This pink velvet cake came about because liam got tired of red velvet always being "boy colors" at birthday parties. He begged me to make red velvet cake but "in pink like my sister's room." I figured why not - if red velvet works, pink velvet should too, right? Turns out he was onto something! The pink version tastes sweeter and lighter than regular red velvet, almost like it was meant to be this color all along.
Why You'll Love This Pink Velvet Cake Recipe
This Pink Velvet Cake has become our go-to for every celebration, and I mean every single one. liam requests it for his birthday, I made it for my neighbor's baby shower, and it was the hit of our last family barbecue. What I love most is how much better it tastes than regular red velvet. I always found red velvet a little too sharp and tangy, like it was trying too hard to be different. This pink version is just pure deliciousness - sweet, smooth, and exactly what you want cake to taste like.
liam feels like he discovered something nobody else knows about, which makes him so proud every time we serve it. But even my friends who usually roll their eyes at anything pink have become converts. Last month I brought it to book club, and these women normally go for fancy desserts like tiramisu or chocolate torte. They couldn't stop raving about how good it was and how the color just made them smile. I had three Pink Velvet Cake requests before everyone even finished eating.
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Pink Velvet Cake Ingredients
The Cake Base:
- All-purpose flour
- Granulated sugar
- Unsalted butter
- Large eggs
- Buttermilk
- Vegetable oil
- Vanilla extract
- Unsweetened cocoa powder
- Baking soda
- Salt
- White vinegar
- Pink food coloring
For the Cream Cheese Frosting:
- Cream cheese
- Unsalted butter
- Powdered sugar
- Vanilla extract
- Pinch of salt
See recipe card for quantities.
How To Make Pink Velvet Cake
Get Everything Ready:
- Preheat oven to 350°F
- Grease two 9-inch round pans
- Line bottoms with parchment paper
- Dust with flour and tap out excess
- Get all ingredients to room temperature
Make the Cake Batter:
- Cream butter and sugar until light and fluffy (about 3 minutes)
- Add eggs one at a time, beating well after each
- Mix in vanilla extract
- In separate bowl, whisk together flour, cocoa, baking soda, and salt
- Mix buttermilk and oil in measuring cup
- Add dry ingredients to butter mixture alternating with buttermilk mixture
- Start and end with flour mixture
- Mix just until combined
Add the Magic:
- Stir vinegar into batter (it'll foam a little - that's normal)
- Add pink food coloring gradually until you get the shade you want
- liam likes ours pretty pink, so we use quite a bit
- Mix gently until color is even throughout
Bake the Layers:
- Divide batter evenly between prepared pans
- Bake 25-28 minutes
- Test with toothpick - should come out with just a few moist crumbs
- Cool in pans 10 minutes
- Turn out onto wire racks to cool completely
Storing Your Pink Velvet Cake
This Pink Velvet Cake stays incredibly moist and delicious for days, which is great because it's almost too pretty to eat all at once! Here's how to keep it perfect:
Room Temperature Storage (2-3 days):
- Cover with cake dome or large bowl
- Keep in coolest spot in kitchen
- Away from direct sunlight
- Don't refrigerate unless it's really hot outside
- Cut slices as needed
Refrigerator Storage (up to 5 days):
- Cover tightly with plastic wrap
- Store in cake carrier if you have one
- Let sit at room temperature 30 minutes before serving
- Cold cake doesn't taste as good
- Cream cheese frosting stays stable
Freezing Options:
- Wrap unfrosted layers individually in plastic, then foil
- Freeze up to 3 months
- Thaw overnight before frosting
- Don't freeze the whole frosted cake
- Individual slices freeze well for surprise treats
Make-Ahead Tips:
- Bake layers up to 2 days ahead
- Wrap and store at room temperature
- Make frosting day of assembly
- Actually tastes better after sitting overnight
- Flavors blend together beautifully
Equipment
- Two 9-inch round cake pans
- Electric mixer
- Large mixing bowls
- Measuring cups and spoons
- Rubber spatula
- Wire cooling racks
- Parchment paper
Pink Velvet Cake Variations
Different Pink Shades:
- Pale ballet pink for elegant occasions
- Hot pink for liam's more adventurous moods
- Rose gold pink with edible shimmer
- Ombre layers from light to dark pink
- Swirled pink and white for marble effect
Flavor Additions:
- Strawberry extract instead of vanilla
- Lemon zest for brightness
- Almond extract for sophistication
- Rose water for fancy dinner parties
- Orange zest for something unexpected
Frosting Variations:
- Pink cream cheese frosting to match
- Vanilla buttercream for contrast
- Strawberry cream cheese frosting
- White chocolate ganache
- Simple powdered sugar glaze
Special Occasion Versions:
- Cupcakes for classroom parties
- Sheet cake for big gatherings
- Mini layer cakes for individual servings
- Bundt cake with pink glaze
- Heart-shaped pans for Valentine's Day
Substitutions
I've had to get creative with this Pink Velvet Cake plenty of times when I'm missing ingredients or baking for friends with different dietary needs. Here's what actually works:
Dairy Alternatives:
- Buttermilk → Regular milk + 1 tablespoon lemon juice
- Butter → Vegetable shortening or margarine
- Whole milk → Almond milk or oat milk
- Cream cheese → Dairy-free cream cheese
- Heavy cream → Coconut cream from can
Flour Options:
- All-purpose → Cake flour
- Regular flour → Gluten-free 1:1 blend
- White flour → Half white, half whole wheat pastry
- Standard → Self-rising
Oil and Fat Swaps:
- Vegetable oil → Canola or melted coconut oil
- Oil → Applesauce
- Butter → Greek yogurt
- Regular → Avocado oil for neutral flavor
Sugar Changes:
- Granulated → Caster sugar for finer texture
- White sugar → Part brown sugar for depth
- Regular → Coconut sugar
- Full amount → Reduce by ¼ cup if you want less sweet
Egg Replacements:
- Regular eggs → Flax eggs for vegan version
- Chicken eggs → Aquafaba
- Whole eggs → Egg substitute
- Fresh → Egg whites only for lighter cake
Top Tip
Getting your ingredients to room temperature is way more important than I used to think. I always figured that was just fancy baking talk, but I tried making it once with cold stuff straight from the fridge and it was a disaster. The butter wouldn't cream right, the eggs made the batter lumpy, and the whole thing turned out dense and heavy. Now I pull everything out when I'm having my morning coffee so it's ready when I want to bake.
Don't skip the vinegar even though it sounds gross in cake. I thought it was a mistake in the recipe the first time and left it out. The cake was okay but not nearly as fluffy and light as it should be. That acid does something with the baking soda that makes the cake rise better and get that soft texture. It bubbles up when you add it, which scared me at first, but that's supposed to happen.
Pink food coloring can disappear if you bake the Pink Velvet Cake too long. I found this out the hard way when I got caught up in a phone call and forgot about it in the oven. When I pulled it out, it was more like beige velvet cake. I couldn't figure out what went wrong until I made it again and paid attention to the timer.
Why This Pink Velvet Cake Works
This pink velvet cake works because it fixes everything I didn't like about regular red velvet. The combo of buttermilk, oil, and butter keeps it incredibly moist for way longer than most cakes I make. Red velvet can sometimes be too tangy or have this weird aftertaste, but this version is smooth and sweet all the way through. The buttermilk still gives it that little bit of tang to balance the sweetness, but it's not overpowering like some red velvet recipes can be.
That tiny bit of cocoa powder is what makes this more than just pink vanilla cake. You can't really taste chocolate, but it adds this richness and depth that makes people wonder what the secret ingredient is. I tried making it without cocoa once just to see, and it was basically vanilla cake with food coloring. Boring. The cocoa makes it interesting without being heavy or chocolatey.
The vinegar thing sounds gross but it's what makes the texture so light and fluffy. When it hits the baking soda, it bubbles up and creates extra lift. I thought this was just old recipe weirdness until I skipped it once and got a dense, flat cake that tasted fine but had no personality. Now I never skip the vinegar, even though liam always makes faces when I add it.
FAQ
What is the flavor of pink velvet cake?
Pink velvet cake tastes like a sweeter, more delicate version of red velvet cake. It has a smooth vanilla-forward flavor with subtle hints from the small amount of cocoa powder, but without the tangy bite that red velvet sometimes has. The buttermilk keeps it moist and adds just a touch of richness. liam describes it as "birthday cake mixed with cotton candy," which is surprisingly spot-on for how light and sweet it tastes.
What is the difference between red velvet and pink velvet cake?
The main difference is the food coloring and slightly sweeter flavor profile. Pink velvet uses pink coloring instead of red, but the real difference is in taste - pink velvet is smoother and more vanilla-focused, while red velvet often has a more tangy, acidic flavor. Both use the same basic ingredients (buttermilk, cocoa, vinegar) but pink velvet feels lighter and more delicate. The texture is essentially the same - that signature soft, moist velvet crumb.
Is pink velvet just vanilla?
No, pink velvet is more complex than regular vanilla cake. It contains buttermilk for tang and moisture, a small amount of cocoa powder for depth, and vinegar that reacts with baking soda for texture. These ingredients create that distinctive "velvet" quality - incredibly moist and tender with subtle complexity. While it's more vanilla-forward than red velvet, it has layers of flavor that plain vanilla cake doesn't have.
What does pink velvet taste like?
Pink velvet tastes sweet and smooth with a tender, moist texture that melts in your mouth. It's like vanilla cake's more sophisticated cousin - not as plain as vanilla but not as bold as chocolate. The buttermilk adds richness without heaviness, and the tiny bit of cocoa gives it depth without making it taste chocolate-y. It's comfort food that feels elegant and special at the same time.
Your New Go-To Celebration Cake!
This pink velvet cake has become our family's most requested dessert, and I honestly can't remember the last celebration we had without it. What started as liam wanting "red velvet but prettier" has turned into something we make for birthdays, holidays, and even just because it's Friday and we want cake. That gorgeous pink color makes everything feel more special, and the sweet, tender taste keeps everyone asking for seconds.
This has joined the ranks of our other go-to treats that never let us down. Speaking of favorites, you have to try our Healthy Chocolate Orange Cake (Ready in 45 Mins!) when you want something rich but not too heavy. Our Easy Lemon Raspberry Cake is perfect for spring celebrations and tastes like sunshine. And if you need something impressive with almost no work, make our Easy Butterfinger Pie: A 4-Ingredient Wonder - people will think you're a dessert genius.
Take pictures of your Pink Velvet Cake and liam loves scrolling through and seeing all the different shades of pink people make. It makes him so happy knowing other kids are enjoying "his" special cake recipe.
Rate this Pink Velvet Cake and tell us how yours turned out!
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Pairing
These are my favorite dishes to serve with Pink Velvet Cake
Pink Velvet Cake
Equipment
- 2 9-inch round cake pans (Greased and lined with parchment)
- 1 Electric mixer (Hand or stand mixer)
- 2 Large mixing bowls
- 1 set Measuring cups and spoons
- 1 Rubber spatula
- 2 Wire cooling racks
- As needed Parchment paper (To line cake pans)
Ingredients
Cake Base:
- 2 ½ cups All-purpose flour
- 1 ¾ cups Granulated sugar
- ½ cup Unsalted butter - Softened
- 3 Large eggs - Room temperature
- 1 cup Buttermilk - Room temperature
- ½ cup Vegetable oil
- 1 ½ teaspoon Vanilla extract
- 1 tablespoon Unsweetened cocoa powder
- 1 teaspoon Baking soda
- ½ teaspoon Salt
- 1 teaspoon White vinegar
- As needed Pink food coloring - Gel or liquid; to desired shade
Cream Cheese Frosting:
- 8 oz Cream cheese - Softened
- ½ cup Unsalted butter - Softened
- 3–4 cups Powdered sugar - Sifted
- 1 teaspoon Vanilla extract
- Pinch Salt - Optional
Instructions
- Preheat your oven to 350°F (175°C). Prepare two 9-inch round cake pans by greasing, lining with parchment, and dusting with flour. Tap out excess.
- Use an electric mixer to cream the softened butter and sugar until light and fluffy, about 3 minutes.
- Add eggs one at a time, beating well after each. Mix in vanilla extract.
- In a separate bowl, whisk together flour, cocoa powder, baking soda, and salt.
- Mix the buttermilk and vegetable oil together in a measuring cup.
- Add dry and wet ingredients alternately to the butter mixture, starting and ending with dry. Mix just until combined.
- Stir in the vinegar (it may bubble), then gradually add pink food coloring until evenly tinted.
- Divide batter between prepared pans. Bake 25–28 minutes or until a toothpick comes out with a few moist crumbs.
- Let cakes cool in pans for 10 minutes, then transfer to wire racks to cool completely.
- Beat cream cheese and butter until smooth. Add vanilla, salt, and powdered sugar until fluffy.
- Layer and frost the cooled cake, covering the top and sides evenly. Decorate as desired.
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