Angel Cake
Growing up with Granny baking at home, people are always shocked to find out that as kids, my sisters and I weren’t big cake fans. We’d always have beautiful birthday cakes created by Granny, but we would never have much interest in actually eating them. However, there’s one person who has always been loyal to…

Growing up with Granny baking at home, people are always shocked to find out that as kids, my sisters and I weren’t big cake fans. We’d always have beautiful birthday cakes created by Granny, but we would never have much interest in actually eating them. However, there’s one person who has always been loyal to eating Granny’s cakes – that is Papa. Perhaps that is why the tale of his 40th Birthday Angel Cake is all the more facetious.
It’s a cake that I myself have always enjoyed. Even if I wasn’t too fussed about cake as a whole, I always loved the look of Angel Cake. Layered cakes are somewhat common these days, but this lovely little sponge is the true original. Another lifelong fan of Angel Cake is Papa. But unlike me, he has always been a fan of cake too, being Granny’s dedicated cake-cut-off-consumer for decades!
You would think that such a loyal fan of Granny would also be in receipt of some spectacular birthday cakes, especially when it comes to important birthdays, but our Papa is not a demanding fellow. He’s the kind of guy who just does away in the background, making do with what he’s given. So for his 40th birthday, the one is which Granny opened our door to the gigantic Lorimer family, put on a fantastic spread of finger foods, provided a dizzying amount of alcohol…Papa got a cake…a shop-bought Angel Cake. Gasp! Between all the madness of organising his 40th Birthday Party, Granny hadn’t had a chance to bake Papa a cake, so he got his favourite little cake, bought from Safeways, with a candle on top.
Did he complain? Not once – he was perfectly happy with his little layer Angel Cake.
Did he share?
Well, no, he didn’t do that either, but it was his birthday after all!

The easiest way to make the layers of Angel Cake is to use three individual loaf tins or a multi-sized cake tin. If, like me, you only have one loaf tin, you can improvise by making your own multi-sized cake tin. I used my tray bake tin
, with a long sheet of greaseproof paper measured and folded into three 4-inch sections, and it worked perfectly well. It’s a tad fiddly getting the paper folded and fitted into the tray, but by no means impossible – and cheaper than investing in the tins just for one cake.

Angel Cake
Print RecipeINGREDIENTS
For the Cake:
- 150 g Margarine or Butter (softened)
- 150 g Caster Sugar (Superfine Sugar)
- 3 Free-range Eggs (at room temperature – see notes below)
- ½ tsp Vanilla Extract
- 200 g Self-raising Flour
- 1 tsp Baking Powder
- 1 tbsp Milk
- Pink & Yellow Food Colouring
For the Icing:
- 50 g Block Margarine or Butter (at room temperature)
- 110 g Icing Sugar (Powdered Sugar)
- Splash of Milk
INSTRUCTIONS
For the Cake:
- Preheat your oven to 180°c (160°c for fan-assisted ovens, Gas Mark 4 or 350°F). Grease a 30x20cm (12×9 inches) baking tin with a little excess butter/margarine. Take a piece of greaseproof paper around 60x20cm (24×8 inches), fold it in half, measure 5cm in from the fold and create another fold at this point, then open the paper back up – these folds are where your middle sponge will be. Fold a pleat on either side of this middle section (a few centimetres high, around the depth of your tin). Place the greaseproof paper into your tin and fold the excess up the sides of your tin. Set aside.
- In a large bowl, cream the butter/margarine and sugar together until light and fluffy.
- Add the eggs one at a time, mixing until combined before adding the next. Don’t worry if the mixture appears to curdle – this will remedy itself once the flour is added.
- Stir in the vanilla and milk. Sift in the flour and baking powder, and mix until you have a smooth batter.
- Evenly separate the batter into 3 bowls. Leave one bowl plain, and add a small amount of yellow and pink food colouring to the others. Mix until well combined – don’t go too dark with food colouring as the colour will intensify as it bakes.
- Spoon and spread the batter into the individual sections of your prepared cake tin. Bake in your pre-heated oven for 20-25 minutes, until risen and golden in colour, and a skewer inserted comes out clean. Remove from the oven and leave in the tin until cool enough to touch, then remove the cakes from the tin (using the greaseproof liner to help) and place on a wire rack to cool completely.
- Once completely cool, prepare your buttercream.
For the Icing:
- In a bowl, cream the butter/margarine and icing sugar to create a buttercream, adding a little milk to loosen it up to a spreadable consistency, if required.
- Trim the edges of the cakes so they are all an even rectangular size, and trim the top off the yellow and pink sponges so they have a level finish.
- Spread half the buttercream icing on the top of the yellow cake layer, before sandwiching the pink cake layer on top. Spread the remaining buttercream on the pink cake layer, before sandwiching the plain cake layer on top.
IMPORTANT NOTE:
All my recipes are developed using a digital scale and the metric system (grams and millilitres). Cup measurements are available as a conversion but these, unfortunately, won’t always be as accurate. For best results, I always recommend baking with a digital scale.



I was so pleased to find this recipe. It was very easy to follow. I did a bit of a Heath Robinson with the cake tin, using foil and baking parchment. That worked well. I was surpsied that the amount of batter was so little but it has made 3 reasonable sized layers! Haven’t tasted yet but will be using both the buttercream icing and a little fresh cream too.
If i made again, I’d get the Wilson gel as recommended and also, remember to use white sugar instead of golden. My colours all look drab, even though they were fairly bright before cooking. I’m very much a novice at this but I did enjoy this bake! Thank you
Hi ,do you use unsalted butter in this recipe?
Sounds lovely. I’m looking at making it for my brother in law he loves angel cake. If you have the loaf tins would you make each mixture 3 times in the 3 different colours or would you still devied the one between the loaf Tin 3 times
Lovely cake Baked with my grandson who insisted we make it in three 8 inch round tine. It turned out really well. He iced top with pink icing but other wise kept to recipe. It tasted wonderful.
Did you change the amounts to use the round tins?
What size eggs do you use. Medium or large?