This Pink Champagne Cake is the perfect way to celebrate any occasion or holiday! A champagne infused cake with a classic vanilla buttercream.
I wanted to do something special for New Year’s Eve this year, since I often let it pass by without mention.
We’re not big on New Year’s Eve parties, and often spend the evening enjoying a cozy night at home, though we do have our own traditions.
“Dinner” on NYE is a generous spread of various appetizers and goodies that we end up grazing on throughout the night.
There is always champagne or some sparking wine around, and we end up tuning in to some kind of NYE broadcast around midnight. Almost always, it’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve because it’s in Times Square and, to me, that is the epitome of NYE celebrations.
It’s not the same without Dick Clark though. 🙁
It’s always a quiet and enjoyable evening at the Liv for Cake household, and this Pink Champagne Cake is the perfect way to celebrate.
I’d like to tell you that this Pink Champagne Cake went off without a hitch, but I think you know me better than that by now.
This cake, or rather the photo shoot for this cake, was a huge pain in the butt.
Since the cake was pretty and pale, I thought it would look best with a light/white backdrop, which essentially made it impossible to get a good shot (at least with my camera and expertise).
Know what else is not fun?
Trying to light 3 sparklers simultaneously so that they ignite at exactly the same time, placing them quickly onto the cake, and grabbing your camera so you can take some pics.
I could have really used an extra set of hands (or two) or a remote for my camera. Ugh.
Let’s not even talk about how many sparklers I went through (18). That’s one entire package (though it actually felt like more at the time). I bought two packs just in case, and I would have used more, but by the 18th sparkler I was SO over it.
Naturally, of the 40 sparkler pics I took, I ended up using #4 which was the first one after a couple test shots.
True story.
Oh, and the sparkler photo session was briefly interrupted here and there so I could fan the smoke away from the smoke alarm. LOL. You can’t make this stuff up.
Sparkler issues aside, I think this Pink Champagne Cake turned out pretty well and it’s the perfect cake for any celebration!
Other noteworthy tidbits from this shoot:
- I watered down the pink champagne because it was too dark pink in contrast with the cake.
- I removed the champagne glasses from the sparkler photo session for fear that they would ignite (lol).
Knowing my luck, they would have.
Cake Sparkles
The cake sparkles I pressed into the sides and top of the cake, while pretty and sparkly and perfect, do not have the best texture.
You’d think they would dissolve almost instantly as soon as you eat them… but they don’t.
You have to chew them and then eventually just give up and swallow. I’m still glad I used them though, and totally would again for the pretty effect that they gave the cake.
Pink Champagne Cake
This Pink Champagne Cake tastes just like (surprise, surprise) champagne!
So if you don’t like the taste of champagne or sparkling wine, you might not like the flavor of this cake. Though my cake taste testers said it didn’t taste overly champagne-y and they thoroughly enjoyed it.
I went with a pretty pink color for the cake layers, as I wanted something different. You could do a gold (use 2 whole eggs rather than 3 whites, and non-pink champagne) or some other color instead and it would be just as pretty.
Whatever you decide, this cake is sure to be a crowd-pleaser for your celebrations.
Tips for this Pink Champagne Cake:
- Recipe revised Aug 4, 2019 ~ I increased volume to yield thicker layers. The recipe makes enough for three 6″ pans or two 8″ pans. Layers should be close to 2″ tall.
- 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.
- If you don’t like the taste of wine/champagne, you may not like the flavor of this cake (shocker, I know).
- Do not overmix the cake batter once the flour is added as it will result in a fragile and crumbly cake. To prevent this you can add some color gel when you’re mixing the butter & sugar instead.
- Cake sparkles give a perfectly pretty effect, but I would recommend sanding sugar instead for a more palatable texture.
- If you would like to have a gold-toned cake for NYE, use 3 whole large eggs rather than 5 large egg whites, and regular champagne instead of pink. I wouldn’t recommend tinting the batter, but you can try brushing gold luster dust onto the chilled/set frosting or using gold leaf to add accents!
- Learn how to keep your cakes moist by using Simple Syrup.
- Be sure to check my Swiss Meringue Buttercream post for tips and troubleshooting and for how to make your buttercream white.
- To help ensure your cake layers bake up nice and flat, see my Flat Top Cakes post.
Pink Champagne Cake
Ingredients
Pink Champagne 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
- 5 large egg whites room temperature
- 1 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
- 1 cup pink champagne or sparkling wine, room temperature
- Fuschia color gel
Vanilla Buttercream:
- 5 large egg whites
- 1 1/2 cups granulated sugar
- 1 1/2 cups unsalted butter room temperature, cubed
- 1 tsp clear vanilla extract
- Fuschia color gel
Assembly:
- 2 jars of cake sparkles or 1 jar sanding sugar
- Wilton tip 1M
- Wilton tip 12
Instructions
Pink Champagne 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 egg whites one at a time, fully incorporating after each addition. Add vanilla.
- Alternate adding flour mixture and champagne, beginning and ending with flour (3 additions of flour and 2 of champagne). Fully incorporating after each addition.
- Add a small amount of Fuschia color gel using a toothpick. Mix to incorporate but try not to overmix.
- Spread batter evenly into prepared pans. Smooth the tops with a spatula.
- Bake for approx. 35 mins 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.
Vanilla 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 hot and 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 vanilla and continue to whip until smooth.**
Assembly:
- Place one layer of cake on a cake stand or serving plate. Top with approximately 2/3 cup of frosting and spread evenly. Repeat with remaining layers and apply a thin coat of frosting all over the cake. Chill for 20mins.
- Frost and smooth the sides. Chill for 20mins.
- Using a toothpick, add a small amount of Fuschia color gel to the remaining frosting. Stir with a spatula to incorporate, or place back on the stand mixer to mix in the color.
- Gently press cake sparkles or sanding sugar into the sides and top of the cake.***
- Decorate with pink rosettes on top and beads along the bottom if desired.
Notes
** The buttercream may look like it’s curdled at some point. Keep mixing until it is completely smooth.
*** It’s easiest to do this if the cake is on a cake board and you can place it on an upside-down glass or bowl so the edges hang over. Adapted from My Cake School. ~Recipe revised Aug 4, 2019 – I increased volume to yield thicker layers. The recipe makes enough for three 6″ pans or two 8″ pans. Layers should be close to 2″ tall.~
Originally published on Dec 17, 2016
Geetu says
Hi, I am trying to make this cake for a birthday, but am not sure which exact wine I should use. Do you have any suggestions on which is the best for the cake?
Olivia says
Hi Geetu! Any champagne will work. It depends on what is available to you.
Claudia says
My friend raved about a pink champagne cake she had Tacoma Washington, challenge accepted. She said this recipe becomes really close I used a sweet pink champagne and 1 g of sparkling wine flavoring. It was absolutely perfect
Olivia says
Hi Claudia! Happy to hear it was a hit 🙂
Chris says
Would this work as cupcakes?
Olivia says
Hi Chris! Yes, I mention this in the post: “To make cupcakes, all you need to do is reduce the baking time — start checking at 15mins or so.”
Patty says
If you do 1.5 x recipe how many egg whites do you use ?
Olivia says
I would do 7.5 egg whites and just do my best to measure out half an egg white. You can whisk it a bit if that helps.
Andrea Miller says
Hi Liv ! I’m making this cake next weekend into a barbie themed birthday cake for a Bachelorette! My gf wants some sort of strawberry incorporated. What would you recommend!? Thanks in advance. Happy baking !
Olivia says
Hi Andrea! There are lots of options — you can cut up fresh strawberries and use them between the layers, or use a jam or compote. Or flavour the buttercream inside with freeze-dried strawberry powder. Let me know what you try!
Skye says
Hello 🙂 will be trying out this recipe next week for my birthday, would it be okay if i tried the reverse creaming method for this particular recipe? Or just strictly follow recipe as guided.
Olivia says
Hi Skye! For best results follow the recipe as listed. I haven’t made this using reverse creaming and I know you need specific proportions for that to work well.
Susie Rees says
You must be some sort of witch or something. I have never been able to get such a good, strong champagne flavor out of a champagne cake recipe. And the texture is perfect…moist but light and tender! My customer wanted champagne buttercream instead of the vanilla but otherwise, this was the perfect recipe for me. It will be my go to for any orders I get for champagne cake from now on!
That having been said, I was only able to get two six inch by two inch layers out of it which was all I needed. If I need three, I will do 1.5 times the recipe.
Olivia says
Hi Susie! I’m so happy you loved it and found the champagne flavour to come through well.
Laura says
I increased recipe to 18 servings so I could have three 8 inch pans (1x) as per your instructions. It didn’t really make enough batter and when baked the layers were way too thin. Sadly I have to redo it.
Olivia says
Hi Laura! The layers may be slightly thinner in three 8″ pans but should still be about 1.5″ tall.
Jodi says
How long should 3 – 8” layers be cooked?
Olivia says
Hi Jodi! It’s hard to say as every oven bakes differently. Baking time should be somewhat similar though if you 1.5x the recipe.
Elizabeth Merian says
I made this cake recently and used Miquel Pons “Eulalia” Cava. I LOVE the flavor of this cake! I could not imagine what a sparkling wine flavor would be in cake but, let me tell you, it is SO good. It is tangy and yeasty. VERY elegant! I am testing flavors for my daughters wedding cake and I definitely want this to be the flavor (I will test again with a white Champagne for a wedding cake). I intended to sub the SMB with American Buttercream (I was scared of failing at the SMB and wasting expensive ingredients). I made a Champagne American Buttercream from another website that called for some champagne reduction. When making this buttercream I think I added too much reduction which caused the texture of my buttercream to split just a bit. It didn’t look completely terrible but not quite right either so I used that buttercream to fill and crumb coat and then made Liv’s SMB recipe as written to do my final finish. It was a perfect combination (my execution of the SMB was flawless and was my best experience of frosting texture & consistency).
I have made several cakes from this website and it is my go-to site based on the success I have had with the recipes here. Thank you so much for the resource!
Olivia says
Hi Elizabeth! I am so happy you love it. It is such a unique flavour. I am so happy to hear you nailed the SMBC! It’s my favorite buttercream. Good idea to use on to fill and another to frost. Thanks so much for the wonderful feedback. I can’t wait to hear what you try next!
Karla says
How many cups of batter does this recipe make? I want to make this recipe in 8inch pans but knowing how many cups of batter helps me know if I should double the recipe to get the height of cake I want.
Olivia says
Hi Karla! I’ve never measured the batter but the recipe as-is will work for two 8×2″ cake pans.
Julie says
Super tasty recipe! I added sprinkles for a funfetti effect. I did use 2 8-inch pans, though, and the cakes turned out rather thin. I would try 1.5x next time so I could get some cakes tall enough to slice in half for a fun tiered effect.
Olivia says
Hi Julie! So glad you loved it 🙂
Julie kimball says
This is now my favorite cake. Delicious and the frosting is so light. It spreads and pipes well. So glad I tried it.
Olivia says
Hi Julie! Thank you! I’m so happy you love it 🙂
Julie kimball says
Is the frosting recipe enough for crumb layer and frosting and piping? Or should I double?
Olivia says
Hi Julie! The frosting is enough to decorate the cake as shown here. It is crumbed and fully frosted.
lindsay dwarka says
i made this once a few years ago and it was great. i’m planning to make it again but was wondering if i could use carton egg whites (for the cake, not the buttercream)–will the cake texture/volume still be ok? what do you think? thanks!
Olivia says
Hi Lindsay! For the cake that will work totally fine 🙂
lindsay dwarka says
thanks for replying!
Amy says
Would carton egg whites work for the buttercream?
Olivia says
Hi Amy! I don’t recommend carton whites for the buttercream. I talk about why in this post: https://livforcake.com/swiss-meringue-buttercream-recipe/
Leann says
Can this recipe be used in a jelly pan to make petit fours? If so what size pan and cooking time? Thank you
Olivia says
Hi Leann! It should work in any size pan. 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
Cindy says
I’m wondering if I can substitute 1 cup of whole milk for the champagne? I don’t have any champagne on hand and I’m kinda in a pnch to bake right away. Would this work?
Olivia says
Hi Cindy! It would work but it would not be a champagne cake.
Ang says
Hi! I was planning on making this cake for New Year’s Eve, starting with making the cake today and frosting it on the 31st. Do you know if just the cake can freeze or refrigerate well for about 3-4 days?
Olivia says
Hi Ang! Here are my tips for making in advance:
For the Cake: Cool the layers, double wrap in plastic wrap, freeze for up to 3 months. Take out 2-3 hours before assembly.
For the Buttercream: Place in an airtight container and refrigerate for 1 week for freeze for 3 months. Bring to room temperature and rewhip before using.
Finished Cake: The whole frosted cake (without drip) can be frozen as long as it is stored in something airtight.
For shorter storage, the cake will be fine in the fridge for 2-3 days but after that it will start to dry out.
Lindsay W. says
I love this recipe and am making it for my brother’s wedding! But I think my smbc ends up being too runny with some butter flecks still in it. What should I do to correct that? I was worried about over-mixing, but am I not mixing enough?
Olivia says
Hi Lindsay! I’m not sure if you’ve seen my tutorial on SMBC but it has a step by step process as well as tons of troubleshooting tips: https://livforcake.com/swiss-meringue-buttercream-recipe/
Kat says
This is the second time I have made this. We loved it. I have done a very cheap pink champagne and now a medium costing one on a work day so will not tasting it until I get home from work. It is 3 am here and wanted my darling daughter to have her favorite cake this morning. She is an adult.
Thank you so much for this recipe. You have made this family so happy.
Olivia says
Hi Kat! Thanks so much for the wonderful feedback. I’m so glad you all love it 🙂
Carol says
I made a three tiered wedding cake using regular champagne to keep it all white. The cake not only looked beautiful, it was delicious! My daughter said it was by far the most beautiful cake I made by far! Good thing as it was her wedding! Lol
Olivia says
Hi Carol! SO happy to hear that. Thanks for the wonderful feedback!
Sydney H says
I’m making this for my friend’s birthday. Should the champagne be room temperature or flat?
Olivia says
Hi Sydney! It should be room temperature. Mine was not flat when I used it but if it is it should work too.