Beet Red Velvet Cake

- Total Time
- 2 hours, plus 1 hour 15 minutes beet-roasting time
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 3medium beets
- ¾cup/ 170 grams butter, plus more for greasing pan
- ¾cup/180 milliliters buttermilk
- Juice of 1 large lemon
- 2teaspoons/10 milliliters white vinegar
- 1½teaspoons/7 milliliters vanilla extract
- 2cups/200 grams cake flour (sift before measuring)
- 3tablespoons/24 grams Dutch process cocoa powder
- 1⅛teaspoon/6 grams baking powder
- 1teaspoon/6 grams salt
- ½teaspoon/3 grams baking soda
- 1¾cup/350 grams granulated sugar
- 3eggs
- Cream cheese frosting (see recipe), or other fluffy white icing
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat oven to 350 degrees. Wash beets and wrap in aluminum foil. Bake until the tip of a knife slides easily into the largest beet, about 1 hour 15 minutes. Cool until beets can be handled, then peel. (This may be done up to a day ahead.)
- Step 2
Butter two 9-inch cake pans. Line the bottoms of the pans with parchment and then butter again.
- Step 3
In a food processor, chop beets to pieces about the size of finely diced onions. Measure 1 cup and set aside (remaining beets can be reserved for another purpose). Return cup of beets to the food processor. Purée with buttermilk, lemon juice, vinegar and vanilla until smooth.
- Step 4
Sift together flour, cocoa, baking powder, salt and baking soda. Set aside.
- Step 5
In the bowl of a stand mixer, beat butter until soft. Slowly add sugar and beat until creamy. Beat in eggs one at a time, scraping down the sides of the bowl after each addition.
- Step 6
Alternate adding flour mixture and beet mixture to butter mixture, beginning and ending with the dry ingredients, and beating for 10 seconds after each addition. Scrape down the bowl after each addition of the wet ingredients.
- Step 7
Divide batter between prepared cake pans, smoothing the tops. Bake until a cake tester inserted in the cake comes out clean, about 20 minutes. Remove pans from oven and cool completely on a wire rack.
- Step 8
To assemble, remove one cake from its pan and peel away parchment. Place flat side down on a serving platter. Drop about 1 cup of icing onto cake and, using a flat spatula, spread evenly over top. Remove the second cake from its pan and remove parchment. Place flat side down on top of first layer. Use remaining frosting to cover top and sides of cake.
- Measurements for dry ingredients are given by weight for greater accuracy. The equivalent measurements by volume are approximate.
Private Notes
Comments
Excellent! I used more beet than I think I was suppose too -- I used 1 cup of pureed beet (vs the 1 cup of diced beet) which gave the cake a super red color. The batter was perfect for 24 cupcakes. They took approx 16min to cook at 350. Yum!
The cake turned out very well, with a delicate texture and great taste. I made this recipe four times and assembled the 8 layers to make a huge cake for my 40th birthday party. Mt friends loved it. I tried it again. The only thing is I would appreciate tips to prevent the cake from sinking somewhat after cooking, when it cools. what might I be doing incorrectly? I totally recommend this recipe. far better than another one I have tried! thank you for sharing it.
I made half of the recipe and baked it in a 6x2 inch round pan. Because I only used 1 medium sized beet, I microwaved the beet in the microwave instead. To do this, I simply wrapped the washed beet with parchment paper and microwaved it on high for 8 minutes. Instead of using 1.5 eggs, I used 2 eggs and added about 1 tbsp more flour. Since I like my cakes less sweet, I reduced the sugar by 25% and it came out perfect! The cake is so moist and soft! Definitely a favourite!
I really like how this turned out even though I forgot the vanilla! I made 3 - 6" cakes which took 27 minutes to bake. I will add more vanilla to the frosting receipe.
In case it's helpful, two medium beets yielded one cup of cooked, diced beets, and that cup weighed 152 grams when I made this. I baked both layers in two 8-inch pans, and they were fully cooked in under 30 minutes. This resulted in thicker layers than if I had used 9-inch pans, and the cake was beautifully moist, not dense at all. I iced it with a standard vanilla buttercream and it was a huge hit!
I realized that I substituted rice wine vinegar, which is about a third less acidic than with vinegar. It needed an extra teaspoon to make up the difference.
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