Coffee Cream Cake is four delicious layers of coffee-flavored cake made with a stabilized whipped cream filling and drizzled with coffee-flavored icing. It’s like having your coffee and eating it, too! For another decadent layered cake, check out my White Layer Cake With Fudgy Brownie.
Ingredients & Substitutions
Coffee: Since this is a coffee cake, we can’t forget about the coffee! You will need 2 tablespoons of instant coffee for the cake and another tablespoon for the icing. It brings out the coffee flavor in every bite!
Whipped Cream Filling: To best hold its shape when added between cake layers, I use my stabilized whipped cream.
Icing: This icing on the cake, literally, has more coffee flavor. It is drizzled over all of the delicious layers before cutting and serving.
Why Freeze The Cake Layers
The purpose of freezing the layers of cake comes down to the ease of assembling the cake. When building a layer cake, the last thing you want to happen is for the cake to crumble and fall apart! Chilling it helps with this.
Can I Make This Cake Ahead Of Time?
Yes! You can get a couple of parts of this coffee cream cake made in advance so it’s ready to assemble when you are! Once the cakes have been baked and frozen (part of the instructions), wrap them and store them in freezer-safe bags or containers. They can be frozen for up to 2-3 months. When ready to assemble, let the cakes thaw in the refrigerator for a few hours, up to overnight. You can also get the stabilized whipped cream made ahead of time. The whipped cream can be stored in the refrigerator for 2-3 days or frozen for up to 1-2 months!
How To Store Coffee Cream Cake
To store coffee cream cake, cover it and store it in the refrigerator. It should be refrigerated because of layers of stabilized whipped cream. Enjoy the cake within 2-3 days for the best results.
The Pioneer Women’s Coffee Cake (slightly adapted)
The recipe in the book is a slight variation of the recipe on Miss Ree’s site. Hope you love this Coffee Cream Cake as much as we do!
More Popular Cakes
Coffee Cream Cake
Ingredients
Cake
- 1 cup (2 sticks / 227 g) unsalted butter
- 2 tablespoons instant coffee
- 1 cup hot water
- 2 cups (250 g) all-purpose flour
- 2 cups (400 g) granulated sugar
- ยผ teaspoon kosher salt
- 2 teaspoons baking soda
- ยฝ cup (122.5 g) buttermilk, room temperature
- 2 large eggs, room temperature
- 1 tablespoon vanilla
Stabilized Whipped Cream Filling
- 2 ounces cream cheese, softened
- ยฝ cup (100 g) granulated sugar
- 2 cups (476 g) heavy cream
- ยฝ teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1 pinch kosher salt
Coffee Icing
- ยพ cup (1 ยฝ sticks / 170 g) unsalted butter
- 1 tablespoon instant coffee
- ยผ cup (60.5 g) half-and-half, room temperature
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- 4 cups (500 g) confectioners' sugar
Instructions
Cake
- Preheat oven to 350ยฐF. Spray 2, 8-inch round cake pans with nonstick cooking spray and line each with parchment paper. Set aside.
- To a medium saucepan over medium heat, add butter. Once the butter has melted, add the instant coffee and hot water. Remove from heat. Whisk until fully combined. Set aside.
- To a large bowl, add flour, sugar, salt, and baking soda. Add the butter mixture. Stir to fully combine.
- To a separate bowl, add buttermilk, eggs, and vanilla. Stir to combine. Pour over the batter, whisking until well combined.
- Evenly divide the batter between the two prepared cake pans.
- Bake for 24-26 minutes, or until a toothpick comes out mostly clean.
- Let the cakes cool to room temperature. Once cool, cut each cake layer horizontally into two layers, creating a total of 4 layers.
- Place the layers onto a lined baking sheet and transfer to the freezer for at least 2 hours, up to overnight.
Stabilized Whipped Cream Filling
- Once the cake layers are frozen, prepare the stabilized whipped cream.
- Place the bowl and whisk attachment from your stand mixer into the freezer to chill for about 15 minutes. Starting with a cold bowl will help the cream whip up faster and with more volume.
- Once chilled, add the cream cheese and sugar to the bowl. Mix on medium-high speed until fully combined and no lumps remain.
- With the mixer off, pour in the heavy cream. Resume mixing on medium speed until soft peaks have formed (peaks droop slightly). Stop the mixer.
- Using a rubber spatula, scrape the bottom of the bowl to incorporate all of the cream cheese.
- With the mixer back on medium speed, mix until stiff peaks have formed. (Stiff peaks refer to the whipped cream peaks that stand straight up and hold their shape firmly.)
- Finally, add in the vanilla and a pinch of salt, being careful not to overmix.
- On a cake stand, place one layer of cake. Add โ of the whipped cream filling, spreading it out to the edges. Repeat with the next two layers, topping with the final cake layer.
- Once assembled, make the icing.
Icing
- To a medium saucepan over low heat, add butter. Stir until melted.
- Add instant coffee, half-and-half, and vanilla. Whisk to combine. Remove from heat.
- To a large bowl, add confectioners' sugar. Add the butter mixture and whisk until no lumps remain.
- Evenly drizzle the icing over the cake.
Did you make this recipe?
Thank you for making my recipe! You took pictures, right? Well go ahead and post them on Instagram! Be sure to mention me @iambaker and use the hashtag #YouAreBaker.
Why did you vary the recipe from Ree
Drummondโs recipe in her book?
What is half and half?
A coffee creamer, it has more milk fat than whole milk.
It’s a mixture of milk and cream in equal parts.
Que es un suero de leche? Como hago para conseguirlo o como puedo hacerlo yo? Muchas gracias๐
Just love these cake recipes. Do you have a recipe that uses real strawberries like a strawberry cake
Thank you
Serena Meredith
When you watch the video is says baking “powder”, yet the written recipe says baking “soda”. When I made the cake it bubbled up out of the pan and didn’t rise properly. The filling and icing are wonderful, but something was definitely a problem with the cake recipe.
Will try our this coffee cream cake
what does it mean when it says whisk in half and half.
I made this as a birthday cake for myself today. It turned out great. The combination of two fillings/frostings made it special. Cooling the uncut layers also helped divide them too. This is a keeper recipe! Many thanks to both you and Ree for developing this recipe. I wish I could attach a picture so you could see how beautifully it turned out…ch
Did you use baking powder or baking soda? There seems to be a difference between the printed version to the video. I would love to try it.
Does this cake need to be refrigerated after it’s made due to all the dairy products in it?
what does 1/4 cup half & half talking about in this recipe