This caramel cake has become my most requested dessert for birthdays and special occasions. After years of trying different recipes and dealing with caramel that either burned or turned grainy, I finally figured out the method that works every single time. oliver loves helping me make the caramel sauce, though he's mainly interested in licking the spoon. What started as an intimidating dessert has become one of my favorites to make because once you know the tricks, it's actually pretty straightforward.
Why You'll Love This Caramel Cake
This caramel cake is way less scary than people think once you know the right method. Yeah, making caramel from scratch sounds terrifying, but it's really just sugar and patience. I've taught this to friends who were convinced they'd burn down their kitchen, and they all managed to pull it off. oliver thinks watching the sugar melt is like magic, and honestly, it kind of is. The smell alone makes the whole house feel warm and special.
The best part is how this cake gets better with time. Most cakes are good the day you make them and then start going downhill, but this one actually improves after sitting overnight. The caramel soaks into the cake layers just enough to make everything moist and rich, while the frosting sets up perfectly. I always make it the day before I need it now, which takes all the pressure off. Plus, it's one of those desserts that looks way harder than it actually is, so everyone thinks you're some kind of baking genius.
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Ingredients For Caramel Cake
For the Cake:
- All-purpose flour
- Sugar
- Butter
- Eggs
- Baking powder
- Salt
- Vanilla extract
- Milk
For the Caramel:
- Granulated sugar
- Heavy cream
- Butter
- Salt
- More vanilla
For the Frosting:
- Butter
- Powdered sugar
- The caramel you just made
- Splash of milk if needed
Nice to Have:
- Extra caramel for drizzling
- Flaky sea salt for the top
- Vanilla bean paste
See recipe card for quantities.
How To Make Caramel Cake Step By Step
Make the Cake First:
- Cream butter and sugar until fluffy (takes longer than you think)
- Add eggs one at a time
- Mix in vanilla
- Alternate flour mixture and milk, starting and ending with flour
- Divide between three greased pans
- Bake at 350°F for 20-25 minutes
Make the Caramel (The Scary Part):
- Put sugar in heavy saucepan over medium heat
- Don't stir, just let it melt and turn amber
- Swirl the pan gently if needed
- When it's deep golden, slowly add warm cream (it'll bubble up)
- Stir in butter and salt
- Let it cool completely
Make the Frosting:
- Beat butter until light and fluffy
- Add powdered sugar gradually
- Beat in cooled caramel (make sure it's really cool)
- Add milk if it's too thick
Put It Together:
- Level cake layers if needed
- Spread frosting between layers
- Frost outside of cake
- Drizzle with extra caramel
- Let it set for at least an hour
Storage Tips
From making this for events and dealing with leftovers, here's what works:
Room Temperature (2-3 days):
- Cover with cake dome or foil tent
- Don't seal it completely (frosting needs air)
- Keep away from heat and direct sunlight
- Actually gets better overnight
In the Fridge (up to 5 days):
- Wrap loosely in plastic wrap
- Let it come to room temp before serving
- Frosting might get a little firm when cold
- Tastes fine cold if you're impatient
Freezing (up to 3 months):
- Freeze unfrosted cake layers wrapped tight
- Make frosting fresh when ready to serve
- Don't freeze assembled cake (frosting gets weird)
- Thaw layers overnight before frosting
Make-Ahead Tips:
- Bake cake layers 2 days ahead
- Make caramel sauce 3 days ahead
- Assemble day before serving
- Frosting holds up really well
What Not to Do:
- Don't refrigerate unless you have to
- Don't cover while frosting is still soft
- Don't freeze with frosting on
Equipment For Caramel Cake
- Offset spatula for frosting
- Heavy-bottomed saucepan
- Electric mixer
- Three 9-inch round cake pans
- Wire cooling racks
Substitutions
From making this for different dietary needs and using whatever's in the pantry, here's what works:
Cake Substitutions:
- All-purpose flour → Cake flour (makes it more tender)
- Regular milk → Buttermilk (tangier flavor)
- Butter → Oil (stays moist longer)
- White sugar → Brown sugar (deeper flavor)
Caramel Alternatives:
- Homemade → Store-bought caramel sauce (totally fine)
- Heavy cream → Half and half (thinner but works)
- Regular sugar → Coconut sugar (different flavor)
- Dairy → Coconut cream (for dairy-free)
Frosting Changes:
- Butter → Cream cheese (tangy twist)
- Powdered sugar → Less sugar plus cream cheese
- Regular → Add cream cheese for stability
- Dairy → Vegan butter and powdered sugar
Flavor Twists:
- Vanilla → Almond extract
- Plain → Add coffee to the caramel
- Regular → Salted caramel version
- Basic → Bourbon in the cake layers
Make It Easier:
- Three layers → Two thicker layers
- Homemade → Box cake mix with homemade caramel
- From scratch → Buy cake, make just the caramel and frosting
Caramel Cake Variations
Salted Caramel Version:
- Add sea salt to the caramel
- Sprinkle flaky salt on top
- Use salted butter in frosting
- oliver's favorite because he loves salty-sweet
Chocolate Caramel Combo:
- Add cocoa powder to one cake layer
- Chocolate ganache between layers
- Caramel frosting on outside
- Looks fancy at parties
Apple Caramel Fall Style:
- Add diced apples to cake batter
- Cinnamon in the cake layers
- Regular caramel frosting
- Perfect for autumn
Coffee Caramel:
- Strong coffee in the cake
- Espresso powder in frosting
- Caramel drizzle on top
- Grown-up flavor
Mini Caramel Cupcakes:
- Same recipe, different pans
- Bake for 18-20 minutes
- Easier to serve at parties
- Kids love individual portions
Layered Trifle Style:
- Crumble cake into pieces
- Layer with caramel and whipped cream
- Easier assembly
- No frosting skills needed
Top Tip
- She also had this weird thing about adding a tablespoon of corn syrup to her caramel. I thought it was cheating at first, but it keeps the caramel from crystallizing and getting grainy, which is what ruins most homemade caramel. oliver thinks corn syrup is gross on its own, but he can't argue with how smooth and glossy it makes the finished caramel.
- The last trick she taught me was to always make the caramel the day before and let it sit overnight before using it in the frosting. Something about letting it rest makes the flavor deeper and richer, and it's way easier to work with when it's had time to thicken up properly. Most people try to rush this part, but patience really does make a difference.
Why This Caramel Cake Recipe Works
This caramel cake works because it breaks down what seems like a scary dessert into steps that don't require perfect timing. The cake part is basic and forgiving - just a good vanilla cake that can handle all that caramel without turning into mush or falling apart. I've made this when I'm distracted, when oliver's "helping" by dumping flour everywhere, and even when I'm rushing for a party, and it still turns out fine because the recipe doesn't need you to be super precise.
The caramel method is what really saves you from disaster. Instead of trying to get the caramel perfect while also juggling cake layers and frosting, you make it completely separately and let it cool down before using it. This way, if you burn the caramel (and I have, multiple times), you haven't wasted a whole cake - you just toss the burnt sugar and try again. Plus, making the caramel ahead actually makes it taste better and gives you time to fix problems. oliver has watched me mess up caramel and just start over without having a meltdown, which taught him that cooking mistakes aren't the end of the world.
FAQ
How does caramel cake taste?
Caramel cake tastes rich and buttery with deep, sweet caramel flavor that's not too overwhelming. The cake itself is moist and vanilla-flavored, so the caramel frosting is really the star. It's sweet but has a slight complexity from the caramelized sugar that makes it more interesting than just vanilla cake with brown frosting.
Can you put caramel between cake layers?
Yes, definitely! That's actually one of the best parts about making caramel cake. You can brush warm caramel sauce between the layers or add caramel to your frosting and spread it thick between each layer. Just make sure the caramel isn't too hot or it'll melt your frosting.
What's the difference between caramel and butterscotch cake?
Caramel is made from granulated sugar that's heated until it melts and turns golden. Butterscotch is made with brown sugar and butter from the start. Butterscotch has a deeper, more molasses-like flavor, while caramel is sweeter and more purely sugar-focused. They're both good, just different flavors.
What are the three types of caramel?
The main types are wet caramel (sugar cooked with water), dry caramel (sugar cooked alone), and soft caramel (caramel with cream and butter added). For cake, you usually want soft caramel since it stays creamy and spreadable. Dry caramel is what most home bakers make since it's simpler.
Your New Special Occasion Star!
Now you've got everything you need to make caramel cake that'll blow people away - from the basic technique to grandma's double caramel method and corn syrup trick. This recipe proves that fancy desserts don't have to be scary once you break them down into simple steps. oliver still gets excited watching the sugar turn into caramel, and honestly, it never gets old seeing people's faces when they taste homemade caramel cake.
Want more crowd-pleasing desserts? Try our Easy Blueberry Cheesecake in Just 10 Minutes for when you need something quick but impressive. Need a refreshing summer treat? Our Best Watermelon Sorbet Recipe in 5 Minutes is perfect for hot days. And for casual family dinners, our Easy Taco Pizza Recipe always makes everyone happy!
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Related
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Pairing
These are my favorite dishes to serve with Caramel Cake:
Caramel Cake
Equipment
- 1 Offset spatula (For smooth frosting)
- 1 Heavy-bottomed saucepan (Essential for caramel)
- 1 Electric mixer (Stand or hand mixer)
- 1 9-inch cake pans (Greased and lined)
- 1 Wire cooling rack (For cooling cake layers)
Ingredients
For the Cake:
- 2 ½ cups All-purpose flour - Can sub cake flour
- 2 cups Sugar - White or brown
- 1 cup Butter - Room temperature
- 4 Eggs - Room temperature
- 2 ½ teaspoon Baking powder
- ½ teaspoon Salt
- 1 tablespoon Vanilla extract
- 1 cup Milk - Can sub buttermilk
For the Caramel:
- 1 ½ cups Granulated sugar
- ¾ cup Heavy cream - Warmed
- 6 tablespoon Butter - Unsalted
- ½ teaspoon Salt - Or more to taste
- 1 teaspoon Vanilla extract
- 1 tablespoon Corn syrup - Optional – prevents crystallization
For the Frosting:
- 1 cup Butter - Room temp
- 3 cups Powdered sugar - Sifted
- All Homemade caramel - Cooled completely
- 1 tablespoon Milk - If needed to adjust texture
Optional Toppings:
- To taste Flaky sea salt - For garnish
- Drizzle Extra caramel sauce - For decoration
Instructions
- Make the cake batter and bake the layers
- Prepare the caramel sauce
- Make the frosting using the cooled caramel
- Assemble and decorate the cake with frosting and caramel drizzle
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