Pretty in Peach! This Peach Cake is the perfect way to make the most of stone fruit season. Vanilla cake layers with a homemade peach filling and peach flavored frosting.
Can you believe we’re halfway through July already? I’m actually not complaining, as I am eagerly awaiting the Fall season – aka best season ever.
I’m not a summer kinda girl. It’s my least favorite season, which apparently makes me crazy according to my husband. I just don’t like the heat. Unless I’m on vacation or somewhere tropical, in which case bring on the sun and scorching temps. But when sweating as soon as I get out of the shower… no thank you. I’ll take the cooler temps and rainy days over that any time!
To me, summer isn’t berry season, it’s stone fruit season. We’re lucky enough to live so close to the Okanagan that we can make the most of all the delicious fruits grown there. I actually don’t have a ton of stone fruit recipes, and only one that calls for peaches, which is actually kinda sad because peaches may just be the best stone fruits out there. Note to self to create more stone fruit cakes.
Enough of my rambling, on to this Ombre Peach Cake!
How to make this Peach Cake
I used my favorite vanilla cake recipe for the cake layers here as I wanted the homemade peach filling to stand out. The peach filling is actually very simple to make — 4 simple ingredients, about 20mins, and you’re done.
Chop your peaches and cook half of them with the sugar and lemon juice until soft. Mash them up, add the remaining chopped peaches and the cornstarch and cook for a few more minutes. Simple as that! Cool completely before using on the cake.
The peach filling can be made in advance and stored in the fridge.
Peach Frosting
For the peach frosting I simply added some peach liqueur to it. Ideally though, if you can find some freeze-dried peaches to grind into a powder and add that, I think it would be an amazing flavor addition! I would add about 1/4 cup or so of the powder to the frosting. Note that it will tint the frosting pink though.
How to make an Ombre Cake
This is only the second ombre cake I’ve ever made. The first one I made was earlier in my blogging days, and it didn’t turn out as clean and pretty as I’d hoped. I needed to redeem myself, and what better way than with a pretty peach ombre frosting?
The ombre frosting is actually really easy to do.
How to do an Ombre Frosting
- Once you’ve filled and crumb coated your cake, portion remaining frosting into 4 bowls with one having slightly more frosting (this will be the white frosting and you need a little extra for the top). I should have measured these properly (sorry!) but the good thing about ombre cakes is that they are forgiving, so less or more of one color isn’t a huge problem.
- For the remaining three bowls, add the following amounts of color and mix thoroughly.
- 7 drops of Americolor Peach gel into one
- 3 drops of Americolor Peach gel into one
- 3 drops of Wilton Buttercup Yellow into one
- Starting with the bottom and the darkest peach color, spread roughly onto bottom quarter of cake with a small offset spatula.
- Clean your spatula and do the same with the lighter peach colored frosting and the yellow frosting on the middle sections.
- Clean your spatula add the remaining white buttercream to the upper third and top of the cake.
- Try to ensure all layers have the same amount of thickness. Take a bench scraper or a large offset spatula and smooth the sides and blend colors.
- Use a small offset spatula to create a swirl pattern on the sides and top.
Things like a cake turntable and an icing smoother make it infinitely easier, but you could just as easily do a rustic ombre effect. I actually intended for this cake to have clean, smooth, pristine sides.
It initially did, but I thought it looked a little plain. I didn’t want to mess around with a drippy ganache, plus I’ve done a lot of drippy ganache cakes lately, so I decided to do an easy swirl pattern on the sides using my offset spatula. You can see this technique used here and here as well.
This peach layer cake is packed with flavor, and the homemade peach filling is amazing! You’ll want to be eating it with a spoon. It would make a great topping to some vanilla ice cream, too! I kept the cake simple – classic vanilla – so that the peach flavor would stand out. You can add peach liqueur to the frosting like I did, or simply use vanilla extract if you don’t have any liqueur on hand.
Looking for more summer fruit recipes?
- Pineapple Cake
- Raspberry Mango Cake
- Lime & Coconut Cake
- Strawberry Cheesecake Cookie Cups
- Easy Plum Cake
Tips for making this Ombre Peach Cake
- The recipe as-is will also work in two 8″ pans. For three 8″ pans, 1.5x the recipe.
- To make cupcakes, all you need to do is reduce the baking time — start checking at 15mins or so.
- I used peach liqueur to flavor the frosting but if you have access to freeze-dried peaches that you can grind into a powder, that would be your best bet! Use 1/4 cup of the powder in the frosting. It will tint the frosting though.
- I used Americolor Peach gel and Wilton Buttercup Yellow to color the frosting.
- Be sure to check my Swiss Meringue Buttercream post for tips and troubleshooting.
- Learn how to keep your cakes moist using Simple Syrup.
- To help ensure your cake layers bake up nice and flat, check out my Flat Top Cakes post!
Ombre Peach Cake
Ingredients
Vanilla Cake:
- 2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
- 2 1/4 tsps baking powder
- 3/4 tsp salt
- 3/4 cup unsalted butter room temperature
- 1 1/2 cup granulated sugar
- 3 large eggs room temperature
- 1 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
- 1 cup buttermilk room temperature
Peach Filling:
- 2 cups chopped peaches approximately 2 peaches
- 2 tsp lemon juice
- 2 Tbsp light brown sugar packed
- 1 tsp cornstarch dissolved in 1 tsp cold water
Peach Buttercream:
- 5 large egg whites
- 1 1/4 cups granulated sugar
- 2 cups unsalted butter cubed (room temperature)
- 2 tsp peach liqueur
- Americolor Peach color gel
- Wilton Buttercup Yellow color gel
Instructions
Vanilla Cake:
- Preheat oven to 350F and grease and flour three 6″ cake rounds, line with parchment.
- In a medium bowl, whisk flour, baking powder, and salt. Set aside.
- Using a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat butter until smooth. Add sugar and beat on med-high until pale and fluffy (2-3mins).
- Reduce speed and add eggs one at a time, fully incorporating after each addition. Add vanilla.
- Alternate adding flour mixture and buttermilk, beginning and ending with flour (3 additions of flour and 2 of milk). Fully incorporating after each addition. Do not overmix.
- Spread batter evenly into prepared pans. Smooth the tops with a spatula.
- Bake for approx. 30mins or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out mostly clean.
- Place cakes on wire rack to cool for 10mins then turn out onto wire rack to cool completely.
Peach Filling:
- Place 1 cup of the peaches, sugar, and lemon juice into a medium saucepan. Bring to a boil and simmer for 10 minutes. Mash peaches to break down into a puree. Add remaining 1 cup of peaches and cook for 5 minutes. Add cornstarch slurry and simmer until thick. Cool completely before using on cake.
Peach Buttercream:
- Place egg whites and sugar into the bowl of a stand mixer, whisk until combined.*
- Place bowl over a hot water bath on the stove and whisk constantly until the mixture is no longer grainy to the touch (approx. 3mins).
- Place bowl on your stand mixer and whisk on med-high until the meringue is stiff and cooled (the bowl is no longer warm to the touch (approx. 5-10mins)).
- Switch to paddle attachment. Slowly add cubed butter and mix until smooth. Add peach liqueur and whip until smooth.**
Assembly:
- Place one layer of cake onto a serving plate or cake stand. Top with a thin layer of buttercream and pipe a dam around the outside using a large round tip to hold the filling. Place 1/2 cup peach filling inside the dam and spread evenly. Repeat with next layer. Top with final layer and crumb coat the cake. Chill for 30mins.
- Portion remaining frosting into 4 bowls with one having slightly more than the other 3 (the white frosting).
- Add drops of the color into each bowl and mix thoroughly. – 7 drops of peach into one– 3 drops of peach into one– 3 drops of yellow into one
- Starting with the bottom and the darkest color, spread roughly onto bottom quarter of cake with a small offset spatula.Clean spatula and do the same with the lighter peach colored frosting and the yellow frosting on the middle sections. Clean spatula add the remaining white buttercream to the top of the cake and upper third.
- Try to ensure all layers have the same amount of thickness. Take a bench scraper or a large offset spatula and smooth the sides and blend colors. Use a small offset spatula to create a swirl pattern on the sides and top.
Tsveta says
Absolutely loved this one! I made it for my friends’ wedding, and it was a hit! The Swiss meringue buttercream troubleshooting article was also a life saver during one of the trial cakes! I added a little bit of lavender buds and grated ginger to the peach filling for a zing and substituted the peach liquor for amaretto. Can’t wait to test another one of your recipes! Thanks!!!
Olivia says
Hi Tsveta! Thanks so much, I’m so happy you loved it and found the SMBC tutorial helpful 🙂
Melanie E. says
This cake was delicious and pretty. Used two 8″ pans. Neither cake nor frosting was overly sweet. Used dehydrated peaches instead of liqueur (found at Target) , which tool a while to break down in my food processor but was worth it (user almost entire small sized packet). Peach flavor came through. I think next time I will squeeze in more filling.
Olivia says
Hi Melanie! So happy you loved it. Thanks for your tips!
Krystal says
How do I multiply this recipe for two 10″x3″ round pans? I’ll be cutting them in half and making four layers 🙂
Olivia says
Hi Krystal! Converting pan sizes is always tricky. Here are some sites I use as a guideline:
http://www.joyofbaking.com/PanSizes.html
https://www.cookipedia.co.uk/recipes_wiki/Cake_tin_conversion_charts
Krystal says
Thanks so much! Making it this weekend 🙂
Nicole says
Hi. I’m planning to make this cake for my daughters 1st birthday next week for her smash cake. It’s not peach season unfortunately. Do you think canned peaches will work ok?
Olivia says
Hi Nicole! I think they could work but I would skip simmering the peaches for 10mins as they are already softer. Just cook them until they are mashable 🙂
Dhanisha says
Hi.
I’m planning of making this cake for my sister birthday next week.
Is it possible to use peach juice instead of peach liqueur?
Thanks <3
Olivia says
Hi Dhanisha! For sure, that will work great.
Dhanisha says
Thank you for the reply! <3
Liena says
HEllo!!! do you recommend to use white chocolate ganache for the filling + the peach filling? what do you think??
Thanks!!!!
xx
Liena
Olivia says
Hi Liena! I think that combo would be delicious!
Liena says
Thanks!!! I will try it!! I just made your Lemon Blueberries…so yummi!!
Xx
Autumn says
Hi! I absolutely love peaches so I am very excited to make this cake! However, I’m a teenage baker and am making this for some little kids, so I was wondering what I could sub for the peach liqueur in the frosting? I was thinking maybe peach syrup/juice (the can liquid) or some of the puree. I’ve seen comments about there also not being enough peach flavor, so I’m worried the sub will make that problem worse. It’s also probably worth mentioning that I couldn’t find freeze-dried peaches and am on too much of a budget to order some. Any thoughts?
Olivia says
Hi Autumn! You can totally use the syrup instead, or some of the puree, or jam. Whichever you choose (or a combo of both) add it 1 Tbsp at a time to the buttercream and whip it very well before adding more. You should be safe to add about 1/4 cup (4 Tbsp) to the buttercream. Let me know how it turns out!
Keren says
Do you cut each cake in half and then put the filling in between or you use the cakes whole?
If I want a tall cake should I do the recipe for 2 8 inch pans or 3? Because I’m not sure how tall each pan comes out
Olivia says
Hi Keren! I didn’t cut these layers in half. Each layer should be close to 2″ tall. This recipe is for a 6″ round cake though. If you want to do an 8″ then it will work for two 8″ pans or you have to 1.5x the recipe for three 8″ pans.
Keren says
So if I want 3 layers of 8 inch I basically halve all the amounts and add it. For ex. 2.25 cups flour , another 1.125 is basically x1.5 right? :/ I hope
Math isn’t my strong side
Olivia says
Hi Keren! For ease, just change the Servings to 18 — that will update all of the amounts. If you don’t mind slightly thinner layers, you can change the Servings to 16 instead for easier to work with amounts.
Keren says
Is there a video of how you do the swirl?
Olivia says
Hi Keren! I don’t have a video myself, but here’s the general idea: https://youtu.be/nEKFCtXlOBU?t=158
Keren says
Hi there!
My daughter’s birthday is next Wednesday and I want to make it in advance( just the cake) and freeze it and a day before put it together and coat it. Does it freeze well for a few days?
Olivia says
Hi Keren! Yes, the cake freezes really well! I do that all the time. Just double wrap the cake layers in plastic wrap (once they are cool) and freeze for up to 3 months.
Keren says
Thank you! And how much time does it takes to unfreeze? Just put it on the counter overnight?
Olivia says
Hi Keren! About 2-3 hours I’d say but you can leave them on the counter overnight too 🙂
Keren says
Thank you!! 🙂
Keren says
Hi there!
What if i want to make it smaller? let’s say around 6.24 inch?
how long would i have to bake the cake for? given that i bake it in 2 separate rings?
Olivia says
Hi Keren! I used three 6″ pans for this one.
Shivani Wali says
Hi Olivia,
I don’t have 6inch round cake tins. Can I divide the batter in two 9 inch round tins instead? will the cake come out as less fluffier if I use 9 inch tins.
Best
Shivani
Olivia says
Hi Shivani! The cake layers will be too thin if you use two 9″ pans. I suggest doubling the recipe if you want to do that.
Rachel says
Love love loved this recipe!! I was a little scared of making the frosting, I’d only done American buttercream before, but now I’ll never go back! The frosting was so easy and silky. The cake was moist and delicious. So good!
Olivia says
Hi Rachel! Thanks so much for the feedback and awesome about trying a Swiss meringue buttercream 😀
Shivani says
Hi Olivia,
I would like to try this recipe but unfortunately my family is not too fond of cakes with icing. I however wanted to try this if I have to bake for a party or a potluck.
My question is – if I want to make this as a small cake (just one tier with small batch of filing and butter cream), can I decrease each ingredient quantity by half ( 2 1/4 cups of All Purpose Flour to 1 cups and 2 tablespoon).
Would greatly appreciate your suggestion.
Best!!
Olivia says
Hi Shivani! Yes, you can halve the recipe just fine. Just adjust the Servings in the recipe card and it will update to the new amounts.
Rachel S says
Thanks for the recipe! I made this cake for my wife’s birthday and it came out pretty much brilliantly. I was looking for a light cake that could look like the fancy shop bought and it looked and tasted delicious. This is the second cake I have made and they are absolutely fantastic – thanks for the recipes!
I ended up doubling the peach filling through it took a while to thicken through a mixture of rescinding, adding flour (I didn’t have cornstarch to hand) and stirring.
The icing – I have a question – up until the meringue part it was perfect, smooth marshmellowy type mixture. When I added the butter (as directed very slowly) it made the mixture deflate and looked curdled. When I tasted it, I could taste little lumps of butter but continuing made it worse. I was using a kitchen aid and paddle as directed and the butter was cubed and room temp. Do you any advice as to why that happened? In the end, I started from scratch and just didn’t add in the butter but instead kept it as a marshmellow mixture with a few more eggs and then refrigerated.
Olivia says
Hi Rachel! So happy to hear that, thanks for the great feedback! Curdling is a common stage in the meringue buttercream process! You just need to keep whipping it. Here’s a detailed post with all of my tips and troubleshooting 🙂 https://livforcake.com/swiss-meringue-buttercream-recipe/
Elizabeth Bettis says
Hi Olivia! Made this cake over the weekend. It turned out beautifully! My concern is over the flavoring of the icing. The peach liqueur didn’t really add much and I probably used 4 tsp total. I might try again if I can find freeze dried but wanted to ask your thoughts and see if you eventually tried freeze dried as well. Thanks!
Olivia says
Hi Elizabeth! I wasn’t able to find FD peaches here (FD fruit is harder to find in general here), but I think if you can find that it would have an amazing flavour impact! Or you could try peach flavouring such as this: https://amzn.to/318cCt0
Erin says
This cake is gorgeous! Love the ombre frosting 🙂 It’s very attractive. Wishing I had a big slice of this cake right now…it looks sooooo tasty! Peaches are definitely the best stone fruit there is! I’m originally from South Africa, and we used to get these peaches called King Peaches there that were so big and juicy and sweet, with a very fuzzy coating. I haven’t found any peaches that can compare to this, although I LOVE the fruit from the Okanagan! (I lived in Trail BC in the Kootaneys for a while before moving to Nanaimo, and we used to get lots of fruit from the Okanagan. I’m certainly missing that!)
Olivia says
Hi Erin! They ARE the best, right?! Now you have me wanting to try those King Peaches 😮 The Okanagan fruit here is really the best. I rarely make the drive out there to get some first hand, but am grateful for the stuff that makes its way into the shops and markets here 🙂