Kick off apple season with this delicious Caramel Apple Cake! A spice cake made with diced apples, paired with a caramel buttercream, and caramel drizzle.
Know what my favorite thing ever is? Doing things twice. Even better if I’m redoing them because I did something stupid the first time, and that’s exactly what happened with this Caramel Apple Cake.
I had to bake the damn cake layers twice because when I thought they were done, they actually weren’t even close to done, but I took them out anyhow and they completely deflated and caved in. UGH.
I hate wasting things — time, ingredients (aka money), food, etc. So I trimmed the failed cake layers to even them out and stuck them in the freezer to be used for I don’t know what, I don’t know when.
I have issues throwing stuff out until the fridge/freezer situation gets so dire that I go in there to do a massive clean out and throw out anything I deem past its prime. I don’t like to get to that point though.
My second attempt at the cake layers went much better (I did tweak the recipe a tad though too), except that I overbaked them for fear of underbaking (lol).
Overbaked is better though — you can always save a drier cake with some simple syrup, but you can’t serve people raw cake!
I’ve actually had a lot of troubles lately with premature cake removal, so I’ve decided to stop relying on skewers/cake testers to test if the cake layers are done. Often times I’ll poke a skewer in there too early and the cake layer will collapse a bit. It’s soul crushing.
Sometimes the skewer will come out clean, but they aren’t actually done! Now, my first test will be to gently press the tops of the cake layers with my finger. If they spring back, they’re done. If it leaves a bit of an indent, they’re not.
Baking is stressful, guys.
How to make this Apple Cake
Ok, let’s talk about this Caramel Apple Cake because it is the perfect cake for Fall. Especially early Fall, where we are now. It’s the start of apple season!
We’re lucky to have a lot of amazing local apples grown in the BC interior. I haven’t seen a lot of them at the markets yet, but they should be popping up soon.
My very favorite apples are Honeycrisp. They are crisp, juicy, and the perfect mix of sweet/tart. Actually, if I’m being honest here, my absolute fave are Macintosh, but they’re not the best for baking (too soft).
I actually can’t remember what kind of apples I used for this cake. It wasn’t Honeycrisp, because I couldn’t find any, and it wasn’t Granny Smith. Really though, you could use almost any kind of apple you like for this Caramel Apple Cake.
I chose to chop the apples into small chunks to get more of that flavor/texture, but you could also grate them if you like.
The perfect and pretty apples in the pictures are from my friend Sam at My Kitchen Love. She graciously offered to give me the last 3 apples from her apple tree so I would have some rustic apples for my photos.
I’m not kidding when I tell you I had 10 perfectly fine store-bought apples sitting on my counter ready to be used, but instead, I chose to drive 1 hour round trip in the pouring rain on the morning that I was meant to shoot this cake just to get these 3 precious apples.
Totally worth it. By the way, you must check out Sam’s blog, her recipes are both stunning and delicious!
The caramel recipe that I used for this Caramel Apple Cake is my absolute favorite. I have a detailed tutorial on it here. There are easier ways to make a caramel, sure, but this one isn’t that hard and it’s totally worth it for a smooth, silky texture. I used this same recipe in my Turtles Cake. It’s truly delicious!
A simple Swiss meringue buttercream with caramel added into it is the perfect complement to this Caramel Apple Cake. The flavors go so well together.
If you’d like an additional hit of caramel, you can drizzle some onto the buttercream on each layer. You’ll have enough to do that if you like.
I kept the decorating simple — a naked cake with a caramel drip. This is the perfect cake for Fall, and a great way to make use of all of those amazing apples!
Tips for this Apple Cake with Homemade Caramel:
- 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.
- The cooled cake layers can be baked ahead of time, double wrapped in plastic wrap, and frozen for up to 3 months. Take out 2-3 hours before assembly.
- The frosting can be placed in an airtight container and refrigerated for 1 week for frozen for 3 months. Bring to room temp and rewhip before using.
- You can use any apples you like for this cake recipe.
- Be sure to check out my How to Make Caramel post for a detailed tutorial.
- The caramel will keep for a good month or so in the fridge, so you can make this in advance.
- If caramel has thickened too much, microwave in 5-10 second intervals until it’s pourable (but not warm).
- If you like this, check out my other Fall themed recipes: Apple Pie Cake, Pumpkin Spice Latte Cake, Spice Cake, Pumpkin Spice Bundt, Pear & Walnut Cake.
- 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 How to Bake Flat Cake Layers post!
Caramel Apple Cake
Ingredients
Apples:
- 2 cups diced apples heaping, approx. 2 medium apples
- 1 Tbsp light brown sugar
- 1 tsp ground cinnamon
Apple Spice Cake:
- 2 cups all-purpose flour
- 2 tsp baking powder
- 3/4 tsp salt
- 1 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
- 3/4 tsp ground nutmeg
- 1 cup vegetable oil
- 1/2 cup light brown sugar packed
- 1 cup granulated sugar
- 3 large eggs room temperature
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
Caramel:
- 1 cup granulated sugar
- 1/4 cup water
- 150 ml heavy cream room temperature
- 1/2 cup unsalted butter room temperature
Caramel Swiss Meringue Buttercream:
- 3 large egg whites
- 1 cup granulated sugar
- 1 cup unsalted butter room temperature, cubed
- 1/2 cup caramel
Instructions
Apples:
- Toss peeled & diced apples in 1 Tbsp light brown sugar and 1 tsp cinnamon. Set aside.
Apple Spice Cake:
- Preheat oven to 350F. Grease and flour three 6″ cake rounds, line with parchment.
- In a medium bowl, combine flour, baking powder, spices, and salt. Set aside.
- In the bowl of a stand mixer combine vegetable oil and sugars. Beat until well combined (2 mins). Add eggs one at a time, fully incorporating after each addition. Add vanilla.
- Add flour mixture in 3 parts. Fold in apples.
- Spread batter evenly into prepared pans and bake for 45-50 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.
Caramel:
- Place sugar and water into a medium pot, stir to combine, but to not stir from this point forward. Cook over high heat, washing down the sides of the pot with a pastry brush dipped in water as needed to prevent crystals.
- Cook until desired color of caramel is reached (amber) and immediately remove from heat. Very slowly pour in heavy cream while whisking quickly. The mixture will bubble up (a lot) and boil. Add butter, return to heat, and bring back to a boil. Cook for 2 minutes whisking constantly.
- Remove from heat and let cool to room temperature. Transfer to a container and place in fridge to thicken.*
Caramel Swiss Meringue 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 reads 160F on a candy thermometer and is no longer grainy to the touch (approx. 3mins).
- Place bowl on your stand mixer and whip 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 cooled caramel and whip until smooth.***
Assembly:
- Trim cake layers if needed. Place one layer of cake on a cake stand or serving plate. Top with 2/3 cup of frosting, spread evenly. Repeat with remaining layers.
- Frost and smooth the outside with a thin crumb coat. Chill for 20mins.
- Using a small spoon, place dollops of caramel around the top edges of the cooled cake, allowing some to drip down. Fill in the top of the cake with more caramel and spread evenly with an offset spatula.****
Notes
** Ensure there is NO trace of egg yolks in your whites and that your mixer bowl and whisk is completely grease free or your meringue won’t stiffen.
*** The buttercream may look like it’s curdled at some point. Keep mixing until it is completely smooth.
**** If caramel has thickened too much, microwave in 5-10 second intervals until it’s pourable (but not warm).
Originally published on Sep 24, 2017
Bonnie says
I’ve been asked to make my niece’s wedding cake. First question: Do you think that this cake would work well to stack into a tiered cake? 2nd question: My niece wants a Semi-naked cake that resembles a tree (like a birch). I’m trying to decide between the Caramel apple cake and the Caramel Gingerbread cake. Which cake has a darker, more tree-like coloring, or are they about the same color cake once baked?
Olivia says
Hi Bonnie! Stacking should be fine as long as the tiers are properly supported. The gingerbread cake will be a bit darker. It is super delicious!
Keri Hester says
This is a GREAT recipe, but I find it only provides 4 cups of batter. For me, that’s enough for two 6-inch pans??
Olivia says
Hi Keri! This does make a slightly smaller cake than most of my 6″ cakes. Each layer is about 1″ tall or so, a bit more. If you’d like taller layers you can change the Servings to 16 and use those amounts 🙂
Lenice says
Hi Olivia,
Made this cake for an anniversary party this weekend. I doubled it to make a small 2 tiered cake. It’s autumn/fall here in Cape Town South Africa so I wanted a recipe that offered a little comfort. This recipe is a winner. Not too sweet, it has body without being claggy, super moist and very very moreish. Thank you Sooo much for sharing your recipes and making us feel like star baker.
Olivia says
Hi Lenice! Thanks so much for the wonderful feedback! I’m so glad the cake was a hit 🙂
Shay Kay says
We made this for a couples night in and gosh, they were a hit! One couple took some home to share and let’s just say, I heard back that she didn’t share! We used honey crisp apples and made it into cupcakes. We’ll definitely be making again!!!
Olivia says
Hi Shay! Thanks so much, I’m so happy everyone loved it!
Selina says
Hi I had a cake sampling order and I suggested an apple Caramel witch in turn never did before so I used this recipe! It turned out fine the cake seems firm enogh do build on my question would be could I use butter instead of oil to make this in future I feel it would create a flavore that could pair very well with Caramel apple! Any how it was a good taste eather way. Not to sweet witch is awsome ! I’d post a pic but don’t think I’m allowed
Olivia says
Hi Selina! So happy you liked this one. You could use cooled, melted butter if you like but it will result in a denser cake. I would love to see a pic, you can email me at livforcakeblog@gmail.com 🙂
Lauren says
Hi Olivia,
I’m wanting to make a layer cake that’s a combination of rich chocolate cake layers paired with a caramel type cake. It’ll have a caramel buttercream and salted caramel drip. Do you think this apple caramel cake would pair better or your straight caramel cake?
https://livforcake.com/caramel-cake-recipe/
Thank you in advance,
Lauren
Olivia says
Hi Lauren! The cake layers for this one are more spice cake rather than caramel so if you want a caramel flavoured cake I would use my Caramel Cake recipe 🙂
Li says
Planning to make this recipe for my son’s birthday! I don’t think I want to fuss with SMBC, do you think a cream cheese frosting would work with this cake too?
Olivia says
Hi Li! For sure, I think it would be delicious! I have a recipe here you can use: https://livforcake.com/blueberry-banana-cake/
Margaret Deacy says
One warning about making cream cheese buttercream, Li, is that it won’t be as firm so if you layer it. you’ll get some slipping and sliding. That’s what happened to me last weekend so I ended up making it into a “dump cake” – I dumped it into a dish after it fell apart because it still tasted good – lol Everyone LOVED it! I’m going to try it again following the recipe to the letter next time. Another thing I did wrong was doubled the recipe and split it between 4 pans, so it was thicker/heavier, so making cream cheese frosting (for me) was a recipe for disaster.
Dee says
Can you use regular buttercream for this recipe? Are they basically interchangeable in general?
Olivia says
Hi Dee! For sure! For the most part they are interchangeable.
emily says
Hi! i have two questions: 1) How far in advance can you make all of the components and fully assemble the cake? I want to make it on Wednesday and eat it for Thanksgiving dinner. 2) once the cake is assembled should it be stored room temperature, or in the fridge?
Thanks for your help
Olivia says
Hi Emily! A day in advance is totally fine! I would refrigerate it then bring it to room temp (should take 2-3 hours) before serving. You can also make all of the components well 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.
For the Caramel: Cool completely and place in an airtight container with plastic wrap directly on top. Refrigerate for up to a week or freeze up to 3 months.
Heather says
I’ll be making this for the weekend, probably layers on Thursday and frosting on Saturday. Caramel already made, but I wanted to share something with you: a while back I wanted to make Caramel SMB without adding extra sweet so I caramelized the sugar first with water & let it cool to 150 then proceeded like usual. When I started whipping it up it wasn’t getting much volume so I chickened out stopped after adding about 1/2 cup butter (didn’t have enough butter on hand to re-make a whole recipe if it failed). Froze the remains for reasons unknown. Took it out a few weeks later, thawed it, and it was a bizarre mess that had separated, so I removed the butter best I could, whipped the liquid best that it would whip and added overnight room temp butter, including the stuff I scooped off the top after the thing thawed. It came together! I couldn’t believe it. It was stunning. Great caramel flavor without being overly sweet. I’m gonna try the caramelized sugar with French buttercream next. Thanks for all your yummy & beautiful inspiration!
Olivia says
Hi Heather! I’ve had SMBC that has separated on me before after chilling but because it was still slightly cold and not completely room temperature. It’s totally saveable though it just needs to be heated up a bit so the butter can emulsify properly with the meringue. I have a detailed tutorial for it in case you ever run into weird issues with it again! https://livforcake.com/swiss-meringue-buttercream-recipe/ I hope you love the caramel apple cake. It’s so perfect for Fall!
Brooke Matthews says
My layers turned out great! I made 1.5 the recipe for three 8 inch layers and it was the perfect amount.
I was wondering how these will do in the freezer. My fear is that the apples might get mushy. Have you tried freezing these layers?
Thanks, B
Olivia says
Hi Brooke! I have frozen them. The apples get cooked a bit already during the baking process so they are already a bit softer. I didn’t find any noticeable difference 🙂
Jess says
Made this last night – it wad delicious! Everyone raved about it.
Olivia says
Hi Jess! So glad everyone loved it. Thanks for the feedback 🙂
Stef says
Hi,
Can I bake this in a 9×13 pan?
Thanks!
Olivia says
Hi Stef! 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
You can bake it in a 9×13 but the layer will be thinner. I would probably increase the recipe slightly, maybe 1.25x (you can change the Servings to adjust the amounts). Baking time may need to be adjusted.
Stef says
Thank you for the guidelines! Just one more questions: is it ok to freeze this cake or will the apples become mushy?
Olivia says
Hi Stef! It should be fine since they get cooked in the oven anyhow.
Michelle Rodriguez says
I made this into cupcakes and wow they were phenomenal I did everything exactly and was able to get 24 cupcakes with left over batter but it was amazing!! I used apples I got from apple picking, eggs from a farm so I was so excited!!
Olivia says
Hi Michelle! So happy you loved them. Thanks for the tip about the cupcakes!
Christina Goding says
Can I make this in 2 9 inch round pans instead of 3 6 inch pans? I want to try this at my cafe but 6 inches is too little. This looks amazing!!!
Olivia says
Hi Christina! 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
The recipe as-is works for a two-layer 8″ so I would 1.25x the recipe to make sure you have enough. You can adjust the Servings to get the amounts.
Christina M. Goding says
Thank you! I ended up tripling it and making two triple layer 9 inch cakes because I just couldn’t compute the size differences lol. The flavor was AMAZING! However…the cake layers completely fell apart as I was transferring them from the cooling rack to the cake board. They were all decently thick, and I made sure to follow the recipe exactly so I’m unsure what went wrong. I used a regular buttercream and added the caramel in and the buttercream was able to hold the cake together thankfully.
But I burned the caramel so that was an epic fail. I’m going to try it again though, with thicker layers, and hopefully not burn the caramel this time. I’ve never made caramel before so it was something I was not sure about to begin with. I hope next time it stays together and the caramel doesn’t taste burned lol!
Olivia says
So glad you loved the cakes! Strange that they fell apart, but it could have been due to the size/weight of them. I’ve never tripled the recipe myself or make them that large. For the caramel, be sure to read through my detailed tutorial! https://livforcake.com/caramel-sauce-recipe/
Stef says
Hi, can I use butter instead of vegetable oil?
Thank you!
Olivia says
Hi Stef! You can but it would make the cake more dense.
Jes says
Can I substitute applesauce for the apples?
Olivia says
Hi Jes! No, that would change the texture of the cake and likely make it too dense. If you don’t mind experimenting you can try replacing the oil with applesauce.
Denise says
Could you make this recipe in a Bundt tin?
Olivia says
Hi Denise! Yes, that should work fine. You’ll need to increase the baking time.
Jill G. says
I made this cake once and it was really good!
Sidebar: Can I just say that this is my absolute, go-to recipe for caramel sauce? I cannot tell you how many times I’ve paged back to this recipe–just for the caramel sauce! Like today, when I stupidly tried to follow someone else’s recipe for caramel sauce and ended up with a stuck-on-the-pan, crystallized mess! That little voice inside of my head told me to come back here and use this caramel sauce recipe. I ignored it. Wish I hadn’t. Started over with this recipe. Nailed it on the first try! Works. Every. Time. Thank you!
Olivia says
Hi Jill! So happy you love the caramel sauce! I actually have a detailed tutorial in a separate post so you can save that instead if you like 🙂 https://livforcake.com/caramel-sauce-recipe/
Hosanna says
Hello! I’m going to just make this Carmel swiss meringue buttercream for now, but I also want to double it to make a separate batch of cupcakes, along with a two layer chocolate cake. I have never made swiss meringue buttercream before, so I was wondering if you have any tips? thank you!
Also, in step 5 of making the buttercream, do you switch back to the whisk from the paddle attachment? just wondering since it says whip instead of stir! (I’m a starting baker so that may be a dumb concern, sorry!)
Thank you very much, your reply is earnestly awaited, and greatly appreciated!
Olivia says
Hi Hosanna! I have a very detailed tutorial on SMBC here! It has everything you need to make it and troubleshoot it: https://livforcake.com/swiss-meringue-buttercream-recipe/
And no, I keep the paddle once I add the butter. Sorry, I should have said beat! Not a dumb question at all. Let me know how it turns out!
Caryn says
I made this cake last night, and received rave reviews. Everyone loved it, even though my cake wasn’t nearly as pretty as Liv’s. (I need to work a bit on perfecting the drizzle consistency.) But I will definitely be making this again.
Olivia says
Hi Caryn! I’m so happy to hear that! Glad you loved it 🙂