The Ultimate Frosting and Icing Glossary: Get Our Best Recipes for Everything from Buttercream to Ganache (2024)

Before you make your next cake, browse our collection of frosting recipes.

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The Ultimate Frosting and Icing Glossary: Get Our Best Recipes for Everything from Buttercream to Ganache (1)

A high-quality frosting can transform a simple dessert into something truly incredible. And when it comes to decorating cakes, cupcakes, cookies, and other baked goods, each type of frosting has its place. There's traditional buttercream—the classic birthday cake frosting—that's fluffy, rich, and can be flavored with everything from raspberries to chocolate chips. Then you have royal icing, a favorite of bakers for detailed cookie decorating. Additionally, there's cream cheese frosting, seven-minute frosting, and many more. Our primer on the different types of frostings and icings will ensure you use the right one for each baking project.

For the purpose of this collection—and so you have access to all of the dessert decorating options available to you—we've included both frosting and icing recipes. While the terms are often used interchangeably, frosting is thick and fluffy and typically uses some type of fat, like cream or butter, as its main ingredient. On the other hand, icing can be a simple combination of confectioners' sugar and liquid (cream, milk, citrus juice, or liqueur) mixed to a thin, glossy-like finish. Additionally, you can work with a glaze when baking. The Chocolate Ganache Glaze, pictured here forms a pourable dessert topping with just two ingredients: chocolate and cream. The rich, satin-like number will take any dessert to the next level.

Before baking your next cake or batch of cookies, refer to this glossary of the best spoon-licking frosting recipes. We've got foolproof versions of all the greats, including cream cheese frosting, buttercream, royal icing, as well as some specialty frosting recipes flavored with lemon, peanut butter, vanilla bean, and more

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Italian Meringue Buttercream

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This take on traditional meringue buttercream calls for pouring a hot sugar syrup over egg whites and cream of tartar, whipping until the mixture cools down, and adding chilled butter bit by bit until the frosting becomes spreadable.

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Cream Cheese Frosting

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It's a must for carrot cake, pumpkin cake, red velvet cupcakes, you name it. This tangy frosting is similar to American-style buttercream, but it relies on cream cheese rather than butter for the fat component. All you have to do is beat cream cheese, butter, confectioners' sugar, and vanilla until smooth. Try incorporating other flavors like maple syrup or lemon.

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Swiss Meringue Buttercream

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For this all-purpose buttercream, egg whites are heated with sugar and salt until the mixture is completely smooth, then whipped until fluffy and glossy. Butter is added a few tablespoons at a time, followed by vanilla, forming an airy and silky texture. Feel free to experiment with food coloring here, being sure to add a drop at a time until you achieve your desired shade.

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Chocolate Ganache Frosting

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Ganache—a smooth mixture of chocolate and cream—is one of the richest chocolate frostings imaginable. ​​Add corn syrup and you have the perfect consistency for spreading. Slather onto any cakes or cupcakes you please.

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Simple Vanilla Frosting

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This recipe is so much better than anything you can get out of a can. The secret to the creamy texture of this four-ingredient frosting is a splash of milk.

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Basic Buttercream

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The classic birthday cake frosting couldn't be simpler. It's just a matter of beating together butter, confectioners' sugar, and vanilla until fluffy. Keep in mind that this frosting is very sweet and has a high butter content, so it doesn't hold up very well in warmer temperatures.

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Ultimate Chocolate Frosting

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The key to this fudgy chocolate frosting? Sifting together the confectioners' sugar and cocoa powder before stirring in the butter, milk, and vanilla. And make sure the butter and milk are at room temperature—it makes all the difference in the texture.

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Chocolate Buttercream

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Basic buttercream becomes way more exciting with the addition of semisweet chocolate chips.

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Royal Icing

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Royal icing is much stiffer than buttercream and dries to a smooth, hard finish. It's great for decorating sugar cookies of all types. Add a few drops of glycerin if you prefer royal icing glossy rather than matte.

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White Icing

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This is a two-ingredient glaze that's just the thing for a loaf cake. And it's as easy as whisking together powdered sugar and lemon juice. Try customizing this icing by swapping in another citrus juice, milk, or your favorite liqueur.

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Classic Seven-Minute Frosting

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Named for the amount of time the egg whites have to be whipped with the corn syrup, this frosting actually takes closer to 20 minutes from start to finish. It makes a light, delicate finish for any cake.

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Whipped Frosting

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Ready in minutes, this light and airy frosting is achieved by bringing a saucepan of water to a simmer, then adding egg whites, sugar, and salt until the sugar dissolves. Next, pour the mixture into an electric mixer and beat until glossy, stiff peaks form. It works on just about any cake, from vanilla to lemon.

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Cooked Milk Frosting

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This old-fashioned frosting is creamy without being overwhelmingly sweet. It calls for cooking a milk-and-flour mixture until it becomes thick and pudding-like. Once cooled, the mixture is beaten with butter and sugar until a light and fluffy frosting that resembles whipped cream forms.

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Vanilla-Bean Milk Frosting

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Two types of vanilla—bean and extract—are used to make this creamy béchamel-based frosting perfectly sweet and aromatic.

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Lighter Peanut Butter Frosting

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Buttercream frosting can be flavored in a multitude of ways. Here, a scoop of powdered peanut butter is added to the butter, confectioners' sugar, milk and vanilla extract mixture forming a sweet, nutty icing that can be used to frost vanilla cupcakes or any dessert you fancy,

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Lemon Cream Cheese Frosting

The Ultimate Frosting and Icing Glossary: Get Our Best Recipes for Everything from Buttercream to Ganache (17)

When life gives you lemons make... frosting! This tart, citrusy icing is ideal for people who don't like super sweet desserts. A double dose of lemon from the juice and zest are used to flavor cream cheese, butter, and confectioners' sugar.

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The Ultimate Frosting and Icing Glossary: Get Our Best Recipes for Everything from Buttercream to Ganache (2024)

FAQs

Can you combine ganache and buttercream? ›

Ganache: Add a small amount of cooled (but not chilled) chocolate ganache to the buttercream. This magic combo of heavy cream + melted chocolate lends intense fudgy richness to the American buttercream texture and a huge dose of chocolate flavor.

What is the difference between frosting icing and ganache? ›

Icing (including the popular chocolate icing called ganache) is thinner than frosting but thicker than glaze. Icings set quickly and stiffen as they dry, and are usually spooned or poured over the cake or cookie—though in the case of royal icing, they may also be piped on to create details.

What kind of frosting do most bakeries use? ›

1. Buttercream Frosting. Buttercream frostings rely on the main ingredient of butter and will be the most common type of frosting you will find in a bakery.

What are the disadvantages of ganache? ›

It is the flavor of chocolate unleashed and let loose on your cake. Pro/Con: ganache is very temperature sensitive. That means your finished desert needs to be in a climate controlled environment but it also means that you can re-melt your ganache and adjust the texture by adding more cream or more chocolate.

What is the secret of good ganache? ›

The best ganache is made from high-quality chocolate (we recommend Barima Artisanal chocolate) and whipping cream with a high fat content (preferably 36%). By selecting good quality ingredients, you will give your ganache an intense flavour and smooth texture.

What is the hardest frosting to make? ›

Italian Meringue Buttercream is the most difficult buttercream to make. If you are familiar with Italian meringue, you'll understand that it involves boiling sugar and then whisking egg whites into this piping hot syrup. Because of the high temperatures involved, we only recommend it to the more advanced cake artists.

What happens if you add butter to ganache? ›

Cut up the butter, stir it into the mixture and blend. Note: Butter isn't essential but it gives your ganache a more melt-in-the mouth texture. Your ganache is now ready to use. You might have to let your ganache crystallize depending on what you want to do with it.

Does ganache harden? ›

As it cools, your ganache will thicken and harden to a stable fudge-like consistency. It will never reach a point where it is rock hard (you'll always be able to smudge it if you apply enough pressure with your finger and it will always give to your teeth if you take a bite) but it will completely firm up once cooled.

What are the three types of ganache? ›

There are three primary types of ganache: dark chocolate, milk chocolate and white chocolate. The process for making each variety will not change, regardless of what chocolate you choose to use; however, the taste of your ganache will be affected by the flavor of the chocolate and any additional flavors you add.

Is ganache or buttercream better for wedding cake? ›

If you are having a summer wedding, ganache is a better option to pick over buttercream as it is slightly more stable in hotter temperatures, however can still be slightly temperamental.

Can I put ganache straight onto cake? ›

Whisk the mixture until a smooth and glossy ganache forms, about 30 seconds. You can either pour the warm ganache over the cake immediately, or let ganache sit at room temperature for 1-2 hours and then spread it on the cake. It's delicious either way.

What frosting do professionals use for cakes? ›

Swiss meringue buttercream is a favorite among many cake decorators because of its smooth finish on the outside cakes and its ability to hold piping detail.

What kind of frosting does Buddy Valastro use? ›

Want to make your own Italian Buttercream Icing right at home? Buddy customized this recipe from one he used at The Culinary Institure of America and was shown to him by a group of students for whom he did a demonstration.

What frosting is on wedding cakes? ›

Fondant Icing

Let me explain, fondant (or sugar paste) is almost the default choice for wedding cakes, it's very popular in terms of design ideas and all the possibilities it opens up. It looks the neatest out of all choices and it's the base of most designs out there.

What are the advantages of using ganache? ›

Ganache provides a personal Blockchain network to test your smart contracts, which helps you avoid the costs associated with deploying contracts on the leading network. One of the significant cost-saving advantages of using Ganache in smart contract development is that it helps developers avoid transaction fees.

Does ganache set hard on a cake? ›

As it cools, your ganache will thicken and harden to a stable fudge-like consistency. It will never reach a point where it is rock hard (you'll always be able to smudge it if you apply enough pressure with your finger and it will always give to your teeth if you take a bite) but it will completely firm up once cooled.

What is the purpose of ganache? ›

Chocolate ganache is a type of glaze, sauce, or filling that combines melted chocolate and cream. This chocolatey creation ideal for covering cakes, stuffing pastries, and drizzling over desserts.

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