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Home › Recipe

Updated: Apr 26, 2023 · Published: Jan 16, 2017 by Elizabeth Marek · This post may contain affiliate links · 133 Comments

Pink Champagne Cake Recipe

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This pink champagne cake is incredibly moist and fluffy thanks to real champagne mixed right into the batter! And just because I like to be extra, I included some sugar bubbles and a gravity-defying champagne bottle! Happy New Year! 

Pink champagne cake is a great cake to use for any celebration. There is just something about those pink layers of cake that scream celebration! I made this pink champagne cake for New Year's Eve but it's really a great flavor of cake for any time. Paired with my easy buttercream frosting with a touch of molasses to warm up the flavor.

champagne cake with gravity defying bottle

Tools & Supplies

Just in case you want to be extra like me, here is a list of all the tools and materials I used to make my gravity defying champagne cake. 

  • Gold Drip
  • Sphere Molds
  • ⅛" Armature Wire
  • Acrylic Cake Riser
  • Ready To Melt Isomalt
  • ¼" Wooden Dowel
  • Milkshake Straw
  • Aluminum Foil Tape

Champagne Cake Ingredients

champagne cake ingredients

I've adapted this recipe from my famous pink velvet cake but reduced the sugar a bit and added some wine flavoring and of course, champagne to the recipe. I made my champagne cake pink but you can totally skip it if you want. The color doesn't affect the flavor.

What's The Best Champagne For Champagne Cake?

close up of champagne bottle

Did you know that not all champagnes are the same? They vary a lot from not very sweet (brut nature) to very sweet (demi sec). For this champagne cake, anything in the middle of the road is going to work for the recipe. Look for the word "brut" on the bottle. If you use sweeter a champagne like demi-sec, reduce the sugar in the recipe by 1 Tablespoon to account for that added sweetness. 

champagne glasses filled with sugar

What does pink champagne cake taste like?

Well, funny you should ask. Pink champagne cake tastes like... Champagne! While to many it doesn't taste exactly like picking up and drinking a glass of fancy champagne, it does have a distinct taste that has notes of sweet vanilla flavor with a bit of tangy-ness mixed in.

What filling should I use with a pink champagne cake?

Pink champagne cake is pretty versatile as far as fillings go but it does traditionally pair best with fruit fillings like strawberry buttercream and a light buttercream like my brown sugar buttercream frosting. It also pairs well with white chocolate buttercream. 

closeup of champagne cake on a white plate

Does a pink champagne cake have alcohol in it?

Without getting into the science of it all, the answer is yes. When you are baking 6" or 8" layers, the cake will retain about 10% of the alcohol content. 10" cakes or larger the alcohol will bake out. If you are concerned about having any alcohol remain in your cake, you can use champagne flavoring instead of real champagne. I use Lorann Oils Sparkling Wine Flavoring.sparkling wine flavoring

Pink Champagne Cake Step-By-Step

Step 1 - Make the cakes. Preheat the oven to 335ºF and prepare three 6"x2" cake pans with cake goop or any kind of pan release that you like. 

Step 2 - Use a scale to weigh your ingredients (including liquids) unless otherwise instructed (Tablespoons, teaspoons, pinch etc). Metric measurements are available in the recipe card. Scaled ingredients are much more accurate than using cups and help ensure the success of your recipe. 

Step 3 - Combine the flour, sugar, baking powder, baking soda, and salt in the bowl of a stand mixer with the paddle attachment. Mix 10 seconds to combine. 

flour, sugar and salt in the bowl of your stand mixer

Step 4 - Combine the milk and the oil together and set aside. 

Step 5 - Combine the egg whites, wine flavoring, champagne, and vanilla together, whisk to break up the eggs, and set aside. Add in the pink food coloring now if you want your cake to be pink. Set aside.

Step 6 - Add your softened butter to the dry ingredients and mix on low until the mixture resembles coarse sand (about 30 seconds).

vanilla cake ingredients in a mixing bowl

Step 7 - Add in your milk/oil mixture and let it mix until dry ingredients are moistened and then bump up to med (setting 4 on my Kitchenaid, setting one on the bosch) and let it mix for 2 full minutes to develop the cake's structure. If you don't let your cake mix on this step your cake could collapse

pink champagne cake batter

Step 8 - Scrape your bowl and then reduce speed to low. Add in your egg white mixture in three batches, letting the batter mix for 15 seconds between additions. 

adding egg white mixture to pink champagne cake batter

Step 9 - Divide into your cake pans and bake for 30-40 minutes or until a toothpick comes out of the center cleanly. Some shrinking is normal.

pink champagne cake batter in a cake pan

Step 10 - IMMEDIATELY TAP THE CAKE PAN FIRMLY on the countertop once to release the steam from the cake. This stops the cake from shrinking too much. Place the cakes into the freezer unwrapped for 30 minutes to flash cool them if you want to decorate right away or wrap them in plastic wrap and freeze until you need them. 

pink champagne cake in a cake pan

pink champagne cake on a cooling rack

Brown Sugar Easy Buttercream

Step 1 - Place egg whites and powdered sugar in the bowl of your stand mixer with the whisk attachment attached and whip on high for 5 minutes. 

egg whites and powdered sugar in a mixing bowl

Step 2 - Start adding in your butter (softened) in chunks while it's whipping until all the butter is added. Add in your salt, molasses, and vanilla.

holding clear glass bowl above the rim of a metal bowl mixer

Step 3 - Continue whipping until buttercream does not appear curdled and is fluffy and white. This can take up to 15-20 minutes depending on your mixer. If it tastes buttery, keep mixing.

easy buttercream frosting in a metal mixing bowl

Step 4 - (OPTIONAL) switch to the paddle attachment and mix on low for 10-15 minutes to remove bubbles from the frosting. Frosting will be soft and this is normal.

Pro-Tip: If your buttercream is too cold and is clinging to the bowl, take out one cup and microwave it for 30 seconds. Pour the warm buttercream back into the mixing bowl and it will help the buttercream whip up and become lighter and fluffier. 

How To Decorate A Champagne Cake

Step 1 - Frost your cake. Layer your cakes with about ¼" of buttercream and apply a crumb coat (thin layer of buttercream). Chill your cake for 15 minutes then apply your final coat of buttercream and smooth it with your offset spatula and bench scraper.

frosted champagne cake

If you need more information on how to frost a cake check out my how to make your first cake video. 

how to make a cake tutorial

Step 2 - Make your bubbles. Melt about 6 ounces of simi cakes clear isomalt in a heatproof container. I added in about ¼ teaspoon of gold luster dust to give the isomalt a champagne color. 

Step 3 - Seal your sphere molds together. Pour the melted isomalt into the mold in a thin stream. Then turn the mold over and empty the excess isomalt. Let the mold drain completely then set it aside to cool fully. If you don't have a 3D sphere mold, you can use the half-sphere molds and just stick them together by very gently warming the edge on a hot plate and pushing the two sides together. 

melted isomalt in silicone sphere mold

For the smaller spheres, I just left them solid. You can also hand-roll spheres or use small candies in place of spheres. 

close up of sugar sphere in mold sugar spheres

Cut the nubs off the sphere with a hot knife (heat with a kitchen torch) or just hide the nubs when you place them on to the cake. I also poured some isomalt into a half-sphere mold. 

close up of sugar half sphere

Step 4 - Add your drip. I'm using easy drip but you can also use water ganache and paint it gold. I melted the drip in the microwave for 30 seconds then 15-second increments until it was liquid. Let the drip cool down so that it thickens a bit but is still liquid. You can do a test drip on your chilled cake to make sure it's the right consistency. 

gold drip

Step 5 - Insert a straw into your chilled cake until it rests against the bottom board and cut it off so it's level with the top of the cake. Place a ¼" wooden dowel into the straw and trim it off about 3" from the top of the cake. 

Step 6 - Tape a piece of armature wire to the dowel that is about 8" long using aluminum foil tape. 

dowel inserted into the cake with aluminum foil tape

Step 7 - Add some more drips down the foil until it's covered or you can brush it on with a paintbrush. 

adding a gold drip to the foil structure

Step 8 - Add the empty champagne bottle to the top.

Step 9 - Attach your bubbles to the cake with a little buttercream. Attach bubbles to each other using a little melted isomalt. I used a silicone tool to dab on the isomalt. You only need a tiny amount. 

close up of sugar bubbles on a champagne cake

Is that not the most gorgeous pink champagne cake that you've ever seen! I feel like photos just do not do it justice. I love how the bubbles look and the drip is so cute!

champagne cake on a plate with cake and champagne bottle in the background

Let me know in the comments if you make this cake and don't forget to tag me in your posts! Happy New Year!

Related Recipes

Brown Sugar Swiss Meringue Buttercream

Champagne Bottle Cake Tutorial

White Chocolate Buttercream 

Water Ganache Drip

Cake Batter and Frosting Calculator

Select an option below to calculate how much batter or frosting you need. Adjust the servings slider on the recipe card to change the amounts the recipe makes.

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Cups of Batter Needed

8 cups

Cups of Frosting Needed

5 cups

Note: measurements are estimated based off the vanilla cake recipe using standard US cake pans and sizes. Measurements used are for 2" tall cake pans only. Your results may vary. Do not overfill cake pans above manufacturer's recommended guidelines.


Recipe

close up of pink champagne cake

Pink Champagne Cake

Pink champagne cake with brown sugar easy buttercream, sugar bubbles and a gravity defying champagne bottle!
Print Recipe Pin Recipe Rate Recipe
Prep Time: 15 minutes minutes
Cook Time: 30 minutes minutes
Total Time: 45 minutes minutes
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: American
Servings: 8 cups
Calories: 1817kcal
Author: Elizabeth Marek

Equipment

  • Sphere Molds
  • ⅛" Armature Wire
  • ¼" wooden dowel

Ingredients

  • 13 oz cake flour
  • 10 oz sugar
  • 1 Tablespoon baking powder
  • ½ teaspoon baking soda
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • 6 ounces unsalted butter room temp
  • 4 ounces buttermilk room temp
  • 6 oz champagne room temp
  • 4 ounces egg whites room temp
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1 ½ teaspoon sparkling wine candy flavor (optional) affiliate link: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B007BIDREU/?ref=exp_sugargeekshow_dp_vv_d
  • 2 oz vegetable oil
  • 1-2 drops electric pink food color optional if you want pink champagne cake

Brown Sugar Easy Buttercream Frosting

  • 8 oz Pasteurized Egg Whites
  • 32 oz Unsalted Butter
  • 32 oz Powdered Sugar
  • 1 Tablespoon Molasses
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
US Customary - Metric

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 335ºF. Make sure all of your ingredients (champagne, eggs, butter) are at room temperature
  • Use a scale to weigh your ingredients (including liquids) unless otherwise instructed (Tablespoons, teaspoons, pinch etc). Metric measurements are available in the recipe card. Scaled ingredients are much more accurate than using cups and help ensure the success of your recipe. 
  • Prepare three 6"x2" cake pans with cake goop or another preferred pan spray. Fill your pans about ¾ of the way full of batter. 
  • Combine flour, sugar, baking powder, baking soda and salt in the bowl of a stand mixer with the paddle attachment. Mix 10 seconds to combine. 
  • Combine the milk and the oil together and set aside. 
  • Combine egg whites, wine flavoring, champagne and vanilla together, whisk to break up the eggs, and set aside. Add in the pink food coloring now if you want your cake to be pink. Set aside.
  • Add your softened butter to the dry ingredients and mix on low until mixture resembles a coarse sand (about 30 seconds). . 
  • Add in your milk/oil mixture and let it mix until dry ingredients are moistened and then bump up to med (setting 4 on my kitchenaid, setting one on the bosch) and let it mix for 2 full minutes to develop the cakes structure. If you don't let your cake mix on this step your cake could collapse
  • Scrape your bowl and then reduce speed to low. Add in your egg white mixture in three batches, letting the batter mix for 15 seconds between additions. 
  • Divide into your cake pans and bake for 30-40 minutes or until a toothpick comes out of the center cleanly. Some shrinking is normal.
  • IMMEDIATELY TAP THE CAKE PAN FIRMLY on the countertop once to release the steam from the cake. This stops the cake from shrinking too much. 

Easy Buttercream Instructions

  • Place egg whites and powdered sugar in the bowl of your stand mixer with the whisk attachment attached and whip on high for 5 minutes
  • Start adding in your butter (softened) in chunks while it's whipping until all the butter is added. Add in your salt, molasses, and vanilla.
  • Continue whipping until buttercream does not appear curdled and is fluffy and white. This can take up to 15-20 minutes depending on your mixer. If it tastes buttery, keep mixing.
  • (OPTIONAL) switch to the paddle attachment and mix on low for 10-15 minutes to remove bubbles from the frosting. Frosting will be soft and this is normal.

Notes

Important Things To Note Before You Start
1. Bring all your ingredients to room temperature or even a little warm (eggs, buttermilk, butter, etc) to ensure your batter does not break or curdle. 
2. Use a scale to weigh your ingredients (including liquids) unless otherwise instructed (Tablespoons, teaspoons, pinch etc). Metric measurements are available in the recipe card. Scaled ingredients are much more accurate than using cups and help ensure the success of your recipe. 
3. Practice Mise en Place (everything in it's place). Measure out your ingredients ahead of time and have them ready before you start mixing to reduce the chances of accidentally leaving something out.
4. Chill your cakes before frosting and filling. You can cover a frosted and chilled cake in fondant if you wish. This cake is also great for stacking. I always keep my cakes chilled in the refrigerator before delivery for easy transporting. Learn more about decorating your first cake. 
5. If the recipe calls for specific ingredients like cake flour, replacing it with all purpose flour and cornstarch is not recommended unless specified in the recipe that it’s ok. Substituting ingredients may cause this recipe to fail. 
All purpose flour is a plain flour with no rising agents. It has a protein level of 10%-12%
Cake flour is a soft, low protein flour of 9% or less. 
Cake flour sources: UK - Shipton Mills Cake & Pastry Flour

Nutrition

Serving: 1serving | Calories: 1817kcal | Carbohydrates: 186g | Protein: 12g | Fat: 118g | Saturated Fat: 75g | Cholesterol: 291mg | Sodium: 475mg | Potassium: 317mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 149g | Vitamin A: 3635IU | Vitamin C: 1mg | Calcium: 127mg | Iron: 1mg
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

 

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. aditi says

    July 01, 2020 at 12:53 pm

    hi i just wanted to know if you have to put in the candy flavour or if u can leave it out

    Reply
    • Elizabeth Marek says

      July 02, 2020 at 9:34 am

      You can leave it out but the cake will not have much of a champagne flavor

      Reply
  2. Ashley B says

    July 06, 2020 at 4:48 pm

    5 stars
    Perfect every time. A moist and divine cake!

    Reply
  3. Eloho Iyamu says

    July 20, 2020 at 3:21 pm

    Really Lovely cake. Amazing. I made it form my mum's birthday and it came out awesome. Everyone loved it. Thanks for this recipie!!

    Reply
  4. Nirusha says

    July 26, 2020 at 3:44 am

    Hello,
    In My country it is difficult to find the sparkling wine extract. Can i substitute with candy or brandy extract?

    Reply
    • Elizabeth Marek says

      July 27, 2020 at 10:59 am

      Yes that would be a great substitute

      Reply
  5. Penny Laspina says

    July 30, 2020 at 10:23 pm

    5 stars
    This is my new favorite cake recipe. I am so excited to add it to my cake menu.

    Reply
  6. southernbell82 says

    August 05, 2020 at 11:00 am

    5 stars
    I made this recipe to test for my brother and future sister-in-aw's couples shower. My husband turned his nose up to it until he tried it. He requested the cake for Father's Day! I pointed out that it was pink (he is quite masculine) and he said that he was comfortable enough with his manhood to eat the cake on Father's Day...LOL! It also passed the test with our son, my father-in-law and the boys across the street. I can't wait to make this cake for the shower!!

    Reply
  7. Becks E says

    September 14, 2020 at 12:58 am

    5 stars
    Hi Liz is it possible to have the serves in cups like in other recipe...the serves here is on oz

    Reply
    • Sugar Geek Show says

      September 21, 2020 at 5:10 pm

      Hi! My cake recipes are only in ounces and grams because it's much more accurate to measure by weight than by volume and I don't want anyone's cake to fail. Check out my how to use a kitchen scale blog post for info on how to measure by weight or for an oz to cups conversion chart.

      Reply
  8. Andrew says

    November 01, 2020 at 10:45 am

    Can you use this recipe for a two layer cake or would we need to half all the ingredients or a two layer cake

    Reply
    • Elizabeth Marek says

      November 02, 2020 at 10:46 am

      It depends on how big the cake is. You can use the cake calculator to choose what layers you need to make and then adjust the recipe to reflect how many cups of batter the calculator says to make.

      Reply
  9. Jacqueline Ruiz says

    November 04, 2020 at 1:37 am

    5 stars
    Wondering Liz, can I use a Perrier Jouet or Louis Roeder rose champagne?

    Reply
    • Elizabeth Marek says

      November 05, 2020 at 10:38 am

      I don't see why not

      Reply
  10. Sam says

    December 03, 2020 at 5:25 pm

    Can you get drunk with any kind of champagne or rum cake if you eat it?

    Reply
    • Sugar Geek Show says

      December 04, 2020 at 11:07 am

      No, the alcohol bakes out in the oven

      Reply
  11. Jewel B says

    December 26, 2020 at 1:43 pm

    5 stars
    This Cake comes out perfect and delicious every time. And today I added the wine extract in the buttercream for extra flavor.

    Reply
  12. Helen Diane says

    December 29, 2020 at 1:11 am

    5 stars
    Hello, I made this but made them into cupcakes and boy were they good! First time making any cake from scratch ! I’m so impressed by the way it turned out! Made them for my daughter’s birthday tomorrow! Can’t wait to have her taste it! Thank you

    Reply
  13. Nina Bavosa says

    December 30, 2020 at 10:01 am

    Hi Liz, is this recipe an updated version? I see some comments talking about not using cake flour, but this recipe uses cake flour. Also the video is different and doesn't have buttermilk. I just want to be sure I'm using the best recipe, I'm going to make this for New Year's Eve tomorrow. Thanks!

    Reply
    • Elizabeth Marek says

      December 30, 2020 at 10:52 am

      Yes it's an updated version. The video isn't out yet 🙂

      Reply
  14. Anonymous says

    December 31, 2020 at 10:42 am

    How much batter would I need for three 10" cakes?

    Reply
    • Elizabeth Marek says

      December 31, 2020 at 1:25 pm

      I would make a 1 1/2 batch

      Reply
  15. Caritas says

    January 09, 2021 at 5:39 am

    4 stars
    Can I use pasteurized egg whites to bake the cake? I don’t want leftover egg yolks as they will go to waste and I am trying not to be wasteful.😌

    Reply
    • Elizabeth Marek says

      January 11, 2021 at 10:56 pm

      Yes you can

      Reply
  16. Abigail says

    July 25, 2024 at 11:55 am

    Is it ok to make frosting the day before using? Or will it not turn out the same?
    Also my stand mixer is broken at the moment, will a hand mixer work for the frosting?

    Reply
    • Elizabeth Marek says

      April 22, 2025 at 3:42 pm

      You can, but make sure you re-whip it before use.

      Reply
  17. Silvia says

    March 25, 2025 at 11:27 pm

    5 stars
    I had some sparkling rosé left over and some Italian buttercream in the fridge, so I started looking for recipes. Stumbled upon this one and WOW!! What a cool cake this made!! The reverse-creaming is something I’ve never tried, and it made such a huge difference. I don’t think I’ve ever had a cake batter so silky and soft. The texture of this cake was a 10/10. Velvety and perfectly moist. I didn’t even need to use a simple syrup before frosting. The taste was unique - I could definitely taste the wine. Both my husband and I thought it was a bit weird tasting upon the first bite, but we quickly adapted and ended up loving it.

    Next time I make it I will put a little more food colour as I found that it lost most of its colour during baking. I will also add champs to the frosting next time to give even more flavour.

    Thank you for this recipe!!

    Reply
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Liz Marek with strawberry cake

Hi, I'm Liz! I'm an artist and cake decorator from Portland, Oregon. Cakes are my obession, which is why I'm dedicated to crafting tried-and-true recipes, small cake tutorials, as well as advanced online cake courses!

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