Verticallayercake
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The second time making the cake I was surprised by how quickly everything went. Its amazing how much smoother life is with a plan.

Huh. I gotta remember that.

Anywho… I made two cakes. One red velvet and one white cake. I made them in 8in pans and used these methods for creating a level cake.

Here is an important step… immediately out of the oven, within five minutes at most, I removed the cakes from their pans and cut the top dome of both 8-inch cakes.

I then placed the cut parts together. (It should look like a two layer cake here, except without frosting) Then put it in the freezer for no less than five hours.

The reason I do this is:

1. I want the height of a two layer cake. (four or five inches)

2. I do not want a frosting seam.

3. This helps to meld the layers together so they appear one complete layer.

(If you have a 5-inch deep cake pan you can use that.)

Now! Once the cakes have firmed up nicely (after a good five hours) you can remove them from the freezer.

We will begin to cut out our layers!

I simply used a cardboard cake round as my guide. I traced out three evenly spaced concentric circles.

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I am now going to cut off the outside circle.

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Place the template back on the cake. Now I need to carve around that circle! It’s important to try and get your knife at a 90-degree angle… you want a very straight up and down cut.

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Follow the template as close as you can. A sharp knife here is a great idea!!

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You are going to do this with BOTH cakes.

Now I cut off another circle and started the process again.

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Do this to both cakes.

Then cut off another circle so you are left with the center portion. (FYI, if you want to do another circle, therefore making your center smaller, you certainly can!)

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You are now left with two cakes that have concentric circles cut in each.

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The next step might go against everything you know about cake… but just do it anyway.

Wow that was bossy.

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Take a nice big sharp knife and cut from the OUTSIDE of the center circle through the cake.

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You are going to gently separate the layers into individual sections. This is why it is SO important to have a very chilled if not frozen cake!

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Choose which center you want to start with. (I choose the white cake)

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Take the next larger layer of the other cake and place it around the center.

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Keep doing this… alternating the layers… until you have a complete cake assembled again!

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And there you go! Easy right?

Now… were you worried about the layers not staying together? I fixed that with three easy steps.

1. Pour a simple syrup over the re-assembled cakes. (not too much!!)

2. Place a wax paper “belt” around the cake and bind it together with a cord or towel scrap.

3. Place it back in the freezer for a bit!

A couple hours before you are ready to decorate, place the cakes in the fridge so they can “thaw” without sweating.

(I wouldnt recommend decorating a frozen cake.)

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Now… please forgive me but I didn’t decorate the outside with the roses.

I just did a smooth layer of frosting then wrote out a romantic quote I found.

It’s nothing fancy, but it was easy.

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“When I saw you I fell in love, and you smiled because you knew.”

And there are the vertical layers!

If you make this cake please let me know, I would love to see! And of course, love to know if you came up with an easier way. 🙂

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Meet Amanda Rettke

Amanda Rettke is the creator of I Am Baker, and the bestselling author of Surprise Inside Cakes: Amazing Cakes for Every Occasion – With a Little Something Extra Inside.Over the course of her 15+ year blogging adventure, she has been featured in and collaborated with the Food Network, New York Times, LA Times, Country Living Magazine, People Magazine, Epicurious, Brides, Romantic Homes, life:beautiful, Publishers Weekly, The Daily Mail, Star Tribune, The Globe and Mail, DailyCandy, YumSugar, The Knot, The Kitchn, and Parade, to name a few.

Reader Comments

  1. Hello,

    I’d like to bake either your vertical layer cake or a checkerboard cake for my boyfriend’s birthday. He doesn’t own an oven and it’ll take me a good 5 hours to get to his place, so I’m thinking to prepare the cake, put it in the fridge when I get there and decorate it in his kitchen the next day. After freezing and cutting/layering this cake, do you think it’d become soggy etc if I travel with it for 5 hours?

  2. What an incredible challenge! I hope I am successful at pulling this off as you are – one can dream! I have a question for you – for those of us who desire a filling between layers, do you think it could be applied to the inside walls of the vertical layered circles without destroying the cake structure? Just wondering if you’ve ever attempted it yourself!

  3. I want to try this so badly! Thanks for the tutorial 🙂 How do you get your frosting to be so even though? It looks like fondant, it’s so perfect!

  4. I do the vertical layers in exactly the same way except i dont freeze the cakes cause i dont like cold cakes and i use diameters of cake pans as my template so that you have a higher straight edge to guide your knife so there is a smaller chance of cutting it skew. I also dont cut the cake and peel them around but rather gently slip the rings off one another and slot them together again. this works really well.

  5. Hi there! Your cake looks wonderful! just a question.. can i replace with sponge cake instead?? will it affect the cutting???? would love to hear from u!

    Cheers

  6. I found a really cool cake pan set I used to do something like this. It came with rings to divide the batter. It was shop much easier than this process and I had the option to make it checkered on the inside. Found it at hobby lobby. Just two 9″ cake pans and plastic dividers.

  7. Sorry if this seems obvious, but did you actually make two red velvet cakes and two white cakes, for the rosette cake, that you stacked on top of each other before freezing?

  8. Amanda, I have two questions
    1. After the initial freezing, how long should I left it defrost before slicing the rings?
    2. After the final freezing, about how long does it take to defrost the cake before frosting and how do you recommend defrosting the cakes – keep it wrapped in plastic in refrigerator or on the counter?
    THanks! and I can’t wait to make this!

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