This Black Forest Cake combines rich chocolate cake layers with fresh cherries, cherry liqueur, and a simple whipped cream frosting.
Black Forest Cake was a staple when I was growing up (much to my dismay…read on).
You know, the grocery store kind with the nuclear red maraschino cherries? My mom loooooved that cake and always got it for her birthday, and often at other times throughout the year as well. This was epically disappointing to me.
Why on earth would you ruin a perfectly delicious cake with those sickly sweet, sticky, artificial tasting cherries? Whyyyyy? Needless to say, I ate around them, but they totally tainted the cake and frosting. Sad times.
Now that I think about it, it’s probably been a good 20-25 years since I’ve had that cake.
I’ve talked about my disdain for maraschino cherries before, and that feeling still holds true to this day. I have caved and used them as a garnish because I will admit, they look pretty and just go with certain desserts, but they get plucked right off before eating the cake.
Thing is, I actually love cherries. Real cherries. Fresh cherries. They are one of my favourite summer seasonal fruits. So, I set off to re-create the decades-old Black Forest Cake my way.
I promise you, this is one of the easiest cakes you will make.
It looks fancier than it is, and the chocolate bark was actually dead easy to make. The trickiest part of this cake is making sure you don’t have any lingering cherry pits in your cherries, which totally happened due to a less-than-stellar cherry pitter that broke after about 10 cherries.
Needless to say, it got returned.
So, super easy chocolate cake, a simple whipped cream for frosting, and fresh cherries. That’s really all you need.
In order to keep it traditional, I also made a cherry syrup (using kirsch – cherry liqueur) to brush onto the cake layers.
You can leave this out if you’d like to keep it kid-friendly or use a non-alcoholic cherry syrup.
How to Make Chocolate Bark
The chocolate bark on the side of the cake is much easier to make than it looks. I first saw this on my friend Janette’s Irish Chocolate Cake. She has a video tutorial to show you how to make it, and I basically followed her steps: melt chocolate, spread on parchment, chill, unroll.
The only difference is that I popped mine into the freezer for 20mins instead of the fridge for 30mins because I’m mega impatient.
I actually didn’t think it would work out, to be honest, since it was my first time trying it and all, but it worked great!
I actually thought my pieces were too big/thick and was thisclose to re-melting it and trying it again, but after I placed them on the cake they looked perfect.
You will have to work quickly with this chocolate bark — since the chocolate isn’t tempered, it will melt on contact.
I recommend using food safe latex gloves so that you’re not touching the chocolate directly. It will help a ton. I also popped the chocolate shards back in the fridge/freezer here and there to cool them off — it was a hot day too, so that didn’t help my plight.
At one point I actually had the cake and bark in the fridge and was placing the shards on the cake with the fridge door open (lol).
Desperate times. Is it Fall yet??
I used a vegetable peeler on a block of chocolate to create the chocolate shavings on top, and then used a 1M tip to pipe rosettes out of the whipped cream on top.
Really though, you could skip all the bells and whistles and just do a rustic frosting job with the whipped cream.
If you’re a Black Forest Cake fan, I hope you try this version! And if you’re not, maybe this recipe will convert you.
It is much better than the ones you can get at the grocery store, I promise!
Tips for this Black Forest Cake:
- The cake batter will be very thin and rises a lot! The cakes will double in size and rise right to the top of two 8×2″ pans. I do not recommend using springform pans.
- You can leave the cherry liqueur out (though it is traditional) or use a non-alcoholic version.
- You can use maraschino cherries or use cherry pie filling instead of fresh cherries.
- When making the whipped cream frosting, make sure everything is chilled, as the cream will whip up better. I stick my mixer bowl and whisk in the freezer beforehand to chill them before starting.
- I used this technique from my friend Janette to create the chocolate bark. I recommend wearing food safe latex gloves when handling the bark, as the heat from your hands will melt the chocolate. Work quickly regardless!
- This cake will not keep incredibly long due to the whipped cream. I recommend eating within 1-2 days and storing in the fridge. I do not recommend freezing.
- To help ensure your cake layers bake up nice and flat, see my Flat Top Cakes post.

Black Forest Cake
Ingredients
Chocolate Cake:
- 2 cup all-purpose flour
- 2 cups granulated sugar
- 3/4 cup Dutch-processed cocoa powder sifted
- 2 tsp baking soda
- 1 tsp baking powder
- 1 tsp salt
- 1/2 cup vegetable oil
- 1 cup buttermilk room temperature
- 1 cup hot water or hot coffee
- 2 large eggs
- 2 tsp vanilla extract
Cherry Liqueur Syrup:
- 1/2 cup granulated sugar
- 1/2 cup water
- 1/4 cup cherry liqueur
Whipped Cream Frosting:
- 3 cup whipping cream cold
- 1/4 cup powdered sugar sifted
Chocolate Bark:
- 250 g good quality dark chocolate chopped
Assembly:
- 2 1/2 cups cherries pitted and cut in half
- 1 bar dark chocolate for shavings (optional)
- cherries
Instructions
Chocolate Cake:
- Preheat oven to 350F, grease two 8" round baking pans and dust with cocoa powder. Line bottoms with parchment.
- Place all dry ingredients into the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment. Stir to combine.
- In a medium bowl whisk all wet ingredients (pour hot water in slowly as not to cook the eggs).
- Add wet ingredients to dry and mix on medium for 2-3 mins. Batter will be very thin*.
- Pour evenly into prepared pans. I used a kitchen scale to ensure the batter is evenly distributed.
- Bake for 45 mins or until a cake tester comes out mostly clean.
- Cool 10 minutes in the pans then turn out onto a wire rack to cool completely.
Cherry Liqueur Syrup:
- Place sugar and water into a small pot. Stir and bring to a boil. Simmer for 1 min then remove from heat. Stir in cherry liqueur and allow to cool completely.
Whipped Cream Frosting:
- Whip cream and powdered sugar until stiff peaks. Ideally in a cold bowl with a cold whisk.
Chocolate Bark:
- Melt chocolate over a double boiler or in 20 second bursts in the microwave.
- Using a large offset spatula, spread melted chocolate in a thin layer on a large sheet of parchment.
- Roll up from the short side of the parchment. Place on a baking sheet and refrigerate or freeze until firm.
- Unroll to create chocolate bark.
Assembly:
- Cut each cake layer in half horizontally.
- Place one layer of cake on a cake stand or serving plate. Brush generously with cherry syrup.
- Top with approximately 1 cup whipped cream and spread evenly. Top with approximately 1 cup of cherries and gently press them into the whipped cream. Repeat with remaining layers and frost the outside of the cake.
- Decorate with chocolate bark, chocolate shavings, rosettes, and cherries if desired.
Mary Kostiw says
Baking this cake today for my brother in law for his birthday
doing this exactly like recipe says except liquor not using non alcohol syrup
made bark for side and making rosettes
will post pictures after done making
love the ingredients
Olivia says
Hi Mary! I hope you love it! Please email me a photo, I would love to see it 🙂
Penny says
Hi,
I was wondering if 400 grams of sugar for 250 grams of flour is going to be too sweet?
Olivia says
Hi Penny! I don’t find it too sweet at all, especially with the cherries and the whipped cream. You can reduce the sugar slightly if you like though.
Linda says
This is the best black forest gateau ever and so simple. I couldn’t buy fresh cherries and did cheat with store bought morello cherries in syrup. Best chocolate cake recipe I have found. About to try the oreo cookies and cream one for my boys birthday.
Olivia says
Hi Linda! So happy you loved it! Thanks for the feedback 🙂
Doreen says
Hi! Thank you for this recipe! My family loved it! I decided to mix the liquor with the cherry pie filling and it still tasted great!
Question though, how long can the assembled cake last in the fridge and how long can it stay at room temp before consuming? I assembled the cake in a jar by the way.
Thank you!
Olivia says
Hi Doreen! Due to the whipped cream it is more perishable than other cakes and doesn’t last as long in general. I would keep it in the fridge and it should be ok for 2-3 days. At room temp, I’m not sure… max an hour or two I’d think.
Satabdi says
Hi,
Is the cherry brandy you are using sweet or bitter?
Thanks
Satabdi says
Sorry I meant cherry liqueur.
Olivia says
Hi Satabdi! The one I used was sweet.
Eva says
Hi,
Can you please share all the ingredients measurements in grams?
I don’t have any standard cup to use. Also what is the capacity of the cup you have based the measurement?
Olivia says
Hi Eva! There is a metric converter below the list of ingredients.
Rose says
Hi Olivia – Have you tested the recipe using weight measurements? I’ve tried some of those metric converters and they’re often a bit off if the recipe hasn’t been tested. I’m interested in making this cake but hesitating because of the cup measurements. Thanks!
Rose says
I just saw that when I click on metric it gives me the liquids in grams too, but those should be given in milliliters. Making me more skeptical of their accuracy. But if you’ve tested then I’ll give it a try.
Olivia says
Hi Rose! The metric conversions are done automatically and I have not verified them myself. In pastry school we used a scale for both dry and liquid measures so you should be able to use grams no problem. If you read through the comments though a few people have made this recipe using the metric amounts without issue. Let me know if you try it!
Kay says
Hi,
Do I have to cut the cakes in half? If I didn’t how much of a difference would it make?
Olivia says
Hi Kay! Not at all, you could just leave it as a two-layer cake.
Em says
Can I use stabilized whipped cream frosting if I want to make this in warmer climates?
Olivia says
Hi Em! Yes, stabilized whipped cream will be fine.
Em says
Thank you! I love your recipes btw but it seems like it doesn’t rise enough. When I bake this cake, one 8-inch round pan only gets to about 1 and a half inch. Is that normal or am I doing something wrong?
Olivia says
Hi Em! The cake should actually rise a lot — double in size. Did you halve the recipe? Each cake layer should be about 1.5″-2″ tall using the full recipe.
Akanksha Mavooru says
I love your recipe. I have a few questions.
1. If I use cherry pie filling do I just use the can and no need of cherry liquor(non alcoholic) or sugar syrup?
2. Can I use milk chocolate cooking bar for the bark and shavings?
3. Can u make the cake sponge two days in advance, and the day before birthday do the filling and bark?
Thank you in advance.
Olivia says
Hi Akanksha!
1. The syrup is optional, you could still use it if you like.
2. Yes, that would work fine but it wouldn’t be as dark in color.
3. Once you cool the layers, double wrap in plastic wrap, freeze for up to 3 months. Take out 2-3 hours before assembly.
I would do the whipped cream filling and assemble the cake the day you plan to serve it, for best results.
Erin says
Turned out wonderful. Light and was not too sweet. Was a new favorite for the family. I appreciate all the tips you provided, they really helped. Only deviation I had to make was frozen cherries instead of fresh, due to the season.
Olivia says
Hi Erin! So glad you loved it 🙂
Emily M says
How difficult is cutting the cake in half? I’ve never done something like that before and I fear that the cake will just crumble apart. Is there a way to bake each of the four layers separately? Thank you.
Olivia says
Hi Emily! I find it easiest to cut the cake if it’s cold (but not frozen). If it’s room temperature it may be too soft. You can bake each layer separately as long as you have room for 4 8″ pans in your oven. There won’t be much batter in each pan though — it rises a lot but they will still bake up a bit thin (less than 1″). You’ll likely need to reduce the baking time. Let me know if you try it!
Becky says
I made this for my family as my husband loves Black Forrest cake. Our friends joined us for cake and said it was bakery quality. I don’t even really like chocolate cake and this was fantastic! I used combo of cherry pie filling and jarred bing cherries inside and jarred bing cherries on outside as no fresh cherries this time of year. Mine came out a bit messier than photo of course, but delicious and stunning none the less. Definitely will be making this again!
Olivia says
Hi Becky! So glad everyone loved it! Thanks for the feedback 🙂
Christine Gehrman says
Really want to make this gorgeous and delicious looking cake, but can’t get fresh cherries right now and would prefer not to use canned cherry filling…can I use Trader Joes frozen cherries?
Olivia says
Hi Christine! I haven’t tried using frozen cherries myself. I worry they might be a bit mushy when thawed. This will not be a problem for inside the layers, only if you wanted something pretty on top.
amanda says
perfect. I followed the directions exactly using frozen cherries (time of year) and the cake was delicious and beautiful.
Olivia says
Hi Amanda! So glad you loved it! 🙂
Rence says
Hi Liv,
What can you suggest best buttercream partner for this one if I will not do the whipped frosting?
Anyways, love your recipes..and still there are a tons of recipes to try…😊..thank you fpr sharing all these..
Olivia says
Hi Rence! I would do an ermine frosting (https://livforcake.com/ermine-frosting/). It’s lighter and less sweet, but not as much as whipped cream. Let me know if you try it!
Pau says
Thank you for the recipe, I’m wondering how many cupcakes makes this recipe?
Olivia says
Hi Pau! It should make 18-24 depending on size.
Ann says
Hi, could I use olive oil instead, as that’s what I have? I’ve tried several other recipes and they’ve failed, so hoping this will be a success! These were chiffon cakes. Is yours a sponge that is light, as worried the cream will squash out of the layers? Any advice appreciated 😊
Olivia says
Hi Ann! Olive oil will work fine but will flavour the cake slightly. This cake is fairly light but I had no issues with the cream squishing out the sides.
Olivia says
About to make this cake for a friend, just freaking out about the bark. Is 250g Chocolate enough for the whole cake? I’ve seen other videos where once spreading the choc on the paper, they put another piece on top before rolling it up? Which method would be better do you think?
Olivia says
Hi Olivia! I used 250g for my cake and I link to the technique I used. It worked great for me! Be sure to watch the video I linked to.
Ashley says
Hi! Typically sugar is added to the wet ingredients (like added in first thing with the butter). Should it be added in there or mixed with the rest of the dry ingredients? Thanks!
Olivia says
Hi Ashley! This cake uses a different mixing method and requires the sugar to be added with the dry.
Ruch says
It turned out to be extremely delicious. I am using this chocolate sponge recipe for all my chocolate sponges hereafter
Olivia says
Hi Ruch! So happy you loved it 🙂
Ronak Mehta says
Thanks for sharing the awesome information. your information going to be very helpful for me. thank you so much.
Olivia says
Thanks Ronak!