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Home › Recipes › Recipe

Updated on December 7, 2025 by Liz Marek · This post may contain affiliate links · 204 Comments

Mirror Cake Glaze Recipe

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A mirror glaze cake is one of those baking moments where science meets literal magic. The first time I poured a traditional mirror glaze over a frozen cake, I swear I stopped breathing for a second. Watching the whole thing turn into a glossy, reflective finish that looked like it came straight from TikTok was so satisfying. And the good news? Even though mirror glaze cakes look complicated, they're actually super doable once you understand the right temperature, the right consistency, and the base of every mirror glaze recipe.

closeup of mirror cake shot from above

I started making mirror glaze cakes long before they blew up on social media, but I'll be honest - the vibrant color options and different looks people make on TikTok and Instagram totally inspired me to play with gel food coloring, cocoa butter variations, and different shade combinations. Whether you're glazing an entremet cake, an eight-inch layer cake, or even a chocolate cake covered in buttercream frosting, the technique is exactly the same: start with a frozen cake, get your glaze to the appropriate temperature, and pour with confidence.

What's In This Blog Post

  • My Inspiration
  • Mirror Glaze Cake Ingredients
  • Tips & Tricks
  • Step-by-Step Mirror Glaze Cake Instructions
  • Final Thoughts
  • Frequently Asked Questions

My Inspiration

My own mirror glaze journey began when I was testing a mousse-covered cake for class and accidentally poured the glaze too warm. The colors combine, the glaze slid right off the sides of the cake, and I ended up with a run-off glaze disaster on my baking sheet. But that failure taught me the biggest difference between a beautiful creation and a sad puddle on parchment paper: temperature. Once I stuck to 90ºF and kept my cake frozen solid, everything changed.

And because I love bright colors, I always experiment with different colors in smaller bowls so I can swirl, drizzle, and layer them over the center of the cake. If you're glazing for the first time, trust me - play with color. A tiny bit of liquid food coloring or a very small amount of gel food coloring makes a huge difference in the final result.

Mirror Glaze Cake Ingredients

  • Granulated sugar - Helps create the shiny reflective finish. Replace with equal parts glucose syrup and sugar if you want a thicker layer of glaze.
  • Sweetened condensed milk - Adds richness and smoothness. Can be replaced with milk chocolate or real chocolate for a different type of glaze.
  • Water - Used to hydrate the gelatin and dissolve the sugar. Cold water works best for blooming gelatin.
  • Gelatin powder - The key ingredient for the outer layer texture. You can use plain gelatin or sheet gelatin.
  • White chocolate - The best results come from high-quality white chocolate. Valrhona is amazing, but any real chocolate works.
  • Gel food coloring - Gives a vibrant color without thinning the glaze. Replace with liquid food coloring sparingly.
  • White food coloring - Helps brighten the whole thing so your glaze color pops.
  • Plastic wrap & airtight container - Important for storing leftover glaze without air bubbles.

Tips & Tricks

Keep your cake frozen. Keep your glaze at 90ºF. And always strain everything to avoid lumps. If you're making this for uploading & non-users on social media, use bright colors and a clean cake board so the whole cake looks flawless. Set your cake on a wire rack over a baking sheet to catch the excess glaze and keep your workspace clean.

And don't rush your pour. Confidence is the secret glazing technique nobody talks about.

Step-by-Step Mirror Glaze Cake Instructions

  1. Heat the sugar mixture
    Add the granulated sugar and the first amount of water to a saucepan. Bring it to a gentle simmer - not a boil - and let it dissolve.
  2. Bloom your gelatin
    Mix the second quantity of cold water and the gelatin powder together and let it absorb for 15 minutes. This step ensures the right consistency.
  3. Prepare your chocolate base
    Combine the white chocolate and sweetened condensed milk in a large bowl.
  4. Add gelatin to the syrup
    Once the sugar mixture is hot (but not boiling), remove from heat and add the bloomed gelatin. Stir until completely dissolved.
  5. Melt everything together
    Pour the hot mixture over the chocolate and condensed milk. Let it sit for 5 minutes so the chocolate can melt, then whisk or use an immersion blender until smooth.
  6. Color your glaze
    Add gel food coloring, white food coloring, or several different colors split into smaller bowls if you want a multi-shade effect.
  7. Strain and cool
    Pass the glaze through a fine strainer to remove air bubbles and lumps. Let it cool to 90 degrees F - this is the most important part.
  8. Glaze your cake
    Place the frozen cake on a circular object or small cake pan turned upside-down on a baking sheet. Pour the glaze over the center of the cake, letting it flow down the sides of the cake until the entire cake is coated.
  9. Finish your edges
    After about 5 minutes, scrape off excess glaze at the bottom with a hot knife or offset spatula.
  10. Serve or store
    Refrigerate until serving. Finished cakes keep their shine for about 24 hours. Store leftover glaze in an airtight container wrapped with plastic wrap touching the surface to prevent a skin from forming.

Final Thoughts

A mirror glaze cake might look like something only professional pastry chefs make, but once you understand the consistency of the glaze and the appropriate temperature, it becomes one of the most fun techniques in baking. You can go minimalist with one glaze color or mix up different colors for a vibrant shade marble effect. Whether you're making this for a special event, your first time experimenting, or just to impress social media, you'll end up with something gorgeous.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much mirror glaze do I need?
This recipe is enough to glaze an eight-inch cake or a small entremet cake with tons of glaze for extra coverage.

Why does my glaze slide off?
Your cake wasn't frozen or your glaze was too warm.

Can I use corn syrup instead of glucose syrup?
Yes - it works great and is the closest substitute.

How do I store leftover glaze?
Pour it into a container, press plastic wrap onto the surface, and refrigerate. Reheat gently to reuse.

Can I glaze a buttercream cake?
Yes, as long as the buttercream frosting is super smooth and the cake is well-chilled.

Want me to turn this into a short-form version, a Pinterest title, or an Instagram caption?

 

Recipe

closeup of mirror cake shot from above

Mirror Cake Glaze Recipe

This mirror glaze cake recipe creates a stunning, glass-smooth finish using white chocolate, gelatin, and condensed milk poured at the perfect temperature over a frozen cake. The result is a vibrant, reflective shine that looks impossibly professional yet is surprisingly easy to master. Perfect for special occasions, viral-worthy bakes, and anyone wanting that dramatic, show-stopping pour.
Print Recipe Rate Recipe
Prep Time: 10 minutes minutes
Cook Time: 10 minutes minutes
Total Time: 50 minutes minutes
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: American
Servings: 4 cups
Calories: 945kcal
Author: Liz Marek

Equipment

  • 1 Fine Sieve
  • 1 Immersion blender
  • 1 Kitchen Scale

Ingredients

  • 2 ounces Cold Water for the gelatin
  • 20 grams Powdered Gelatin
  • 12 ounces White Chocolate high quality for best results such as Valrhona
  • 5 ounces Water
  • 11 ounces Sugar
  • 7 ounces Sweetened Condensed Milk
  • 1 Tablespoon Vanilla
  • 2 drops White Food Coloring
  • 1 Frozen Cake
US Customary - Metric

Instructions

  • Sprinkle the gelatin into the water and mix to combine. Set it aside to bloom for 15 minutes.
  • Combine the water, sugar, and condensed milk in a medium saucepan over medium heat until it begins to gently simmer.
  • When the sugar and water mixture begins to simmer (do not boil), remove from the heat and add the bloomed gelatin. Stir until the gelatin has dissolved.
  • Strain this mixture through a sieve to remove any lumps and return it to the saucepan.
  • Pour the hot liquid on top of the chocolate and let it sit for 5 minutes.
  • Use an immersion blender to stir the glaze until the chocolate has completely melted.
  • Add the gel food coloring and stir until well-mixed. Pass the glaze through a fine sieve to remove any lumps. Leave the glaze to cool to 90ºF.
  • Once the glaze has cooled to 90º F / 32º C, pour it over the frozen cake which is on top of a cup, sitting on a tray or plate with a edge to catch the drips.
  • Leave the glaze to set for 5 minutes before using a hot knife to remove the drips.
  • Enjoy your cake right away or refrigerate until serving. Keep in mind that glaze loses it's shine after 24 hours so if you're making this for a client make sure you pour the same day as delivery. 

Video

Nutrition

Serving: 2ounces | Calories: 945kcal | Carbohydrates: 156g | Protein: 13g | Fat: 32g | Saturated Fat: 19g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 9g | Cholesterol: 35mg | Sodium: 154mg | Potassium: 435mg | Fiber: 0.2g | Sugar: 155g | Vitamin A: 158IU | Vitamin C: 2mg | Calcium: 316mg | Iron: 0.4mg
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

 

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About Liz Marek

Liz Marek is a professional cake artist, sweet and savory recipe developer, and the founder of Sugar Geek Show, where she teaches cooking, baking and cake decorating through detailed tutorials, food science explanations, and kitchen-tested recipes. She has been creating recipes and teaching baking techniques since 2008, helping bakers of all skill levels gain the confidence to make professional-quality desserts at home.

Liz is known for breaking down complex cooking and baking concepts into simple, approachable methods. Her work focuses on helping people understand not just how a recipe works, but why it works. Through Sugar Geek Show, she shares step-by-step recipes, cake decorating tutorials, and practical baking guides designed to make professional techniques accessible to everyone.

Over the years, Liz has taught thousands of students through online tutorials, classes, and educational content focused on real kitchen results. Her recipes are carefully tested and written to help people succeed the first time they make them.

When she’s not developing recipes or teaching baking techniques, Liz also hosts curated travel experiences for women through her travel brand Soul Sisters.

You can find Liz’s latest recipes, baking tutorials, and food science tips at Sugar Geek Show.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Uma Dhamankar says

    July 22, 2019 at 4:51 am

    Hi can I pour this on a cake crumb coated with choc ganache ( not whipped ) and also on a square cake ? Thanks

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      July 22, 2019 at 9:51 am

      You can if the ganache is super cold/frozen

      Reply
  2. Chiné says

    June 16, 2019 at 9:41 am

    Hi.
    Will this work on normal sugar cookies with buttercream base frosting?

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      June 24, 2019 at 8:27 pm

      I don't see why not

      Reply
  3. Tahira Guyon says

    June 10, 2019 at 1:21 pm

    I’m super excited about my birthday coming up June 20. I’m going out of town, hotel & all. Can this glaze travel?

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      June 11, 2019 at 9:20 am

      It will lose it's shine after 24 hours but otherwise, it travels just fine. I would defrost the cake in the fridge before traveling so that it doesn't sweat too much.

      Reply
  4. Amber says

    May 25, 2019 at 3:15 pm

    Sooo disappointed I’ve never followed a recipe more closely in my life ? and my glaze turned into a huge glob it took forever to cool to 90 and it was a glob nearly have to throw the measuring cup I poured it from out

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      May 25, 2019 at 5:04 pm

      Sounds like something went wrong in your making of the glaze, I've made this many times and so have others so I know the recipe is correct. The first step to figuring out what went wrong is to go over every ingredient to see if you measured correctly or if you changed any of the ingredients. Second step is to see if you missed any steps.

      Reply
  5. Jennifer says

    May 11, 2019 at 6:38 pm

    Can you use whipped cream for the mirror glaze

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      May 12, 2019 at 10:35 am

      Sure can! Just make sure it's very frozen before pouring the glaze and make sure your glaze is at 90ª so it's not too thin

      Reply
  6. Bode Procinsky says

    May 07, 2019 at 12:53 pm

    5 stars
    What kind of food colouring should be used??

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      May 07, 2019 at 6:34 pm

      I used americolor food coloring

      Reply
  7. G Parker says

    April 21, 2019 at 1:59 am

    Hi! This is a very good tutorial, thank you! Just a question, you mentioned about using ganache for mirror glazed cakes, does it mean i can use any cake e.g. chocolate cake recipe with buttercream filling as it is and finish it with ganache and freeze it before pouring the mirror glaze, or this only applies to all mousse cakes that's finished with ganache? How about buttercream? Thank you!

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      April 21, 2019 at 9:15 am

      It can be mousse, ganache, buttercream, anything you want as long as it's frozen and smooth before pouring on the mirror glaze

      Reply
  8. Debbi says

    March 30, 2019 at 6:13 pm

    5 stars
    Great info, you are awesome. My plan is to make a rectangle cake look like a lace tablecloth. My question is, after I buttercream the cake, can I put the sugar lace on and mirror glaze over? Or would it be better to mirror glaze the cake then put on the lace?

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      March 31, 2019 at 9:27 pm

      The mirror glaze would just drip all over the lace and be a huge mess if you put it on first but you could put the lace over the mirror glaze after you trimmed the glaze

      Reply
  9. Ashley says

    January 16, 2019 at 1:17 pm

    Hi! You say in the recipe to use a whisk but in the video immersion blender? Will the whisk be alright??

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      January 20, 2019 at 12:18 am

      I whisk to combine then use the immersion blender to make it really smooth

      Reply
  10. Patty says

    January 02, 2019 at 8:27 pm

    Hi there...I made the Mirror Cake Glaze recipe today...I froze the cake as directed...I followed all the instructions , the glazing came out very nice, but when I cut into the cake, it was like cutting into rubber.....could barely cut it with a knife.....I used the exact amt. of gelatin and water...I can't figure out what I did wrong..and I really wanted it to turn out....Hope you can help me!!!

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      January 03, 2019 at 6:40 pm

      The glaze is rubbery, that's just how it is. Next time heat your knife a bit in hot water if you want to cut through it in slices but usually you just eat with a spoon 🙂

      Reply
  11. Diane Wagner says

    January 02, 2019 at 10:57 am

    I would love to try this mirror glaze. I am doing my grandson's 4th birthday cake this weekend. Can I put an edible picture over the glaze? If so, how. I was also thinking that maybe I would put the edible on the buttercream and then pour the glaze around it and down the sides of the cake. Do you have any recommendations?
    Thank you so much!
    Diane

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      January 02, 2019 at 2:10 pm

      After about 24 hours in the fridge the glaze becomes much less sticky and sets up so you could put an image on top no problem.

      Reply
      • Diane Wagner says

        January 06, 2019 at 9:22 am

        5 stars
        Liz, My cake turned out great. I haven't put the image on it yet. I made the cake yesterday and was going to put the image on it just before the party today. The cake has been in the fridge. Well this morning my daughter informs me that the party is postponed due to the stomach flu. Can I freeze the cake until next weekend, without the image. I hate to waste all that hard work.
        Thank you for your help,
        Diane

  12. Novice says

    December 28, 2018 at 4:32 am

    You mention that the mirror glaze will start to lose its shine over time. What would you say the maximum time for storing a mirror glaze cake in the fridge would be, prior to the shine starting to diminish and how fast would it lose its shine??

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      December 28, 2018 at 10:38 am

      24-36 hours

      Reply
  13. Mary Campagna says

    December 27, 2018 at 1:46 pm

    Can I use gelatin sheets instead of the powder? If so, how to convert it from powder to gelatin?? Thanks.

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      December 27, 2018 at 6:03 pm

      1 tablespoon powdered gelatin = 3 sheets leaf gelatin.

      Reply
    • Simona Gronic says

      August 03, 2019 at 6:57 am

      Does this glaze freezes well?
      Can I keep it a few days in the freezer before eating it?
      I will not have enough time to do it right before, but I was thinking to make it a couple days in advance....
      Thank you.

      Reply
      • The Sugar Geek Show says

        August 03, 2019 at 8:35 am

        I wouldn't freeze it after you glaze but you can put it in the fridge after you glaze for a couple of days. It loses it's shine over time though

  14. Frankie says

    December 20, 2018 at 10:18 am

    5 stars
    also, can you use this mirror glaze on donuts, if i put buttercream on it as well?

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      December 21, 2018 at 10:21 am

      Yes and yes

      Reply
  15. Frankie says

    December 20, 2018 at 10:14 am

    5 stars
    So im doing a project on mirror glaze and all of the things you can put it on, but i can't find the date
    may you please help me?

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      December 21, 2018 at 10:22 am

      The date of what?

      Reply
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