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Raspberry Angel Food Cake

I made this Raspberry Angel Food Cake for dessert on Sunday for our big family dinner. My family is so large, that even just the bare minimum invitees leave us 17 people strong. Yay for big families! This cake was the perfect size for us, and it was a hit all the way around the table.

Raspberry Filled Angel Food Cake

Raspberry Angel Food Cake

Angel food cake quickly is rising to the top of my dessert love list. I had only ever had the grocery store varieties before a month or two ago when I was out of ideas, out of ingredients, and out of options but NEEDED to whip a dessert up for 20.

Yikes!

Not a great spot to be in.

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I happened to have ingredients for an angel food cake, and it turned out amazing. That time I turned it into an awesome berry trifle with berry custard and sweet whipped cream. Yum. That’ll be coming up soon on the blog, but this time I’m going to share with you something I liked even more than that.

Raspberry Angel Food Cake.

Yum.

Raspberry Angel Food Cake

The soft, fluffy, sweet angel food cake (which is NOTHING like the tasteless spongy grocery store version, by the way) is filled with a mixture of stabilized sweet whipped cream, mini marshmallows, and plump juicy raspberries.

The whole cake is covered in a thick layer of whipped cream and then topped with as many raspberries as you can cram on. It is like summer on a plate, and I hope the family really did like it and wasn’t just being nice, because this particular cake (maybe with a different fruit stealing the show) is going to be making a few more appearances before the leaves start to change and the rains come back again.

Raspberry Filled Angel Food Cake

A few important tips on homemade angel food cake before we get started:

  • Make SURE that there is NO residual fat, grease, or oil of any kind on your mixing bowl, beaters, or anything that touches the batter. The batter won’t rise, and you will have something decidedly NOT light and airy on your hands.
  • The best pan to use for this is NOT a non-stick tube pan. Use the old-fashioned kind without non-stick coating. I don’t have one, so I use my non-stick bundt pan going against all common advice. It has worked each time, perfectly. My non-stick bundt is not brand new though, so some of the non-stickiness is a bit…lacking. I can not attest to how this will work if your non-stick coating is new and super effective. Use at your own risk. The whipped egg whites need to stick to the pan in order to rise, so definitely stay away from the baking spray too!
  • This Nordic Ware Natural Aluminum Commercial 2-Piece Angel Food Pan (affiliate link!) is the one I’ll be getting in the very near future.
  • If you want to save some money and make your own superfine sugar, just blend up some regular granulated sugar in your blender. Poof! Superfine sugar!

Huge shout-out to Sweet Sugar Bean for her beautiful work, photos, and for being the inspiration for this post.

Need some more sweet inspiration? Check out these other desserts and cakes!

No Bake Cherry Cheesecake Fluff Pie

No Bake Cherry Cheesecake Pie

Chocolate Sour Cream Coffee Cake

Chocolate Sour Cream Coffee Cake is going to be your new favorite coffee cake. Its sweet enough for dessert, but totally appropriate for brunch too. Or so I tell myself.

Strawberry Lemon Cheesecake Pound Cake

You'd never guess this is a doctored up boxed mix.

Lemon Blueberry Cornmeal Butter Cake

Blueberry Lemon Cornmeal Butter Cake-8

Yield: 12 servings

Raspberry Angel Food Cake

Raspberry Angel Food Cake

Homemade light and airy angel food cake is filled with raspberries and a delicious cream filling.

Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 45 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 5 minutes

Ingredients

Cake:

  • 1 1/4 cups egg whites, room temperature
  • 1 1/4 teaspoon cream of tartar
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 1 1/2 cups superfine granulated sugar, divided
  • 1 cup cake flour

Frosting/Filling:

  • 3 cups heavy whipping cream
  • 1/2 cup superfine granulated sugar
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla
  • 1 teaspoon unflavored gelatin
  • 4 teaspoons cold water
  • 1.5 cups mini marshmallows
  • 4 cups raspberries, divided

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Move rack to bottom position.
  2. Place room temperature egg whites into mixing bowl, and beat to soft peaks. Add in cream of tartar, vanilla, and salt, and beat to medium peaks. Start adding 1 cup of the superfine granulated sugar, 1 tablespoon at a time, and peak to stiff peaks.
  3. Sift together the cake flour and the remaining 1/2 cup of superfine granulated sugar 4 times. Carefully and gently fold into the egg white mixture in small increments, until it is all combined.
  4. Gently spoon into the pan, and bake for 35-45 minutes, or until set and golden brown. Immediately invert pan onto a wine bottle, or other similar bottle, and let rest until completely cool.
  5. After cake is cooled, run a knife, offset spatula, or similar utensil along all sides of cake including the center post. Invert again onto counter and tap to remove.
  6. Place whipping cream into your mixer and whip for about 1-2 minutes, or until about halfway thickened. Add sugar and vanilla, and whip until spreadable.
  7. In a small saucepan, combine gelatin and water, and whisk to combine. Heat over low heat just until gelatin dissolves, but don't let it set! It should still be pourable.
  8. Drizzle into whipping cream while mixing on low, and mix until combined.
  9. Remove 1/3 of whipped cream and stir in marshmallows and 2 cups raspberries.
  10. Using a serrated bread knife, carefully slice cooled cake in half, length-wise. Spoon raspberry cream mixture onto bottom half, and replace with top half. Cover entire cake with remaining whipped cream, top with remaining raspberries, and and chill until ready to serve.

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Nutrition Information:

Yield:

12

Serving Size:

1

Amount Per Serving: Calories: 430Total Fat: 22gSaturated Fat: 14gTrans Fat: 1gUnsaturated Fat: 7gCholesterol: 67mgSodium: 109mgCarbohydrates: 54gFiber: 3gSugar: 41gProtein: 6g

Nutrition data provided here is only an estimate. If you are tracking these things for medical purposes please consult an outside, trusted source. Thanks!

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Nicole Johnson

Nicole Johnson, a self-taught expert in grilling and outdoor cooking, launched Or Whatever You Do in 2010. Her blog, renowned for its comprehensive and creative outdoor cooking recipes, has garnered a vast audience of millions. Nicole's hands-on experience and passion for grilling shine through her work. Her husband, Jeremiah Johnson, also plays a pivotal role in recipe development, adding his culinary flair to the mix. Together, they form a dynamic duo, offering a rich and varied outdoor cooking experience to their followers.

Liz Blois

Friday 22nd of April 2022

Please could you tell me why you use gelatine with the whipped cream? Is it necessary, could i just use whipped cream, I live in the UK in case that makes a difference. Thank you

Nicole Johnson

Friday 22nd of April 2022

It just stabilizes the whipped cream a bit. You can totally go without it if you can't find it. I'd just make sure that the cake won't be resting too long before serving in this case.

Ali Dice

Monday 25th of November 2019

Thanks for this recipe! I’ve made the cake, but before making the frosting, I have a question. Once frosted, how long will it keep in a cake box in the fridge?

Ali Dice

Tuesday 26th of November 2019

@Nicole Johnson, Thank you for your response! Once you have frosted the cake, if there are leftover pieces, do they keep in the fridge? Or does the frosting lose its integrity? I’m thinking of either making it 3 hours before or making the frosting ahead of time and just waiting to frost the cake until the last minute.

Nicole Johnson

Monday 25th of November 2019

I haven't tested that, myself. I typically frost it right before we eat. Angel food cake is pretty delicate, so if possible I'd assume right before you serve.

Emma Davis

Thursday 28th of February 2019

None of the stores near me sell superfine sugar. Is it ok to use regular?

Nicole Johnson

Thursday 28th of February 2019

I'd pulse your regular sugar through a blender or food processor to make it a bit finer just to be safe.

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