Ben Starr

The Ultimate Food Geek

REAL Red Velvet Cake (with no food coloring or beet juice)

Who thought this was a good idea?!?

I’m gonna shoot straight with you.  Red Velvet Cake grosses me out.  I look at it, and I feel compelled to run to the nearest toilet.  It’s not because I’ve had a bad experience with it.  To be perfectly honest…I’ve never tasted it.  (Well, except for the one my friend Chris made with beet juice.  It was yummy.  But it tasted like beets.)  You just can’t convince me that there’s any reason to pour a gallon of food coloring into a cake for no other purpose than to make it red.  That’s gross.  Who thought of that?

I’ll tell you who.

"The cake of a wife time."

In the early 1940’s, the Adams Extract company (right here in Texas!) was suffering, like most businesses during the Great Depression, and they needed a ploy to sell more food coloring.  Mr. Adams and his wife Betty were lunching at the Waldorf Astoria in New York (obviously they weren’t hurting TOO bad), which had been serving a “Red Velvet Cake” colored with beet juice on their menu since the 1930s.  Adams realized that his red food coloring could really be used to amp up the color of such a cake, and it would no longer taste like beets.  So his company released an “original” recipe for Red Velvet Cake…a chocolate cake dyed red with their food coloring, topped with a boiled milk-and-flour frosting called Ermine Frosting or “Betty White Original Icing.”  (They later replaced it with a no-cook frosting.)  They even invented a catchy tag line for the cake.  “The Cake of a Wife Time.”  (whatever that means!)  You can read their original recipe here.

This wasn’t, however, an original recipe.  The only thing that made it original was the addition of red food coloring.  Because before that…in fact, LONG before the Waldorf began making Red Velvet Cake…”velvet cakes” were commonplace.  A simple cake with a luxurious texture thanks to the reaction of acidic buttermilk with alkaline baking soda.  There were many versions of velvet cake, and they appear in recipe books dating back to the early 1800s.  There was pineapple velvet cake.  Lemon velvet cake.  Red velvet cake, which simply referred to a vanilla velvet cake made with “red sugar”…which is what brown sugar was called back then.  And “mahogany velvet cake,” which was a chocolate version of the cake that happened to turn a reddish color when the cocoa powder met the buttermilk.

You see, chocolate, like many natural plants, contains compounds called “anthocyanins” which are red in color, and are responsible for the hues in everything from raspberries to rhubarb to roses.  Anthocyanins are bright red in their natural acidic environments…but when they meet an alkaline environment, they turn brown.  Chocolate manufacturers in the Netherlands discovered this little fact in the early 1800s, and started alkalizing ALL their chocolate and cocoa powder, to make it a deeper, richer color, and thus commanding a higher price.  This became the predominant way to make cocoa powder, and by the 1930s when the Waldorf was making Red Velvet Cake, that natural chemical reaction that rendered the batter a reddish tinge wasn’t happening any more, so they had to add beet juice to make it red.

And the old fashioned red velvet cake, colored naturally, was lost to the history books.

The cake that started America's love affair with Red Velvet.

Red Velvet Cake, despite all the free recipe cards on food coloring boxes and the catchy “Cake of a Wife Time” slogan, never was very popular in the US.  Then a little film called Steel Magnolias was released in 1989, featuring an armadillo-shaped Red Velvet Cake with grey frosting, and the cake took off.  Now it was at every Southern bride’s wedding reception, and a famed bakery in New York (coincidentally called Magnolia Bakery) began selling a legendary version of it.  And no one ever looked back.

Except that I could never bring myself to choke down a piece of the unnaturally red cake.  Because of that dark alkaline cocoa, recipe developers had to back off the amount of cocoa so that the red food coloring could shine through, and the cake actually had no flavor other than “red.”  Famous cookbook author James Beard was a noteworthy critic of the cake, saying it was bland and uninteresting.  And, having baked a version of the Adams original recipe (sans food coloring and artificial butter flavoring), I found it tasted more like banana bread than chocolate cake, but with a rich, velvety texture.  It was a starting point.  And now there are sources for non-alkalized cocoa powder…so surely…SURELY I could resurrect that old-fashioned cake that turned red naturally when cocoa powder met buttermilk.

Real Red Velvet Cake batter with no food coloring. After baking, this batter turns a reddish tinge, but not other-worldly and fake. This is how Red Velvet Cake used to be made!

I reverse engineered the Adams recipe, removing the food coloring, and adding more naturally-processed cocoa powder, a bit at a time, until I reached that magical point where the batter had a reddish tinge.  But after baking it, I had lost that velvet texture…the air holes (or “crumb”) in the cake were much larger and more coarse, due to the fact that natural cocoa is acidic, and more acid reacting with the baking soda meant more carbon dioxide being released.  So I began backing off of the vinegar in the recipe until it was totally gone, letting the increased cocoa add the acidity along with the buttermilk, and I had that velvety texture back.

Voila!  Red velvet cake.  No beet juice.  No red food coloring.  Chocolate cake that was noticeably red…especially in a sunlit room.  It’s not gonna pass your Red-Velvet-Cake-obsessed-friend’s color scrutiny.  But it’s quite obviously red.  Here’s a picture of a mini Red Velvet Cake using my recipe, next to an actual chocolate cake:

Red Velvet Cake with NO food coloring or beet juice, at right, next to a normal chocolate cake on the left. The red color might not be noticeable without this frame of reference. This is under incandescent lighting and has not been altered.

So now I’m happy to present to you, real, old fashioned Red Velvet Cake with absolutely no red ingredients!  In theory, you can buy the readily available Hershey’s Natural Unsweetened Cocoa powder.  They claim it is not alkalized.  I haven’t tried it, I’ve been using a raw, cold-pressed cacao powder from Freedom Super Foods that I order on Amazon.  In theory, as long as the cocoa isn’t alkalized, it will work.  (Do NOT use anything labeled “Dutch Process” or “Special Dark.”)  Confused about cocoa vs. cacao?  Don’t be.  It’s the same thing.  Cacao is the name of the tree that produces the seeds that we make into chocolate by first separating the fat (cocoa butter) from the solids (cocoa powder), and are then recombined in a different ratio to make chocolate.  The term “cacao” is a marketing term used to make cocoa powder seem more natural, thereby commanding a premium price.

You’ll notice the measurements in this recipe are by weight (ounces), not by volume.  If you don’t have a kitchen scale, that should be on your next grocery list.  They’re not expensive, and it will make your life SO much easier in the kitchen.  No more measuring cups to wash!  I still publish some recipes in volume style, when it’s convenient.  But 6 ounces of flour doesn’t translate into an easy-to-measure volume.  (One cup of unbleached flour SHOULD be 4 1/4 ounces, but if you and I each measure out one cup of flour and then weigh it, we will have two different amounts of flour, even though we both measured out 1 cup.)  So just get a kitchen scale, it will make your baking easier AND better.

In the bowl of your stand mixer, combine:

6 ounces (1 and a half sticks, or 12 Tablespoons) unsalted butter, at room temp
15 3/4 ounces light brown sugar

Cream these together at medium high speed for about 5 minutes…longer than you think is necessary…until the mixture is light and fluffy.  Then add, one at a time:

3 eggs

Beat each egg in fully before adding the next, maintaining that light fluffy texture.

In a large bowl, combine:

6 ounces unbleached flour
6 ounces cake flour
2 1/4 ounces natural cocoa powder
1 1/2 teaspoons baking soda
3/4 teaspoon Kosher salt

Sift this mixture twice with a strainer.  This is an important step, don’t skip it.  MOST recipes that call for sifting actually don’t need any sifting.  That’s an antiquated technique (like baking recipes that call for scalding milk) that was originally used to remove tiny bits of stone that remain in the flour after the grinding process.  Modern flours aren’t stone ground any longer, and are sifted multiple times in the factory before packaging.  However, in this recipe, the sifting is important because both cake flour and cocoa powder tend to clump, and the dry ingredients need to be fully aerated to achieve that velvety texture that is every bit as important as the red color in Red Velvet Cake.

In a large measuring cup, combine:

1 1/2 cups buttermilk, warmed 30 secs in the microwave
2 teaspoons vanilla

Whisk this together with a fork.  On low speed in the stand mixer, add 1/3 of the dry ingredients and 1/3 of the buttermilk to the butter/sugar/egg mixture.  Let the mixer fully incorporate the ingredients before you add the next 1/3 of each.  And then the final 1/3.  Let the mixer run an additional 5 minutes (important) on low speed to ensure the batter is fully smooth.

Let the batter sit for a bit while you prepare your pans.  This recipe will make three 9″ layers, or 24 cupcakes or individual cakes.  Spray the cake pans or muffin tins with cooking spray, and line the bottom with circles of parchment.  (If you’re making cupcakes, just use cupcake liners, but if baking individual cakes, it’s best to cut out little circles for the bottom of each muffin cup.)  For individual cakes, only fill the muffin cups about 2/3 full.  For cupcakes, fill them almost to the rim.  An ice cream scoop makes this laughably easy.

Preheat your oven to 325F (or 375F if baking cupcakes) and place the rack in the center of the oven.

Bake full 9″ cakes for 30-35 minutes, individual cakes for 20-25 minutes, or cupcakes for 15-20 minutes (at 375F…cupcakes need a higher temperature to raise their tops into a high, rounded shape.  Cakes you want flat across the top for easier frosting, which is why you bake them 50 degrees cooler.)  You’ll know the cakes are done when you gently touch the top and it’s not sticky and doesn’t give easily when you press.  It should have a bit of resistance and even spring back just a bit when you remove your finger.  You can also stick a knife or toothpick in the cake, and if it comes out clean, with no streaks of batter, it’s done.  But who wants to stab their cake?!?

Remove the pans and cool for 15 minutes in the pan.  Then you can remove the cakes, which should slide out easily because of that parchment layer you worked so hard on.

The traditional topping for Red Velvet Cake these days is cream cheese frosting.  Which is a good thing, because it’s the easiest of all the frostings to make, AND it tastes the best.  If you are frosting a layer cake, let them fully cool and put them in the freezer for 30 minutes to firm up while you make the frosting.  This will prevent all those little crumbs from accumulating in the frosting.

In the bowl of your stand mixer, combine:

8 ounces cream cheese, at room temp
4 ounces (1 stick) unsalted butter, at room temp

Beat these together on medium high speed until they are light and fluffy.  Reduce the speed to low and add, a bit at a time:

1 pound powdered sugar

After the sugar is mostly incorporated, you can raise the speed to beat it until the frosting is light and airy.  Then add:

1 Tablespoon vanilla

Beat until it’s fully incorporated.  And please note, if your household is cream cheese frosting obsessed, you might wanna double this recipe!!

Is it red? Yes. Is it crazy-neon-sign-crime-scene red? No. Why would you want it to be? This color comes from natural reactions between natural ingredients. No color editing on this photo.

The red color in the cake will definitely pop once you’ve got layers of white frosting between it.  Plop your cake in front of your family and friends and brag about how you made Red Velvet Cake with no red food coloring OR beet juice.

How cool are you?

Thanks for reading!  Feel free to comment below, and subscribe to my blog in the upper right corner of this page so you don’t miss any crazy new recipes, innovations, and ramblings.

174 responses to “REAL Red Velvet Cake (with no food coloring or beet juice)”

  1. Duane Boda Avatar
    Duane Boda

    Ben…ever known of a cake with a
    watermelon base – taste

    1. Ben Avatar

      Never heard of it! Sounds interesting…

      1. Duane Boda Avatar
        Duane Boda

        Liquify the watermelon and after its finally strained through some mesh use
        that as a base flavoring. You may have to boil it down to a concentrate but
        couldn’t that be used and added to get the desired effect – taste in a cake or
        say….even a Jam? Am I missing something that wouldn’t this feasible?

        1. Ben Avatar

          Well, the flavor of watermelon changes dramatically when you boil it to reduce it, or even just cook it, that’s the problem. And most cakes have so little actual liquid in them that I’m not sure if straight watermelon juice would come across as a prominent flavor once it was cooked. But I’m sure there’s SOME way to do it…

          1. Duane Boda Avatar
            Duane Boda

            Yes…..there must be a way to have one’s cake and eat too. Ben…could you
            please give this more thought? At best it’s a mere idea with me where as
            you’re a mystro (spelled right?) of the Kitchen. Thank you for being so kind
            to answer me.
            You’re showing me that being gay doesn’t automatically mean being loud –
            abrasive – pushy or insulting. We have talked before though I’m sure you don’t
            recall my name. To be so worldly (in your job) must very interesting and quite
            rewarding. Do ever find it almost overwhelming where you have to pinch yourself
            or take a deep breath and look around and say…WOW?
            Thanks again for spending your valuable time responding to
            me and have a awesome week.
            Sincerely yours….

            Duane D. Boda

          2. Ben Avatar

            Duane, it’s just the loud pushy ones that you hear most from! Ha ha ha… I don’t believe they reflect the majority, we are as diverse as ANY group of humans. Thanks so much for your kind words, and I’ll work on that watermelon project!

  2. Susan Bolinger Avatar
    Susan Bolinger

    “Cake of a Wife Time” ~ snort!

    Thank you for doing all this research; this article was an interesting read. The first time (& last) I made a red velvet cake, I felt like I was cheating when I poured in an entire little bottle of red food coloring, as specified in the recipe. I’ve never made another one.

    The Lemon Velvet cake sounds like a cake this wife could get behind, but that armadillo cake though… :O

    Thanks again!

    1. Duane Boda Avatar
      Duane Boda

      Thanks you so much Ben. In your travels have you ate a exotic fruit that you

      swear you could eat every day if it was readily available?

      1. Ben Avatar

        Passion fruit. I would eat it EVERY day if I could! It’s so amazing.

  3. Allison @ Eating Food and Stuff Avatar

    This is SO cool. I read about the history of red velvet cake before but was under the impression that was lost to time. I can’t wait to try this!

  4. Andrea Avatar
    Andrea

    My mother is obsessed with red velvet cake. I made it once from scratch, but I had to sub the buttermilk (don’t give me that look, Ben dear – I told you we don’t have it down here! T_T for some sour cream dissolved in skim milk. It wasn’t as reddish as I wished it could be, but the taste was okay. so now, every time she goes to the US, she buys red velvet cake mix and tells me to bake it. I let her eat it all; I don’t like its radioactive color nor the flavor. But I do like red velvet crinkle cookies… Got a taste of them in Houston.

    However, I admit I love making cream cheese frosting with salted butter. I know it’s not the usual, but I feel that the slight bit of salt in it (I gotta show you some Colombian butter) gives it an intriguing flavor and makes it less cloying. Just my 47.65 pesos (two cents!)

    1. Ben Avatar

      Andrea, that’s a REALLY interesting idea. I have actually salted my frosting before, when experimenting for my famous cake, but it’s been years. Gonna try it again!

      1. Andrea Avatar
        Andrea

        Let me know how it went! :3

  5. Donna Donahue Avatar
    Donna Donahue

    I’m not much of a baker (as you know) I simply wait til my baking lovers come and visit *cough* but it was a really interesting read. I still say you should pick up after Alton Brown on Good Eats because of your scientific knowledge of foods.

  6. Gregory Wright Avatar
    Gregory Wright

    Interesting stuff…and I will admit, my own fascination with the cake came from Steel Magnolias! I’ll have to try this, for me the part of the cake I really like is the texture and the slight tang you should get. I’ve had some success with the vinegar method, before, but not with the most re-producable results.

  7. Dinahann Avatar
    Dinahann

    I’m intrigued by red velvet cake but haven’t had much luck with baking them since I don’t add the red food coloring. My husband says it’s his favorite cake, but I’m always disappointed by the lack of chocolate flavor. I was excited to hear that Oreo was making a red velvet version of their famous sandwich cookies. I lurked at my neighborhood Kroger last weekend until they were stocked. I was disappointed once again, as they sadly lack flavor. I can’t wait to try your recipe. With brown sugar and more chocolate I’m hoping it’s a winner.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Dina, the flavor of this cake is WAY superior to modern Red Velvet Cake. It’s just not crime-scene red. So as long as your hubby can get over the fact that he’s not eating blood-red chocolate cake, you’ll be a hero!!

  8. Owain Avatar
    Owain

    I love Red Velvet cake. I can’t wait to bake this in my house…. well once I clean up D: ….

  9. linda Avatar
    linda

    I made a red velvet cake from scrat h 3 years ago and i do belueve all the red dye 40 (red food coliring) i had to use made me feel ill…my husband loves RVC sk i will try your recipe – which looks like a lot of work but is probably worth it. Good story.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Linda, you’re not alone. LOTS of people say they feel ill when they eat a lot of red food coloring.

      This cake recipe is actually easier than most cake recipes, and only slightly more complex than using a mix! It takes me about 15 minutes to make the batter and get it in the pan. There are really only 3 steps: preparing and sifting the dry ingredients, warming the buttermilk and adding the vanilla, and creaming the sugar, butter, and eggs together. Super easy!!

  10. Rose Avatar
    Rose

    This is quite literally the best recipe-gone-history-slash-critical-thinking-lesson I’ve ever read. Thank you.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Thanks, Rose! *hugs*

  11. Edward Avatar
    Edward

    Fantastic. I’ve been searching for how to make a Red Velvet Cake the “original” way without artificial coloring. I’ve found bits and pieces of the history before and was intrigued, but no other site I’ve found put all together in one place, and –score– with a recipe that had been already been tested and tweaked. I was prepared to try my own experiments in altering amounts of cocoa powder and even trying vinegar for extra acidity. Thanks for doing that work for me. 😉

  12. Drace Langford Avatar
    Drace Langford

    Love everything about this blog, Ben! Thank you! I have learned so much…now I need to share some of your information with my cake baker! Hope she takes it the right way….her Red Velvet cupcakes are good, but they seem to be white cake with red dye – which ultimately looked more pink. I def want a cocoa-red cake. Cheers!

  13. Carrie Avatar
    Carrie

    My kids are allergic to dairy – I normally bake with coconut milk. What do you suggest for the buttermilk?

    1. Ben Avatar

      Hi, Carrie! I can’t tell you exactly how it will turn out, but I’d try it with coconut milk plus 2 teaspoons of white vinegar to counterbalance coconut’s natural alkalinity. If you don’t get the noticeable color, next time up the vinegar to 3-4 teaspoons and continue until you start getting the red coloration. Since coconut is naturally alkaline, and buttermilk is naturally acidic, you’ll have to find the perfect balance that triggers the reaction.

    2. Jenn Avatar
      Jenn

      You can make any “milk” buttermilk by adding cream of tartar to the milk. I forget the conversion, I think it is 1 tbs of cream of tartar to 1 cup of milk, but I am not sure. Hope it turns out!

  14. Regina Avatar
    Regina

    Awesome!! Thank you for all you hard work to create this recipe! I made it for a friend that requested red velvet cake and they said the thing they like about it more than other red velvet cakes is the chocolate flavor. This is my new, go to recipe for red velvet cake. Thank you again!

    1. Lucia Avatar

      Excelent blog!! That’s a fight I constantly have with my clients… My red velvet, without coloring food has a brownish color (like red wine).. If they want a exotic light red full of color, please go ahead and buy a Cake mix..!!

  15. Christine W. Avatar
    Christine W.

    Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! My grandmother, aunts and step-mother all love red velvet cake. I’ve never been fond of it because of the red food color (I taste it in the cake and it is bitter). Earlier this year another baker mentioned that the “original” red velvet cake did not have any food color as the red color was created by a reaction between the cocoa and vinegar. I’ve been searching for recipes and contemplating experimenting with cacao powder. It looks like you’ve done all that work for me. I’ll be trying your recipe soon. I don’t know if it will live up to my family’s expectations regarding color but I know I will be happier without all that bitter red gunk in the mix.

  16. Carol Z. Avatar
    Carol Z.

    Thank you for your article and re-inventing, if you will, the recipe for “real” red velvet cake. I have never liked looking at that shocking red color, and only recently tried eating it a couple of times. What a disappointment. I would say that the flavor is very nondescript and often was over powered by the frosting, which is often applied too thick. And I never felt well afterwards.

    I grew up enjoying my mother’s Chocolate Screwball cake, which used vinegar and always had an awesome crumb and flavor, and never dry. I can see your recreation being a similar texture.

    I am intrigued by the idea of other velvet cakes. Will be searching for those recipes. Hope you share your versions of those as well if you have them.

  17. Gissel Avatar
    Gissel

    I made this cake and it’s amazing!!! Yes people looked at it and said its not red, someone even said it’s chocolate cake not red velvet. Oh how I wanted to pull out a baking history book on him and say it’s ALWAYS been chocolate but the red dye covers the delicious chocolate flavor. Anyways, it’s velvety, light and you can taste the chocolate!!!! It’s not red but I never cared for the color just the flavor. This is an amazing recipe and I’m so glad you did this research. And the frosting, no words. Amazing.

  18. Denise Shamrowicz Avatar

    Thank you so much for this recipe! I’m currently making this for my daughter’s 16th birthday tomorrow and it smells delicious!! In the middle of making it, I realized that I didn’t have the flour needed, so I had to run out to buy some. I have been staying away from wheat flour because of how much it’s over processed. Have you attempted to make this with any other flours such as spelt or coconut or a combo of several? I’m going to try that combo in the future, I just didn’t want to screw up a birthday cake so I didn’t attempt it this time. Very excited to see how this tastes:)

    1. Ben Avatar

      Denise, I have very little experience with gluten free. My friend Marie has probably the best gluten free baking cookbook out there, very thoroughly researched. Check it out here: http://www.amazon.com/Beyond-Flour-Approach-Gluten-free-Cooking/dp/0984604065

  19. Blumommy Avatar
    Blumommy

    I am so glad to see this, my son asked for a red velvet cake for his birthday and since I know that the traditional cake doesn’t have food coloring and why it was red in the first place I refused to settle for the modern day recipes. In search I went and I found this!!!! I’m so glad I’m not the only baking history buff out here! Thank you so much, I can’t wait to try this recipe.

  20. MM Saw Avatar
    MM Saw

    I made the cake with Hershey’s Natural Unsweetened Cocoa according to the recipe, except for the sugar which I reduced by 3oz and with a milk-plus-vinegar substitute for buttermilk. However, my cupcakes turned out very dark and chocolatey. Just like regular chocolate cake. I couldn’t pass it off as dark-red or cocoa-red by any stretch of the imagination. The cake tastes good – fine n moist – so no complaints there. Just disappointed that I still haven’t found a recipe for all-natural Red Velvet Cake. But I now have a good recipe for Chocolate Velvet Cake…!

  21. Dolka Avatar
    Dolka

    Great read, loved finding out about the whole history of the cake! I am still a fan of a proper beet chocolate cake though. Whatever you want to call it! There’s a little place in Montreal I adored call Cocoa Locale, that made the most amazing “Red Velvet” from scratch – super moist – not beety in flavour – still haven’t managed to reproduce a satisfactory copy myself!

  22. Michelle Avatar
    Michelle

    It’s my son’s birthday tomorrow, and I asked him if he wanted his usual French Silk Pie? “Nope, this year I would love Red Velvet Cake!” He already knows, that along with veal are on my “Do not make in good conscience” list! I thought I remembered hearing somewhere that is was not originally made with food dye, so I searched it on-line and found your post. So glad to come across you article and recipe,
    I will be making this today! Thanks for all the background information, I do miss Paul Harvey’s “The Rest of the Story” episodes and your story reminded me of them. And now I know the rest of the story on Red Velvet Cake!

  23. pete Avatar
    pete

    Unfortunately I have no friends and my family wouldn’t give a crap if I made a cake that was all natural or that had 3 pounds of food coloring. But I care and I can pretend to serve it to people who do, too.

  24. heather Avatar
    heather

    This is amazing!!!! You are a genius, do you own a bakery, work for one? I need your baked goods haha.

  25. Kairas Avatar
    Kairas

    Excited to try out this recipe. Incidentally, Ghirardelli 100% Unsweetened Cocoa is non-alkalized as well. They actually go out of their way to mention this fact on the back of the package.

  26. Armando Avatar
    Armando

    Thanks for all the research and recipe!

    I noticed that there were a couple of references to a chemical reaction between the cocao and vinegar in past recipes to help get the red color, but I didn’t see vinegar on the recipe here. Is the vinegar not needed?

    Thanks!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Armando, vinegar is just an acidic component that reacts with alkaline cocoa. Buttermilk is acidic. You don’t need vinegar for this recipe unless you’re using regular milk, in which case you add a teaspoon of vinegar to help with the reaction.

  27. Fran Avatar
    Fran

    Thanks for this article. A coworker brought in a Red Velvet cupcake. I did a survey about the red color. Most said red food coloring. One was surprised when I mentioned beet juice. Now I will make this cake using your recipe to set the record straight.

  28. Milena Avatar
    Milena

    Here’s a silly question – do you bake the 9″ cake layers separately, or do you bake one whole cake and then cut it into layers? Also, if I were to half the recipe, do you know what size pan I should use? I definitely want to try making this!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Milena, you can do either one! Since slicing a cake into layers can be tricky if you’re not experienced, it’s generally best to bake in separate layers, but it’s entirely possible to bake a single, thick layer and slice it.

  29. Shani Avatar
    Shani

    Hi, loved your article!! So clear and detailed.
    It’s exactly what I was looking for my son’s birthday.
    One question though, is it any different if I make it as a cake?

    1. Ben Avatar

      NO different at all! Bake at 350F until done, which will depend on the size and thickness of your layers.

  30. Jill Avatar
    Jill

    I’m so glad I found this. I’m making a Red Velvet Cake for Christmas and refuse to put red food coloring in it. Was worried about using beet juice also. Keeping my fingers crossed!

  31. Linda Sartain Avatar
    Linda Sartain

    This is the Queen Bee of all Red Velvet cake recipes. I made it exactly by Ben’s recipe today, with the exception that I warmed the buttermilk on low heat on an electric range instead of microwaving it, and I alternated mixing the buttermilk and the flour mixture into the sugar-butter-egg mixture, rather than alternately adding the sugar mixture & flour mixture into the buttermilk. It has a faintly red tint, but it’s best points by far are its texture and taste. I’ve never tasted a better melt-in-your-mouth cake! Home run, Ben! You outdid yourself. Thank you so much for sharing this with us!

  32. OpalB Avatar
    OpalB

    Thank you for this recipe. Like so many others, I find the Red Velvet cake, made either either natural or artificial food coloring, to be tasteless and disgusting. For a very short period of time I thought that ,well maybe if I use natural food coloring, I’ll try it. that was until it learned that the natural food coloring is somehow made from a a cockroach type bug found in the Orient. No thank you! I am going to give this a try. Thank you again.

  33. Paullywog Avatar
    Paullywog

    Thank you. The biggest thing missing from today’s version of red velvet cake is the taste of chocolate. Today’s cake has a Gross unnatural colour and strange flavour, I don’t understand the appeal of it.

  34. Elaine Avatar
    Elaine

    Red velvet cake is not supposed to taste like a chocolate cake. This recipe is similar to the one my home ec teacher taught me to make in the mid 70’s. It also had a filling that was cooked on the stove. The cake was light and fluffy and not sweet. The filling and frosting added the sweetness, which balanced perfectly with the cake itself. I rarely buy red velvet cake or cupcakes, because most are not the real thing.

  35. Fran Avatar
    Fran

    Great information and technics. I never like red velvet cake because the taste of food coloring ……..yuck! Hoever, my family like it, I guess it is the cream cheese frosting that they like. I agree the red food coloring make the cake bitter and plus chemical taste, no chocolate flavor in it at all.

  36. N/A Avatar
    N/A

    One it is not a red velvet cake if it is not red, and doesn’t have vinegar.
    Two you don’t need beet juice or food color dye to make it red.
    There is a thing called fruit juices. Example Black forest red velvet combo!!!!

    1. Ben Avatar

      The vinegar addition was used when buttermilk was not available, to acidify regular milk so that it acted like buttermilk. Vinegar is not a prerequisite for a velvet cake. This cake IS red when you bake it. Cameras do not register colors the way the eye does, particularly under different temperatures of light. Give it a try! It’s the closest thing to the old-fashioned Red Velvet cake you’ll find.

  37. Linda Avatar
    Linda

    After a friend bought red velvet cupcakes over, I decided to do them for my wedding. When I asked for her recipe and saw that it had 4 tablespoons of red food colouring I thought, surely there must be a better way! So my three year old and I have just put a batch of your recipe in the oven and if the mixture (currently all over both of our faces) is anything to go by, they are going to be AMAZING! Thanks so much. Linda from Australia 🙂

    1. Clair Avatar
      Clair

      Hi Linda, where did you find the cocoa in Australia? Ta, from Perth.

  38. Linda Avatar
    Linda

    If I were going to do a layer cake as well as cupcakes, and use three shallow 9″ pans, would i just do single recipe and how long would I cook it for/at what temp? I won’t fit in my wedding dress if I keep trialling all this stuff!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Linda, this recipe will make 3 very shallow 9″ layers. If you’re looking for a nice tall cake, double the recipe.

  39. Lisa Avatar
    Lisa

    That cupcake looks dry and the texture does not look like it would melt in your mouth. I cannot see any red in it. Just follow the best red velvet cake recipe without the red food coloring. Call it a Velvet Creme cake.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Lisa, we served this cake at my $150 per person restaurant, and people raved about it, and the cake is definitely red. You can’t always judge a recipe by its photo! Give it a try first.

  40. sandy Avatar
    sandy

    i feel the same way about red velvet cake in regards to what you wrote in the first paragraph, in fact you made me laugh. i will definitely try your recipe! thank you!

  41. Mindy Avatar
    Mindy

    I’m going to give this a go today. Mum wants a red velvet cake for her anniversary but I don’t want to be set off by food colouring.

  42. Cassandra Tucker Avatar
    Cassandra Tucker

    Hi Ben,

    Thank you so much for printing this recipe! My mother used to talk about how she used to make a red velvet cake without red food coloring, and then she couldn’t do it anymore. After reading your post, I think it was her cocoa that was alkalized. At least you’ve given me an explanation – I have her recipe, and it’s really not very similar to yours, but she did use cocoa and buttermilk or sour milk, whichever she had at the time, and I do remember it being very red, but not like those made with food coloring.

  43. peta Avatar
    peta

    I think you’re having one over on us. I made this. With raw cacao at a whopping cost to boot. it didn’t rise and it isn’t red – it is a lighter chocolate colour than a devils food cake, but the colour rendering in the picture above is what I got, brown. I’ll concede that it’s delicious, but i think some of your instructions are specifically designed to ensure that the cake collapses and the icing is super runny.

    Maybe you’re just colour blind.

    *disappointing.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Peta, please read some of the other comments, this cake is a favorite of many. My instructions work perfectly for me, though I’m an experienced baker. Many readers make this cake regularly. If it didn’t rise, there was something wrong with your technique, or your oven, or the weather. I make this cake at my restaurant regularly, the recipe is solid!

  44. Laurie Lane Avatar

    Something is wrong with you all if you see red. I see brown and dark brown, no red..

    1. Ben Avatar

      Laurie, you can’t base your judgement on a photo, which doesn’t perceive color the way your eye does. But still…this recipe does NOT produce a vivid red cake. Old fashioned red velvet cake was not vivid red. You cannot achieve a vivid red color without adding red coloring, either artificial or natural. If you want to make red velvet cake the way it was done a hundred years ago, and for which the cake got it’s name “RED velvet” this recipe will do that for you. And the cake IS red. But not unnaturally so.

  45. Mika Avatar
    Mika

    Hi just made your cake this weekend. I used organic raw cocoa and while it didn’t come out quite red enough to really think of RED when you look it, it was certainly a lighter brown than most chocolate cakes with a somewhat rusty tone. More importantly it was moist and creamy and delicious!

  46. Erin Sands Avatar
    Erin Sands

    I don’t care whether this cake is red or not. The texture is so smooth and the cake is so delicious, this has been my most requested cake for birthdays and holiday.

  47. Dora Glasberg Avatar
    Dora Glasberg

    Put the cake on a dark brown plate,
    It will look plenty red by comparison,
    NEXT!

  48. Stacy Avatar
    Stacy

    I see that some are complaining that the bottom picture does not look red. I’m a photographer and just ran a quick color correction on it and can attest that it really does have red in it. Granted, it’s not the absurd chemical red that you probably grew up with, thanks to the food coloring industry, but do you really want petroleum byproducts in your cake? If so, then by all means, go for it, but if you want a yummy, fossil-fuel-free dessert, try this one.

  49. Katharina Avatar
    Katharina

    What a great recipe! Thanks! The food color never bothered me until today, when I wanted to do a Red Velvet Cake for my niece’s birthday party. But serving cake to kids that is full of nasty chemicals is just not an option. So glad I found your authentic approach to the original recipe.
    This cake is by far the softest, fluffiest and most delicious ever! Naturally, it doesn’t have the bright red color but I can see a light shade of red in it – and it’s definitely not as dark as a regular chocolate cake.

  50. Luanne A Taylor Avatar
    Luanne A Taylor

    thank you, I feel the same way about Red Velvet Cake, but I want to copy a Southern Living cover photo, and it is Red Velvet – White Chocolate Cheesecake. I was going to leave out the food coloring and add a little oil, but I might just use your recipe…I am not pouring 2 bottles of dye into any cake…Luanne

  51. Emily Avatar
    Emily

    “It’s the same thing … The term ‘cacao’ is a marketing term used to make cocoa powder seem more natural, thereby commanding a premium price.”

    I trust you on everything else, but your above statement is blatantly false. Cocoa vs cacao is not a marketing ploy; it is a legitimate manufacturing difference. Cocoa comes from roasted cacao. Cacao powder is minimally treated, obtained from pressing raw cacao beans. There are chemical differences between cocoa and cacao powder. By using cacao powder you are using the more acidic version of cocoa, on the opposite side of the spectrum to dutch cocoa. (It is similar to why “dark roast” coffee is gentler for sensitive stomachs than “light roast” – because heavier roasting decreases acidity. And then I’m sure you know dutch process cocoa includes more steps than just roasting.) Google it if you don’t believe me, but I’ve had this argument multiple times and it’s a bit of a pet peeve of mine when people mix up cocoa and cacao powder, as they are indeed different.

    Thanks for the recipe though, I am excited to try it this weekend.

  52. andrea Avatar
    andrea

    hi, I’m so excited about this cake! Its in the oven right now! How should I store it over night, on the counter or in the refrigerator? Thank you!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Countertop is fine for a day or 2!

  53. Jerome Avatar
    Jerome

    OpalB: Wow, the Orient? Really? Firstly, the “natural” red food colouring you are referencing is from cochineal, an insect fount predominantly in Mexico, and sub-tropical South America. Today Peru is the largest producer (for export).

    As for related to a cockroach. No. Cockroaches are Dictyoptera, Cochineal are Hemiptera (true bugs). so other than both being insects, they are as similar as a human and a cow.

  54. Jean Avatar
    Jean

    Thank you for the recipe and for the history concerning this cake. I too am skittish about the red dyed, red velvet cakes, and was looking for an alternative (also the weird tingling I get from eating most red dye versions of the cake). The ‘velvet’ in this version IS ‘velvet’ – the crumb is fine, delicate and definitely not dry. I made this recipe as cupcakes and yes, there is a slight red tinge, which is alright with me, since its the chocolate I’m really after!

  55. Lynn Damiano Avatar
    Lynn Damiano

    I’m going to try it as I do not like using food coloring. My only question is this – I like using convection – can I with this recipe – I’m making the cupcakes?

    1. Ben Avatar

      Lynn, you can use ANY recipe in your convection oven, you just need to reduce the cooking time a bit. Some sources also recommend lowering the baking temp by 10 degrees. The more you convert recipes to convection for your oven, the more you’ll learn the “sweet formula” that works for your oven. I’ve never had convection in my home, only in professional kitchens.

  56. Cynthia Avatar
    Cynthia

    Question: I want to make this cake but I want to know if I can use unbleached flour and unbleached cake flour? Your recipe calls for “cake flour”. I don’t want to use bleached flour at all if I can avoid it. Also, I don’t want three layers. Do I need to change the volume of the recipe to make two 9″ layers? I’m really excited about making this cake for my family without using red food coloring.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Cynthia, I only use unbleached flour as my all-purpose flour. However, to my knowledge, all cake flour is bleached. You might be able to find an unbleached cake flour that has been bleached via ageing. But that’s what is done with unbleached AP flour, as well. Bleached flour, whether done via chemical process or by ageing, performs MUCH better in recipes than flour that has not been bleached. Freshly-milled flour results in dense, hard loaves and cakes. Bleaching happens to flour naturally as it ages, but most manufacturers speed the process up with chemicals. This is the reason that “unbleached flour” (which is ACTUALLY bleached, but by ageing rather than chemicals) is more expensive. I used to think, “why is the flour more expensive if they don’t have to add bleach to it?” But it’s because they have to keep the flour around longer before it can go to market, so you’re paying for the storage time.

  57. Doria Tai Avatar
    Doria Tai

    Thank you very much for coming up with a recipe that is authentic. I will definitely try your recipe. The bottles of colouring into one recipe just makes me sick.

  58. Shaz Avatar
    Shaz

    Thank you so much for this! After discovering that red velvet was red due to the reaction of cocoa in acidic conditions, I’ve been struggling to find a recipe without red coloring (natural or otherwise)… So I was very pleased to find this!

    Question, what exactly is cake flour? Is it the same as self raising flour? (in the UK?)

    1. Ben Avatar

      Shaz, cake flour is NOT self-raising flour. Cake flour is milled much finer than all-purpose flour, and is sifted many times to aerate it. You can also search for “pastry flour.” If you can’t find it, no worries, just follow the recipe and use all-purpose flour. (Lower the flour content by removing 1 Tablespoon of flour from the total amount.)

  59. Stephie G. Avatar
    Stephie G.

    Thank you so much! I’ve always felt left out because I can’t stand red velvet cake. I can taste the dye, and I don’t find that pleasant. I’ve been researching how to make red velvet without dye and your recipe is the best I’ve seen yet. I can’t wait to try it when I’m allowed to have cakes again. And I totally see the red. I agree with you, just because it’s not unnaturally red like all those dyed cakes doesn’t mean it doesn’t have a rusty look because of the reactions that happen. Baking is a science. If you don’t get what you want, I don’t think dumping dye on it is the way to remedy it. Would you do that in a lab? Probably not…so why do it in a kitchen.

  60. LSmallwood Avatar
    LSmallwood

    Just curious, why brown sugar instead of white? And do you think it could work with a bit less cocoa? My husband isn’t the biggest fan of chocolate but loves red velvet cake. So I’d love to do this recipe, but don’t want it to be very chocolatey. Thanks!

    1. Ben Avatar

      This recipe is not NEARLY as chocolatey as a chocolate cake. I’d try the recipe as-is the first time. If it’s too chocolatey for him, you can experiment with reducing the cocoa. Keep in mind that the cocoa is necessary in this recipe for several things…the acidic reaction that causes the coloration, as well as the leavening which affects the texture.

      Regarding brown sugar…I very rarely use white sugar. Brown sugar contributes more moisture, and it has WAY more flavor. White sugar rarely gets touched in my kitchen.

  61. Edmilson Avatar

    I’ve been looking for this recipe a long, long time. Thanks mate… I just feel like you about this contemporaneamente recipes of red velvet cake with food coloring or beet juice (in fact, I’d love beets… But the cake must tasty chocolaty). Indeed, this reaction makes all sense when you mix flavonoides with some acid. I’ll make this recipe like you’d improve it. Thanks for your historical rescue.

  62. Ben Avatar
    Ben

    I remember having traditional red velvet cake as a kid, and I don’t like the idea of red velvet cake made red by food coloring. Thank you for taking the time to bring this recipe back to life.

  63. Brandi Avatar
    Brandi

    This may be a dumb question but I’m not an experienced baker.. If I don’t have a scale, would using a liquid measuring cup with ounce measurements on the side be the same?

    1. Ben Avatar

      Brandi, YES, the fluid ounce scale on the side of a liquid measuring cup will work just fine. However, then you have to wash the measuring cup! Get yourself a kitchen scale and you’ll start doing way fewer dishes!!

  64. Peyton Avatar
    Peyton

    Made these tonight for the fourth of July tomorrow! They are wonderful! Just a hint of red, but very “angel food like” in a way and very moist! Love them! Thanks for the recipe

  65. Tracey Avatar
    Tracey

    We have a child with dye allergies, and I’m not a fan of beet juice or fruit juice in my cakes, so we’re off to bake. Thank you!!!

  66. Coco Avatar
    Coco

    Looks good and red to me. I’d love to try it. All that red dye #whatever can’t be good for a body. You didn’t hear of many food allergies back then because they ate food that came from nature. Now we eat the equivalent of “synthesized” food. Where are we, on the Enterprise?

    1. Ben Avatar

      Tea. Earl Grey. Hot.

      1. Sarah Avatar
        Sarah

        Make it so.

  67. Lora Monroe Avatar
    Lora Monroe

    For this recipe, if I didn’t want to use buttermilk, how much regular milk and vinegar would you suggest? My sister has a negative reaction anytime buttermilk is used in a recipe. Please let me know your thoughts!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Lorna, 1 Tablespoon of vinegar plus enough milk to make 1 cup is the standard substitution! However, ALL this does is sort of replicate the amount of lactic acid content in buttermilk by substituting acetic acid. It will not replicate the flavor and texture that buttermilk contributes in a recipe. It’s VERY unusual that your sister would have a negative reaction toward a baked good containing buttermilk. The ONLY difference between milk and buttermilk is that a bacterial culture (lactobacillus) is added to milk to turn it into buttermilk. Those cultures are killed during the baking process, so all that’s “left” is milk and lactic acid. Lactic acid is found in a wide variety of foods and beverages. I think the culprit may be something ELSE that’s also regularly called for in recipes that call for buttermilk…

  68. Sarah Avatar
    Sarah

    Thank you for this! I made this for my daughter’s first birthday party in both cupcake and smash cake form. My son is sensitive to dyes so we’ve been trying to avoid them but I love red velvet so this was a fun alternative! I need to do it a few more times to master the recipe, I think. Mine turned out a little dry but I am at a high elevation so I think I may need to add more oil/butter or some yogurt to increase moisture. I also bought the 365 Whole Foods brand organic cocoa powder that claimed to be 100% unaltered, but I’m not sure that it was as light/red as your example so I may need to try a different cocoa powder. Still very yummy though and I loved the research that you put into this! Thank you!

  69. Nick Avatar
    Nick

    You’ve got me thinking; if I were to increase the alkalinity in the cocoa further would it brighten more? I too would like to avoid the red food coloring and beet juice, I’m not a fan of beets and agree about the health concerns with the artificial dyes.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Nick, increasing alkalinity destroys the color of the anthocyanins. They prefer an acidic environment. You’d want to increase acidity to see if you can increase color.

  70. Elaine Cortez Avatar
    Elaine Cortez

    How would I alter this recipe to make whoopie pies?

    1. Ben Avatar

      Elaine, I’ve never made a whoopie pie. I would imagine you could pour 1/4 cup amounts of the batter onto a parchment lined baking sheet and bake them maybe 10 minutes or so to make the small cookie-shaped cakes, but I don’t know if they’ll be sturdy enough to support handling. Some experimentation may be in order…report back if you do!

  71. Lori Avatar

    Thank you for the recipe! My daughter wants a Red Velvet cake for her birthday next week. I was about to tell her no because I refuse to use food coloring!!! You saved the birthday cake! 🙂

  72. Tiffaney Avatar
    Tiffaney

    Where is the vinegar?
    The red color comes from a chemical reaction from the dutch cocoa, buttermilk and vinegar…. I just really want to find a good recipe out there. So many use red dye and I don’t like that….

    1. Ben Avatar

      Tiffaney, I did not need to use vinegar in my experimentation…buttermilk is acidic enough to trigger the reaction. You’re welcome to experiment further and let us know what happens!

      1. Anna Avatar
        Anna

        So, if I wanted to experiment, would you decrease the buttermilk 1:1 (if at all)?

  73. Lexy Avatar
    Lexy

    Thank you so much for your article and recipe!
    This is what this country needs – a reminder what real red velvet is!
    I use real chocolate, not coco powder and it came out fantastic. It does require some time to master the recipe.

    1. Nicole Avatar
      Nicole

      Sounds great! Can you remember how much chocolate you used and what kind (% would be best, I live outside of the US and we don’t have all the same kinds as you guys)? Was the cake still red?
      Thanx, Nicole

  74. Mimi in Arizona Avatar
    Mimi in Arizona

    Thank you so much for taking the time and effort to create this recipe. When I was young our neighbor, a professional chef, used to make red velvet with buttermilk, cocoa powder and vinegar. We were fascinated to watch the batter turn that pretty brick red color. It tasted divine and as you say, smooth and velvety. I despise this dyed concoction people call red velvet and refuse to eat it.

    My family has heard me say so often that “it isn’t real red velvet” they may think I am ready for the looney bin. I am going to make your recipe for the holidays and surprise them all!

  75. Laya Vivian Smith Ellington Avatar
    Laya Vivian Smith Ellington

    Red velvet cake is disgusting. I always wondered where the insane idea of dying a wrap chocolate cake red came from, and now I know. I can’t wait to try your recipe for real red velvet cake. It sounds delicious!

  76. Craig Coleman Avatar
    Craig Coleman

    No no you are wrong the red food coloring has everything in the world to do with MAKING the cake !
    Do not know how BUT IT DOES !
    And come on we have one or two times a year and have for over 60 years ! Will not kill you !
    If you want the best cake you have ever put in your mouth just try it ! The original recipe

  77. Mike Avatar
    Mike

    I’ve been experimenting with red velvet for a while and this recipe changed my game completely, thank you for posting this! I am still having trouble seeing any reddish hue at all though, I’ve tried different natural cocoa powders, including the same one you used here.

    What was the chocolate cake that you made for the color comparison above?

    Thank you!

  78. Kaitlin Avatar
    Kaitlin

    Do you know what temperature the buttermilk is heated to in the microwave? I don’t have a microwave so I’ll have to warm it on the stove. My MIL requested red velvet for Christmas and I’m SOOO happy I found one without coloring!

  79. Jenna Avatar
    Jenna

    Hope you had fun experimenting, but this was pointless, as red velvet cake is meant to be unnaturally red and bright. It may not have originally been that way, but most have come to love the crazy coloring and the great taste, even if it uses a lot of food dye. Your cake probably does taste really good, but all this experimenting is really only needed for the crazy people who don’t love the fun and unique color in this classic cake. Among other smart people, I will continue to use red food coloring to craft the truly perfect red velvet cake.

  80. Pam G Avatar
    Pam G

    Thanks. Exactly the kind of recipe I was looking for to make the old fashioned red velvet or even “chocolate” velvet, as long as we can ditch the nasty unhealthy red dye.
    Gluten Free? What flours would you recommend to make in gluten free in the right proportions? Any advice?

  81. Linda Avatar
    Linda

    That was really interesting. Thank you for going to the trouble to research this AND publish it.

  82. Michele Avatar
    Michele

    Unfortunately this recipe didn’t work. I’ve made it twice. I even ordered the same Cocoa powder. All I get is a light brown cupcake

    1. Ben Avatar

      Michele, you’re probably looking for too much red. Bake the cake and put it next to a chocolate cake. THEN it looks red. Taken alone, it’s only a reddish brown color. You can’t expect miracles without food coloring. What this cake is is the old-fashioned red velvet cake, before food coloring was introduced. It will NOT replicate the color you get with food coloring.

  83. JMK Avatar
    JMK

    Thank you! I’ve been looking for several weeks to find the “best” Red Velvet cake recipe for my niece’s bridal shower. I’ve never liked Red Velvet cake. All I’ve had is just chocolate cake with red food coloring (YUCK) and I don’t get the hype. Even the so called “best” recipes call for the requisite 4 tablespoons of red food coloring. Now that I have something natural, and have read how it really should be made I’m happy to make this for her special day.

  84. Chris Avatar
    Chris

    I’ve had a red velvet cake with very red color and no food coloring before. It had rhubarb and vinegar in it as well as the non alkaline cocoa and buttermilk. I’d love to figure out how to get that chemical reaction and the tanginess of the rhubarb and vinegar. With the cream cheese frosting that cake was ssssooo good.

  85. Moona Avatar
    Moona

    Husband just declared this his favorite cake ever. Demanded I make it for his office this Valentine’s Day festivities (as I noted this was a test-run recipe).

  86. Andrea Van Avatar
    Andrea Van

    I usually just use a more modern recipe, but omit the dye. I tell people it’s brown red velvet cake. It tastes the same, but without the gross!
    I made this recipe today and it is fantastic. Thank you

  87. Saskia Riezebos-Vlaanderen Avatar
    Saskia Riezebos-Vlaanderen

    From a Dutch cooking enthousiast, cacao is the Dutch word for cocoa so maybe that marketing term came from lazy translators.

  88. Jackie Thom Avatar
    Jackie Thom

    For a long time, I’ve been looking for a red cake recipe without colouring (yes, we spell the British way here) but I was resigned to using beet in it in some form. My kids (all around 50) always say, “Ask your friend Google” and the first recipe under the Ads, which I ignore, was your wonderful recipe – no beet in sight! Greetings from beautiful Cape Town, South Africa. Thank you. Jackie

  89. Ambica Avatar
    Ambica

    This is fantastic, I tried a red velvet cake once, and thought it was actually quite awful. For so long I didn’t understand what the big deal was about them, people rave about them, and I’m like, what the hell, is it me?

    This has probably been on my mind for years now, I finally decide to bring some cupcakes to work and wanted to choose the red velvet one, but remembering how awful it was I went into research and came across this page. I’m so glad someone cares enough to go through the trouble of concocting a recipe. I’m definitely baking this sometime. Added to favorites. Thank you 🙂

  90. Helen Avatar
    Helen

    I wish you would use the old fashioned cooked icing. It tastes so much better and doesn’t cause me to stop breathing the way anything with cream cheese does. People NEED that wonderful recipe before it is lost!!

  91. Beth Brunelle Avatar
    Beth Brunelle

    Hi Ben! I don’t know if you will even check this anymore, but I’m giving it a shot.

    Thank you for this recipe! I had never made a red velvet cake because of the dye, but a friend said there was an “old” way of doing it and challenged me to find it and make it. I love the flavor! However, there is no red color by any stretch of the imagination. I followed your instructions exactly. Weighed the ingredients. Sifted twice. Timed the mixing. I even bought the same kind of cocoa as you.

    My only thought is that I could only find low-fat buttermilk . Could that be the problem? Any other thoughts? Thanks!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Hi, Beth! I’m not sure what to tell you. The cake isn’t red red, of course. But each time I’ve made it, it definitely has a reddish hue. I doubt the buttermilk would make a difference.

  92. Elizabeth Avatar

    One of the best things about being diagnosed with Celiac is that I had an excuse not to eat a family member’s nasty food-dye-flavored cake ever again. I had never even heard of “red velvet” cake until she moved into town and started proudly bringing over large slices of her artificially colored monstrosities to share with us.

    I’m going to have to try to figure out a way to adapt THIS method to work with gluten free flour. I think I’ll have to do some research on the chemistry of different kinds of flour.

  93. Roseann Avatar
    Roseann

    It is a lot like Paula Deen’s “The Bag Lady’s Favorite Chocolate Pound Cake” recipe ,which I have made numerous times but it never had the red/brown color of your pictures. She says hers is a Pound Cake not Red Velvet Cake, will have to try yours and compare!

  94. Sandra M Avatar
    Sandra M

    About your comment on scalding milk…I always believed that we scald the milk to kill an enzyme that will inhibit the yeast . My parents had a mill with 2 huge stones for grinding wheat, corn… and we never noticed any stones in the flour.
    Very interesting article. Thank you!
    Sandra

  95. Susan Anderson Avatar
    Susan Anderson

    Why so much brown sugar and no white sugar?

    1. Ben Avatar

      Why ask why? The recipe works and is lovely!

    2. SR Avatar
      SR

      Brown sugar is mildly acidic (because of its molasses content) and, along with cocoa powder and buttermilk, reacts with baking soda to leaven the cake. Additionally, as noted, brown sugar was once called red sugar – making it the red ingredient in some of the oldest red velvet cake recipes.

  96. Teresa Avatar
    Teresa

    I had never heard of red velvet cake until I moved to Georgia. I tried it. I disliked it. But I thought maybe this person wasn’t the greatest baker. It happens. Baking is science after all. So I gave it another try when someone else baked it. I disliked it even more. Hmm, maybe I should just try store bought red velvet cake I thought, after all, everybody around here raves about it like its the greatest thing that ever happened to dessert. Okay I get it now. I just really freaking hate red velvet cake. It is so terrible that not even the yummy deliciousness that is cream cheese frosting can redeem it. It’s truly a waste of frosting. And apparently if you dye something red people can’t tell it’s shit. However, I may actually try this recipe in the hopes that maybe one day I can say that I like red velvet cake…at least when I make it lol.

  97. Eleanor Self Avatar
    Eleanor Self

    Red Velvet has always been a big deal in the South. It has nothing to do with that sappy movie. But thanks for posting the link to natural cocao. My grandmother made the best ones. Im going to try it!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Eleanor, I didn’t meant to imply that Steel Magnolias single handedly made Red Velvet Cake famous again in the South. But outside the South, most Americans had never even heard of the cake until the film. And it didn’t become a popular WEDDING cake in the South until the film, though you could certainly find it at church potlucks and the like.

  98. Melinda Avatar
    Melinda

    I made red velvet cake for visiting American years ago that brought a recipe from me that I have lost and hav never been able to find. It called for scalded milk and I’m not sure if nothing was added with it, after the cakes were baked you poked holes in them with a toothpick and then pour the milk on after their cooled you frost them. Does anyone have this Red Velvet Cake recipe, I’d really like too have it?

    Melinda
    Alberta, Canada??

    1. Deb Avatar
      Deb

      Hi Melinda

      I think you’re talking about a red velvet poke cake. You bake the cake and then poke holes in the top. Some people pour sweetened condensed milk in the holes. There are various recipes for a red velvet poke cake online.

      Hope this helps!

  99. Alexandra Lascko Avatar
    Alexandra Lascko

    Amazing! Thank you for posting, it is so appreciated. I’m going to try this recipe with the classic Ermine frosting. Thank you!

  100. Brandee Carlisle Avatar

    You have no idea how much I appreciate this. I baked a real red velvet years ago and knew it was a chemical reaction I just have lost that recipe! I love the info you shared. I have tried to tell people about food coloring and that real (original) red velvet had not a drop of food color. I have told professional bakers this only to have them call me crazy or just stare at me. I love all the info you gave.

  101. Lucine Avatar
    Lucine

    I can’t wait to try this. I have always hated red velvet cake, I can taste the food coloring, it’s gross. I think that most people who dislike it are tasting the food dye and don’t realize it (and if you actually like it, you probably don’t have very strong taste buds). I had heard the history of red velvet cake in the past but didn’t realize why the cocoa powder was making the cake red, I’d thought it was the amount used. Now that I know the trick I can make one myself!

  102. -K- Avatar
    -K-

    hi! i think there was some mix up or i just don’t understand this part..

    ” For individual cakes, only fill the muffin cups about 2/3 full. For cupcakes, fill them almost to the rim.”

    Uhm.. shouldn’t this be the other way around? Just pointing it out. 🙂 Great cake by the way.
    Bloody delicious! :9

    1. Ben Avatar

      Sorry if this was confusing. If you are wanting to serve miniature cakes, fill the muffin cups only 2/3 full, because you don’t want ANY of the batter to reach the top of the cup and flare out over the edge. You serve the “cake” upside down, like you see in my photos. But if you want to frost them like a cupcake, you want the batter to flare out over the edge a bit, to provide larger surface area for the frosting. Not backwards!

  103. Julia Avatar
    Julia

    Now we need a recipe for pineapple velvet cake.

  104. Jenna Avatar
    Jenna

    Thank you so much for this recipe! My great-grandmother made a delicious homemade red velvet cake for Christmas every year (that unfortunately used dye!) and my mom and I always loved it! She used an old fashioned frosting, not the cream cheese frosting, but it was not cooked either. Anyway, I always bake my mom a red velvet cake on her birthday, and a couple of years ago I came across this recipe, in an attempt to bake a dye-free cake, and it’s so delicious! My mom approves, my kids love it, and everyone else too. 🙂 I’m really happy to find such a great recipe without dyes for a treasured family tradition of ours. Thank you again, so much!

  105. WMSmith Avatar

    Just tried out your recipe in the U.K. using organic raw cacao. The resulting colour was a reddy brown but definitely a brown none the less. I’m making red velvet as part of a cake sale so unfortunately I’m going to have to return to the popular recipes out there that use red food colouring as I think that’s what people expect now. It was definitely worth looking into though and thanks for sharing this recipe anyway.

  106. Anna Avatar
    Anna

    You are my hero!!! I absolutely hated red velvet cake for that same reason! I was doing some research to recreate original no coloring recipe until I found your page! Amazing amazing amazing! So happy! Thank you so much !!!

  107. Barbara Avatar
    Barbara

    I have to make a gluten free dairy free, soy free cake..and soy is in most artificial flavors. So I am very excited to try this

  108. Phillips Avatar
    Phillips

    Cacao is raw and cocoa is cooked.

    1. Ben Avatar

      This statement is not true consistently across all commercially available products.

  109. Niki Avatar
    Niki

    Thank you so much for figuring this out! The one and only recipe I could find without any coloring (natural or not.) Will be making this for my daughter in law’s birthday. Thank you!

  110. Tiffany Schlemeier Avatar
    Tiffany Schlemeier

    Just made this for my twin girls’ 10th birthday. They had begged me for a red velvet cake for a year, but I couldn’t bring myself to buy, much less ingest a dye-laden cake. I was thrilled to find a recipe for an authentic, original red velvet cake without the gross factor. The cake was absolutely divine! The texture was unbelievable! The cake was so good, we devoured it in no time. I will definitely have to make this one again! Thanks for sharing this recipe, as well as the history! A++

  111. Nina Avatar
    Nina

    Ok, I want to try this cake, but that is way too much sugar for my taste. I want to use just one cup sugar which I usually use for a cake baked in 2 cake pans. What adjustment would I need to make for 3 pans.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Nina, I can’t guarantee proper results when changing any of the critical ingredients like sugar. For 3 cakes, though, you don’t need to modify the recipe, just distribute the batter between 3 cake pans, which will results in 3 thinner layers rather than 2 thicker ones. They will also bake faster.

  112. Dillon Bowles Avatar
    Dillon Bowles

    hey Ben, I loved this recipe with the traditional remind frosting. However this tasted a lot like chocolate cake. Now I know that red velvet cake has chocolate in it, but the vinegar and buttermilk give it a characteristic Tangy flavor. That was sadly missing from this recipe except in a few bites for some reason. I don’t know how you could make it happen, but I would love it if this recipe were adapted to have a more classic red velvet taste in addition to the beautiful mahogany color. What do you think?

  113. Leslie Avatar

    Made this today for a friend who is turning 13 tomorrow. Wanted a recipe that did not have red food coloring. Will let you know what everyone thinks of it. Thank you so much for publishing the recipe!

  114. JamieInWyoming Avatar

    THANK YOU!! I too cannot bear the thought of all that red coloring, so I googled “real red velvet cake no food coloring” and VOILA, I found you. 🙂 I have so many friends ask me to make red velvet for them and I tell them I haven’t found a good recipe, and I won’t use a box mix, lol. I look forward to giving this recipe a try.

    JamieInWyoming

  115. janet kidd-white Avatar

    at last, a proper red velvet recipe with intelligent explanations and directions! My Nan would have been one of your most ardent fans, as she was a cookery/”home economics” teacher before her retirement and LOVED to help us appreciate the science behind different cooking processes. thank you very much indeed. Now I will have to give it a go!

  116. Karen Cunningham Avatar
    Karen Cunningham

    Thank you, Ben! This is exactly what I have been looking for. I’ve had the red food coloring red velvet once and couldn’t understand the histeria for it. 2 of my children and 1 grandchild, (that I’m aware of) have sensitivity to red dyes so I have stayed away from them as much as possible. It’s not pretty when they ingest dyes. I can’t wait to try this!!! Thank you again for posting this!!!!

  117. Sheryl Hall Avatar
    Sheryl Hall

    Neither can I eat a cake containing a whole bottle of red dye! I knew there was a natural recipe in the old days but this is the first time I’ve read a whole explanation of it. I also picked up some other information from you. I can’t wait to try your recipe. Thank you.

  118. Liz Morea Avatar
    Liz Morea

    I have searched up and down, is there a printable version of this recipe?

  119. roblox planet Avatar
    roblox planet

    Red velvet cake is literally just chocolate cake with red food dye or beet juice

  120. Heather T. Avatar
    Heather T.

    This worked so well (after a little creative math because I don’t have a scale). Yummy–and I’m so glad not to have that #5 dye!

    1. Marissa Avatar
      Marissa

      I made this with Bob’s red Mill paleo all purpose flour and they came out fantastic! They were a little more chocolatey than I would have preferred, but a I will try using a little less cacao next time. Literally the most moist, flavorful gluten free cupcakes I have ever made! The frosting was great as well.

  121. Colette Avatar
    Colette

    If I convert the sugar amount to grams that’s about 450g right? Dayum, that’s alot of sugar lol. When will you post more recipes again Ben?

  122. Kara Smith Avatar
    Kara Smith

    Thanks for sharing this recipie! I’m giving it a shot for me and a friend’s mutual birthday party and it’s almost finished baking, and so far it looks and smells fantastic! (also the batter is pretty tasty)

  123. emlovescats9 Avatar
    emlovescats9

    loved this little history lesson, very interesting.

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