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4.89 from 27 votes (15 ratings without comment)

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55 Comments

  1. 4 stars
    Recipe is written wrong!!! Please fix it. You say it made by boiling mild flour and sugar. Instructions say flour and milk. Sugar and butter. I have to throw out my batch. Gritty

    1. Camille – the milk and flour has to be cooked into a thick roux and set aside to cool. The butter and sugar are creamed until light and fluffy. This should take about 3 to 5 minutes.
      If you do not cream long enough, the sugar will not dissolve and will result in a gritty frosting.

  2. 4 stars
    I made this and its gritty from the sugar. Tastes great though. I there a way to eliminate the grittyness?

    1. You have to cream the butter and sugar until light and fluffy, so that means you should not feel any grittiness. If it’s gritty, it means your sugar has yet to be creamed long enough. Alternatively, give your sugar a few pulses in the food processor to grind it finer so it will dissolve easily. Hope this helps.

  3. HiI have two questions
    1. Can I make the roux a night before and leave in refrigerator
    2. If I need to make the cake and frost it a night before will the frosting be good the next day?
    Thanks shani

    1. No, Shani, the roux will set and become very lumpy once it cools. You must make it fresh and use it before the flour sets.

  4. I made the frosting but didn’t put the plastic wrap to remove the skin and I mixed it in and there are lots of the roux in my frosting. is there any way I can get this out before using it?

    1. Hey Kathy. The only way to remove them would be to pass them through a sieve! Similar to how we strain custard/pastry cream.

  5. I’m wondering why the photo above, of the milk, says egg yolk?

    An Ermine buttercream is an old-fashioned frosting. It’s the original frosting for Velvet Cakes – Red Velvet, White Velvet, etc. It’s used in the south for a couple of reasons – it’s the closest in texture to whipped cream, and it holds up the best in the southern heat.

    It has been called many different names, including a Roux Frosting. This isn’t an accurate name since it is not made with a roux. A “roux” is a mixture of equal parts flour and fat, cooked together over low to medium heat, to create a uniform thickening agent that’s deployed to thicken sauces like gravies, Bolognese, Gumbo, etc. Gravy is made by adding stock and/or meat drippings to a roux.
    There are options when it comes to the fat, but more often than not, a roux is made from either neutral oil (i.e. vegetable or canola) or unsalted butter. When used in soups, sauces, and casseroles a roux provides creaminess and density, helps incorporate other fatty ingredients like cream or cheese, and generally binds things together into a cohesive finished product.
    It is not used as a base for any frosting.

  6. Annaliese says:

    Is it possible to reduce the sugar a little bit or will it turn out too runny?

    1. This one is already less sweet so I usually don’t and have not tested it. But, you can try. It should still work.

  7. 5 stars
    It’s heart that you shared this wonder it’s great that you shared this wonderful frosting recipe . I m old enough to remember this recipe from way back . Not many people make it . So often people say that buttercream is too sweet . Well here’s the frosting for them . The original recipe that I have for Red Velvet cake uses this delicious frosting from the 50s . I’ve never made it with cream cheese for just that reason It is soooo rich and delicate .

    1. Thank you, Kiki. Yes, it was a very common frosting back when my mom made cakes. I remember eating it out of the bowl with a spoon. We could never get enough!! Red velvet used to be a classic with Ermine before people started getting crazy over cream cheese in frostings.