Homemade White Chocolate Cake Recipe with Raspberry photo
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White Chocolate Cake Recipe with Raspberry

This white chocolate cake with raspberry is my go-to when I want something that looks special but doesn’t require a baking degree. It pairs a tender, buttery white cake with a seedless raspberry filling and a white chocolate cream cheese frosting that holds up well between layers. The flavors are bright and balanced—sweet white chocolate tempered by tart raspberry—so every slice feels celebratory without being cloying.

I’ve tested this recipe repeatedly to get the texture and assembly steps reliable. The cake layers are rich but light thanks to the egg whites and careful mixing method. The raspberry filling is cooked and strained for a seedless spread that won’t tear your layers. And the frosting is stabilized with cream cheese so it behaves during assembly and slicing.

Read through the ingredient checklist and method first so you know where you’ll need time to chill and cool. There are a few simple staging steps—bake, cool, chill fillings and frostings—that make the whole process smooth. I’ll also share the tools I use, common mistakes to avoid, and storage tips so your finished cake stays fresh.

Ingredient Checklist

  • 1 1/2 cups milk — at room temperature for even incorporation into the batter.
  • 9 large egg whites — at room temperature; they help keep the cake light without adding yolk fat.
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract — primary flavor for the cake batter.
  • 1 teaspoon almond extract — adds a subtle, complementary note to the white chocolate.
  • 3 1/3 cups cake flour — gives a tender crumb; see recipe notes for substitutions if needed.
  • 2 2/3 cups granulated sugar — for the cake batter; sweetens and helps with texture.
  • 2 tablespoons baking powder — the leavening so the layers rise evenly.
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons salt — balances sweetness and lifts flavors.
  • 18 tablespoons (2 1/4 sticks) unsalted butter — cubed small and softened so it creams into the dry mix evenly.
  • 16 ounces raspberries — frozen then thawed or very ripe fresh raspberries for the filling.
  • 2 1/2 tablespoons cornstarch — thickens the raspberry filling for a spreadable texture.
  • 2 1/2 tablespoons lemon juice — brightens the raspberry puree and balances sweetness.
  • 2/3 cup granulated sugar — for the raspberry filling; use the stated amount to get the right set.
  • 12 ounces white baking chocolate — chopped small for melting smoothly into the cream.
  • 1/4 cup heavy cream — with the white chocolate to create a smooth ganache-like component.
  • 2 (8-ounce) packages cream cheese (16 ounces total) — at room temperature; gives the frosting structure and tang.
  • 1/2 cup unsalted butter — at room temperature; for richness and spreadability in the frosting.
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt — added to the frosting to cut sweetness.
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract — for the frosting.
  • 7 cups powdered sugar — more or less as needed to get the frosting consistency you want.

White Chocolate Cake Recipe with Raspberry: From Prep to Plate

  1. Preheat the oven to 350°F (175°C). Line the bottoms of three 9-inch cake pans with parchment paper and spray or grease the pans, then dust with flour (or use a nonstick spray with flour). If you have only two pans, you will bake two layers, then bake the third layer immediately after the first two finish.
  2. In a large liquid measuring cup or medium bowl, whisk together the milk (1 1/2 cups), the 9 large egg whites, the vanilla extract (1 1/2 teaspoons), and the almond extract (1 teaspoon). Set this wet mixture aside.
  3. In the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the whisk attachment, combine the cake flour (3 1/3 cups), the granulated sugar for the cake (2 2/3 cups), the baking powder (2 tablespoons), and the salt (1 1/2 teaspoons). Mix on low speed just to combine.
  4. With the mixer running on low, add the cubed, softened unsalted butter (18 tablespoons / 2 1/4 sticks) a few pieces at a time. Once all butter is added, increase the mixer speed to medium and beat until the mixture resembles moist crumbs and the largest pieces are about the size of small peas, about 3 minutes.
  5. Pour half of the reserved milk-and-egg-white mixture into the mixer and beat on medium-high until the batter is light and fluffy, about 1 minute. Stop the mixer and scrape down the bowl.
  6. With the mixer on low, stream in the remaining milk-and-egg-white mixture. Increase speed to medium-low and mix no more than 30 seconds. If the batter looks slightly lumpy, stop mixing; give a few gentle stirs by hand with a spatula—do not overmix.
  7. Divide the batter evenly among the three prepared 9-inch pans and smooth the tops. Bake at 350°F until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out with a few crumbs but no wet batter, about 22–25 minutes.
  8. Let the cakes rest in the pans for 5 minutes, then turn them out onto cooling racks. Cool completely before frosting, about 1½ hours.
  9. While the cakes cool, make the raspberry filling. Add the raspberries (16 ounces, frozen then thawed or very ripe fresh) to a food processor and puree until smooth.
  10. Place a fine-mesh sieve over a medium saucepan. Pour the raspberry puree into the sieve and press with the back of a spoon or spatula to strain out the seeds, collecting the seedless puree in the saucepan. Scrape the underside of the sieve to get as much puree as possible into the pan.
  11. Whisk the cornstarch (2 1/2 tablespoons), the granulated sugar for the filling (2/3 cup), and the lemon juice (2 1/2 tablespoons) into the seedless puree until the cornstarch is mostly dissolved.
  12. Heat the puree over medium-high, stirring constantly until it comes to a simmer. Reduce the heat to medium (or medium-low if your stove runs hot) and continue to cook, stirring continuously, until the mixture thickens to a quite-thick but spreadable consistency. Remove from heat and refrigerate until completely chilled; it will thicken further as it cools.
  13. Make the white chocolate component: place the chopped white baking chocolate (12 ounces) and the heavy cream (1/4 cup) in a microwave-safe bowl. Microwave for 30 seconds, stir, then continue microwaving in 15-second intervals, stirring between intervals, until the chocolate is completely smooth. Let cool for about 5 minutes.
  14. Make the white chocolate cream cheese frosting: in a large bowl, beat the cream cheese (28 ouncepkgs. cream cheese (16 ounces) at room temperature), the 1/2 cup unsalted butter (at room temperature), and 1/4 teaspoon salt at medium speed with a hand-held electric mixer until very creamy, 1–2 minutes.
  15. Beat the cooled white chocolate and the vanilla extract (2 teaspoons) into the cream cheese mixture until smooth.
  16. Gradually add the powdered sugar (7 cups), in batches, beating at low speed until blended after each addition. When all powdered sugar is incorporated, refrigerate the frosting about 30 minutes to help it firm up; it should be fairly thick to support the layers.
  17. After chilling the frosting, spoon roughly 1 cup of frosting into a pastry bag to use for piping the dams around each cake layer. If you do not have a pastry bag, you can use a freezer bag with a corner snipped off. Spoon 3/4 cup of frosting into a small bowl and set aside to use as the crumb-coat frosting. Keep the remaining frosting chilled until assembly.
  18. Level the cooled cake layers: use a large serrated knife to remove the domes from the tops of the cakes so each layer is flat.
  19. Prepare your cake stand or serving platter: place four strips of parchment paper around the edges of the stand to form a square with an open middle (this keeps the stand clean). Place a small dollop of frosting in the center of the stand to anchor the first layer.
  20. Place the first leveled cake layer on the stand, top side up. Pipe a ring (a dam) of the prepared frosting just inside the top edge of the cake to contain the filling.
  21. Spread half of the chilled raspberry filling inside the piped ring, using an offset spatula to bring the filling to the edges of the dam. Spread 1 cup of the white chocolate frosting over the raspberry layer and smooth to the edges.
  22. Place the second leveled cake layer on top, top side down. Repeat: pipe a ring of frosting just inside the top edge, spread the remaining raspberry filling to the edges of that ring, then spread 1 cup of white chocolate frosting over the raspberry layer.
  23. Place the third leveled cake layer on top, top side down.
  24. Apply the crumb coat: using the reserved 3/4 cup crumb-coat frosting, frost a thin, even layer over the top and sides of the assembled cake to seal in crumbs. Smooth as desired and remove any excess frosting. Refrigerate the cake for about 30 minutes, or until the crumb coat has set. Meanwhile, refrigerate the remaining frosting and then lightly rebeat it before final frosting if it has become too firm.
  25. Finish frosting: frost the outside of the chilled, crumb-coated cake with the remaining white chocolate frosting as desired. Remove the parchment strips from around the base of the cake, and pipe a ring of frosting around the bottom edge if desired.
  26. Garnish the top with additional raspberries if desired. Refrigerate the cake until ready to serve; bring to a suitable serving temperature before slicing.

Why You’ll Keep Making It

This cake feels elevated but the steps are straightforward. The batter assembly—mixing dry ingredients with cubed butter until pea-sized crumbs—is forgiving and quick. The cooled, seedless raspberry filling adds a clean-tasting fruit layer without tearing the cake or making it soggy. The white chocolate cream cheese frosting is stable enough to pipe and smooth, but soft enough to slice neatly once the cake comes up to serving temperature.

It works for birthdays, brunches, and anytime you want something pretty and impressive without a ton of temperamental technique. Most importantly, the flavors are balanced: not overly sweet, thanks to the bright lemon in the filling and the slight tang of the cream cheese in the frosting.

No-Store Runs Needed

Easy White Chocolate Cake Recipe with Raspberry shot

  • Milk, sugar, flour, baking powder, salt, butter, eggs, vanilla, almond extract, powdered sugar — these are probably already in a well-stocked kitchen.
  • Frozen raspberries are shelf-stable in the freezer; use those before fresh raspberries if you have them on hand.
  • White baking chocolate and cream cheese are common items and keep well if stored properly.

Recommended Tools

Delicious White Chocolate Cake Recipe with Raspberry recipe photo

  • Three 9-inch cake pans — or two if you plan to bake one layer at a time.
  • Electric mixer with whisk attachment — speeds up the process and gives consistent batter texture.
  • Fine-mesh sieve — essential for a seedless raspberry filling.
  • Offset spatula and bench scraper — for leveling, spreading, and smoothing frosting.
  • Pastry bag or a freezer bag with a corner snipped off — for piping frosting dams.
  • Kitchen scale or measuring cups — accurate measurements matter for texture.

Mistakes That Ruin White Chocolate Cake Recipe with Raspberry

  • Overmixing the batter after adding the remaining milk-and-egg-white mixture — will develop gluten and make the cake dense. Mix only as long as instructed.
  • Skipping the sieve for the raspberry puree — seeds left in the filling can cause texture issues and make it harder to spread without tearing layers.
  • Using cold cream cheese or butter for the frosting — results in lumps and thin, runny frosting. Bring them to room temperature first.
  • Not chilling the frosting before assembly — warm frosting won’t hold a dam or support layers, so follow the chilling step.
  • Assembling warm cake layers — always cool completely before frosting or the filling and frosting will slide.

Dietary Customizations

You can adapt the structure of this cake for various needs, but note that the texture will change with swaps. For gluten-free needs, use a cake-specific gluten-free flour blend and check that your baking powder is labeled gluten-free. For dairy-free versions, choose dairy-free white chocolate alternatives and a vegan cream cheese substitute; these can affect set and mouthfeel, so adjust chilling times. To reduce sugar slightly, consider reducing the powdered sugar in the frosting a bit and rely on the white chocolate and raspberries for sweetness—taste as you go.

What I Learned Testing

The first time I made this I underestimated how much chilling time the filling and frosting needed. Chilling is not optional if you want clean layers and sharp slices. Also, small, even cake pans and leveling the domes made stacking easy and reduced the need for a lot of filling between layers. Finally, piping a dam of frosting before adding the filling keeps the raspberry layer tidy; it’s a small step that makes a big visual difference.

Storage & Reheat Guide

Keep the cake refrigerated until about 30–60 minutes before serving to take the chill off so the flavors open up and the frosting softens slightly. Wrapped tightly, the cake will keep in the refrigerator for 3–4 days. For longer storage, freeze individual slices wrapped well in plastic and foil for up to one month; thaw in the refrigerator overnight and bring to serving temperature before slicing.

Handy Q&A

  • Can I use fresh raspberries instead of frozen? Yes—very ripe fresh raspberries work well. If using frozen, thaw completely before pureeing.
  • Why does my frosting get too thick after chilling? Chill to firm it up, then briefly rebeat (as the recipe suggests) to restore spreadable texture before final frosting.
  • Can I make this ahead? Yes. The raspberry filling and frosting can be made 1–2 days ahead and kept refrigerated; assemble the day you plan to serve for best texture.
  • Why is the batter lumpy sometimes? Slight lumpiness after mixing is fine. Stop and fold gently—overmixing will create a denser cake.

That’s a Wrap

This White Chocolate Cake Recipe with Raspberry is one I return to when I want something that feels special and tastes balanced. Follow the timing notes: cool the cakes, chill the fillings and frostings, and you’ll be rewarded with neat layers and clean slices. Little staging steps—piping dams, chilling the crumb coat, and leveling—make assembly feel manageable and the final cake look professional.

Make it a day ahead if you can: resting overnight in the refrigerator lets the flavors meld and makes serving simpler. If you have questions while you bake, come back to the Q&A or my notes above—I’ve probably encountered the same hiccup and can point you to a fix.

Homemade White Chocolate Cake Recipe with Raspberry photo

White Chocolate Cake Recipe with Raspberry

A three-layer white chocolate cake filled with seedless raspberry filling and frosted with a white chocolate cream cheese frosting.
Prep Time3 hours 30 minutes
Cook Time25 minutes
Total Time3 hours 55 minutes
Course: Dessert
Servings: 12 servings

Ingredients

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 cupsmilkat room temperature**
  • 9 large egg whitesat room temperature**
  • 1 1/2 teaspoonsvanilla extract
  • 1 teaspoonalmond extract
  • 3 1/3 cupscake flour see notes for substitution
  • 2 2/3 cupsgranulated sugar
  • 2 tablespoonsbaking powder
  • 1 1/2 teaspoonssalt
  • 18 tablespoons 2 1/4 sticksunsalted butter, cubed small, softened
  • 16 ouncesfrozen thawed raspberries or very ripe fresh raspberries
  • 2 1/2 tablespoonscornstarch
  • 2 1/2 tablespoonslemon juice
  • 2/3 cupgranulated sugar
  • 12 ounceswhite baking chocolate chopped small
  • 1/4 cupheavy cream
  • 28 ouncepkgs. cream cheese 16 ouncesat room temperature ***
  • 1/2 cupunsalted butterat room temperature ***
  • 1/4 teaspoonsalt plus more to taste
  • 2 teaspoonsvanilla extract
  • 7 cupspowdered sugar more or less as needed

Instructions

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to 350°F (175°C). Line the bottoms of three 9-inch cake pans with parchment paper and spray or grease the pans, then dust with flour (or use a nonstick spray with flour). If you have only two pans, you will bake two layers, then bake the third layer immediately after the first two finish.
  • In a large liquid measuring cup or medium bowl, whisk together the milk (1 1/2 cups), the 9 large egg whites, the vanilla extract (1 1/2 teaspoons), and the almond extract (1 teaspoon). Set this wet mixture aside.
  • In the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the whisk attachment, combine the cake flour (3 1/3 cups), the granulated sugar for the cake (2 2/3 cups), the baking powder (2 tablespoons), and the salt (1 1/2 teaspoons). Mix on low speed just to combine.
  • With the mixer running on low, add the cubed, softened unsalted butter (18 tablespoons / 2 1/4 sticks) a few pieces at a time. Once all butter is added, increase the mixer speed to medium and beat until the mixture resembles moist crumbs and the largest pieces are about the size of small peas, about 3 minutes.
  • Pour half of the reserved milk-and-egg-white mixture into the mixer and beat on medium-high until the batter is light and fluffy, about 1 minute. Stop the mixer and scrape down the bowl.
  • With the mixer on low, stream in the remaining milk-and-egg-white mixture. Increase speed to medium-low and mix no more than 30 seconds. If the batter looks slightly lumpy, stop mixing; give a few gentle stirs by hand with a spatula—do not overmix.
  • Divide the batter evenly among the three prepared 9-inch pans and smooth the tops. Bake at 350°F until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out with a few crumbs but no wet batter, about 22–25 minutes.
  • Let the cakes rest in the pans for 5 minutes, then turn them out onto cooling racks. Cool completely before frosting, about 1½ hours.
  • While the cakes cool, make the raspberry filling. Add the raspberries (16 ounces, frozen then thawed or very ripe fresh) to a food processor and puree until smooth.
  • Place a fine-mesh sieve over a medium saucepan. Pour the raspberry puree into the sieve and press with the back of a spoon or spatula to strain out the seeds, collecting the seedless puree in the saucepan. Scrape the underside of the sieve to get as much puree as possible into the pan.
  • Whisk the cornstarch (2 1/2 tablespoons), the granulated sugar for the filling (2/3 cup), and the lemon juice (2 1/2 tablespoons) into the seedless puree until the cornstarch is mostly dissolved.
  • Heat the puree over medium-high, stirring constantly until it comes to a simmer. Reduce the heat to medium (or medium-low if your stove runs hot) and continue to cook, stirring continuously, until the mixture thickens to a quite-thick but spreadable consistency. Remove from heat and refrigerate until completely chilled; it will thicken further as it cools.
  • Make the white chocolate component: place the chopped white baking chocolate (12 ounces) and the heavy cream (1/4 cup) in a microwave-safe bowl. Microwave for 30 seconds, stir, then continue microwaving in 15-second intervals, stirring between intervals, until the chocolate is completely smooth. Let cool for about 5 minutes.
  • Make the white chocolate cream cheese frosting: in a large bowl, beat the cream cheese (28 ouncepkgs. cream cheese (16 ounces) at room temperature), the 1/2 cup unsalted butter (at room temperature), and 1/4 teaspoon salt at medium speed with a hand-held electric mixer until very creamy, 1–2 minutes.
  • Beat the cooled white chocolate and the vanilla extract (2 teaspoons) into the cream cheese mixture until smooth.
  • Gradually add the powdered sugar (7 cups), in batches, beating at low speed until blended after each addition. When all powdered sugar is incorporated, refrigerate the frosting about 30 minutes to help it firm up; it should be fairly thick to support the layers.
  • After chilling the frosting, spoon roughly 1 cup of frosting into a pastry bag to use for piping the dams around each cake layer. If you do not have a pastry bag, you can use a freezer bag with a corner snipped off. Spoon 3/4 cup of frosting into a small bowl and set aside to use as the crumb-coat frosting. Keep the remaining frosting chilled until assembly.
  • Level the cooled cake layers: use a large serrated knife to remove the domes from the tops of the cakes so each layer is flat.
  • Prepare your cake stand or serving platter: place four strips of parchment paper around the edges of the stand to form a square with an open middle (this keeps the stand clean). Place a small dollop of frosting in the center of the stand to anchor the first layer.
  • Place the first leveled cake layer on the stand, top side up. Pipe a ring (a dam) of the prepared frosting just inside the top edge of the cake to contain the filling.
  • Spread half of the chilled raspberry filling inside the piped ring, using an offset spatula to bring the filling to the edges of the dam. Spread 1 cup of the white chocolate frosting over the raspberry layer and smooth to the edges.
  • Place the second leveled cake layer on top, top side down. Repeat: pipe a ring of frosting just inside the top edge, spread the remaining raspberry filling to the edges of that ring, then spread 1 cup of white chocolate frosting over the raspberry layer.
  • Place the third leveled cake layer on top, top side down.
  • Apply the crumb coat: using the reserved 3/4 cup crumb-coat frosting, frost a thin, even layer over the top and sides of the assembled cake to seal in crumbs. Smooth as desired and remove any excess frosting. Refrigerate the cake for about 30 minutes, or until the crumb coat has set. Meanwhile, refrigerate the remaining frosting and then lightly rebeat it before final frosting if it has become too firm.
  • Finish frosting: frost the outside of the chilled, crumb-coated cake with the remaining white chocolate frosting as desired. Remove the parchment strips from around the base of the cake, and pipe a ring of frosting around the bottom edge if desired.
  • Garnish the top with additional raspberries if desired. Refrigerate the cake until ready to serve; bring to a suitable serving temperature before slicing.

Equipment

  • Three 9-inch cake pans
  • Parchment Paper
  • Nonstick spray or butter and flour
  • Electric mixer with whisk attachment
  • Mixing Bowls
  • liquid measuring cup
  • Whisk
  • Food Processor
  • Fine Mesh Sieve
  • Saucepan
  • Offset Spatula
  • Pastry bag (or freezer bag)

Notes

Use the correct size pan:You will need three 9-inch cake pans for this recipe. I have not tried this recipe with 8-inch cake pans, but the batter should fit, the white cakes will just take longer to bake, closer to 27-30 minutes, and be thicker.
Cake Four:You may substitute the cake flour with 3 cups all-purpose flour plus ⅓ cup + 1 tablespoon cornstarch.
White chocolate:Use quality chocolate baking bars such as Bakers or Ghirardelli for the best results. Quality chocolate chips can also work but ONLY use Guittard or Ghirardelli.  Other chocolate brands don’t have enough cocoa butter and too many additives so they will not melt well.  Note: weigh the chocolate chips and don’t use a measuring cup – it does not translate.
**Room temperature ingredients:It is essential that you use room temperature egg whites, milk and butter for this recipe or your cake will not rise properly or be as light and tender. To quickly bring eggs to room temperature, add eggs (in shells) to a bowl of warm water (not hot) and let sit for 20 minutes. You can microwave the milk at 15 second intervals to warm, but only warm to room temperature- not hot or it will scramble the egg whites!
Raspberry filling consistency:The raspberry filling should be chick and barely spreadable so that it stays in place and doesn’t run over the edges, otherwise, you’ll have cake layers sliding all over the place!  If the jam thickens too much, microwave it for 10 seconds.
Store-bought raspberry jam:You’ll need about 1 ⅓ cups seedless raspberry jam.  Use 2/3 cup per layer. If your store-bought jam is too hard to spread, microwave it for 10 seconds.
***Frosting:This frosting should be on the thicker side and not a thin icing so it’s thick enough to stand up against the weight of the cake layers.  To achieve a thick frosting without having to add too much powdered sugar, use cream cheese and butter softened at room temperature.  I made sure there is plenty of frosting – so don’t be shy! The frosted cake should have about ½ cup leftover which you can use to decorate the cake if you wish.
Raspberry Jam:Make the raspberry jam and store in an airtight container in the refrigerator for 48 hours.  You may need to microwave for 10 seconds to loosen it a little, just so it’s thick but spreadable – you do NOT want it runny!
Frosting:Is best freshly made, but you can whip it together up to 24 hours before assembling the cake, tightly cover and refrigerate.  Let it come close to room temperature before re-whipping.
Cakes:The white cake layers can be prepared one day in advance. Let the layers cool completely then wrap each layer tightly in plastic wrap and store at room temperature.
Crumb Coated Cake:Tightly wrap the cake in plastic wrap and refrigerate or freeze after you apply the crumb coating.
Frosted Cake:Assemble the entire cake, cover with a cake cover or tent with foil, refrigerate, then let sit at room temperature for 1-2 hours before serving.
To freeze individual cake layers:Tightly wrap the individual cake layers in plastic wrap and freeze for up to three months.
To freezecrumb coated cake:Tightly wrap in a couple layers of plastic wrap followed by a couple layers of foil, freeze for up to two months.
To freeze frosted cake:Tightly wrap in a couple layers of plastic wrap followed by a couple layers of foil, freeze for up to two months.   Allow the cake to thaw overnight in the refrigerator then unwrap and come to room temperature on the counter for 1-2 hours before serving.

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