This Pink Champagne Cake is the perfect way to celebrate any occasion or holiday! A champagne infused cake with a classic vanilla buttercream.

I wanted to do something special for New Year’s Eve this year, since I often let it pass by without mention.
We’re not big on New Year’s Eve parties, and often spend the evening enjoying a cozy night at home, though we do have our own traditions.
“Dinner” on NYE is a generous spread of various appetizers and goodies that we end up grazing on throughout the night.
There is always champagne or some sparking wine around, and we end up tuning in to some kind of NYE broadcast around midnight. Almost always, it’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve because it’s in Times Square and, to me, that is the epitome of NYE celebrations.
It’s not the same without Dick Clark though. 🙁

It’s always a quiet and enjoyable evening at the Liv for Cake household, and this Pink Champagne Cake is the perfect way to celebrate.
I’d like to tell you that this Pink Champagne Cake went off without a hitch, but I think you know me better than that by now.
This cake, or rather the photo shoot for this cake, was a huge pain in the butt.
Since the cake was pretty and pale, I thought it would look best with a light/white backdrop, which essentially made it impossible to get a good shot (at least with my camera and expertise).

Know what else is not fun?
Trying to light 3 sparklers simultaneously so that they ignite at exactly the same time, placing them quickly onto the cake, and grabbing your camera so you can take some pics.
I could have really used an extra set of hands (or two) or a remote for my camera. Ugh.
Let’s not even talk about how many sparklers I went through (18). That’s one entire package (though it actually felt like more at the time). I bought two packs just in case, and I would have used more, but by the 18th sparkler I was SO over it.
Naturally, of the 40 sparkler pics I took, I ended up using #4 which was the first one after a couple test shots.
True story.
Oh, and the sparkler photo session was briefly interrupted here and there so I could fan the smoke away from the smoke alarm. LOL. You can’t make this stuff up.
Sparkler issues aside, I think this Pink Champagne Cake turned out pretty well and it’s the perfect cake for any celebration!

Other noteworthy tidbits from this shoot:
- I watered down the pink champagne because it was too dark pink in contrast with the cake.
- I removed the champagne glasses from the sparkler photo session for fear that they would ignite (lol).
Knowing my luck, they would have.
Cake Sparkles
The cake sparkles I pressed into the sides and top of the cake, while pretty and sparkly and perfect, do not have the best texture.
You’d think they would dissolve almost instantly as soon as you eat them… but they don’t.
You have to chew them and then eventually just give up and swallow. I’m still glad I used them though, and totally would again for the pretty effect that they gave the cake.

Pink Champagne Cake
This Pink Champagne Cake tastes just like (surprise, surprise) champagne!
So if you don’t like the taste of champagne or sparkling wine, you might not like the flavor of this cake. Though my cake taste testers said it didn’t taste overly champagne-y and they thoroughly enjoyed it.
I went with a pretty pink color for the cake layers, as I wanted something different. You could do a gold (use 2 whole eggs rather than 3 whites, and non-pink champagne) or some other color instead and it would be just as pretty.
Whatever you decide, this cake is sure to be a crowd-pleaser for your celebrations.

Tips for this Pink Champagne Cake:
- Recipe revised Aug 4, 2019 ~ I increased volume to yield thicker layers. The recipe makes enough for three 6″ pans or two 8″ pans. Layers should be close to 2″ tall.
- The recipe as-is will also work in two 8″ pans. For three 8″ pans, 1.5x the recipe.
- To make cupcakes, all you need to do is reduce the baking time — start checking at 15mins or so.
- If you don’t like the taste of wine/champagne, you may not like the flavor of this cake (shocker, I know).
- Do not overmix the cake batter once the flour is added as it will result in a fragile and crumbly cake. To prevent this you can add some color gel when you’re mixing the butter & sugar instead.
- Cake sparkles give a perfectly pretty effect, but I would recommend sanding sugar instead for a more palatable texture.
- If you would like to have a gold-toned cake for NYE, use 3 whole large eggs rather than 5 large egg whites, and regular champagne instead of pink. I wouldn’t recommend tinting the batter, but you can try brushing gold luster dust onto the chilled/set frosting or using gold leaf to add accents!
- Learn how to keep your cakes moist by using Simple Syrup.
- Be sure to check my Swiss Meringue Buttercream post for tips and troubleshooting and for how to make your buttercream white.
- To help ensure your cake layers bake up nice and flat, see my Flat Top Cakes post.

Pink Champagne Cake
Ingredients
Pink Champagne Cake:
- 2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
- 2 1/4 tsps baking powder
- 3/4 tsp salt
- 3/4 cup unsalted butter room temperature
- 1 1/2 cup granulated sugar
- 5 large egg whites room temperature
- 1 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
- 1 cup pink champagne or sparkling wine, room temperature
- Fuschia color gel
Vanilla Buttercream:
- 5 large egg whites
- 1 1/2 cups granulated sugar
- 1 1/2 cups unsalted butter room temperature, cubed
- 1 tsp clear vanilla extract
- Fuschia color gel
Assembly:
- 2 jars of cake sparkles or 1 jar sanding sugar
- Wilton tip 1M
- Wilton tip 12
Instructions
Pink Champagne Cake:
- Preheat oven to 350F and grease and flour three 6" cake rounds, line with parchment.
- In a medium bowl, whisk flour, baking powder, and salt. Set aside.
- Using a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat butter until smooth. Add sugar and beat on med-high until pale and fluffy (2-3mins).
- Reduce speed and add egg whites one at a time, fully incorporating after each addition. Add vanilla.
- Alternate adding flour mixture and champagne, beginning and ending with flour (3 additions of flour and 2 of champagne). Fully incorporating after each addition.
- Add a small amount of Fuschia color gel using a toothpick. Mix to incorporate but try not to overmix.
- Spread batter evenly into prepared pans. Smooth the tops with a spatula.
- Bake for approx. 35 mins or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out mostly clean.
- Place cakes on wire rack to cool for 10mins then turn out onto wire rack to cool completely.
Vanilla Buttercream:
- Place egg whites and sugar into the bowl of a stand mixer, whisk until combined.*
- Place bowl over a hot water bath on the stove and whisk constantly until the mixture is hot and no longer grainy to the touch (approx. 3mins).
- Place bowl on your stand mixer and whisk on med-high until the meringue is stiff and cooled (the bowl is no longer warm to the touch (approx. 5-10mins)).
- Switch to paddle attachment. Slowly add cubed butter and mix until smooth. Add vanilla and continue to whip until smooth.**
Assembly:
- Place one layer of cake on a cake stand or serving plate. Top with approximately 2/3 cup of frosting and spread evenly. Repeat with remaining layers and apply a thin coat of frosting all over the cake. Chill for 20mins.
- Frost and smooth the sides. Chill for 20mins.
- Using a toothpick, add a small amount of Fuschia color gel to the remaining frosting. Stir with a spatula to incorporate, or place back on the stand mixer to mix in the color.
- Gently press cake sparkles or sanding sugar into the sides and top of the cake.***
- Decorate with pink rosettes on top and beads along the bottom if desired.
Notes
** The buttercream may look like it’s curdled at some point. Keep mixing until it is completely smooth.
*** It’s easiest to do this if the cake is on a cake board and you can place it on an upside-down glass or bowl so the edges hang over. Adapted from My Cake School. ~Recipe revised Aug 4, 2019 – I increased volume to yield thicker layers. The recipe makes enough for three 6″ pans or two 8″ pans. Layers should be close to 2″ tall.~
Originally published on Dec 17, 2016
Danielle Sosa says
Hi Olivia! I was wondering if you had any thoughts on what other kind of frosting might go well with this, as I am not a huge fan of buttercream ( I know I’m a weirdo) I make a delicious cream cheese frosting with cream cheese and a lot of heavy whipping cream, and I love chocolate and white chocolate ganache, do you think something like that would work? I’ve never had champagne cake so I don’t know what flavors would work well with it! Thanks <3
Olivia says
Hi Danielle! I totally think cream cheese would work as long as it’s firm enough. I have a good recipe you can check out here:
http://livforcake.com/2017/04/blueberry-banana-cake.html
I think a white chocolate ganache would work well too 🙂 Let me know what you decide and how it turns out!
TrishKnits says
I made this cake for a birthday dinner for two girlfriends. The photos give the impression that the recipe would result in a relatively tall 3-layer cake. However, I found that a single batch of batter wasn’t going to result in very thick layers, especially after levelling, so instead I made the recipe twice and baked two 6″ layers per batch, which resulted in a beautiful and dramatically tall, 4-tiered cake. Also, I used a pink champagne infused simple syrup (⅓ cup each of white sugar, water and champagne) to moisten the layers when assembling and my go-to vanilla buttercream frosting – but your recipe does looks great. 🙂
I must say that the fragrance of pink champagne baking is so yummy! I’ll come back to report on what the birthday girls and other guests say after they taste it! Thanks. <3
Olivia says
Hi Trish! Thanks for your tips and feedback. I love the idea of a champagne infused syrup! Regarding the size of the layers, I just had a lightbulb moment because Nathan (comment above yours) also mentioned his layers were thin. I actually use Evenbake strips (http://livforcake.com/2014/09/flat-top-cakes.html) to make sure my layers bake up flat, so I don’t have to level them at all. This means they are even and taller all around – should be about 1-1.5″ thick. Totally works as two 6″ layers instead though, and I’d love to see your super tall 4 layer cake! I hope everyone liked it 🙂
Nathan says
This is the first cake that has repeatedly given me issues. It hasn’t risen properly in 6 attempts. I’ve tried doubling the baking powder, I’ve tried self-raising flour, I’ve tried self-raising flour with baking powder, all without luck. Baking powder was brand new. Thoughts?
Olivia says
Hi Nathan! I’m so sorry, I thought I replied to this last week!! 🙁 So strange about your issues with this recipe. Do the layers really not rise at all? How tall are they when they come out and do they dome to the point where you need to level them? (See comment below from Trish). I use this recipe all the time (or versions of it, but basically the same ratios) and never have issues. They layers aren’t super tall — but should be 1-1.5″ or so. You could try adding a bit of baking soda (1/2 tsp) and see if that helps?
Nathan says
Thanks for replying Olivia. I’ll try some baking soda next time.
I used a flour nail so I didn’t get much done and the layers were around half to 3/4 of an inch. I was guessing because it didn’t rise they were also more dense.
I can confirm Champagne simple syrup is awesome, been doing it a while – though I doubt the alc cooks out, maybe it does.
If soda doesn’t fix it I’ll just have to multiply the recipe.
Olivia says
I’ve actually increased the amounts in my more recent “white” cakes to yield taller layers overall. You can try using the cake recipe from here, minus the Kahlua and swap the buttermilk for champagne:
https://livforcake.com/kahlua-cake/
Actually, it might be easier if I just post the measurements:
2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
2 tsp baking powder
3/4 tsp salt
3/4 cup unsalted butter room temperature
1 1/2 cup granulated sugar
5 large egg whites room temperature
1 1/2 tsp vanilla
1 cup pink champagne or sparkling wine room temperature
Let me know what you end up trying and how it goes!
Sheila says
Hello,
I dont bake often and only own two cake pans, one is 8 inches another is 6″ and both are a bit taller than the standard ( 3″). They make for a small tier cake in my imagination 🙂
Should i go out and buy another pan for this recipe or am i good to try this in two, different sized pans. I’ve had a ‘too small pan’ baking disater already that i’d like to avoid repeating.
Thanks in advance.
Olivia says
Hi Sheila! I think your pans should work fine, but the baking time will differ between them, so just keep that in mind 🙂
Nadine says
Hi thanks for the recipe. I have just made it – still to try the cake but the buttercream seemed too runny. There is no way I could pipe it. Do you know what I have done wrong? It was stiff until I added the butter. Thanks.
Olivia says
Hi Nadine! If the meringue was stiff when you added the butter then either 1) your meringue was too warm still and melted the butter or 2) your butter was too soft. Either way though, sticking it in the fridge for 20mins and re-whipping should fix it 🙂
Avery says
Could this be made completely ahead of time and frozen? If that’s possible, do you know how long a cake that size would take to defrost? Thank you!
Olivia says
Hi Avery! I’ve never frozen an whole cake before but, in theory, yes, that should work! My guess would be 5-6 hours at room temperature to defrost. I hope that helps!
Lauren says
How many cupcakes do you think this would make? I’m making this recipe for a friend’s baby shower tomorrow and I want to make sure I have enough for everyone 🙂 thanks in advance!
Olivia says
HI Lauren! Sorry for the delayed reply. MY guess would be maybe around 16 cupcakes?
Ericka says
If I made this into cupcakes, how long would I bake them for? Thank you!
Olivia says
Hi Ericka! Start checking them at 15mins or so. Let me know how they turn out!
Kim says
Maybe I’m reading the directions wrong but do I add the champagne to the egg/butter mixture? When it says alternate between flour mixture and champagne, it seems the champagne is still alone, in which case when do I add the eggs/butter mixture?
Also, what does it mean when you refer to a toothpick to add the color gel????
Olivia says
Hi Kim! You alternate adding the flour and champagne to the butter mixture. For the color gel – I stick a toothpick in it to grab a bit of color then dip the toothpick in the cake batter/frosting to transfer the color. I hope that helps!
Linda says
Your cake looks gorgeous! Great photo shoot. I made this for my son’s wedding rehearsal dinner. Unfortunately the layers we’re extremely thin even though I used 6″ cake pans. I was very disappointed; Mine did not look anything like your photos. Perhaps I should have doubled the recipe. I ended up using a different cake recipe.
Olivia says
Hi Linda! I’m so sorry to hear about your layers!! 🙁 They should be about 1-1.5″ thick. They’re not super tall layers, but they should not be extremely thin :\
Sandy says
Hi. I’ve made this cake two times and it’s delish. I want to try making it with our champagne is that possible. Can I just omit it or do I have to substitute it with something else? Hoping to make this cake thus afternoon.
Olivia says
Hi Sandy! I usually make this recipe with buttermilk, so I would use that in place of the champagne. Or regular milk if you don’t have buttermilk handy, but I love it with buttermilk myself!
Joyce says
The photos look stunning, which motivated me make the cake today.
The texture is great, but somehow the cake tasted a little plain…more like a flavorless butter cake. =(
Do you think it is the pink champagne?! I used a Rosé.
Olivia says
Hi Joyce! That is super weird as I thought mine almost tasted *too much* like champagne, hmm. The stuff I used was a sparkling rosé.
Joyce says
Thanks for the reply! I think it might be the selection of champagne.
Will def. give it another go with sparkling rose! =D
Olivia says
Good luck! Let me know how it goes 🙂
Antionette Henry says
Hi the cake looks delicious! Can I make cupcakes using the exact recipe? Thank you!
Olivia says
Hi Antionette! This should turn out fine as cupcakes. let me know how you like it!
Chelsea Talley says
Hi Olivia,
I plan on making this for a bridal shower next weekend, but wanted to know if I could make the icing a head of time? I was actually thinking of making it this weekend, but didn’t know if it would hold till next weekend. What are your thoughts/advice?
Thanks!!
Olivia says
Hi Chelsea! In theory, the frosting *should* be fine if you refrigerate it until the following weekend then bring it back to room temperature. You’ll need to rewhip it and it may separate a bit, in which case, just keep whipping. There is a small chance it will turn into something that looks like curdled soup (lol, lovely right?). I had this happen to me once and thought it was a lost cause but I managed to save it! Turns out the frosting was still a bit too cold when I went to whip it which is what caused the issues. I grabbed my hair dryer (for real) and heated the side of the bowl a bit while it was mixing. Then I walked away for 5 mins and hoped for the best. Miraculously, it came back together into the most perfect fluffy frosting! Sorry, that was some major rambling…in short, it will work, you might just need to get it to be pretty again once you thaw :). I hope that helps! Let me know how it goes 🙂
Ale says
Hi Olivia!
This recipe looks amazing, and the cake came out beautifully! I’m excited to make this for my friend’s birthday. I have a question though. I only have two 9in cake pans. I noticed your comment to Q said to make 1.5x the recipe. I’m having trouble converting how much pink champagne I would need, as well as the amount of egg whites.
Could you help me out? Thanks!
Olivia says
Hi Ale! If you 1.5x the recipe it’s about 1 cup + 2 Tbsp of champagne and 4.5 egg whites (135g). I hope that helps!
Caity says
Hey! Love this cake, about to make it honestly haha room temp or cold champagne for this? Thanks!
Olivia says
Hi Caity! Sorry for the delayed reply… room temp is best!
Stephanie says
Hi Olivia! I’d like to make this cake for a tasting. I have 5″ rounds and only need two layers for the tasting. Do you think making a half recipe would be sufficient for 2 5″ layers?
Olivia says
Hi Stephanie! Changing pan size is always a challenge and I’ve never made smaller than 6″… The layers are fairly thin in general, so I would recommend 2/3 of the recipe for ease of reducing it. Should work fine!
Cindy Rodriguez says
This is absolutely gorgeous! I can’t wait to try this out and of course, it always gives me an excuse to have a little bubbly.
Olivia says
Thank you! I hope you like it 🙂
Fatima says
Hi! One question. When you do the buttercream who do you mix the egg whites until the are nougat point or just mix a little?
Olivia says
Hi Fatima! I’m not totally sure I understand your question — you whip the egg whites until they are stiff and glossy and then add the room temperature butter 🙂
Rebecca Blackwell says
A cake that tastes like champagne is SO my kind of recipe! And it’s so pretty I can hardly stand it. I think this cake might just make an appearance at our house on Mother’s Day. Thank you so much for sharing it!
Olivia says
Hi Rebecca! I hope you try this one. Please let me know how you like it!! 🙂
Jeanne Chappell says
I want to make this for my daughters next birthday in July, it looks so beautiful.
Olivia says
Thanks so much Jeanne! I hope you like it 🙂