A classic robin's egg cake perfect for easter featuring the most moist vanilla cake covered in a perfectly sweet vanilla buttercream.
Ingredients
INGREDIENTS
For the Cake:
1 2/3cupall-purpose flour213g
1cupsugar228g
1/4tspbaking soda2g
1 1/2tspbaking powder6g
1/4tspsalt
3/4cupunsalted butter176g, room temperature
3egg whites
1tbspvanilla extract
1/2cupsour cream133g
1/2cupwhole milk 113g
For the Vanilla Buttercream:
2lbsconfectioners sugar907g
1lbbutter456g, unsalted, room temperature
3tspvanilla
1tbspmilk
1/4tspkosher salt
Blue food coloring
For the Assembly:
½cupcoconut40g, toasted, sweetened
2tspcocoa powdernice quality
4tspvanilla extract
6chocolate eggsmini
Instructions
For the Cake:
Preheat oven to 325 degrees F.
Spread coconut flakes out on a baking sheet. Cook for about 5-10 minutes mixing once in between, they will toast quickly. Set aside to cool.
Increase temp to 340 degrees F. Butter and flour three 6-inch pans. I use cake strips on my pans for more even baking as well.
Sift the dry ingredients (including sugar) together in a large bowl.
Beat the wet ingredients together in a medium bowl.
Add the wet to the dry and mix until just combined.
Divide the mixture evenly into the cake pans.
Bake at for about 25-30 minutes or until the centers are springy to the touch.
For the Vanilla Buttercream:
Beat the butter until light and fluffy. Add the confectioners' sugar, 1 tsp vanilla, 1/4 tsp salt, and milk. Mix.
Add blue food coloring until you get robins egg blue.
Transfer to a piping bag. Snip off the tip.
For the Assembly:
Pipe buttercream between each cake layer.
Pipe an outer layer and smooth out with a bench scraper.
Mix cocoa powder and vanilla or alcohol. Using a paint brush, splatter the cake and chocolate eggs to create a speckled look.
Chill for about 10-15 minutes.
Pipe a ring of buttercream on the cake. Press toasted coconut flakes onto ring. Create a nest shape.
Add eggs to the inside of the nest.
Notes
If you’re not using 6-inch pans, double the recipe for 8-inch pans or triple the recipe for 9-inch pans.
If you see little clumps of butter after you mix the wet ingredients don’t panic, it all works out by the time you mix in the dry ingredients. You can even use melted butter and warm the milk and sour cream up a bit if you like.
You can substitute whole milk yogurt for the sour cream if desired, I do it all the time and can’t really tell the difference.
*I've amended the recipe slightly since making the YouTube video so please regard the blog post as most current. Both versions are delicious though!