BEST EVER American Buttercream Frosting
This American buttercream frosting is light, fluffy, silky smooth, and surprisingly not too sweet. Unlike traditional American buttercream that can sometimes taste gritty or heavy, this newer whipped method creates a glossy bakery-style frosting with an incredibly smooth texture.

The secret is whipping the butter until very light and airy, then adding hot heavy cream before the powdered sugar. The warmth helps soften the sugar while the long whipping time creates a mousse-like buttercream that pipes beautifully and spreads like a dream.
I used to make large batches of buttercream every week when I ran my cake business from home. Back then, I relied on meringue powder and decorator-style methods because most of my cakes needed to survive transport, heat, and hours of decorating. Over time, though, I simplified the recipe for everyday baking — and honestly, I prefer this version now. It’s easier, silkier, and tastes more like real buttercream instead of pure sugar.
Why You’ll Love This Recipe
- Silky smooth texture with no gritty mouthfeel
- Light and fluffy despite being an American buttercream
- Easy to make with simple ingredients
- Perfect for cakes, cupcakes, layer cakes, and piping swirls
- Stable enough for decorating while still soft and creamy
- Pipes beautifully and crusts lightly
- Much less sweet tasting than traditional American buttercream

Why This Buttercream Is So Smooth
Most American buttercream recipes are made by simply beating butter with powdered sugar. While easy, that method can leave the frosting dense, overly sweet, or slightly gritty.
This whipped buttercream method works differently:
- the butter is whipped first until extremely light,
- hot cream helps soften the powdered sugar,
- and the frosting is whipped for much longer than traditional recipes.
The result is a silky smooth buttercream with a glossy finish and a texture closer to bakery frosting or Swiss meringue buttercream — but without cooking egg whites.

Ingredients and substitutes
- Unsalted butter – Use softened butter but not greasy or melted. Good-quality butter gives the best flavor.
- Powdered sugar – Sift if lumpy. Use less for a softer frosting or more for a firmer piping consistency.
- Heavy cream – Hot heavy cream is the secret to the silky texture. Whole milk works too, but cream gives a richer result.
- Vanilla extract – Use clear vanilla if you want bright white buttercream.
- Almond extract – Just a tiny dash adds bakery-style flavor without overpowering the vanilla.
- Salt – Essential for balancing the sweetness.

Step-by-step: How to make the best American Buttercream
Cream the butter
In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, whip the softened butter on medium-high speed for about 10 minutes until very pale, light, and fluffy.
Pro tip — Don’t rush this step. The butter should almost look whipped before adding anything else.
Add the hot cream
Warm the heavy cream until hot but not boiling. Slowly pour it into the butter while mixing on medium speed.
Add the vanilla extract, almond extract, and salt.
Continue whipping for another 5 minutes until smooth and creamy.
Pro tip — The buttercream may look slightly loose at first. Keep mixing and it will become silky smooth.
Add the powdered sugar
Add the powdered sugar in two batches on low speed.
Once incorporated, increase the mixer speed to medium-high and whip for another 8 to 10 minutes until very light and fluffy.
Pro tip — Long whipping creates the smooth glossy texture and removes the heavy sugary feel common in traditional buttercream.

Consistency Guide
This buttercream is very versatile and can easily be adjusted depending on how you plan to use it.
- For frosting cakes – Use the recipe exactly as written for smooth frosting and filling layer cakes.
- For cupcakes – Perfect for piping swirls and rosettes.
- For stiffer piping – Add an extra ½ to 1 cup powdered sugar.
- For softer buttercream – Add 1 to 2 tablespoons warm cream and whip again.
- For hot climates – Replace part of the butter with vegetable shortening if needed.

Can I make chocolate buttercream?
Yes. Add cooled melted chocolate or cocoa powder after the buttercream is fully whipped.

American Buttercream Frosting
My American buttercream has a glossy sheen due to the unique method I use in making it. This simple and easy recipe makes a delicious velvety smooth texture, not grainy buttercream. This will soon become your favorite frosting recipe.
Video
Ingredients
- 1 kg (2 lb) Unsalted butter softened
- 1 kg (2 cups) Powdered sugar
- 60 ml (4 tbsp) Hot heavy cream or whole milk
- 2 tsp Vanilla extract
- ¼ tsp Almond extract
- ½ tsp Salt
Method
- Cream the Butter – In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, whip the butter on medium-high speed for 10 minutes until pale and fluffy.1 kg Unsalted butter
- Add the Hot Cream – Heat the heavy cream until hot but not boiling. Slowly pour the hot cream into the whipped butter while mixing on medium speed. Add the vanilla extract, almond extract, and salt. Continue mixing for 5 minutes until smooth.60 ml Hot heavy cream, 2 tsp Vanilla extract, ¼ tsp Almond extract, ½ tsp Salt
- Add Powdered Sugar – Add the powdered sugar in two batches on low speed until fully incorporated. Increase mixer speed to medium-high and whip for another 8 to 10 minutes until light, fluffy, and silky smooth.1 kg Powdered sugar
- Use or Store – Use immediately or store in an airtight container.
Notes
- Use less powdered sugar for a softer, creamier frosting.
- Add more powdered sugar for stiff piping consistency.
- The buttercream will lighten in color significantly as it whips.
- If refrigerated, bring to room temperature and rewhip before using.
- Clear vanilla extract keeps the frosting bright white.
- This frosting works beautifully for cakes, cupcakes, layer cakes, and simple piping work.
Equipment you will need
Nutrition
Tried this recipe?
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Tips for Success
- Use room temperature butter
- Whip the butter long enough before adding sugar
- Add powdered sugar slowly to avoid lumps
- Don’t skip the final whipping time
- Use the paddle attachment instead of the whisk for smoother frosting
- Gel food coloring works best without thinning the frosting
Troubleshooting
| Problem | Cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Buttercream feels gritty | Sugar not whipped enough | Continue whipping several more minutes |
| Frosting too soft | Butter too warm | Chill 10–15 minutes then whip again |
| Buttercream too stiff | Too much powdered sugar | Add warm cream 1 tbsp at a time |
| Buttercream looks curdled | Temperature imbalance | Keep mixing — it usually comes together |
Frequently asked questions
A buttercream frosted cake can be left at room temperature for up to 3 days unless it has a perishable filling.
And, beyond that, you can keep it in the fridge. In fact, I like to place it in the fridge for an hour until the buttercream firms up slightly, then wrap plastic around it to protect it from other food odors.
Yes. Store in the fridge for up to one week. Bring to room temperature and rewhip before using.
No. This recipe uses less powdered sugar than traditional American buttercream, which gives it a lighter texture and less sugary taste.
Yes, absolutely. And, the trick to covering a buttercream cake with fondant is to make sure you chill the cake really well, for more than a few hours. In fact, I like to keep my cakes overnight, so when it’s ready for fondant the cake is chilled completely, and I have a nice firm surface to work with.
Yes. Freeze for up to 3 months in an airtight container.
Yes, lightly. Enough for smoother decorating but still soft and creamy when eaten.
Absolutely. Gel food coloring works best.
This is a general guide I use. Also note, I have given you the filling and frosting separately so you can choose another filling with your buttercream. If you choose to fill and frost the cake with buttercream, you can use the last column/total.
The amount is in cups – 1 kgs frosting makes about 8 cups
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Thank you so much for all your information on everything! I was wondering if I can use milk instead of non-dairy creamer, and is that the same as half and half cream?? Thanks again.
Cheri
Yes of course Cheri. You can add milk as well as cream. The non-dairy cream is so you can increase it's shelf life as well as make it Parve. But cream and milk will of course taste better.
Veena
Hi Veena…i made it and my all the relatives including me loved the texture and the flavour of it…and it wasnt too much sweet as compare to other buttercream…Thank u so much for sharing your great recipes for people like us,who are learners in cake baking and decorating field…Thanks
Thank you Sahdia.. Glad to hear that..Glad you find my blog used..
Have fun..
Veena
Veena thank u you r great I'm just learning how to bake but you r an inspiration! I'm learning so much from you !
Lorena,
Thank you so much for your kind words. So glad to hear my efforts are well received.
Happy caking.
Veena
Veena hi you are awesome!
Thanks for sharing this wonderful recipe. I love the texture. This will be my new go-to recipe. 🙂
Dear Veena
Im a vegetarian. Shall it be a problem if i leave out the Merengue powder?
Thank u in advance
What happened is that it didn't whipped it still more liquid! For sure is something i did wrong. What i want to know is what is the ingredient that makes it whipped. Maybe i need to add more of it. Anyways i'm doing it again to see if i can find out what i did wrong. My mixer is old maybe is not whisking it fast enough. Thanks for taking out of your time to answer me. Really appreciate
Hi!! I tried this recipe. It tastes delicious, but it never whipped. I'm starting to think maybe this is not for me even thou i enjoy it a lot. I don't know if it is that here the weather is to hot and humid. If that happens i add more sugar, more cream, more merengue powder? This buttercream sounded so perfect and east i thought i could do it, but i'm starting to think the kitchen
Maria, I do not understand what is the problem with the recipe. Here in Israel the weather is very hot and humid too. In summer this is the only buttercream cake I use. On days that are very hot. I make more cake layers and only crumb coat the cake on the outside. Do you understand what I mean?
If I have baked two layers of 8" cakes I cut both those layers into two horizontally. So now
This is awesome! Thanks for sharing. you are God sent to bakers and decorators. Your blog is my go to for EVERTHING!
How does this hold up in the heat? I live in Texas…