Pink Whisper Angel Food Cake

pink-whisper-angel-cake

This pink whisper angel food cake has serious main-character energy at birthday parties and spring gatherings. It floats onto the table looking all delicate and innocent… and then everyone immediately wants a slice.

I love making it because it’s light, not overly sweet, and somehow feels celebratory without being a full baking marathon. It’s the kind of cake that looks impressive but doesn’t demand a meltdown in the kitchen.

And honestly? That gentle blush colour just makes people happy. You set it down, and there’s always that little pause — then the smiles start. 💕✨

Prepare

25 mins

Cook

50 mins

Serving

4 people

Ingredients

💕 For the Pink Marshmallow Frosting (the dramatic halo)

  • 6 egg whites (about 180g) — because more clouds

  • 1¾ cups + 2 tbsp granulated sugar — sweetness with gloss

  • 2 tbsp light corn syrup — that marshmallow sheen

  • ¼ tsp cream of tartar — stabiliser-in-chief

  • Dash of salt — to keep it grown-up

  • 1 tsp vanilla bean paste or extract — never skip

  • A few drops pink food colouring (optional) — dial your blush level

  • Rainbow nonpareil sprinkles (optional) — because sometimes subtlety is overrated

This frosting is glossy, swirly, and slightly outrageous in the best way. It should look like you whipped up a sunset.

Honestly? This cake feels like it should be sliced at a birthday party where everyone is slightly overdressed and very impressed.

Method

Alright, this is where your Soft Pink Angel Food Cake earns its wings 💕✨
Let’s make it feel like an event, not just instructions.


Position an oven rack in the lower third of the oven and preheat to 180°C (350°F). Sift together the cake flour, powdered sugar and salt — not once, not twice, but four times. Yes, four. This is how you get that impossibly light, cloudlike crumb. Set aside.

Before you touch those egg whites, wipe down your mixer bowl and whisk with a little lemon juice. Any trace of grease and your meringue will sulk. We don’t allow sulking.

Add the egg whites and beat on low until frothy — about 30 seconds. Sprinkle in the cream of tartar and increase to medium speed until the whites thicken and soft swirl lines appear. Slowly add the superfine sugar, one tablespoon at a time, letting it fully dissolve before the next. Beat until you reach soft-to-medium droopy peaks — glossy, airy, and elegant. Fold in the vanilla, almond extract, and a whisper of pink colouring if using. Think blush, not bubblegum.

Remove the bowl from the mixer. Sift the dry mixture over the meringue in four additions, folding gently but confidently with a spatula each time. Don’t rush. You’re preserving air.

Spoon the batter into an ungreased 10-inch angel food cake pan and smooth the top. Bake on the lower rack for about 35 minutes, until the top springs back when lightly touched and a skewer comes out clean. Resist the urge to peek early — this cake thrives on steady heat.

The second it comes out of the oven, invert the pan onto a wire rack and let it cool upside down for one hour. This keeps it tall and fluffy. Once cooled, carefully run a thin knife around the edges and lift the cake free. Let it cool completely. Patience here keeps the texture ethereal.


Now for the glossy pink halo.

Again, wipe your mixer bowl and whisk with lemon juice. In the bowl, combine the egg whites, sugar, corn syrup, cream of tartar and salt. Set the bowl over gently simmering water and whisk continuously until the mixture reaches 54°C (130°F). It should feel smooth and slightly thickened.

Transfer the bowl back to the stand mixer. Beat on low for 2 minutes, medium for 2 minutes, then high until the frosting becomes thick, glossy and marshmallowy — about 5 minutes. Beat in the vanilla and pink colouring. Use it immediately while it’s billowy and cooperative.

Place the cooled cake wide end down on your serving plate. Pile the frosting generously on top and sweep it down the sides with a spatula. Use the back of a spoon to create soft swoops and swirls — this is not a smooth finish cake. It’s dramatic and proud of it.

Scatter rainbow nonpareils over the top. Add a few more just before serving for sparkle and crunch.

Stand back.

It should look like a pastel cloud that decided to attend a party.

And when you slice it? Pure airy bliss.

Helpful tips

This light, airy cloud of a cake is perfectly happy flying solo — but I love giving it a little company. A tumble of fresh strawberries, raspberries or blueberries on the side adds a juicy pop that plays beautifully against that sweet, fluffy texture.

The berries cut through the softness just enough, so every bite feels fresh, balanced and a little bit summery. It’s simple, but it makes the whole thing feel even more special — like you absolutely meant to serve it that way. 💕🍓✨


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