Over the month of December we celebrated Emily’s 5th birthday. This was the year of the Barbie which thrilled me to no end as I had envisioned a Barbie cake for my little girl long before she was even a twinkle in our eye. Barbie cakes are a true labor of love by the mothers who create them and this cake was a testament to my undying love for my daughter.
Today I wanted to share with you how we created our Barbie cake and some tips for creating this cake for your own little princess! The week will be filled with oodles of tutorials and ideas for making your Barbie party special and I hope to add a little inspiration to your own Barbie-inspired party!
For this cake you will need a white cake mix, strawberry gelatin dessert, eggs, milk, canola oil, a package of fresh strawberries, and your doll.
The doll that is pictured in this tutorial ended up not being used because the cake was not tall enough to form her dress and stand her upright. Doll toppers can be purchased specifically for cake decorating at Michael’s for $3.99 (you can also use on of those 40% off coupons on that purchase to save) or you can ask your bakery if they will sell you a doll that you can use for roughly the same amount. Cakes can also be improvised as Monica, from The Homespun Heart discovered, by making your cake taller to fit a Barbie. My girlfriend also found a shorter generic one that could be found at the dollar store because the generic ones are not as tall as the real Barbies.
My best friend broke the legs of her Barbie for my cake. May you all have a super awesome mafia friend like me who is willing to donate her legless Barbie for your project.
This cake is an easy mix and dump cake, but you will need to finely chop your strawberries to mix into the cake. I used my food chopper to chop these up evenly and fine for the cake. Once you have done that, you have the brunt of the cake mixing portion done.
Dump all of the ingredients into your mixer, including those finely chopped berries, and give it a good mix. I let it run for a good minute or two while my oven was preheating to 350 degrees.
Pour your batter into a greased mixing bowl. The mixing bowl I used for this project is the Pampered Chef Classic Batter Bowl that I had in my kitchen. Many years ago when I bought it, the consultant had shared with me that it would make the perfect Barbie cake. It doesn’t have to be a Pampered Chef bowl though, any two quart ovenproof glass mixing bowl should do the job!
Now let Barbie sit back and take a little nap while her dress bakes. Because of the depth of the cake, this cake will take roughly an hour and ten minutes to bake. You want to make sure that the rack is not too high on your oven or it will really brown the top of your cake. You will also want to keep an eye on it and test the center after an hour to see how it is doing. Mine took the full hour and ten minutes for this cake though.
Once the cake is done baking, you can pull it out and let it rest for at least fifteen minutes. Invert your cake on a cooling rack and let it cool for three hours before decorating.
I prefer to make my cakes in a two day process so I went ahead and wrapped the cooled Barbie cake in plastic wrap and rested it on top of a dish, then covered the whole thing in foil. When the cake is frozen it is much easier to decorate and I have a lot less crumbs to have to work around. That little tip came courtesy of a Michael’s cake decorating course I took and has served me well over the years of making and decorating special occasion cakes.
Now it is time to make the frosting. You can definitely skip this step and just use two 16 ounce containers of vanilla frosting (tinted to your favorite cake dress color), but the jarred frosting won’t give you the stiffness you need if you want to decorate and embellish the dress. This buttercream decorator’s frosting uses the confectioner’s sugar, shortening, milk, clear butter flavor (pictured above and purchased at Michael’s) and a little Meringue Powder (pictured above and purchased at Michael’s) that gives it a yummy whipped and buttered taste without adding any off-colors to your frosting.
Making frosting is a messy, messy job and is one of my least favorite parts about cake decorating. One way you can really cut down on the mess is to dampen a kitchen towel and drape it over your mixer while you are whipping up your frosting. This will cut down on the confectioner’s sugar dust clouds that you will find all over the kitchen and you can wipe down your mixer when you are all done.
Really try hard to resist eating this frosting. You really will need all of it to decorate your cake. Doesn’t it look delicious though? Tint the frosting in your desired color. In our case it was Emily’s two favorites…pink and dark pink.
Now it is time to frost your cake. I frost my cakes frozen and they turn out beautifully. You just want to give your decorated cake a few hours to thaw before the guest arrive, but frozen cake frosting is so darn easy that you will never go back. Frost it the best you can and remember that you can add as many details as you need to and that will cover up any of the imperfect parts.
To get the surface even smoother, dip your clean spatula in hot water and run it across the surface of the cake in long strokes. This will melt the frosting slightly to help remove stroke marks. Wipe the spatula clean and dip it in the hot water before each stroke.
Once your cake is smooth (ish), you are ready to add your embellishments to decorate your dress. I used Wilton Tips #2D to make swirl flowers and my zigzag border, tip 3 to make the centers of the flowers and added dots to her dresses, and tip 21 for the shell borders and little loops on her dress.
You can add whatever details you prefer on your cake, that is the beauty of making your own Barbie cake. Embrace your inner-fashionista and have a blast making Barbie’s party dress!
Here is our finished cake. I left the top of Barbie’s dress on and tried to incorporate the lower half into looking like a continuation of her top. Her hair was tied with a little leftover grosgrain ribbon. If your Barbie has legs, you can wrap her in plastic before inserting her. After Barbie was done with this party, I put her dress top in the dishwasher and it came out clean and perfect. Barbie just got a good wash in the sink and I put her away…just in case we might need her next year.
- 1 package (18.25 ounces) plain white cake mix
- 1 package (3 ounces) strawberry gelatin
- 1 cup finely chopped fresh strawberries with juice (approximately 1½ cups whole berries)
- ¾ cup milk
- ¾ cup canola oil
- 4 large eggs
- For Buttercream Icing (Medium Consistency): 1½ cups solid white shortening
- 1½ teaspoons Wiilton Butter Flavor
- 4-5 tablespoons milk
- 6 cups confectioners sugar
- 1½ tablespoon Wilton Meringue Powder
- Pinch of Salt (optional)
- Place your oven rack into the center of the oven and preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
- Prepare a 2 quart oven-safe batter bowl by greasing heavily with cooking spray.
- Place the cake mix, gelatin strawberries and their juice, milk, oil, and eggs in a large mixing bowl.
- Blend with an electric mixer on low speed for thirty seconds. Stop the machine and scrape down the sides of the bowl with a rubber spatula. Increase the mixer speed to medium and beat two more minutes.
- Pour batter carefully into your prepared batter bowl.
- Bake for 1 hour and ten minutes or until the cake springs back when pressed with your finger and a cake tester comes out clean.
- Cool for fifteen minutes and then invert your cake on a cooling rack. Allow the cake to cool for a minimum of three hours before decorating. For more tips see the post above.
- For icing: Cream shortening flavoring, and water.
- Add dry ingredients and mix on medium speed until all ingredients have been thoroughly mixed together. Blend an additional minute or so until creamy.
- Tint as desired.







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Adorable! I can’t believe I have yet to make one of these for my two girls.
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Amy Reply:
January 3rd, 2011 at 12:16 pm
Emily has been dying for one. She only had one Barbie so this ended up being a great theme for gifts to get her Barbie collection started too. I hope you guys had a good Christmas, Tara!! xo
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This is too cute! Oh, if I only had a girl!
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Amy Reply:
January 3rd, 2011 at 12:17 pm
Ha! Yes, I am sure these girlie tutorials will do nothing for you with five boys
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What a wonderful mommy you are.
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Amy Reply:
January 3rd, 2011 at 12:15 pm
I felt pretty proud that day!
Some days are definitely better than others
Hope you had a good holiday, Tammy!
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Excellent job on the cake Amy! I took that course at Michaels too and always freeze my cakes before I frost them. I agree with you, it makes it so much easier to frost!
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Amy Reply:
January 3rd, 2011 at 12:15 pm
That is one tip that really stuck with me. I am a horrible froster of cakes and freezing them really does help! I hope you had a good Christmas, Ingrid!
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Happy belated birthday Emilie! We love your cake (you look so much like your dad!). Sorry Amy – my daughter is a carbon copy of my husband too : ) We’re saving the recipe for our daughter, thanks for sharing!
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Amy Reply:
January 3rd, 2011 at 2:44 pm
Ha! You are the first person to ever say that. I am going to have to post a picture of me when I was little to prove it to you, but I swear she is a little bit me
Thanks for the birthday wishes and so glad you liked the cake idea!
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Amy! Wow – you did awesome!!! That picture of your Emily shows how much she loved it – your cake turned out so great, way to go!!!!
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Amy Reply:
January 3rd, 2011 at 2:41 pm
Thanks so much, Monica, and thank you for your inspiration for the Barbie party too! Your party and cake were just beautiful! I hope you had a wonderful Christmas!! xo
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My little girl is only 8 months but I can’t wait till I get to make a Barbie cake for her someday! Thanks for the great tips
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Amy Reply:
January 3rd, 2011 at 8:37 pm
I swear that I blinked and she is five now. Enjoy every moment of that tiny sweetness as long as you can, Jodi
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I am glad I could help:) You did a great job!
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Hmm, my little one loves strawberries — and is just getting into Barbies. Will definitely have to save this!
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My son was very into anything military, so for his 6th birthday (he’s 14 now, I made an aircraft carrier cake, complete with tanks on a graham cracker dock that had been bombed. He loved it!http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=1240868419792&set=a.1240842539145.134517.1171756641
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Amy Reply:
January 4th, 2011 at 10:28 am
What a cool cake idea, Jen!! I bet your son loved it! Making cakes is not easy and I have a new appreciation every time I make one for the parties for those who do it regularly! Thank you so much for your comment!
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whoops….it was his 5th birthday
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That cake really makes me wish I had a girl, but I’m looking forward to the cupcake transformation
Just curious, have you ever tried the Wilton decorator frosting…I was wondering if it has a better consistency similar to what you used here.
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Amy Reply:
January 6th, 2011 at 10:19 am
I have seen the cake frosting at the store, but I have never tried it just because I use such a large volume of icing to cover flaws in my cake, but I am sure it is the same consistency and the same thing, it just might cost a little more to make your cake. I can’t wait to share the cupcakes too, since they would make a fabulous Valetine’s Day treat!
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Great background story about Barbie’s missing legs! I would totally do something like your friend did, cut off the legs. Awesome!
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Amy Reply:
January 6th, 2011 at 10:18 am
And that is why I am assured that you are an awesome friend, Heather! It isn’t just anyone who would cut the legs off their Barbie to contribute to a cake cause
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Great tutorial! Your cake turned out beautifully. I bet the birthday girl was more than happy!
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I have a question about freezing the cake before frosting. Do you actually freeze it fully, or just for an hour or so? I’m concerned if you frost a frozen cake that the frosting would sort of decompose or something while the cake defrosts. Thanks!
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Amy Reply:
January 13th, 2011 at 10:19 am
Tracy- I actually freeze it solid overnight or even three days or so before my party. I frost it frozen and I promise that it doesn’t affect the icing or the icing texture at all. The cake is always very moist too and locked in with the icing. It really works- I promise!! This cake had been frozen overnight and looked beautiful the evening of the next party!
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I love the cake, this seems pretty easy, and I will need to put it into my stash of recipes. Also, my daughter is Emily and she turned 5 this year too. Ijust had to throw that in!! Happy Birthday Emily!
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Amy Reply:
February 4th, 2011 at 7:34 am
Wow, Rebekkah, we have so much in common! The cake is definitely an easy one, the decorating was really the only tedious part, but you could definitely improvise with canned frosting. Happy birthday to your Emily this year too!
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amanda hallery little Hannah is haveing her Barbie party next weekend.wondering if i can add say powered sugar to store bought frosting to make it thicker for decorating? Aka already bought luck strawberry frosting at the store….yes to containers. Please e mail me and let me know thanks!!!!! P.s. thanks for these simple step by steps!
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What is the easiest way to insert the barbie into the cake. My Emily turns 6 this year.
Another Amy Clark
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Amy Reply:
November 19th, 2011 at 3:40 pm
Honestly, I just shoved her in there just like I would a candle or a cupcake topper. No need to trim around her because she will stay upright better if she is sunk into the cake.
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I cannot wait to try this! Thanks for breaking it down. It’s the whole reason I bought that pampered chef mixing bowl!
(their recipe says to make 2cakes and use about 2 inches of one as a base to make it taller, I guess then it fits a real barbie.)
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Amy Reply:
December 20th, 2011 at 11:53 am
Thanks for this tip, Shannah. I had thrown my insert away from my batter bowl and that makes sense! We have hung on to our broken Barbie in case we have another Barbie party in our future. I hope your party is a success!
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In the late 50′s my aunt made these for me for my birthday! So pink and white and frilly, I was such a tomboy and kept hoping for a Trigger horse, LOL
I miss my aunt’s loving gesture now…
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I’d imagine this would work with a rapunzel doll for my daughters upcoming princess party!
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Out of all the tutorials this was the best help. Thank you.
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Amy Reply:
February 7th, 2013 at 1:48 pm
I am SO happy to hear that, Michelle!
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How long does it take the iced frozen cake to thaw? I’m making one of these…if I frost it frozen in the morning for a 1:30pm party, will it be thawed?
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Amy Reply:
April 3rd, 2013 at 6:12 pm
You should be good! It should take only two to four hours to thaw completely
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Can you put a normal glass bowl in the oven.?
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Amy Reply:
April 9th, 2013 at 6:23 am
It needs to say oven safe!
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I just have the cake freshly baked from the oven, cooling in the kitchen right now. It looks much shorter than yours, any advice on that?
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Amy Reply:
May 23rd, 2013 at 10:30 am
I am not sure why it wouldn’t be as tall unless it was a different size bowl. You could make another cake, cut in half, and stack it on top of that one if it isn’t the height you need! Let me know how it goes, Charis!
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Thanks for the advice. I think I over beat the batter. I happened to have a smaller glass bowl which fits perfectly on top of the shrunk cake. So it worked out just fine.
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Amy Reply:
May 26th, 2013 at 10:49 am
Oh, that does happen sometimes. I’m so glad you were able to work this out!!
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