It has been a while since I baked and assembled a nice-looking cake from scratch. It was my mom’s birthday last Friday, birthdays = cakes. I originally thought of just making some kind of dessert but a cake is just much more celebratory. I wanted to make a fresh mango cake but mangoes were not in season (too bad). Strawberry it was. I didn’t really follow a specific recipe for the whole cake except for the basic sponge cake. I used a Génoise cake recipe, the ingredients are very simple but it is not the simplest cake to make. It is basically just eggs, sugar, flour, butter and a little vanilla extract. The layers consist of whipped cream, my own homemade strawberry jam, fresh strawberries, and a honey syrup. I used chopped pistachios as a garnish on top and sides – makes a very good contrast of colours with the strawberries!
Ingredients:
Génoise Sponge Cake (7″ cake):
- 3 Large Eggs (approx. 55 grams each)
- 100 grams Granulated Sugar
- 100 grams Cake Flour (soft wheat flour) – sift
- 50 grams Melted Butter
- 1 tsp. Vanilla Extract
Layers:
- 450 mL Whipping Cream
- 3 tbsp. Granulated Sugar
- Approx. 6 Large Strawberries – wash, dry, hull and cut into halves + more for garnish
- 2 tbsp. Honey + ¼ cup Hot Water – mixed together (honey syrup)
- ¼ cup Strawberry Jam + 1 tbsp. Hot Water – mixed together (I used homemade – definitely made a difference in taste)
Method:
Génoise Sponge Cake:
- Preheat oven to 350°F/180°C. Prepare a 7″ cake pan – line only the bottom with parchment paper.
- Sift flour and melt butter.
- Break eggs in a medium sized mixing bowl and whisk with sugar. Set eggs over a water bath (simmering, NOT boiling) until the the eggs reach about body temperature, stirring occasionally – avoid cooking eggs so be careful not to have the heat too high.
- Mix with an electric mixer or on a stand mixer on high speed until increases in volume and becomes a creamy colour. *Important*: continue beating eggs on medium speed until eggs reach a “ribbon” stage (testing with a whisk, draw the mixture up, away from the bowl and allow it to flow back to the mixing bowl, if it looks like you can almost write letters in the mixture without it being too runny then it has reached the “ribbon” stage). It is difficult to describe in words so I might consider documenting the whole process in another post. 🙂
- Add in sifted flour and FOLD in flour with a rubber spatula until just mixed in. (try to do this in a fast motion and DO NOT over-mix)
- When flour is all mixed in, add butter + vanilla and FOLD until well mixed (DO NOT over-mix).
- Pour batter into cake pan and tap the pan the counter to remove any big air bubbles, bake right away in preheated oven for about 30 minutes. Try not to open the oven door during the baking process. The cake is done when a knife is inserted into the centre and comes out clean.
- Cool cake, remove from pan – slide a paring knife around the pan and cake should come out easily when pan is flipped over (metal knives are not recommended for “non-stick” pans).
Layering:
- Beat whipping cream with sugar until firm peaks form. Chill in fridge until ready to use.
- Cut cooled cake into three even layers. If the cake is shaped like a “dome” on top, cut off the excess to make a flat layer.
- Brush honey syrup onto the bottom two layers.
- Place strawberries on the bottom layer of cake and spread on whipped cream evenly, place second layer of cake on top.
- Spread strawberry jam on cake and top with a thin layer of whipped cream.
- Coat the top and sides with remaining whipped cream.
- Pipe cream for decoration (if desired – might require more cream). Garnish with strawberries and chopped pistachios.
- Chill until ready to serve.
It is not the best-looking cake but it is not bad. 😛 I didn’t take a picture of the cross-section, I thought that it would be nice to see it in an illustration. I didn’t sweeten the whipped cream too much because my mom is a not a big fan of overly sweet desserts. I also cut back on the cream (trying to be a tiny bit healthier). The end result was VERY yummy, the cake had a rich egg flavour and the layers had a very aromatic strawberry flavour – with fresh berries and the jam. Glad mom enjoyed it, she even had two pieces (she usually stops at one).

I love strawberry shortcake and this recipe is great! Thanks for sharing!
Thanks! Strawberry shortcake is one of my favourites too!
Accidentally “liked” my own post, apparently there is no way to “unlike” it at the moment….o well 😛
did you make the photo-explanations?
I was too busy making the cake and didn’t take photos of every single step..I might make another more detailed post on making the sponge cake which requires more technique! 🙂
love the presentation… so adorable. Strawberry cupcakes are on my soon to make list. Hope mine turns out great like yours. Nice photos
Thanks! Glad you like the post! Cupcakes would look so cute!
wow i dont think ive seen such a fantastic looking pud in a long time!
Thank you! I had the last piece… 😀
Oh goooodness, this sounds heavenly! I recently discovered my love for all cakes fruity and this fits the bill perfectly 🙂 I cant believe you dont think this is ‘the best looking cake’, I think its STUNNING! This is my first time on your blog and i know it wont be the last, i love your layout and everything about this post – gorgeous
Thank you very much! I am a blogging newbie…really glad enjoyed my post!
that’s a really beautiful cake!
Thanks! 🙂
This looks so, so, good! It’s on my list of things to try. I wish I had some right now 🙂
Thanks! Please do when you find some time!
So cute! delicious!
Thanks!
I miss your cakes and the yummy smell of fresh baked bread that I always looked forward to.
great site! bookmarked for future reference. hahaha 🙂
I miss making bread in that little room too..haha…i remember we made a lot of gyoza for a gyoza party…good times!
Looks absolutely beautiful! I must try it…
Aaron from
Westernised Asian Recipeshttp://www.kubeen81.blogspot.com