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.



Joan says
Hi! Can I check what is the temperature of the hot water stated in this recipe?
Olivia says
Hi Joan! I boil water in my kettle before I start gathering all my ingredients. Once everything is ready, I get the water. It’s quite hot! So be sure to pour slowly and whisk the egg mixture quickly.
Laura says
I am a huge fan of the Black Forest Cake and this one looks AMAZING! Big like! Very big like!
Olivia says
Thank you Laura!
Erin says
I made a lazy version of this today for Father’s Day! I halved the recipe to make it a 2-layee cake. This is an AMAZING chocolate cake. For the cherry syrup I used Amaretto and a bit of the maraschino cherry juice. It got a little hard but still delicious. I used maraschino cherries bc my husband loves them and Cool Whip bc I don’t jave a whisk attachment for my mixer. And some shaved chocolate on top.
It. Was. To. Die. For. 100% will make again!
Olivia says
So glad you liked it Erin!
Ainsley says
Hi there!
Do you have any recommendations as to how deep the 8 inch baking pans should be?
Beautiful recipe! I can’t wait to try it! 🙂
Olivia says
Hi Ainsley! Mine are 2″ deep. I hope you like it!
Alex says
Hi, I am very looking forward to making this cake! I don’t use US cups at home so I have to convert from one unit to another but the results of all purpose flour are different on all websites and I was just wondering in relation to your recipe approximately how much grams of flour will it be?
Thanks
Olivia says
Hi Alex! Just below the list of ingredients there is an option where you can toggle to Metric for grams 🙂
Shannon says
Hi! You may have already answered this question so sorry if I am a repeat! I was wondering why the cake needs to be eaten within two days? I am making this for a murder mystery party I’m going to this weekend and wanted to make it the day before because I won’t have much time the day of. Any suggestions on how to handle this?
Also, I am going to use the canned cherry pie filling because my grocery store doesn’t have fresh cherries yet. When layering, do you just use 1 cup of the cherry pie filling instead or is the amount different?
Thanks for your help!!
Olivia says
Hi Shannon! It’s ideal due to the whipped cream frosting — it just doesn’t hold up as well as a standard buttercream does. Day before should still be ok though :). 1 cup of pie filling per layer would be a bit much I think, I would start with half of that and see. The filling will likely also make the cake a bit more unstable (it might slide around) as you’re stacking and filling. So I wouldn’t add too much of it and maybe swirl it into the whipped cream a bit. I hope that helps! Let me know how it turns out 🙂
Shannon says
Awesome! I’ll do that then! Thanks so much!!
brooke says
Is there anything I could replace the cherry liqueur with? My family and I do not drink alcohol.
Olivia says
Hi Brooke! I link to a non-alcoholic version in the Tips section of the blog post. Check that out!
Shubh says
Thankyou olivia for the wonderful recipe .. the laters were so spongy and soft .. yet to master the flat top .. i think one step at a time .. baked it for my little one ‘s bday .. 😍
Olivia says
So glad you liked it!! Have you seen my post on baking flat cakes?? https://livforcake.com/flat-top-cakes/
Kara Murray says
Hi! Hoping my grocery store has cherries – I haven’t looked yet. It is a big grocery store but I don’t know if they are stocked in the produce section yet. If not, what about frozen cherries? Thoughts?
Thanks!!
Olivia says
Hi Kara! I think frozen cherries would be ok, but the texture would be different (mushy?) when they are thawed. You could make a cherry filling with them instead 🙂
Kara Murray says
Thank you!! I’ll look for real cherries! You mentioned cherry pie filling – it has a lot of “sauce” around it. Does that make the cake different? Are regular cherries the best? Thank you!!
Wendy says
If you want to try Canned Bing Cherries that would probably be better than pie filling. Use at least 2-3 cans. Save the juice and add sugar and cook down somewhat. Add some cornstarch and water mix to thicken. Add the cherries back in – but check for pits – as this had happened to me before. Then add some Kirsch to the sauce – after cooling. That way you will get the taste of the German Liqueur without the saturation throughout the cake. I’ve done this procedure with freshly cleaned and pitted cherries as well as canned. BUT the fresh cherries are the best tasting. You have to add sugar and water with fresh cherries and cook 10 min or so. Cherries are only available for a short time not sure if they’re around yet. I live in Canada so not here yet.
Olivia says
This is awesome, thanks so much for the tips Wendy!!
Olivia says
Black Forest Cake is typically made with more of a “filling” I think rather than fresh cherries. I think it would be delicious either way!
Janet says
First- I loved this cake recipe!!!!
I am taking care of my my… so for 6 months I am out of town. No access to my recipes (I have a recipe for a Black Forest cake at home that I love)
But Loved this one too! Excellent not too sweet, not too heavy, CONSISE directions!
Loved the bark idea!
Of course Nov is not cherry season so….
2 cherry comments:
I am from Montana
I love Flathead Lake cherries….. the best cherries in the world!
I buy 60 Lbs each year as soon as they are picked. I pitt , vacuum pack and freeze them so that I have them all year long.
Frozen cherries- defrost them and then slowly heat them on low in a dry sauce pan… stir constantly. It helps to remove the excess moisture (won’t be as good as good,but if they were frozen properly, they won’t be completely mushy.
If I had been home with my freezer full of putted vacuum packed cherries, I would have done this.
But alas not….. so….
I used dried cherries.
Use SOUR cherries cut in half or smaller.
Heat cherry licorice (I use a sour cherry licqor from Portugal- not too sweet) just till it starts to boil.
Add cherries and let them soak 1 hr min (overnight is best)
Drain off excess Licqour.
2 parts cherry : 1 part Licquor.
For Black Forest cake, I mixed cherries in 60% of the whip cream and used it as the filling. The remains 40% whip cream I used on the outside of the cake.
Olivia says
Hi Janet! Once again, thank you for these incredible tips! I am sure they will be so helpful to others. I’m so happy to hear you loved this recipe 🙂
Louis Venter says
I there Olivia, beautiful cake by the way. Your metric measurements, is it accurate? Apologies for confirming, just don’t want to make mistake. Thanks
Olivia says
Thank you Louis! The Metric measurements are automatically converted and haven’t been verified by me. They *should* be accurate, but if you’re concerned you can sanity check them with an online conversion tool?
Louis Venter says
Thank you very much for your reply. I have checked with a conversion table ☺ One last thing, can this cake be frozen?
Louis Venter says
FYI what I mean by frozen cake is only the baked layers. Thanks again for your kind and helpful responses.
Olivia says
Yes for sure! I almost always freeze my cake layers as I spread out my baking. Double wrap them in plastic wrap once cooled and stick them in the freezer. The cake frosted would not freeze well since it’s whipped cream, otherwise it would freeze perfectly fine too. I hope you like it!!
Louis Venter says
Great Olivia! Thanks again for your helpful and friendly assistance on my queries. I won’t hesitate to ask questions in the future. Happy banking 🌟
RAJI NAGOORPITCHAI says
Can I substitute milk for buttermilk thanks for your recipe looking great
RAJI NAGOORPITCHAI says
Thanks for your recipe planning to make this for my birthday pls tell me shall I substitute milk for buttermilk
Olivia says
Hi Raji! You can make your own buttermilk at home. Add 1 Tbsp of either lemon juice or vinegar to 1 cup of milk and let it stand for 10mins.
RAJI NAGOORPITCHAI says
Hi Olivia! I made this cake today it came out good thank you so much:)
Olivia says
So glad to hear you liked it!
Jill says
Hi! I am planning on making this for a party on Saturday. A little confused about the frosting. Recipe calls for whipping cream – but it is called a buttercream frosting, should I be using the buttermilk in the frosting and not the cake?! Thanks!!
Olivia says
Hi Jill! It was just a mistake in one of the headings. It is a whipped cream! I updated the recipe, thanks for calling it out!
Sam says
Black Forest cake was my dad’s favourite so I made it in honor of his birthday this week and shared it with my family so that we could celebrate and remember him. I only had 9 inch pans so my cake was a little wider. I recommendations whipping 4 cups of whipping cream if you use a 9 inch pan. I started with the three cups but didn’t have enough to frost the whole cake and make rosettes. Everyone enjoyed it, I’ll be making it again next year.
Olivia says
Hi Sam! Thanks for the tips about the whipping cream. So glad everyone liked it!!
Sophie says
Hi Liv! I made this recipe for my Dad’s birthday and it was a massive hit! Very simple but effective, and the chocolate bark was yummy! The cake itself was incredibly moist and lush. Thanks!
Olivia says
So happy to hear that Sophie! Glad everyone liked it 🙂
Paige says
Also I only have light buttermilk, will that still work?
Olivia says
Yep! That should work just fine.
Paige says
Hi, I’m making this cake and I was wondering if using butter instead of oil would give it a better flavour?
Olivia says
Hi Paige! This chocolate cake is amazingly delicious, I would not substitute butter, personally, but if you do, I would melt it down so it’s the same consistency as the oil.
Carole says
This cake looks amazing! I’m planning to make it for my dad’s birthday, but I only have 9-inch pans. Do you think I could make this recipe as it is and use those 9-inch pans, or would I have to “one-and-a-half” the recipe? I could also double the recipe and use three 9-inch pans, but that’s a lot of cake.
Olivia says
Hi Carole! Ideally you would increase it by 1/3 for two 9″ pans but that would give some weird amounts. I would suggest 1.5x the recipe and make cupcakes with any extra batter. The layers rise a lot so be sure to not fill the pans more than half full. Let me know how it turns out!
Sabrina says
I made this cake and it is amazing! I totally recommend it! Everybody they tried it loved it! Thanks for the recipe 🙂
Olivia says
Thanks so much Sabrina! I’m so glad you liked it 🙂
Abby says
I am making this cake for my mothers birthday and I don’t consider myself a professional baker but I am pretty handy with a spatula, but I am only 13 do you think this cake is okay for me to make?
Olivia says
Hi Abby! Yes, I think you could totally do this!
Brenda Johnson says
This cake was just so delicious. Presentation was a real show stopper at my dinner party. I did change one thing. I added a black cherry filling between all the layers instead of the whipped cream. Black cherry home made filling made the cake very moist and added to the cherry flavor. Filling was easy to make if you decide to use instead of whipped cream. You have to make the filling ahead and cool before spreading between the layers. The chocolate bark is the star on this cake’s appearance. Fun to decorate and easy to make. I found the recipe easy to follow and fun to make. Don’t be afraid of the challenge. Love this site.
Olivia says
Hi Brenda! So happy to hear it was a hit 🙂 I love the addition of black cherry filling! I’ll have to try that next time. Thanks so much for your sweet comments!! <3
Mariana says
Hi Olivia!It looks fantastic!I want to ask you something.Can I use a 26 cm pan for layers?Thank you very much!
Olivia says
Hi Mariana! You can try using the recipe as is in one 26cm pan. The cake rises a LOT so make sure not to fill your pan more than 1/2 full or so. Let me know how it turns out! 🙂