each a little at a time (1 Tbsp or so) and whip it in well. Taste, adn add more as needed. Let me know how it turns out! 🙂
Kay Lee says
THE best. If you notice a lot of kids just don’t like the standard buttercream. Too sweet. My daughter is one of those kids but she is 18 now. I have been trying to find the right recipe for her and when she tasted this her eyes lit up and she dove in for another spoonful. Coming from a kid who wipes frosting off the cupcake and throws it away before eating the cake. I don’t think I will ever make another frosting recipe. Ever. Thank you!
Olivia says
Hi Kay Lee! That is amazing, I am soooo happy you guys both found a frosting you love!
Glin says
Can we keep our desserts at room temperature with this frosting?
Olivia says
Hi Glin! It should be ok at room temp for a day or so (provided it’s not too warm) but otherwise I would refrigerate.
Sarah says
Can I microwave it in small batches to deepen the colour ( like with Swiss buttercream?), or will this ruin it?
Olivia says
Hi Sarah! I can’t say for sure as I’ve never tried that myself. You could definitely give that a try or add a bit of powdered sugar to it as that helps deepen the color too.
Sasha says
Made this vegan (almond milk and dairy free butter) and it came out perfect for piping and delicious! Thank you!
Olivia says
Hi Sasha! Awesome, thanks so much for your vegan tips!
Nk says
Excellent!
The perfect ,not sweet buttercream
Thanks for this adorable recipe
Olivia says
Hi Nk! So glad you like it 🙂
Mia says
Hello can this frosting be made ahead if time and freeze it??
Olivia says
Hi Mia! I talk about this in the FAQ section of the post: Can I make it in advance? Yes. The frosting can be placed in an airtight container and refrigerated for 1 week or frozen for 3 months. Bring to room temperature and rewhip before using.
Adrianne says
Really buttery. I’ve seen similar recipes where you mix the pudding mixture and add the butter gradually to that. Would be much easier to mix butter into the pudding instead of the other way around. And then you can taste as you go and adjust the butter. The other recipe I was toying with was nearly identical but with a stick less of butter. Probably that would have been a better fit. As it was, I ended up adding a bunch of powdered sugar and milk trying to make this not taste like sweetened butter.
Olivia says
Hi Adrianne! Sorry to hear you didn’t love this one. This is not a sweet frosting. If you’re used to something like an American buttercream it will definitely taste more buttery.
Lynn From Longwood Fl says
So happy you resurrected this recipe from my childhood. We called it Mary’s Frosting It holds up beautifully in Florida’s climate.. Will this recipe make enough to generously frost a chiffon cake made in an angelfood tube pan?
Olivia says
Hi Lynn! I haven’t tried that but I think that should be enough. It makes enough to frost a two layer 8″ cake.
Hannah says
I have made this recipe a couple of times and absolutely LOVE it! American buttercreams are too sweet and thick, but this frosting is so creamy and perfect for so many desserts! I always use this recipe when I make my filling for macarons– trust me, it tastes DIVINE!! Thank you for the recipe, Olivia!
Olivia says
Hi Hannah! Thanks so much, I’m so happy you love it 🙂
John says
I love this recipe and have made it made many times. I don’t know how people have such trouble with it. I make it exactly as the recipe calls for and it comes out perfect every time. I’ve even made it a couple of times with high-ratio shortening and the results are perfect. (I use HRS to get a really white frosting). It pipes well, it’s not too sweet, and is silky smooth (if you don’t overwhip it – use a paddle on med-low, not a whisk attachment – reduces air bubbles). It’s perfect.
Tonight I am making it with your chocolate recommendation – the pudding base came out darker than I thought, so I am happy about that. Excellent recipe…thank you for it.
Olivia says
Hi John! Thanks so much for the wonderful feedback. I’m so glad you love the recipe! I hope the chocolate one was just as delicious 🙂
John says
It came out FANTASTIC! I am making it again tonight for a coffee crisp-inspired cake…such a wonderful recipe. thanks again for it!
Olivia says
Yum!! Coffee crisp is one of my favourite chocolate bars. I bet that will be delicious!
Aanchal says
Can this be made using gluteen free flour?
Olivia says
Hi Aanchal! I haven’t tried it myself so I can’t say for sure. Be sure to use a proper AP GF flour blend. If the pudding thickens like in my photos then it should be fine.
Aanchal Gupta says
will try that, and let you know how it turned out.
Kat says
I made it gf and DF, swap for swap and same instructions. Just cooked it longer to get it to thicken, might try subbing flour for arrowroot or corn starch next time. Such a great recipe!🥰
Olivia says
Thank you for the tips, Kat!
Ha Van says
Is there a way to incorporate cream cheese? I find normal cream cheese frosting to be far too sweet.
Olivia says
Hi Ha Van! I haven’t experimented with adding cream cheese yet so I can’t say for sure how it would turn out. You can try doing half butter half cream cheese if you’re up for experimenting 🙂
Pam ADAMS says
Hi, I usually make the boiled milk frosting that I got from my great grandma This is the first time making this recipe. It did cut the steps a little. I ran out of butter I only had a cup so I did 8 ox of cream cheese. And added cocoa at the end of whipping both the boiled part and the whipped part. The result was awesome. .. Making thus great grandma’s way brings me closer to her while I’m in her cookbooks reading her notes… but this was a great change especially adding cream cheese and cocoa
Olivia says
Hi Pam! I am so happy that you loved it. You are so lucky to have your grandmas cookbooks!
Alice says
Hi, I don’t understand why every time I make ermine frosting (no matter the recipe), it always ends up with so many air bubbles and never silky smooth! It’s creamy and delicious and fluffy but the bubbles make it appear grainy even though it’s not when you eat it, which makes it impossible to get a smooth perfect finish on my cakes. It smooths out nicely when I pipe rosettes etc but it’s just so difficult to work with to cover the cake itself.
Olivia says
Hi Alice! Is it possible that it gets overwhipped? I would try mixing on low at the end for a couple mins to help knock the bubbles out.
Tammie says
Hi Alice. I haven’t made this yet but I make SMBC for almost all of my cakes/cupcakes. The one thing I find helpful to rid it of air bubbles is to use the paddle attachment. When I 1st start the buttercream I always start out with the whisk then after adding a few tbsp of butter (in this case, the pudding) I then switch over to the paddle and I whip it on med speed. The 1st few times I made SMBC I used the whisk the entire time and whisked it at the highest speed. When I went to frosting my cake I had SO many air bubbles. After reading another recipe I followed her advice which was to switch out the attachment. That made all the difference. Hope this was helpful. Happy baking…