Splitting, filling, and crumb coating, are all the basic steps to creating a layered cake just before you ice it. The crumb coat is a technique used to trap free crumbs in a thin layer of icing. That way, when you finally ice the cake, no crumbs will show up in your beautiful icing!
Here’s a video on these basic steps. It took FOREVER for me to edit, but it was so worth it. I used a better camera than my usual mobile phone video camera, and so I’m quite pleased with how this video looks!
Please leave a comment and share any thoughts!

Here’s the recipe we used for this cake:
Red Velvet Cake Recipe
-2 tablespoons cocoa powder mixed with sifted with 1/8 tsp of baking powder
-2 tablespoons water mixed with 4-5 drops of red gel food color
-2 1/4 cups all purpose flour
-1/2 teaspoon salt
-1/2 cup unsalted butter, at room temperature
-1 1/2 cups granulated white sugar
-2 large eggs
-1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
-1 cup buttermilk
-1 teaspoon white distilled vinegar
-1 teaspoon baking soda
Mix the cocoa/baking powder with the red gel solution to a nice red paste, and set aside. Sift together the flour and salt in a bowl, and set aside. Put the butter in a mixing bowl. In the mixer, slowly add the sugar to the butter on medium high. Cream together the butter and sugar on Medium High for 5 minutes in a mixer until it’s a light color, fluffy, and well-incorporated. Add the eggs at medium speed, one at a time, and scrape between each addition.
Add your vanilla extract to your buttermilk. Next, with the mixer on SLOW, add about a third of the flour mixture, followed by a quarter of your buttermilk to the mixture . Add another third of the flour mixture, a quarter of buttermilk, and so on until all of the buttermilk and flour mixture in the mixer. Then pour in your red cocoa paste into the mixture.
In a small cup, add the vinegar to the baking soda, let bubble, and fold into the batter. Fill two 8″ cake pans evenly with batter.
Put in the oven for about 40-45 minutes at 350 degrees, or until a toothpick which is stuck in the center of the cake, comes out clean. You make also check for doneness using a flat hand on the top of the cake. The cake should bounce back. (Be careful; it’s hot!)
Cream Cheese Filling (can be used for the crumb coat as well):
16 ounces cream cheese, cool but soft
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
1 cup confectioners’ sugar, sifted
1 1/2 (360 ml) cups heavy cream
With a hand mixer, mix all of the cream cheese with the vanilla extract, and 2 tablespoons from your heavy cream. Add the confectioner’s sugar and mix until smooth. Refrigerate for 7-10 minutes to cool and harden up the mixture a bit. In another bowl, whip the heavy cream until it forms stiff peaks. Fold in the whipped cream in two or three parts to lighten up your cream cheese mixture.
oh WOW that looks delicious!
Fantastic Site! Red Velvet cak is my least favorite to bake, but it’s my favorite to eat…
Keep on going with the fantastic blog!
Thanks!!!! It really is a good recipe! Red velvet is definitely one of the tougher cakes to work with, which is why I chose to use it for this video.
Great Blog!!! I loved it!!!
You make everything look so easy!!! I’ll have to say I am not the best baker this will probably be out of my comfort zone!! but I’ll need to try it!!!
Oh my goodness! This is just the most fantastic tutorial ever! Your ‘cinematography’ is marvellous, and ten out of ten for the text/font/sparkles/music! I have to confess I expected a wobbly shot with a voice giving dodgy instructions. I was SO surprised! This looks absolutely professional. I’ve always wanted to try and bake a red velvet cake, so maybe I will now! (Mostly a chocolate girl, me.) Plus now I know why I stink at icing layer cakes. Going to try that crumb coat next time!
I have to say ‘well done’ one more time. This is the best entertainment I’ve seen all day.
The end result looks beautiful and delicious!
Gosh, thanks for your kind comments. It really pushes me to work harder and bring you more videos! >_< I hope it shows you that anyone at ANY level can do it, and hopefully you've picked up some tricks of the trade. (Like a crumb coat, or even, using a cakeboard to transfer layers!)
I used a Flip Mino HD and iMovie if you were wondering! >_^