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How to Fill and Stack Cake Layers

July 24, 2020 · In: Cake Basics, Tutorials

Have you ever had a fiasco with your cake filling? I have. Between it bulging out between layers or straight up oozing out of the sides because it’s just too thin to withstand the weight of gravity, I’ve seen it all. The thing is, the filling and stacking process is arguably the most essential part of building your cake’s foundation. If your cake filling is unstable in any way it can throw off the entire outcome of your cake, and if you’re anything like me (perfectionistic to a fault), that can be totally devastating. 

how to make a layer cake

Over the years, I’ve come to depend on two different approaches to filling and stacking cakes, since in my opinion, there are two different types of cake fillings. There are stable fillings like buttercream and then there are less-stable fillings like soft consistency chocolate ganache, salted caramel, jam, lemon curd, etc. Whatever you’re using to fill your cakes these days, I’m about to show you my way of filling and stacking layer cakes. Here’s a quick video to show you the methods I’ve come to love before you read all the details below:

Before we move on to details, if you’re wanting to see more Cake Basics videos like this one, you should definitely check out my YouTube Channel and watch more of this series! You’ll even find cake recipes and decorating tutorials there to help broaden your skill set and inspire you. Be sure to hit the Subscribe button so you never miss a new video!  

Before You Start Filling & Stacking

No matter what kind of filling I’m using, I always start by placing a cardboard cake circle that’s the same diameter as my cake layers onto the turntable. Then, place a small dab of buttercream onto the cake circle before adding the first cake layer on top. The little swipe of buttercream acts as “glue” to keep the bottom layer in place.

how to stack cake layers
how to build a layer cake tutorial

Using this cardboard cake circle method not only keeps your bottom layer in place, it makes your cake easier to work with overall and easier to transport from the turntable to a cake stand or box once it’s finished. 

After you’ve got your bottom layer secured to the cake circle, follow either of the methods below depending on the type of filling you’re using. 

Filling Cakes with Buttercream 

Filling a cake with buttercream is super straightforward as long as you’re working with the right consistency of buttercream. My vanilla buttercream recipe is the perfect consistency for filling and frosting cakes as-is, but if you find that your buttercream collapses underneath the weight of the above cake layer and starts oozing out of the sides, it will need to be made thicker. That could mean adding extra powdered sugar to your buttercream or cooling it in the refrigerator before whipping it back up, depending on the type of buttercream you’re using.

perfect swiss meringue buttercream recipe

To fill a cake with buttercream, simply add a few spatula scoops full onto your cake layer and smooth it down with an angled spatula until it’s about ½ inch thick (or however thick you prefer your filling to be). 

how to fill cake with buttercream
how to add buttercream filling to cake

It’s super important to make sure your buttercream filling is as level as possible, so be sure to get down to eye level and check to see that it’s nice and even before adding your next cake layer. 

buttercream cake filling tutorial

Filling Cakes with Soft Fillings (Ganache, Caramel, Jam, etc)

If you’re using a softer filling, like chocolate ganache, lemon curd, salted caramel, or really anything that could easily ooze out under the weight of a cake layer, I recommend creating a buttercream dam around the edge of your cake layer before adding your filling to the center.

chocolate ganache consistency for drip cakes
thick caramel filling recipe for cake

To create the dam, you’ll want to use a medium or stiff consistency buttercream (these notes after my vanilla buttercream recipe detail how to create those consistencies). Add the buttercream into a piping bag and snip off about ½ inch opening, then pipe a dam around the cake layer that’s about ¼ inch from the edge of the cake. 

piping a buttercream dam on cake
how to make buttercream dam for filling

Fill in the center of the dam with your filling. This method basically gives your filling a nice bumper to hold up the weight of the cake layer, keeping your softer filling nice and secure inside. 

how to fill cake with chocolate ganache
how to use chocolate ganache filling cake

Smooth down your filling until it’s level with the top of the dam, then place your next cake layer on top. 

Stacking Cake Layers

After placing your cardboard cake circle down and filling the bottom layer of your cake using either of the above methods, place your next layer of cake right side up on top. Be sure to get down to eye level to make sure it’s centered with the bottom layer. 

stacking a layer cake tutorial

Then, repeat the process of adding and smoothing the filling before placing the next layer on top. 

how to stack a layer cake

When adding your top layer, flip it upside down (so that the bottom of the cake layer is the top).

how to fill and stack layer cakes

By adding it cut-side down, it greatly reduces the amount of loose crumbs that end up in your crumb coat and final cake finish. 

Creating Structure for Tall Cakes

My go-to cake height is 3 layers, typically 6-inches in diameter. Between the filling and frosting, my cakes end up being between 5 and 6 inches tall. The higher you fill and stack your cakes, the less sturdy they will become due to the weight of the above layers and the nature of gravity. If you want to make an extra tall cake, you’ll want to use the barrel method to add extra structure. This involves adding supports via dowels/boba straws and extra cardboard cake circles to even out the weight of the cake. While I don’t yet have my own tutorial on this method, this is the method I’ve used with success and point readers to all the time. 

What to Do Next

Now that you have perfectly filled and stacked cake layers, it’s time to crumb coat! Here’s a rundown of all the steps to building and decorating your layer cake:

  • Crumb coat your cake
  • Frost a smooth buttercream finish, a rustic buttercream finish, or any kind of frosting texture!
  • Add sprinkles, a ganache drip, or other finishing touches

Want more Cake Basics? Head here to see all of the posts and learn the methods of caking I’ve come to love over the years. I’m cheering you on every step of the way!

By: Whitney · In: Cake Basics, Tutorials · Tagged: buttercream dam, buttercream filling, cake basics, cake filling, cake layers, cardboard cake circles, fill and stack, ganache, ganache filling, layer cakes, three layer cake, triple layer cake

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Connie J says

    September 24, 2024 at 8:56 am

    I’m embarking on making my daughter’s wedding cake. I’m an amateur and have lots of time to practice.
    QUESTION – she wants white cake, raspberry filling and buttercream. I have a wonderful raspberry reduction (from Berenbaum’s Cake Bible) but it is more like a syrup consistency, not a custard or jam. I’m planning a buttercream dam but I think it will soak into the cake. Should I put a layer of buttercream down, then raspberry, then more buttercream? Thinking I will find a thicker one, but even then, doesn’t it gradually soak into the cake? THanks!

    Reply
    • Whitney says

      October 25, 2024 at 9:56 am

      Hi Connie! Congrats on making your daughter’s wedding cake – that is so special! If you don’t want the reduction to soak into the cake layers I would definitely put down a thin layer of buttercream, then the raspberry reduction. Fruit fillings do tend to soak into the cake slightly (even thicker ones) without a layer of buttercream underneath. Hope that helps!

      Reply
  2. Nitnelion says

    June 3, 2023 at 9:01 pm

    I’m making a 9” diameter cake with 3 2-inch layers with butter cream between the layers. I’m planning g to cover with fondant. Do you think I need to put in fowls for support? Do you usually use dowels for your standard 3-layer cakes? Thank you!

    Reply
    • Whitney says

      June 9, 2023 at 9:12 am

      Hi Nitnelion! I don’t think you need dowels for a cake of that size. I only dowel the cake if it’s four layers and up (or tiered). Hope that helps!

      Reply
  3. Simone A. says

    November 20, 2022 at 1:04 am

    Thank you so much for the great recipes and tips, can I use your cream cheese buttercream recipe for filling between cake layers or it won’t be stable enough? I will use the vanilla buttercream cream recipe for coating.
    Thanks again

    Reply
    • Whitney says

      November 20, 2022 at 10:33 am

      Hi Simone! So happy you’ve been loving my recipes and tips! You can absolutely use my cream cheese frosting recipe as filling between layers. It’s perfectly stable as long as you use the block style cream cheese (not the spread).

      Reply
  4. Marie says

    November 11, 2022 at 12:25 pm

    Hello Whitney,

    I just received my mini (4 inch) cake pans that I am planing on using more often for our family of 4. If I want to do one of your recipes, do you think I can adapt the quantity (for the cake and for the frosting) and just calculate with the rule of three?
    I am planing on baking my own birthday cake this Monday 😉

    Reply
    • Whitney says

      November 12, 2022 at 7:29 pm

      Hi Marie! You can absolutely alter my recipes for four 4-inch pans. If the recipe yields 3 6-inch layers, you can halve the recipe for four 4-inch layers. Enjoy!

      Reply
  5. Sarah says

    February 23, 2022 at 11:44 am

    Hi! Would you recommend the cake layers being chilled in the fridge before the crumb coat or room temperature? I made your vanilla cake today, wrapped up the layers, and I plan to crumb coat tomorrow (Thursday). I would think colder cake would help, but I wanted to ask!

    Reply
    • Whitney says

      February 25, 2022 at 8:29 am

      Hi Sarah! Since the refrigerator tends to dry out exposed cake layers, I don’t recommend refrigerating them before crumb coating. Instead, I like to fill and stack my cakes, add a crumb coat, and then refrigerate. Hope that helps!

      Reply
  6. Sofia says

    September 6, 2021 at 8:08 am

    Hi! I love how it looks the vanilla cake. Do you have the recipe for the cake? Thank you!

    Reply
    • Whitney says

      September 7, 2021 at 7:20 am

      Hi Sofia! I do: https://sugarandsparrow.com/vanilla-cake-recipe

      Reply
  7. Heather says

    September 2, 2021 at 2:03 pm

    Would I need to double the buttercream recipe for a double layer 8” cake? To fill and frost?

    Reply
    • Whitney says

      September 2, 2021 at 5:12 pm

      Hi Heather! I would make 1.5x the recipe for a cake of that size. Enjoy!

      Reply
  8. Jennifer says

    August 9, 2021 at 8:31 am

    I just found you website and have never even attempted such a beautiful cake. Question…I am tasked with making a red velvet cake this weekend. Should I use the butter cream recipe?

    Reply
    • Whitney says

      August 10, 2021 at 11:04 am

      Hi Jennifer! You can fill/frost a red velvet cake with buttercream! I’d recommend a cream cheese buttercream (like the one in this recipe: https://sugarandsparrow.com/pumpkin-cupcakes-recipe/) or my vanilla buttercream recipe: https://sugarandsparrow.com/vanilla-buttercream-recipe

      Reply
  9. Pam says

    June 22, 2021 at 12:24 pm

    I want to do 4 eight inch layers. I’m using your buttercream recipe for the filling and the rest. Should I make one recipe for the filling and the crumb coat. Should I make a fresh batch while it’s chilling to ice the final coat?

    Reply
    • Whitney says

      June 22, 2021 at 7:07 pm

      Hi Pam! I would make 2.5x the recipe for filling, crumb coating, and frosting a cake of that size. You can make it all at once. After crumb coating the cake you can leave the remaining buttercream out at room temp covered with a kitchen cloth. You may need to give it a few stirs with your stand mixer before continuing on with the frosting.

      Reply
  10. Maria Sher says

    April 24, 2021 at 4:45 pm

    Hi Whitney
    Thanks for this article, your blog is really very useful and informative.
    After staking my cake layers when I try to crumb coat they move alot, my layers are not steady. They are not breaking but the move. Do you have any tip.
    Thanks

    Reply
    • Whitney says

      April 27, 2021 at 10:13 am

      Hi Maria! If your layers are shifting around while you’re crumb coating, it could mean that the filling you’re using is not super stable. If it’s buttercream you’re working with, try stiffening it up a little more by using less liquid or more powdered sugar (be sure to balance that with a little salt so it doesn’t get too sweet). Once you make your filling more stable, the cake layers shouldn’t move a whole lot. After you crumb coat, try refrigerating the cake for 20 minutes to let everything firm up before moving on in the frosting process. This way, you’ll have a really stable foundation to frost the cake. Hope that helps!

      Reply
  11. Nikki Bernard says

    March 2, 2021 at 10:44 am

    Wow this is so nicely done, not sure what I’m doing wrong, I stack my cakes and then I decorate and the. Put it in the cake holder and my cake starts to split and fall apart, I let my cakes cool overnight before I begin to stack and decorate and still falls apart, idk what I could be doing wrong, do u know what I could be doing wrong ?

    Reply
    • Whitney says

      March 2, 2021 at 4:30 pm

      Hi Nikki! Without knowing what recipe you’re using I can’t say what the problem might be. Perhaps the cake you’re using is too dry?

      Reply
    • Colleen says

      September 12, 2025 at 10:47 am

      Or maybe your layers aren’t even across the top. I’ve had issues in the past with a small amount of doming on any one layer would cause them to split.

      Reply
  12. Vicky says

    January 13, 2021 at 3:59 am

    Hi Whitney
    Thank you for sharing the double barrel method that you use for your tall cakes. Once you place the cake board on the top of the 1st tier and you then add the other cake on top, do you just put the cake straight onto the board without any buttercream to glue it in place?
    Thanks
    Vicky

    Reply
    • Whitney says

      January 14, 2021 at 5:36 pm

      Hi Vicky! I always put a dab of buttercream onto the cake board to glue the cake down and make it more secure.

      Reply
  13. Shanice says

    October 15, 2020 at 10:41 pm

    I love your reading your blog even though I have watched dozens of cake basics videos! I plan on selling cakes (in 2022 or so because I I don’t have the funds) but I always wondered… when you add a filling –fruit based especially– does that mean that the cake has to stay refrigerated?

    Reply
    • Whitney says

      October 16, 2020 at 8:41 am

      Hi Shanice! So happy to hear you’re loving my blog and Cake Basics series! Yes – a fruit based filling typically needs to stay refrigerated until the day you serve the cake, although it will depend on what the filling recipe requires. Some fillings (like certain buttercreams) don’t require refrigeration for a few days and can be left at room temperature. Hope that helps and cheering you on in your future cake business!

      Reply
  14. Ghada abdelghani Gaber says

    August 7, 2020 at 12:35 am

    It’s amazing to see how can I do this I like it but I want to now to decorate the cake it’s the better to use butter cream or unther cream thx

    Reply
    • Whitney says

      August 7, 2020 at 10:31 am

      Hi there! I use American buttercream for decorating all of my cakes: https://sugarandsparrow.com/vanilla-buttercream-recipe/ but there are many kinds of buttercream recipes out there (swiss meringue, italian, german, etc) so feel free to give mine a try but also know there are other options!

      Reply

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LEMON CUPCAKES 🍋 after about a dozen recipe tes LEMON CUPCAKES 🍋 after about a dozen recipe tests, this one is everything I could want in a lemon cupcake! Fluffy-yet-moist, bursting with natural lemon flavor, and absolutely irresistible topped with lemon cream cheese buttercream. 

Full recipe (with frosting) linked in my bio + at https://sugarandsparrow.com/homemade-lemon-cupcakes/

INGREDIENTS:
1 Cup (132g) all-purpose flour
1 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
1/4 Cup (60ml) whole milk, room temperature
3 Tbsp (45ml) lemon juice from 1 medium lemon
3/4 Cup (150g) granulated sugar
3 Tbsp (42g) unsalted butter, room temperature
2 Tbsp (30ml) vegetable oil
2 large eggs, room temperature
1 tsp pure vanilla extract

INSTRUCTIONS:
1. Preheat the oven to 350ºF (177ºF) and line a standard cupcake pan with 12 paper liners.
2. In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, and salt. Set aside. 
3. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment (or with a hand mixer and large bowl), add the lemon zest to the sugar and mix on low speed until fragrant and well combined, about 1 minute. Meanwhile, combine the lemon juice with the milk and set aside. 
4. Add the butter to the lemon-sugar mixture and cream on medium speed until and combined, about 2 minutes. Add the vegetable oil and beat until light and creamy, about 3 minutes. Scrape down the bowl and paddle as needed.
5. Mix in the eggs one at a time on low speed, then add the vanilla and turn the mixer to medium speed for one minute.
6. Turn the mixer off and add the flour mixture all at once. Mix on low speed until just combined, then slowly pour in the lemon-milk mixture. Mix until just combined, about 30 seconds.
7. Divide the batter equally between the liners and bake for 14-18 min. Cool, then top with frosting of your choice (link in bio for lemon cream cheese frosting)�
#lemoncupcakes #creamcheesefrosting #lemon #cupcakes #cupcakedecorating
April in my kitchen 🌸 I published 5 NEW recipes April in my kitchen 🌸 I published 5 NEW recipes on my site, baked my Oreo cupcake recipe for a fundraiser and found it was just as delicious as I remember, and filmed/photographed 3 recipes that will be on my blog in May (Lemon Cupcakes, Lemon Cream Cheese Buttercream, and No-Bake Marbled Strawberry Cheesecake) 🥰 

Comment “APRIL” to get all the available recipes and stay tuned for more! 

#bakersofinstagram #springbaking #cakedecorating #cupcakes #bakinglove
SHEET PAN COOKIE CAKE 🍪 slice it warm for a fud SHEET PAN COOKIE CAKE 🍪 slice it warm for a fudgy chocolate chip cookie OR let it settle into a moist and chewy cookie cake that’s perfect for decorating! My fave vanilla buttercream + sprinkles turn this giant chocolate chip cookie into the perfect birthday cake alternative at the end 🥳
⁣
Full recipe + decorating ideas at https://sugarandsparrow.com/sheet-pan-chocolate-chip-cookie-cake/
⁣
INGREDIENTS⁣
1 Cup (226g) unsalted butter, melted⁣
1 1/3 Cups (267g) packed light or dark brown sugar⁣
1/2 Cup (100g) granulated sugar⁣
3 large eggs⁣
1 Tbsp pure vanilla extract⁣
1 tsp baking soda⁣
1 tsp cornstarch⁣
1/2 tsp salt⁣
3 Cups (398g) all purpose flour⁣
2 Cups (350g) semi-sweet chocolate chips⁣
⁣
INSTRUCTIONS⁣
1. Preheat the oven to 350ºF (177ºC). Grease and line a 13×18 inch sheet pan.⁣
2. In a large bowl, add the brown sugar and granulated sugar. Melt the butter in the microwave and pour it over the top of the sugars. Whisk together until uniform. Add the eggs and vanilla, then continue whisking until uniform. Whisk in the baking soda, cornstarch, and salt.⁣
3. Add the flour and use a silicone spatula to fold it in until smooth cookie dough forms. Reserve 1/2 Cup of the chocolate chips and set them aside, then fold the remaining 1 1/2 Cups of chocolate chips into the cookie dough.⁣
4. Place the chocolate chip cookie dough onto the prepared sheet pan and use an offset spatula to spread it all the way to the edges in an even layer.⁣
5. Bake the cookie cake for 14-16 minutes, until it looks golden brown on the edges and set. 
6. Enjoy warm or let it cool and decorate with vanilla buttercream and sprinkles! ⁣
⁣
#cookiecake #chocolatechipcookies #sheetcake #birthdaycake #cakedecorating
STRAWBERRY CUPCAKES 🍓based on my beloved strawb STRAWBERRY CUPCAKES 🍓based on my beloved strawberry layer cake recipe, this cupcake version is just as moist yet fluffy and bursting with natural strawberry flavor! Between the mix of fresh strawberries in the cupcakes + freeze-dried strawberries in the frosting, the flavor is out of this world 🚀

Full recipe link in my bio (with strawberry buttercream) + at https://sugarandsparrow.com/strawberry-cupcakes/

STRAWBERRY CUPCAKES
Yield: 14 cupcakes

INGREDIENTS:
5 oz (143g) fresh or frozen strawberries
1/3 Cup (80ml) whole milk, room temp
1 1/2 Cups (158g) sifted cake flour
1 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
6 Tbsp (85g) unsalted butter, room temp
1 Cup (200g) granulated sugar
2 large eggs, room temp
3 Tbsp (45g) sour cream, room temp
1 tsp vanilla extract
1 drop pink food coloring (optional)

INSTRUCTIONS: 
1. Puree the strawberries using a food processor (you’ll have about 1/2 cup of puree), then place into a saucepan over medium-low heat. Bring to a simmer, then cook for 10-15 min, stirring occasionally, until you have 1/4 cup. Refrigerate until room temp.
2. Preheat oven to 350ºF (177ºC) and line a standard cupcake pan with liners.
3. Whisk together the sifted cake flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt and set aside.
4. In a stand mixer w/ paddle attachment (or hand mixer + large bowl), whip the butter on high for 2 min. Add sugar and beat for 2 min, until light and fluffy. Turn the mixer to low and add the eggs one at a time, then add the vanilla and sour cream, turn the mixer to high and beat for 1 min. Meanwhile, whisk together the strawberry puree, whole milk, and food coloring (if using).
5. Turn the mixer off and add all of the dry ingredients at once. Mix on low until just combined, then add the strawberry milk mixture until just combined, about 30 seconds.
6. Fill the cupcake liners 2/3 full and bake for 14-18 minutes. Cool completely before topping with strawberry buttercream (full recipe linked above). 

#strawberrycupcakes #strawberrycake #pinkcupcakes #strawberry #cupcakes
COFFEE BUTTERCREAM (recipe below)☕️ this frost COFFEE BUTTERCREAM (recipe below)☕️ this frosting has AMAZING coffee flavor, is so easy to decorate cakes with, and pairs beautifully with so many flavors (chocolate, vanilla, or any cake flavor you’d want to turn into a latte). 

All my cake pairing suggestions are linked in my bio or at https://sugarandsparrow.com/coffee-buttercream-recipe/ 

COFFEE BUTTERCREAM⁣
Yield: 2.5 Cups⁣

INGREDIENTS⁣
1 1/2 tsp instant coffee or espresso powder⁣
1 1/2 Tbsp whole milk, room temperature⁣
1 Cup (226g) unsalted butter, room temperature⁣
3 1/2 Cups (420g) powdered sugar⁣
2 tsp pure vanilla extract⁣
Pinch of salt⁣

INSTRUCTIONS⁣
1. Combine the instant espresso/coffee with the whole milk and set aside. In the bowl of a stand mixer, beat the butter on high until creamy and smooth (about 5 minutes), scraping down the bowl and paddle a few times in between.⁣
2. Turn the mixer to low and add the powdered sugar a few cups at a time, scraping down the bowl and paddle between intervals. Add the vanilla, the coffee/espresso milk mixture, and salt. Mix on low until fully incorporated, about one minute.⁣

#coffeebuttercream #buttercream #frosting #coffeecake

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