This is the best fresh strawberry cake made with real strawberries (no Jell-O, no boxed mix, no fake flavors). The secret is a slow-simmered strawberry reduction that goes into both the cake batter and the buttercream frosting, giving you intense fresh strawberry flavor in every bite. It takes a little extra time to make the reduction first, but I promise the result is worth it.

Quick Glance: Strawberry Cake Recipe
- Recipe Name: Strawberry Cake Recipe
- Why You'll Love It: Real strawberry flavor, beautiful pink color, moist, tender crumb. No artificial flavors or Jell-O needed.
- Time and Difficulty: 20 minutes prep + 50 minutes total (reduction adds 40 to 60 minutes the day before). Intermediate.
- Main Ingredients: Fresh or frozen strawberries, all-purpose flour, butter, egg whites, milk, strawberry emulsion, lemon, and pink food coloring.
- Method: Make a strawberry reduction by simmering pureed strawberries with sugar and lemon until thick. Use part of the reduction in the cake batter and part in the buttercream. Bake, cool, fill, and frost.
- Texture and Flavor: Moist, tender, soft pink crumb with bright, real-strawberry flavor and a creamy strawberry buttercream.
- Quick Tip: Add a drop of pink food coloring to keep the strawberry pink color from baking out into a muted gray.
Jump to:
- Quick Glance: Strawberry Cake Recipe
- Why This Is The BEST Strawberry Cake Recipe
- Strawberry Cake Ingredients
- Cake Batter and Frosting Calculator
- Cups of Batter Needed
- Cups of Frosting Needed
- Common Strawberry Cake Problems To Avoid
- Final Thoughts
- More Strawberry Recipes To Try
- Strawberry Cake FAQs
- Watch: How To Decorate A Cake Step-by-Step
- Recipe
Why This Is The BEST Strawberry Cake Recipe
This is one of my all-time favorite cake recipes, and also one of the hardest I've ever developed. So many failed attempts before I landed on this version. I tried adding chopped fresh strawberries to my vanilla cake recipe, and the cake turned out wet, dense, and brown, and most of the strawberry flavor was gone.
Next, I tried the recipe everyone says works, the one with strawberry Jell-O. Let me tell you, that was the weirdest-tasting cake I've ever made. I don't know how anyone can call that flavor strawberry. If you like it, more power to you, but it wasn't what I was after.
I also tried grinding up freeze-dried strawberries and adding them to the dry ingredients. That cake turned out a little better, but I still wanted a way to use real, fresh strawberries. After dozens of test bakes, I finally nailed it using two things: a slow-simmered strawberry reduction and a high-quality strawberry emulsion.
Strawberry Cake Ingredients
This is the BEST strawberry cake recipe you'll ever make, and it may seem intimidating, but I promise it's worth it. There are three components: the strawberry reduction (made first, ideally the day before), the strawberry cake layers, and the strawberry buttercream. Here's why each ingredient matters.

- Fresh or frozen strawberries. The base of the strawberry reduction. Frozen are often better because they're picked at peak ripeness. Thaw them before blending.
- Granulated sugar. Used in the reduction and the cake. In the reduction, a small amount intensifies strawberry flavor and helps thicken. In the cake, it's the main sweetener and creates structure when creamed with butter.
- Lemon juice and zest. Used in the reduction and the cake. The acid keeps the pH low so strawberries hold their bright red color instead of turning gray-purple (anthocyanin pigment is unstable at neutral or alkaline pH). Zest adds aromatic brightness.
- Salt. Used in the reduction, cake, and buttercream. Balances sweetness and intensifies the other flavors.
- Unsalted butter. Used in the cake (8 oz) and the buttercream (16 oz). Use good-quality butter like Kerrygold (or make your own). Cheaper butter has more water and can affect how the cake bakes and how the buttercream sets.
- Egg whites. Used in the cake and the buttercream. Important: the buttercream MUST use pasteurized egg whites (boxed cartons from the dairy aisle) because they aren't cooked in the recipe. The cake can use either separated fresh egg whites or boxed whites. Don't use whole eggs; the yolks tint the cake peach-orange instead of pink.
- Whole milk. Used in the cake only. Lower-fat milk works but the cake won't be as rich.
- Vegetable or canola oil. Used in the cake only. Keeps the cake moist for days. Any neutral oil works (grapeseed, sunflower). Avoid olive oil because the flavor comes through.
- LorAnn Strawberry Emulsion (or strawberry extract). Used in the cake only. The emulsion is much more concentrated than regular extract and adds real strawberry depth without artificial sweetness. I get mine from Michaels in the cake decorating aisle. Regular extract works in a pinch.
- Vanilla extract. Used in the cake and the buttercream. Rounds out the flavor and balances the strawberry.
- Americolor electric pink food coloring. Used in the cake only. Even with lemon juice protecting the natural color, strawberry pink dulls during baking. A few drops keeps it vivid. This isn't optional if you want a vibrant pink cake.
- All-purpose flour. Used in the cake only. Cake flour is too tender to hold up to all the moisture from the reduction.
- Baking powder and baking soda. Used in the cake only. Standard leavening combo for this recipe.
- Powdered sugar. Used in the buttercream only. Sweetens and gives body.
- Strawberry reduction. Made in step 1 of the recipe (using the strawberries, sugar, lemon, and salt above). Used in the cake batter, the buttercream, and as a thin filling between cake layers for extra flavor.
Strawberry Cake Step-By-Step
Use a kitchen scale for the rest of the recipe; converting to cups is the most common reason this cake fails.

- Make the strawberry reduction (one day ahead). Blend thawed strawberries until smooth, then simmer with sugar, lemon juice, and lemon zest in a saucepan over medium-low heat for 40 to 60 minutes until thick like tomato sauce. Cool completely. This is the secret to real strawberry flavor in both the cake and the buttercream, and doing it the day before saves time on bake day.

- Butter, egg whites, milk, and the strawberry reduction all need to be at room temperature before you start mixing. Cold ingredients are the number one cause of curdled batter. While the ingredients warm up, grease two 8-inch cake pans with cake goop and preheat the oven to 350°F.

- Whisk the milk, oil, strawberry reduction, strawberry emulsion, vanilla extract, lemon juice, lemon zest, and pink food coloring together in one bowl.

- In a second bowl, whisk the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt. Setting these up separately keeps the batter from getting overworked later.

- Beat the butter in a stand mixer with the paddle attachment until smooth and shiny, then add the sugar gradually and beat until the mixture is fluffy and almost white.

- Add the egg whites one at a time, beating briefly between each. The mixture should look cohesive; if it looks curdled, your ingredients were too cold.

- On low speed, add about a third of the dry, then about a third of the wet, mixing just until almost combined. Repeat twice more. Stop, scrape the bowl thoroughly, and mix briefly to combine. The finished batter should look like ice cream.

- Split evenly between the prepared pans, then bake until the centers feel firm and a toothpick comes out clean.

- Cool the cake in the pans on a wire rack for 10 minutes, then turn out onto the rack to cool completely. I put mine in the freezer for about an hour to firm up before stacking and frosting.

- Make the strawberry buttercream. Whip the pasteurized egg whites and powdered sugar in a stand mixer until fluffy, then add softened butter in chunks and whip until light and white. Add the leftover strawberry reduction along with vanilla and salt, and continue whipping until smooth and silky. The reduction is what gives this buttercream its real strawberry flavor (no extract needed).

- Assemble and decorate. Layer the chilled cakes with strawberry buttercream and a thin spread of extra strawberry reduction between each layer for maximum flavor. Crumb coat, chill, then frost the outside. If you're new to layer cakes, my cake decorating tutorial for beginners walks through every step from leveling layers to a clean buttercream finish.
PRO TIP: Refer to the recipe card below for a complete ingredients list of all the strawberry components and watch the video for more information on assembling the cake.
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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(based on 2" tall cake pan)
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Cupcake Tin Size
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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.
Common Strawberry Cake Problems To Avoid
- Skipping the room temperature step. Cold butter, egg whites, milk, or strawberry reduction will cause your batter to curdle and break. Set everything out at least an hour before mixing, or microwave the milk for 20 seconds and the reduction for about a minute to speed it up.
- Using poor quality strawberries. Out-of-season fresh strawberries often have very little flavor, and a flavorless reduction can't be fixed downstream. Frozen strawberries from a quality brand are usually picked at peak ripeness and taste better than mediocre fresh ones.
- Under-reducing the strawberries. Strawberries are 90% water, and the reduction needs to simmer slowly until it's thick like tomato sauce (40 to 60 minutes). If you stop early, too much water will go into the batter and the cake will be dense and wet.
- Substituting jam, Jell-O, or extract for the reduction. Jam has pectin and too much sugar, Jell-O is artificial flavor, and extract alone isn't concentrated enough. Real strawberry reduction is what makes this cake taste like strawberries.
- Using whole eggs. The yolks tint the cake peach-orange and fight against the strawberry pink. Use only egg whites, either separated yourself or from a pasteurized boxed carton.
- Using cake flour instead of all-purpose. This cake is too moist for cake flour to support, so it will sink in the middle. Stick with AP flour even if your other cake recipes use cake flour.
- Skipping the pink food coloring. Strawberries' natural color (anthocyanin) softens during baking, even with the lemon juice protecting it. A few drops of Americolor electric pink keeps the cake vivid instead of muted gray.
- Measuring by cups instead of weight. A cup of flour can vary by up to 50% depending on how you scoop, which is enough to ruin the recipe. Use a kitchen scale for this and every other recipe on the site.
Final Thoughts
I worked harder on this recipe than almost anything else on Sugar Geek Show, and the failures along the way were genuinely demoralizing. Watching cake after cake come out gray, dense, weirdly artificial, or bland nearly made me give up. The breakthrough was understanding that strawberries had to be concentrated before they went into the cake, not added fresh, and that the color needed protection (the lemon and pink food coloring) to survive the oven.
Once it clicked, this became one of the most-requested cakes I bake. The flavor is what fresh strawberry cake is supposed to taste like, and the color makes it feel like a celebration on the plate. It's perfect for Mother's Day, birthdays, baby showers, gender reveals, or just any time strawberries are in season and you want to do them justice.
If it's your first time, give yourself two days. Make the reduction the day before. The whole thing comes together more easily when nothing is rushed.
More Strawberry Recipes To Try
Strawberry Cake FAQs
I use LorAnn's strawberry bakery emulsion. It's much more concentrated than regular strawberry extract and doesn't have an alcohol burn. You can find it at Michaels in the cake decorating aisle, online at LorAnn directly, or on Amazon. If you can't find emulsion, regular strawberry extract works in a pinch but use a little more.
Yes, with one note. The buttercream is on the soft side, so chill the assembled cake well before applying fondant so the fondant doesn't slip. The cake itself holds up beautifully under fondant.
Yes, and frozen is often better. Frozen strawberries are usually picked at peak ripeness, so the flavor is more concentrated. Just thaw them before blending.
Yes. Divide the batter into a lined cupcake pan and bake at 350°F for 18 to 20 minutes. The recipe yields about 24 cupcakes.
Both. The strawberry reduction keeps in the fridge for up to a week or in the freezer for 6 months. The baked, cooled cake layers can be wrapped tightly in plastic and frozen for up to a week before assembly. Bring the cake layers to fridge-cold (not frozen solid) before stacking and frosting.
Watch: How To Decorate A Cake Step-by-Step
Before you start decorating, watch the video below where I show you every step of decorating a cake from start to finish. Seeing the process in action makes it much easier to follow along
- Liz Marek.

Recipe

Equipment
- 2 8" cake pans
Ingredients
Strawberry Reduction
- 32 ounces fresh or frozen strawberries thawed
- 4 ounces sugar optional
- 1 Tablespoon lemon juice
- 1 teaspoon lemon zest
- 1 pinch salt
Fresh Strawberry Cake Ingredients
- 8 ounces unsalted butter room temperature
- 10 ounces granulated sugar
- 6 ounces egg whites room temperature
- 4 ounces milk room temperature, whole milk is best
- 6 ounces strawberry reduction room temperature
- 2 ounces vegetable or canola oil
- 1 Tablespoon lemon juice fresh
- zest one lemon
- 1 ½ teaspoon strawberry emulsion or extract, I use LorAnn oils bakery emulsion
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- ½ teaspoon Pink food color I use Americolor electric pink gel
- 14 ounces all purpose flour
- 1 ½ teaspoons baking powder
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- ½ teaspoon salt
Easy Strawberry Buttercream Frosting
- 4 ounces pasteurized egg whites
- 16 ounces powdered sugar
- 16 ounces unsalted butter room temperature
- ½ teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 4 ounces strawberry reduction room temperature
Instructions
Strawberry Reduction Instructions
- I recommend making this reduction the day before you're ready to make your cake.
- Place your thawed or fresh strawberries into the blender and blend until smooth.
- Place the strawberry puree, sugar, lemon zest, and lemon juice into a medium saucepan and bring it to a boil.
- Once bubbling, reduce heat to medium-low and slowly reduce the puree until you have two cups of liquid and the mixture is very thick like tomato sauce. This can take between 40-60 minutes. Occasionally stir the mixture to prevent burning.
- You will use some of the reduction for the cake batter, some for the frosting and the rest for filling between the cake layers for extra moisture. Leftover reduction can be stored in the fridge for up to one week or frozen for 6 months.
Strawberry Cake Instructions
- NOTE: It is SUPER IMPORTANT that all the room temperature ingredients listed above are room temperature and not cold or hot.
- Make sure to take your strawberry reduction out of the refrigerator 1 hour before making your cake so that it comes to room temperature or microwave it for about a minute so that it's warm.
- Adjust an oven rack to the middle position and preheat to 350ºF/176ºC.
- Grease two 8" cake pans with cake goop or preferred pan release
- In a separate medium bowl, whisk together the milk, oil, strawberry reduction, strawberry emulsion, vanilla extract, lemon zest, lemon juice, and pink food coloring.
- In a separate medium bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt.
- Add room temperature butter to your stand mixer with the paddle attachment and beat at medium speed until smooth and shiny, about 30 seconds.
- Gradually sprinkle in the sugar, beat until mixture is fluffy and almost white, about 3-5 minutes.
- Add the egg whites one at a time, beating 15 seconds in between. Your mixture should look cohesive at this point. If it looks curdled and broken, your butter or egg whites were too cold.
- Mix on low speed and add about a third of the dry ingredients to the batter, followed immediately by about a third of the milk mixture, mix until ingredients are almost incorporated into the batter.
- Repeat the process 2 more times. When the batter appears blended, stop the mixer and scrape the sides of the bowl with a rubber spatula. If it looks like ice cream, you did it right!
- Divide the batter evenly between the prepared pans.
- Bake cakes at 350ºF/176ºC until they feel firm in the center and a toothpick comes out clean or with just a few crumbs on it, about 30-35 minutes.
- Place pans on top of a wire rack and let cool for 10 minutes. Then flip your cakes onto the racks and cool completely.
- Once cooled, wrap each layer in plastic wrap and refrigerate or freeze before assembling your cake.
Buttercream Instructions
- Place egg whites and powdered sugar in a stand mixer bowl. Attach the whisk and combine ingredients on low and then whip on high for 5 minutes
- Place pasteurized egg whites and powdered sugar in the bowl of your stand mixer. Add the whisk attachment and combine ingredients on low, then whip on high for 5 minutes.
- Add in your softened butter in chunks and whip on high for 8-10 minutes until it's very white, light and shiny. It may look curdled and yellow at first, this is normal. Keep whipping.
- Add in strawberry reduction, vanilla extract and salt and continue whipping until incorporated.
- Optional: Switch to a paddle attachment and mix on low for 15-20 minutes to make the buttercream very smooth and remove air bubbles.
Video
Notes
- All ingredients (egg whites, milk, butter, reduction) should be at room temperature, not cold or hot.
- Use a kitchen scale for accurate weight measurements. Converting this recipe to cups can lead to failure.
- Americolor electric pink is what keeps the cake from turning gray during baking. It looks like cheating but it isn't optional if you want a vivid pink color.
- Use only egg whites. Whole eggs tint the cake peach.
- LorAnn's strawberry bakery emulsion is more concentrated than regular extract. If you can plan ahead and order it, you'll get better strawberry flavor. Regular extract works in a pinch.
- Goal: get as much liquid out as possible without burning the strawberries. The mixture should look like thick tomato sauce and have reduced by about half.
- Use some for the cake batter, some for the frosting, and the rest between the cake layers for extra flavor.
- Leftover reduction stores in the fridge for up to a week or in the freezer for 6 months.
- Whip the buttercream until light and very white before adding the reduction. If it still tastes like butter, keep whipping until it tastes like sweet ice cream.
- If the buttercream looks curdled after adding the reduction, it's too cold. Microwave ½ cup of buttercream for 10 to 15 seconds until just barely melted, then pour it back into the mixer while it's running. It will come together creamy.
- Two 8-inch cake pans is the recommended size.
- Two 9-inch pans work but you'll have leftover batter; bake the extra as cupcakes.
- Three 8-inch pans for a taller cake; reduce baking time to 25 to 28 minutes per pan.
- Cupcakes: line a cupcake pan, fill liners ⅔ full, bake at 350°F for 18 to 20 minutes. Yields about 24.
- Strawberry reduction: fridge up to a week, freezer up to 6 months.
- Baked cake layers: wrap tightly in plastic, refrigerate up to 5 days or freeze up to a week before assembling.
- Frosted, assembled cake: refrigerate covered up to 3 days. Bring to room temperature before serving.
- Don't substitute cake flour for all-purpose. The cake will be too soft and may sink.
- Don't use whole eggs. The yolks tint the cake peach instead of pink.
- Don't skip the pink food coloring. The cake will bake out gray.
- Don't substitute jam, preserves, or strawberry Jell-O for the reduction.
- Don't add fresh chopped strawberries to the batter. The water content ruins the cake's structure.
- Don't use cold ingredients. Everything must be room temperature.












Clo says
What are the conversions for the ingredients?
Elizabeth Marek says
Just select the "METRIC" button in the recipe card for grams
AmandaW says
so are there 603 calories for 1 out of 24 slices?... I don't think I can cut my cake that thin for me to get 24 slices. That would mean 1206 calories for 1 out of 12 slices?? yeesh well there goes my summer bod lol
Ye says
Hi there! This cake looks great! Can this recipe be doubled and still come out the same texture and flavor? Or should I make two separate batches?
Elizabeth Marek says
Yes you can double it
Connie LeBlanc says
I would love to make this cake for my son. However, I need to be able to decorate the outside with colors other than pink. Do you think if I did a separate buttercream flavored with the strawberry emulsion that it would work? I would still use the strawberry buttercream to fill the cake.
Elizabeth Marek says
I would just use the strawberry buttercream as a filling and leave some without strawberry for decorating the outside. It will still have tons of strawberry flavor
Keenjal Parikh says
Hi, is it possible to use this recipe to make cupcakes? I’ve been looking for a fresh strawberry cake recipe. This looks amazing!
Elizabeth Marek says
Yes you can, makes about 24
Keenjal Parikh says
Hi! Im really excited to try this recipe out this weekend for my parent’s’ anniversary. I was wondering if this same recipe can be used to make cupcakes?
Elizabeth Marek says
Yes it can
Chaelly says
Thank you so much!!
Chaelly says
Hi! I just made this cake yesterday for a party that was just rescheduled for next week. I didn’t frost it yet. Will the cake last in the fridge or freezer for a week if I wrap it in Saran Wrap? Thank you So much in advance for your thoughts/opinion!
Elizabeth Marek says
Double wrap and freeze until you need it
Jennifer says
Perfect timing! Every year my son asks for a strawberry cake and I make it using Jell-O and get that dense texture. So excited. Was thinking of trying strawberry emulsion instead of extract. Thoughts? Also, wanted to make a strawberry cream cheese frosting. Could I use the reduction in that too?
Elizabeth Marek says
I love strawberry emulsion, very tasty. Not sure about the cream cheese frosting, it might make it too soft.
Janey says
Can you use cage free egg whites that come in the cartons from the store?
Elizabeth Marek says
Yes you can use boxed egg whites
Karina Rosales says
Can i use cake flour ??
Elizabeth Marek says
So a small difference isn't going to affect much. I would do a 2:1 for a drip 🙂
kathy umlor says
this cake has superb taste!
Pauline says
Egg whites, are they safe in the buttercream not cooked?
Elizabeth Marek says
Pasteurized eggs are already heat treated and safe to eat just like milk is pasteurized.
MarshaC says
Hi, I'm making this recipe this weekend and wanted to know if I can use frozen strawberry compote?
Elizabeth Marek says
I'm not sure, it depends if the compote is reduced to be stronger in flavor which is why we use the strawberry puree.
Monica Guglielmina says
Hello, I love the sound of your cake and I’m going to try it. I’m just asking this, is there a possibility you think without changing the science of the cake too much to add whole eggs instead of just whites. I’m a professional chef and I bake for my clients as well. She wants a really rich strawberry cake and I just thought that perhaps the whole legs instead of the white could work. I would very much appreciate your opinion on what you think would happen if it were a whole eggs versus just the whites. Thank you
Monica Guglielmina
Elizabeth Marek says
If you use whole eggs it will affect the color and make it orange. If you want more fat in the recipe I would add two ounces of canola oil to account for the fat that is removed from the egg yolks. Reduce the butter by 2 ounces.