How Long Can Cream Cheese Desserts Dot Out
This Cream Cheese Frosting is the BEST...sweet, slightly tangy, and quick and easy to make, coming together with just FOUR ingredients. As a bonus, this classic cream cheese frosting recipe complements a variety of cakes and cupcakes!
Hello, friends! I'm coming at you today with a simple, staple Cream Cheese Frosting that I make at least once a month.
This classic recipe is, hands down, my favorite frosting EV-AH. More specifically, it's my favorite cupcake frosting recipe, as the perfect complement to my famous vanilla sheet cake cupcakes.
It's also delicious on carrot cake and Italian Cream Cake and red velvet cake.
It's amazing on chocolate cake and lemon cake and pumpkin cake. Really, it's just flat-out fabulous.
Ingredients
There are just FOUR simple ingredients required to make this amazing Cream Cheese Frosting:
- Butter. It must be softened, and I prefer using salted. However, when I don't have salted butter on hand, I add a tiny pinch of salt to my frosting to make the flavors pop.
- Cream cheese. It needs to be completely at room temperature.
- Powdered sugar. The amount is negotiable. However, keep in mind that the amount used will affect not only the sweetness, but the thickness of your ultimate frosting.
- Vanilla. Trust me...use pure extract of a good quality. Because you will taste it! More on that below...
I realize this isn't rocket science, folks. It's a really simple recipe with minimal ingredients. It's done in a matter of minutes. But as a cream cheese frosting connoisseur, these are the proportions that I've found to render the yummiest results!
How to Make It
Did you know that making homemade Cream Cheese Frosting is super-duper easy?
- Plop your softened butter and cream cheese into a big bowl.
- Use an electric hand mixer (or a stand mixer with the paddle attachment) to beat until smooth.
- Slowly blend in the powdered sugar and vanilla, then beat on high until well-combined, smooth, and creamy.
The longer you whip this frosting, the lighter and fluffier it will become.
However, as soon as it starts to stiffen, stop beating! Otherwise, it can start to break down and turn runny.
How Much Powdered Sugar?
Feel free to tweak the sweetness of this recipe by increasing or decreasing the powdered sugar.
I actually prefer that my Cream Cheese Frosting is not overly sweet, because I like the slight tang from the cream cheese to come through. In fact, I think that's why I adore this frosting so much. I'm not a fan of cloyingly sweet frostings, and this isn't one of 'em.
Just keep in mind that the amount of powdered sugar you add to this frosting will also dictate how loose or thick it ends up.
Use Real Vanilla
In my humble opinion, the key to taking this frosting from good to great lies in the vanilla you use.
For the love of all that is good and holy, use pure vanilla extract! No imitation stuff here, please.
To take it up even a notch more, invest in high quality pure vanilla extract. I'm telling you...it might cost a bit more, but it will make all the difference in your baked goods.
(And forgive me if you've heard me rave about this before, but my most favorite, most beloved, most obsessed-with vanilla extract is Nielsen-Massey Madagascar Bourbon Vanilla. I know that's not the brand pictured in this post, but I ran out...and it's still the best. The end.)
Cupcake Frosting
I made this particular batch of frosting last week to put on cupcakes for my 7-year-old's school Valentine's party, and when I did, I shared my quick and easy cupcake frosting method with my Instagram followers (I hope you're one of them, because it's my favorite social media for sharing...and over-sharing?). Rather than slopping on your frosting with a knife, you just need a gallon-sized freezer bag and about five minutes...hop over to read the details if you don't already know this trick!
Speaking of cupcakes, one batch of this recipe should make enough frosting to ice 24 cupcakes with a knife...and this means spreading each cupcake with a reasonable amount of frosting. 😉
But if you really want to pile on the frosting (such as by using the bag trick mentioned in the previous paragraph) for cupcakes with sky-high frosting like those pictured in this post, you will probably need to make 1.5 or even 2 times the recipe to cover 24 cupcakes.
How to Make Cream Cheese Frosting White
I'm sometimes asked how to get this frosting white. Well, cream cheese frosting isn't likely to ever be truly white, but there are some tricks that you can try if white frosting is important to you.
- Butter can range from pale to dark yellow, so obviously, use the lightest shade of butter that you can find.
- While I don't really recommend using anything but pure vanilla extract, you can use a clear imitation vanilla extract for an even lighter shade of frosting if that's the most important thing to you.
- Also, the longer you whip your frosting, the lighter and fluffier it will become and the lighter in color it will appear.
- Adding a teeeensy drop of violet food coloring can also help yellow-ish frosting appear more white. Fully incorporate a very small dot or drop before determining if you need to add more. Be careful not to add too much or your frosting will turn gray or purple!
Any questions about the yummiest frosting that ever was? Actually, I have one for you...what are you going to use this on? I might have to bake something this weekend just to have an excuse to whip up another batch, and I'm lookin' for idears...
P.S. If you have any frosting left over and you decide to take a spoon to it, it's particularly tasty if you sprinkle some chocolate chips on top. Or so I've heard...
Helpful Tips, Tricks, & Equipment
- Vanilla prices have skyrocketed over the past couple of years because of a worldwide vanilla bean shortage. I used to buy my beloved Nielsen-Massey by the 32-ounce jug on Amazon...but the current price for a mass quantity like that is rather heart stopping. So these days, I tend to buy a smaller bottle of "the good stuff" and only use it in my favorite recipes (like this one!) where the vanilla flavor truly shines through.
- This frosting recipe holds up best when chilled. It is pretty soft at room temperature, meaning it's not the best choice for frosting an elaborate cake that needs strength and structure.
- I usually frost my cake or cupcakes ahead of time, refrigerate, and then let them come to room temperature for about 30 minutes before serving.
Recipes to Use Cream Cheese Frosting
- Strawberry Cream Cheese Frosting
- The BEST Lemon Cupcakes with Lemon Cream Cheese Frosting
- One-Bowl Coconut Cupcakes
- Christmas Tree Sheet Cake Pops
- ½ cup (1 stick) salted butter, softened
- 8 ounces cream cheese, softened
- 3 to 4 cups powdered sugar, depending on your desired consistency & sweetness of frosting
- 2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
Prevent your screen from going dark
-
Using an electric hand mixer (or stand mixer with paddle attachment), beat together the butter and the cream cheese. Slowly blend in the powdered sugar and vanilla, then beat on high until well-combined, smooth, and creamy.
- The longer you whip this frosting, the lighter and fluffier it will become. However, as soon as it starts to stiffen, stop beating! Otherwise, it can start to break down and turn runny.
- This frosting recipe holds up best when chilled. It is pretty soft at room temperature, meaning it's not the best choice for frosting an elaborate cake that needs strength and structure.
- I usually frost my cake or cupcakes ahead of time, refrigerate, and then let them come to room temperature for about 30 minutes before serving.
Calories: 126 kcal | Carbohydrates: 15 g | Protein: 1 g | Fat: 7 g | Saturated Fat: 4 g | Cholesterol: 21 mg | Sodium: 64 mg | Potassium: 13 mg | Sugar: 15 g | Vitamin A: 245 IU | Calcium: 10 mg | Iron: 1 mg
Post originally published on February 19, 2015. Updated on February 5, 2019, and again on May 2, 2020.
How Long Can Cream Cheese Desserts Dot Out
Source: https://www.fivehearthome.com/classic-cream-cheese-frosting/