This is the best fresh strawberry cake recipe 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 strawberry buttercream, giving you intense fresh strawberry flavor in every bite.

I worked harder on this recipe than almost anything else on Sugar Geek Show. It took me dozens of failed bakes to figure out that strawberries have to be concentrated before they go into the cake, not added fresh, and that the color needs protection to survive the oven. If you love my vanilla cake recipe, this is the strawberry sister of that cake, soft, tender, real pink, and tasting like actual strawberries instead of artificial flavor. The reduction adds a little time, but I promise the result is worth every minute.
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
- The Science: Why Strawberry Cake Is So Hard To Get Right
- Strawberry Cake Ingredients
- Cake Batter and Frosting Calculator
- Cups of Batter Needed
- Cups of Frosting Needed
- Pan Conversions and Bake Times
- Common Strawberry Cake Problems To Avoid
- Strawberry Reduction vs Freeze-Dried Powder vs Maceration
- How To Get The Right Shade Of Pink
- Will My Strawberry Cake Still Be Pink Tomorrow?
- Stacking or Tiering This Strawberry Cake
- Hot Weather, Humidity, And Transport
- Make-Ahead and Storage
- Make This Recipe Your Own
- Final Thoughts
- Strawberry Cake FAQs
- More Strawberry Recipes To Try
- 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 version still lives on the site if you want the comparison). It turned out 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.
Real strawberry flavor in every bite. Vivid pink color that does not bake out gray. A crumb tender enough to fork through but sturdy enough to stack, fill, and even tier.crumb tender enough to fork through but sturdy enough to stack, fill, and even tier.
The Science: Why Strawberry Cake Is So Hard To Get Right
Strawberries fight you in three ways at once when you try to bake with them. Understanding why helps everything in this recipe make sense.
They are 90% water. A cup of fresh strawberry puree is mostly liquid, and liquid in a cake batter destroys structure. This is why reducing matters. You are not just concentrating flavor, you are removing water so the cake can still rise.
Their color is pH-sensitive. Strawberries get their red color from anthocyanin, the same pigment in red cabbage and blueberries. Anthocyanin is unstable when the pH climbs above about 4.0. Strawberries sit around 3.0 to 3.5 naturally, which is why a fresh berry is bright red. The moment you add baking soda (which is alkaline, around pH 9) the pH of your batter climbs and your strawberries shift toward gray-purple. This is the reason most homemade strawberry cakes look muted. Lemon juice and zest in the reduction (and a minimal amount of baking soda in the cake) keep the pH low enough to protect the color. This is also why buttermilk-based strawberry cakes hold their color better than milk-based ones, the acid helps.
Their flavor is delicate. Strawberry is a soft, floral flavor that bakes out fast. Reducing concentrates the flavor compounds before they get diluted into a cake batter, and the LorAnn emulsion adds a backup layer of strawberry punch so nothing fades in the oven.
Once you understand the three things working against you, the recipe is just engineering around them.
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. I always recommend weighing your ingredients with a digital kitchen scale for the most accurate results.e 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. Out-of-season fresh strawberries can be flat-tasting and watery, and a flat-tasting reduction can't be fixed downstream.
- 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. 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 and the buttercream. Use good-quality butter like Kerrygold, or make your own French butter. 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. You can swap in buttermilk for extra tang and a small bonus to color stability (the acid helps), see my buttermilk substitute post if you don't have buttermilk on hand.
- 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. (See the color match section below for specific shades.)
- All-purpose flour. Used in the cake only. Cake flour is too tender to hold up to all the moisture from the reduction. If you only have cake flour, my cake flour substitute post explains the AP swap (or you can use a 1:1 swap, just expect a slightly more delicate crumb).
- Baking powder and baking soda. Used in the cake only. I keep the baking soda lean on purpose to protect the pH and the color, baking powder does most of the lift.
- Powdered sugar. Used in the buttercream only. Sweetens and gives body.
- Strawberry reduction. Made in step 1 of the recipe. Used in the cake batter, the buttercream, and as a thin filling between cake layers for extra flavor.
Strawberry Reduction Yield Math (Save Yourself Frustration)
Nobody publishes this clearly, so here it is. Plan your reduction backward from how much you need.
| You start with | You get (puree) | After reduction |
|---|---|---|
| 1 pound fresh strawberries (about 3 cups whole) | About 1 ¼ cups puree | About ½ cup reduced |
| 1 ½ pounds fresh strawberries | About 2 cups puree | About ¾ cup reduced |
| 2 pounds fresh strawberries | About 2 ½ cups puree | About 1 cup reduced |
This recipe needs about ¾ cup of reduction total (½ cup for the cake, ¼ cup for the buttercream, plus a little for between the layers if you want it). Start with 1 ½ to 2 pounds of strawberries.
Strawberry Cake Step-By-Step
Before you start mixing: butter, egg whites, milk, and the strawberry reduction all need to be at room temperature. Grease two 8-inch cake pans with cake goop and preheat the oven to 350º F. Weigh your ingredients; 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.

- Whisk the wet ingredients together. In one bowl, whisk the milk, oil, strawberry reduction, strawberry emulsion, vanilla extract, lemon juice, lemon zest, and pink food coloring together.
PRO TIP: If your reduction won't thicken after 60 minutes, your strawberries were either extra watery (very ripe, frozen, or out of season) or the heat is too low. Bump the heat to medium and stir more often. As a last resort, whisk in 1 teaspoon of cornstarch with 1 Tablespoon of cold water to make a slurry, and simmer for 5 more minutes. Don't add jam or pectin; both throw off the flavor.

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

- Cream the butter and sugar. 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.

- Alternate dry and wet. 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.
PRO TIP: Cold ingredients are the number one cause of curdled batter. Curdled batter will separate when it's baking and cause a gummy wet layer on the bottom of your cake layer.

- Split the batter 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.
Choose a pan type
Choose a cake pan size
(based on 2" tall cake pan)
Choose a cake pan size
(based on 2" tall cake pan)
Cupcake Tin Size
Choose number of pans
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.
Pan Conversions and Bake Times
The recipe as written makes two 8-inch round layers (about 8 cups of batter). Here is how it scales to other formats.
- Two 9-inch rounds: same batter amount, bake 22 to 25 minutes at 350º F. The layers will be a little thinner.
- Three 6-inch rounds: same batter amount, bake 25 to 28 minutes at 350º F. Wrap pans with damp cake strips for flat tops.
- 9x13 sheet cake: pour the full batter into one greased 9x13 pan, bake 35 to 40 minutes at 350º F. Toothpick test starting at 35.
- Cupcakes: fill liners ⅔ full, bake 18 to 22 minutes at 350º F. Yields 28 to 30 cupcakes.
- Mini cupcakes: fill liners ⅔ full, bake 11 to 13 minutes at 350º F. Yields about 60.
- Bundt pan (10-cup): pour the full batter in, bake 50 to 60 minutes at 325º F. Lower temp prevents a dark crust.
Common Strawberry Cake Problems To Avoid
- 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. (If you absolutely cannot make a reduction, see the strawberry jam shortcut in the Make This Recipe Your Own section below.)
- 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.
- Wet streak or dense bottom layer. This shows up specifically with strawberry cake because the pink color hides under-baked centers, you cannot eyeball doneness the way you can with vanilla. If you pull the cake when the top looks set but the toothpick still has wet crumbs, the heavy reduction sinks and you get a gummy band at the bottom. Always toothpick-test in the center, and don't trust the visual cue.
- Curdled buttercream when you add the reduction. Three causes: reduction too cold (butter seizes), reduction too warm (butter melts), or reduction was not reduced enough (residual water breaks the fat emulsion). Pull the reduction out of the fridge 30 minutes ahead, make sure it's the texture of tomato paste (not tomato sauce), and add it after the buttercream is fully emulsified, not before.
Strawberry Reduction vs Freeze-Dried Powder vs Maceration
Three different ways to get strawberries into a cake, and people argue about all three. Here is the honest verdict from the kitchen.
| . | Strawberry Reduction | Freeze-Dried Powder | Maceration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Flavor intensity | Strongest, fresh, bright | Concentrated but slightly drier / candy-like | Mildest, most fresh-fruit |
| Color | Pinkish red, bakes out without help | Vivid pink, bakes out without help | Pink only while fresh, dulls fast |
| Crumb impact | Adds moisture, tender crumb | No moisture, very tender crumb | Adds liquid, can make crumb soggy |
| Buttercream stability | Excellent if reduced enough | Excellent, no liquid added | Poor, weeps moisture into butter |
| Color stability over 24 hours | Holds well in the fridge if the cake is wrapped | Holds best of the three | Dulls overnight |
| Effort | High, 40 to 60 minutes simmer | Low, just grind | Lowest, slice and sit |
| Cost | Low | High, freeze-dried strawberries are pricey | Lowest |
| Best use | Cake batter AND buttercream | Buttercream stabilizer, decorating | Between-layer filling, fresh-eating |
My verdict: Reduction wins for this recipe because it does double duty in the cake and the buttercream, and the moisture works WITH the AP flour structure. Freeze-dried powder is what I use in my older freeze-dried strawberry cake and it's excellent if you want a cake that holds up under fondant or carving. Maceration is what you want between layers of a strawberry shortcake style cake (see my strawberry shortcake layer cake for that approach).
If you only ever make this one strawberry cake, use the reduction. If you bake strawberry cakes often, learn all three and pick by use case.
How To Get The Right Shade Of Pink
The strawberry reduction tints the cake a soft pastel pink, but bakers who are color-matching for gender reveals, baby showers, weddings, or dress codes need more control. Here is the Americolor cheat sheet I use.
- Soft blush pink: 2 drops Soft Pink + 1 drop Ivory in the batter, leave the buttercream pale.
- Barbie / hot pink: 4 to 6 drops Electric Pink in the batter, 2 drops in the buttercream.
- Coral pink: 3 drops Electric Pink + 1 drop Tulip Red in the batter.
- Muted vintage pink: 2 drops Electric Pink + 1 drop Ivory + a tiny tip-of-a-toothpick of Brown to mute.
- Pastel baby pink: 1 drop Soft Pink only in the batter. This is the closest to "natural strawberry color."
Mix the color into the wet ingredients before you fold them into the batter, that way the color disperses evenly. Always start with fewer drops than you think you need. You can always add more, you can't pull it back out.
Will My Strawberry Cake Still Be Pink Tomorrow?
This is the question every event baker asks and nobody answers. The short version: yes, but only if you store it right.
- Day of bake, freshly frosted: Pink is at its brightest. Best color all week.
- Day 1, refrigerated and wrapped: Cake holds about 90% of its color. No visible fade.
- Day 2, refrigerated and wrapped: Slight fade in the cake (maybe 5 to 10%), buttercream still vivid.
- Day 3, refrigerated and wrapped: Noticeable fade in the cake to a more muted pink. Buttercream still good.
- Day 4+: Cake reads more peachy than pink. Eat it but plate it with fresh berries to distract the eye.
What kills the color faster than time: light exposure (keep it covered), oxygen (wrap tightly), and freezing. A frozen-then-thawed strawberry cake comes out noticeably more muted than one that was refrigerated. For a wedding or photo-driven event, bake the cake one day ahead, not three.
Stacking or Tiering This Strawberry Cake
Most strawberry cake recipes are written for two-layer home cakes and the recipe falls apart when you try to use it for a wedding or tiered birthday cake. This one is built to handle the stress, but you have to chill it correctly.
- Crumb coat and chill firm. Once the cake is filled and crumb-coated, refrigerate for at least 2 hours before the final coat. The strawberry buttercream needs to be cold enough to take the weight without dimpling.
- Use the right supports. For a tiered cake, dowel each tier with bubble tea straws or wood dowels spaced about 6-inch evenly inside the perimeter of the next tier up. My cake stacking with straws tutorial walks through this step by step. For very tall stacks, run a central sharpened dowel through the whole stack down to the cake board.
- Thin the reduction filling. When tiering, do not pile the reduction between layers. A thin schmear (about ¼ cup spread over an 8-inch layer) is enough. Too much reduction and the layer can slide under weight.
- Use a sturdy cake board. Each tier sits on its own cake board, the bottom tier on a thicker cake drum for extra support.
- Stack on site if possible. Strawberry cake is more fragile than vanilla because the reduction adds moisture. If you have to transport stacked, transport chilled and assemble at the venue.
- Refrigerate, don't freeze, before serving. A frozen-then-thawed strawberry cake will weep moisture into the buttercream. Refrigerate up to 48 hours, then let the cake come to room temperature before serving.
For inspiration, my strawberry fault line cake tutorial uses this base recipe in a tiered design.
Hot Weather, Humidity, And Transport
Strawberry cake is summer-coded. Most people are making it for outdoor parties in June, July, and August, which means humidity, heat, and a transport leg.
- Buttercream sweating in humidity: Sugar is a humectant, it pulls moisture out of the air. In high humidity (over 60%) your cake will look like it's sweating when you bring it out of the fridge. Move it from the fridge into a sealed cake box before it warms up, and let it come to room temp inside the box. Any condensation forms on the box, not on your cake. If you display the cake at an outdoor event, run a fan nearby (not pointed at the cake, just keeping the air moving) and keep it out of direct sunlight.
- Heat: Above 80º F, buttercream starts softening. If your event is hot, swap up to 25% of the buttercream butter for high-ratio shortening for hot weather stability. The flavor takes a small hit but the cake stays standing.
- Transport: Always transport chilled. Use a non-slip mat under the cake box in the car. Floor of the back seat (the coolest spot) is better than the trunk. Run the air conditioning the whole drive.
- Color migration in humidity: The biggest unique-to-strawberry-cake risk. If condensation forms on the buttercream and runs, the pink can streak. The cake box trick above prevents this.
Make-Ahead and Storage
This is the section nobody writes for strawberry cake, and event bakers need it most.
- Strawberry reduction: Refrigerate up to 1 week in an airtight container. Freezes beautifully for up to 3 months, thaw overnight in the fridge.
- Unfrosted cake layers: Cool completely, wrap tightly in plastic. Room temperature 1 day, fridge 3 days, freezer 2 to 3 months. Thaw wrapped at room temp before frosting.
- Strawberry buttercream: Refrigerate up to 1 week in an airtight container. Re-whip on medium until smooth before using. Freezes for up to 3 months, always re-whip after thawing. (If it looks broken when you re-whip, see the rescue technique in the FAQs below.)
- Frosted whole cake, refrigerator: Wrap loosely in plastic or store in a cake box, 4 to 5 days. The reduction filling can weep slightly after day 3, so plan to serve sooner if possible.
- Frosted whole cake, freezer: Flash freeze unwrapped for 1 hour, then double-wrap in plastic and a layer of foil. Up to 1 month. Thaw overnight in the fridge inside the wrapping. Expect a slight color fade and a touch of moisture release in the buttercream after thawing.
- Sliced leftovers: Press a piece of plastic wrap directly against the cut edge to keep the crumb from drying out. Fridge 4 days.
Make This Recipe Your Own
Once you have the base recipe down, this batter is the launchpad for a whole family of strawberry cakes.
- Strawberry-lemon cake: Add 2 teaspoons of lemon zest to the batter and use my lemon cake syrup brushed on the layers. Pairs with the strawberry buttercream beautifully.
- Strawberry-basil cake: Steep 6 fresh basil leaves in the warm milk for 15 minutes before adding to the batter. Strain. Surprising in the best way.
- Strawberry-rose cake (wedding cake variation): Add ½ teaspoon rose water to the buttercream. Tastes like a Parisian patisserie.
- Strawberry-white chocolate cake: Use my white chocolate buttercream instead of strawberry, with a strawberry reduction filling between layers.
- Strawberry-champagne cake: Replace ¼ cup of the milk with champagne or sparkling rosé in the batter. Inspired by my pink champagne cake.
- Strawberry-pistachio cake: Pair this cake batter with the pistachio frosting from my pistachio cake with raspberry filling.
- Strawberry shortcake style: Skip the reduction filling between layers and use macerated fresh strawberries plus whipped cream, the inverse of this recipe is my strawberry shortcake layer cake.
- Strawberry jam shortcut (if you cannot make a reduction): Sub ⅓ cup of good-quality strawberry jam (not jelly, not preserves) for the reduction in the cake and ¼ cup of jam for the reduction in the buttercream. Reduce the sugar in the cake by ⅓ cup because jam is already sweet. The flavor is a step down from reduction but it gets you to a real-strawberry cake in a hurry.
- Cream cheese frosting alternative: If you prefer the tang of cream cheese, beat 8 oz of cream cheese into the buttercream after the butter is incorporated. Or just use my classic cream cheese frosting with ¼ cup of reduction folded in at the end.
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.
Strawberry Cake FAQs
No. The seeds disappear into the cake during baking and you will not feel them in the buttercream either. Straining is extra work for no payoff.
The two 8-inch layers slice cleanly into 16 generous wedding-style slices or 24 thinner dessert-table portions. If you are running a buffet with other desserts, plan on the 24-portion count. If the cake is the main event (birthday, anniversary, baby shower with no other dessert), plan on the 16-slice count and consider doubling the recipe for any group over 12.
Yes, with one caveat. Double every cake and buttercream ingredient, but make the strawberry reduction in two separate batches rather than one big one. A doubled puree is too deep in the saucepan to reduce evenly, and you will end up with scorched bottom layers and watery top layers. Two pots side by side or two back-to-back batches both work. The doubled batter fits two 10-inch rounds, three 8-inch rounds, or a 12x18 half-sheet pan.
Yes, almost always. The fix is heat. Scoop out about ¼ cup of the broken buttercream into a small bowl and warm it gently with a kitchen torch or 5-second microwave bursts until it is nearly melted but not hot. Whip it back into the rest of the buttercream on medium speed. The warm portion melts the cold lumps and re-emulsifies the fat. If it still looks broken after 2 minutes, your reduction was probably under-reduced (too watery). Whip in a Tablespoon of softened butter at a time until it pulls back together.
Slice and hull your berries, then pat the cut surfaces dry with paper towels. Let the sliced berries rest uncovered in the fridge for 30 minutes to let the surfaces dry further. Place them on the cake within 2 hours of serving. For longer holding (event cakes that sit out for hours), brush each berry with a thin coat of strained warmed apricot jam, the jam seals the cut surface and stops the bleed. Avoid placing strawberries on the cake more than 4 hours before serving, they will eventually release moisture no matter what you do.
More Strawberry Recipes To Try
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 Tablespoons 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
- Before you begin: Make the strawberry reduction the day before so it has time to cool completely. On bake day, set butter, egg whites, milk, and reduction out at room temperature for at least 1 hour before mixing. Grease two 8" cake pans with cake goop and preheat the oven to 350º F.
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 to 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.
Strawberry Cake Instructions
- In a medium bowl, whisk together the milk, oil, strawberry reduction, strawberry emulsion, vanilla extract, lemon zest, lemon juice, and pink food coloring. In a separate 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 the mixture is fluffy and almost white, about 3 to 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.
- 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.
- 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, mixing until ingredients are almost incorporated. 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 at 350º F until the cakes feel firm in the center and a toothpick comes out clean or with just a few crumbs, about 30 to 35 minutes.
- Place pans on a wire rack and let cool for 10 minutes. Flip the cakes onto the racks and cool completely. Wrap each layer in plastic wrap and refrigerate or freeze before assembling.
- Divide the batter evenly between the prepared pans.
Buttercream Instructions
- Place pasteurized egg whites and powdered sugar in the bowl of your stand mixer. Attach the whisk and combine ingredients on low, then whip on high for 5 minutes.
- Add the softened butter in chunks and whip on high for 8 to 10 minutes until very white, light, and shiny. It may look curdled and yellow at first, this is normal. Keep whipping.
- Add the strawberry reduction, vanilla extract, and salt and continue whipping until incorporated. Optional: switch to the paddle attachment and mix on low for 15 to 20 minutes to make the buttercream very smooth and remove air bubbles.
Assembly
- Layer the chilled cakes with strawberry buttercream and a thin spread of extra strawberry reduction between each layer. Crumb coat the cake, chill, then apply the final coat of buttercream and decorate as desired.
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 350º F for 18 to 20 minutes. Yields about 24.
- Half sheet pan (12x18): triple the recipe.
- 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.












Debra says
Thanks for this recipe. My first stab at this cake came out pretty good. I've made 3 other strawberry cake recipes (not from you) that were flops. Whoever thought strawberry cake could be such a difficult flavor to capture. I'd still like a deeper strawberry flavor. For one, I only added a tsp of the emulsion and maybe adding your full amount would have helped. And two, I only put 2 ounces of sugar in my puree. Also the picture of your puree looks real red and lumpy. I processed mine until it was smooth like the recipe said and it's more pinkish. I don't know about using it as a filling between layers. Should the puree be more lumpy? Any tips you can share I'd appreciate. This is definitely the recipe I'm going with, I'd just like to tweak it a little.
Liz Marek says
The color of your puree will depend greatly on the type of strawberry. The intensity of the strawberry flavor will also depend on the strawberries. To add even more strawberry flavor you could add more flavor extract
Courtney says
This cake is incredible. My four year old requested a strawberry cake for her birthday. I had no luck with strawberry emulsion or extract. I substituted with an extra 7g of strawberry reduction and used 2 9” cake pans as it was all I had. They turned out beautifully. The cakes are delicious with the perfect strawberry scent and flavor! This is my second recipe of Liz’s I have used for making our kids birthday cakes. My first was her rainbow cake that is white velvet. Everyone raved about how it looked and tasted. Her instructions are precise and while I adapt for what I find/have it never fails if I follow her instructions. Thank you so much.
Hollye Perry says
I looked EVERYWHERE for the strawberry emulsion or pink food coloring and came up empty. Didn’t have time to order it so I just proceeded with it with prayer and perseverance, despite feeling slightly defeated knowing I didn’t have those things.
My husband has asked me to make his “mother’s cake recipe for 18 years now, and I’ve had little success because nobody has THAT recipe. One year, my attempt weighed over 8 pounds…..dense and not successful…He ate it, but the ENTIRE family still talks about the 500lb cake I made…lol….Literally 18 failed attempts to make a recipe that “hit the spot”
I’m waiting on the cakes to cool now and then assemble everything. I’m so excited and nervous about this recipe!
I’ll let you know how it turns out, and I’m still extremely hopeful!
Thank you for the recipe, I’ll have to search for those missing ingredients next year! But either way, I’ll be making this again next year❤️
Sincerely, Texas wife/mom who never gives up!
Hollye Perry
Kay says
Hi!! Is there a way to adapt this to fit x2 9” pans??
Liz Marek says
You can just use two 9" pans, you might have a little leftover but you could turn it into cupcakes YUM
Kharron Greenberg says
Hi Liz - thanks for the reply. This might be a dumb question, but if I’m using x2 9 inch pans versus x2 8 inch pans, won’t I need more filling versus ending up with leftover?
Liz Marek says
Sorry I thought you meant just one 8" pan haha. Now I feel dumb. I would do a 1 1/2 batch of cake batter. You can adjust the amount the recipe makes in the recipe card.
DONNA says
Thank you for this recipe! I'm not a fan of strawberry cake, as they rarely have much flavor. But this one hit the spot, and my friends who requested strawberry cake loved it. It has a great rise and and balanced flavor, so it will definitely be on repeat during strawberry season.
Remy G says
Would you recommend making the cake in advance and freezing? Or the strawberry reduction?
Liz Marek says
You certainly could!
Denise Hallman says
I truly appreciate this recipe being published. I'm a new baker and this is probably the 4th cake recipe I've used. I even enjoyed the process of making the strawberry reduction one day, then baking the layers on day two and finally making the icing on day 3! Yes, this cake was my weekend project, but I will gladly do it again!
DaShiya Dirton says
Hii! So I made this for a gender reveal that was supposed to be tomorrow, but got pushed until the day after. How should I store it so it stays moist?
Liz Marek says
You can just keep it in the fridge for one day.
Stephanie says
recipe was more complicated than I was expecting, but it was well worth the trouble. It was moist and fruity and solid all at the same time. Buttercream was excellent also. I made 2 batches because I wanted to make 3 -9" layers. I had enough batter left to make 6 cupcakes too.
Jacee says
I just made this recipe for my daughter's birthday, I used the recipe for the reduction and cake but I did a cream cheese frosting instead and it was fabulous! We ended up needing cupcakes too so I halved the recipe to make 12 cupcakes and mixed the leftover reducation into the cream cheese frosting for the cupcakes and it was amazing. Everyone loved it!
Darrin says
I made this for my daughter’s birthday and received so many great comments. Some said it was the best cake they ever had.
Catherine says
it says refrigerate for minimum 2 hours, but what is the maximum for refrigerator vs freezer?
Elizabeth Marek says
Well you don't want to freeze the cake solid. The refrigerator is just to get the buttercream firm so when you slice it doesn't go everywhere.
Ava says
This cake was SO good (my entire family loved it). We finished it in two days. I will definitely be making this again!
Ashley says
Hi! I've made this before and love it. I want to make it for my niece's birthday, and she would prefer a cream cheese frosting. Do you think I could use half butter and half cream cheese in the butter cream? Thank you!
Elizabeth Marek says
yes definitely!
Nancy says
I’ve made this before and it is out of this world delicious! I wanted to ask if I can use cake flour instead of AP? Thank you! Happy Baking!