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.
lucy says
i’m going to make this tomorrow and all the comments make it sound amazing; i’m wondering what order to combine the wet ingredients in since the eggs can’t be cooked by the water. thank you in advance 😀
Carolina says
Hi, Lucy! I’ve made this cake many times before, so I feel that my advice will be pretty solid. Just combine all the wet ingredients together, minus the hot water. Then once the wet ingredients are completely mixed, slowly pour in the hot water while whisking the wet. 🙂
Olivia says
Hi Lucy! I add the hot water at the end to the wet ingredients — pour slowly and whisk quickly and it will be fine 🙂
Shari says
I’ll be honest, I hate black forest cake. I think it’s like…the least thrilling cake out there. But, when it’s your boyfriend and his dads favorite and they celebrate a joint birthday – you dont have a choice I guess!
Everyone loved this cake and were super impressed by the chocolate bark (even though I tried to rely on my old pastry chef days and temper the chocolate which was an epic fail lol). It looked and tasted fantastic. I will add this to my permanent list for that one time a year I have to make my least fav cake. Haha. Thank you!
Olivia says
Hi Shari! Lol, I don’t disagree with you re: BFC. I was always surprised it was my mom’s fave! So happy the cake turned out and that everyone loved it 🙂
Carolina says
Okay. This is heaven.
I’ve made this cake maybe around 4 times now (give or take)? The first was for my older brother’s birthday. Everyone went crazy for this cake, even my uncle who hates cherries and we had to coax him into trying a slice of this cake. He took the fresh cherries off, but devoured the cake itself!
Unfortunately, I was afraid to put too much liquor in the cake when assembling it, so it didn’t have that much liquor.
PUT LOTS OF LIQUOR IN THIS CAKE! It makes a HUGE difference. Brush the cake with the liquor syrup until it literally glistens with the moisture. It’s delicious!!
I’ve tried this cake recipe with fresh and canned cherries, and I do prefer the fresh cherries more, but canned cherries are great too.
And if you don’t have buttermilk on hand, you can substitute a cup of milk with some white distilled vinegar or lemon juice (maybe around a teaspoon?). I’ve tried it both ways (with buttermilk and the substitute) and both times are great.
Just…amazing recipe, Liv! I’m making it again for my birthday in two weeks. My family has been begging me to make it again! Thanks for this SPECTACULAR recipe!
Olivia says
Hi Carolina! Thanks for the amazing feedback! I’m so happy you love this cake as much as I do 🙂 Thanks for all your tips!
Tina says
Hi Liv! This looks amazing and I want to make it, but cherries are not in season! Do you think, one could make the cake with frozen (defrosted) cherries instead?
Olivia says
Hi Tina! I think it would work fine. They might be a bit mushier but they’re in between the layers anyhow 🙂 Cherry pie filling would work too!
Rita El Khouri says
hi again hope all is fine.i want to try it formy hubby bthday on sunday but he like pineapple so can i substitute the cherry with it? what about the sugar can i use instead agave syrop thank u
Olivia says
Hi Rita! You can use pineapple instead no problem. I haven’t tried swapping the sugar for agave and I worry that would affect the texture of the cake.
Brit says
Hey! I was wondering if I could substitute the vegetable oil for butter?? Thank you!!
Olivia says
Hi Brit! For best results, I recommend using the recipe as-is. If you choose to use butter instead, be sure to melt it first.
Reilly says
I wanted to make this with fresh strawberries Instead of cherries. But I don’t have any strawberry Liquor. I do have some plain liquor any suggestions on what I should do?.
Olivia says
Hi Reilly! You can skip the syrup in the cake as the strawberries will be quite strong on their own.
Carrie says
I made the cake (but mini cupcakes and a 6″ cake), and the icing from the strawberry cake with mascarpone buttercream recipe and it was amazing! This is the best chocolate cake I’ve ever had. I got so many compliments!
Olivia says
Hi Carrie! So happy to hear that! Thank you for the feedback 🙂
Sarah Robertson says
good cake
Olivia says
So glad you liked it!
Michelle Kubas says
Is sugar is a wet or dry ingredient in this recipe? It is listed among the fellow dry ingredients but I typically associate it with a wet ingredient?
Olivia says
Hi Michelle! I mix it with the dry ingredients here, but either way will work, really.
Robin says
Can you substitute hot coffee for the hot water? If so would it be a 1:1 ratio?
Olivia says
Hi Robin! Yes and yes! That will work fine 🙂
MMB says
Very easy to make, tastes amazing and looks impressive. I’ve made it about 5 times already.
Olivia says
So happy to hear you like it!
Tony says
Do you happen to have instructions on rolling the chocolate in the parchment?
Olivia says
Hi Tony! I go over the steps in the recipe and also link to a video tutorial in the Notes section as well as the blog post.
Taryn says
Hello, this looks amazing!!
Making it for my husband’s birthday tomorrow but I’m doubtful that the cream will sustain the layers? Surely the layers with squish the cream?.. please help🙏🏻
Olivia says
Hi Taryn! If you follow the recipe as-is for pan size and cutting the layers in half it will hold up no problem.
Alisha says
Hi, can I use raspberry instead? Also, if I use raspberry how can I make raspberry syrup?
Olivia says
Hi Alisha! You can totally use raspberries. You can use store-bought or easily make it yourself https://www.marthastewart.com/346011/raspberry-syrup
Mari says
Hello! This looks very good and I’m really excited to try it but I can’t get my hands on dutch processed cocoa powder. Can I use the normal kind?
Olivia says
Hi Mari! You can just use regular cocoa in place of Dutch and it should be fine 🙂
Poppy Fuller says
Is organic cocoa powder the same thing roughly? I’m struggling to get my hands on any too! Can’t wait to make this! X
Olivia says
Hi Poppy! Yes, that should work fine! 🙂
Jill says
Loved this recipe. My daughter made it for a birthday cake and got so many positive wow comments! Thanks. I’d add a photo but not sure I can
Olivia says
Hi Jill! So happy to hear that you loved it! You can email me a photo at livforcakeblog@gmail.com. I’d love to see it!
Mira says
Yesterday was my husband birthday and I make that cake… oh my god it was wonderful yum… thank you for the wonderful recipe.
Olivia says
Hi Mira! Happy birthday to your husband! I’m so happy you both loved this recipe 🙂
Donna says
I was wondering what your thoughts are on turning this recipe into cupcakes.
Olivia says
Hi Donna! You can totally do this as cupcakes, just reduce the baking time — start checking at 15mins or so. Don’t fill the liners more than half full as the batter rises a lot. Let me know how they turn out 🙂
Ella White says
Beautiful cake made it for my husband s birthday everyone loved it.
Olivia says
Hi Ella! So happy to hear that 🙂
Heather says
I made this yesterday and it was fantastic! The cake was incredibly moist. I used frozen dark sweet cherries because fresh cherries aren’t in season. Thank you for the recipe.
Olivia says
Hi Heather! Thanks for the feedback, so glad you loved it!
Val says
I am excited I found your recipe. I have read all the comments/replies – but have one question that I did not see covered: Your recipe calls for ‘good chocolate’. Could you expand on the exact % of cocoa or cacao you recommend?
Thank in advance!
Olivia says
Hi Val! It’s not so much the percentage that matters, but the brand. I like to use Callebaut semi-sweet myself. But other brands like Ghiradelli, Valhrona, and Guittard are great too. For grocery store brands, your best bet is Lindt. I hope that helps!
Amy says
Wow I’m so happy with this recipe I would give it 100 stars but you only let me put a rating of 5 so I did put secretly it means 100 stars. I made it for somebody’s birthday and they loved it and they don’t have much of a sweet tooth but they loved it because it wasn’t too sweet. Thank you!
Olivia says
Hi Amy! Thanks so much for the amazing feedback. I’m thrilled that everyone loved it!