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The Best Angel Food Cake (8 Ingredients)

This Angel Food cake is divine; store-bought varieties don’t come close.  Homemade angel food cake is soft, pillowy, fluffy. It’s scrumptious all on its own, or with berries and whipped cream. 

homemade angel food cake sliced on plate
Homemade angel food cake is extraordinarily fluffy, tender, and soft.

Video: Watch Us Make This Recipe

Homemade Angel Food Cake is not the same as store-bought

When your previous experience with angel food cake involves only store-bought versions, it’s easy to assume all angel food cake tends to be on the bland-dry-boring spectrum of cakes. That’s where this homemade angel food cake will absolutely waltz in and change all past notions.

Homemade angel food cake is heads above the rest:

  • It smells amazingly aromatic as it bakes.
  • It’s the opposite of bland; homemade angel food cake so lavish with flavor, it needs no embellishment. People eagerly devour this delicious cake all on its own.
  • It’s also not even a little bit dry. This angel food cake recipe yields the most fluffy, tender, and pillowy soft cake.
  • This angel food cake is actually dairy-free, containing no butter and no milk.
  • There are only 8 ingredients to this recipe.
homemade angel food cake in tube pan
A tube pan is essential for angel food cake.

Only 8 Simple Ingredients

Angel food cake may feel like it belongs in the professional-baker category of desserts, but take heart: it only requires 8 simple pantry ingredients to make this fluffy soft cake come true, anytime you want.

Aside from the usual players like eggs, vanilla, sugar, and salt, you’ll also need cake flour, cream of tartar, and almond extract.

Cake Flour

The main difference between cake flour and all-purpose flour lies in the lower protein content of cake flour. Protein becomes gluten when liquids are introduced, which directly affects the structure and texture of baked goods.

With airy-light cakes like our angel food cake, the lower protein content is essential to achieving that signature pillowy soft crumb.

Cream of Tartar

Cream of tartar may be a strange name, but it’s a pantry staple for baking. It helps bind ingredients together and stabilizes light and fluffy baked goods. It’s essential when recipes involve whipping plentiful air into egg whites.

homemade angel food cake on platter
Homemade angel food cake is delicious on its own.

Egg Whites Only

Use large egg whites only; it’s important to remove any yolk that accidentally falls in with the egg whites. I’ve definitely plucked bits of yolk out of the whites, just to ensure the egg whites whip up as nice and airy as possible.

Soft Peaks vs. Stiff Peaks

Use either a stand mixer or an electric hand mixer to whip the egg whites into required peak levels. Be sure eggs are at room temperature.

Soft peaks: when you turn gently pick whisk up from the mixture and turn it upside down, the peaks are soft and gently bend over at the tips

Stiff peaks: when you turn whisk upside down, the peaks hold up strong and pointy, without bending at tips. 

homemade angel food cake with whipped cream and berries
Whipped cream and berries compliment angel food cake perfectly.

More to Bake and Eat

Angel Food Cake
Common Questions

What is angel food cake?

Angel food cake is a type of sponge cake made with egg whites,

How do you keep your angel food cake from falling?

It’s important to measure the ingredients carefully, particularly the dry ingredients, using the scoop and level method. Bake until the cake springs back with a gentle touch, and be sure to invert the cake upon cooling. Allowing the cake to cool upside-down prevents it from collapsing while cooling.

How do you store angel food cake?

This cake keeps well at moderate room temperature, tightly covered, for up to 3 days. Beyond this, keep it tightly covered in the fridge and allow it to reach room temperature before serving.

What do you serve with angel food cake?

We absolutely love and highly recommend serving your angel food cake with stabilized whipped cream, as resists becoming soggy or runny. Add some fresh berries on top for the perfect finish.

Try This Easy Apple Cake, Too

Shop This Recipe

  • Tube pan for angel food cake and chiffon cake

    Perfect for angel food cakes and chiffon cakes.

  • Cream of Tartar

    Increases the rise and texture of many baked goods.

  • cake flour

    Great for making light, fluffy cakes!


Did you make this?

Please give us a rating and comment below. We love hearing from you!

homemade angel food cake on platter

The Best Angel Food Cake

4.99 from 103 ratings
This Angel Food Cake is indeed divinely delicious. It is 200% better than any store-bought version, and easy to make at home. You will need a 2-piece angel food cake pan for best results. I bought my pan specifically for this cake, and I’ll be using it again and again.
Prep Time: 20 minutes
Cook Time: 30 minutes
Servings: 12
Author: Amy Dong

Ingredients  

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 375F. Sift cake flour and 3/4 cup sugar into a bowl and set aside. 
  • Using stand mixer or electric hand mixer on medium-high speed, beat egg whites, cream of tartar, and salt until it forms soft peaks. Add the other 3/4 cup sugar slowly, and then beat on high until stiff peaks form.
  • Beating on LOW, add in flour mixture and both extracts slowly, stopping as soon as batter is incorporated. Do not over-mix. Using rubber spatula, fold in the sides and bottoms of bowl, to fully incorporate.
  • Spoon batter into un-greased angel food cake pan. Do NOT grease the 2-piece angel food cake pan. Gently shake to even out batter.
  • Bake 30-35 min, or until the top springs back with a gentle touch, and top is golden.
  • Invert pan upside down, to cool completely. Run a thin knife around pan sides, and remove bottom from the sides. Gently cut bottom away from pan.

Equipment

Notes

  • It’s important that not even a little egg yolk gets mixed in with the egg whites.
  • Soft peaks: when you turn gently pick whisk up from the mixture and turn it upside down, the peaks are soft and gently bend over at the tips
  • Stiff peaks: when you turn whisk upside down, the peaks hold up strong and pointy, without bending at tips. 
  • If you enjoyed this recipe, please come back and give it a rating ♡

Nutrition (per serving)

Serving: 1g | Calories: 158kcal | Carbohydrates: 34.5g | Protein: 4.5g | Fat: 0.2g | Sodium: 104mg | Fiber: 0.2g | Sugar: 25.3g
Course: cake, Dessert
Cuisine: American
Diet: Low Fat
Method: baking

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79 comments

    • Kathiw

    I think I blew it ! I got the stiff peaks but when adding wet to dry I might have over mixed it . I wanted to be sure to get it folded in correctly with the rubber spatula and I noticed my fluffy volume decreased. Baked it anyway it was my first attempt. So. I see it baked well but only half the volume. Any suggestions on when mixing wet to dry without overdoing it?

      • chewoutloud

      Kathi, you’re on the right track! You’re absolutely right that if wet/dry gets overmixed, the volume will decrease too much and thus the baked cake won’t rise as much. Are you baking in an ungreased angel food cake pan? It’s imp to leave it ungreased so the batter has some cling action as it rises. As far as the folding, I very gently and softly use a rubber spatula to repeatedly “flip” batter over and over on top of itself (very softly!) until most of it is incorporated. The volume shouldn’t decrease by too much; we’re just trying to get the whites mixed into the batter until there are no large egg white streaks left. But a few little streaks are okay. And very gently place batter into the pan, without dumping it in, so that no volume is lost there. You really sound like all you need is a try #2, and you’ll have yourself a beautiful cake! 🙂

    • Nicole

    Ours came out very liquidy before baking and did not fluff up much when baked…was maybe 1/4 of thickness of pan. Re read directions 2-3 times and followed to a T….and thoughts?

      • chewoutloud

      Nicole, I do have a couple of thoughts (because this cake definitely should bake up nice and tall)… did you use the full amount of large size egg whites, and were they at room temp? Did any yolk get into the egg white batter? Also, it takes quite a bit of time to whisk to the soft peaks and then later to stiff peaks; whisking to stiff peaks is essential to getting all that airy-ness into the batter. Otherwise, it will not bake up fluffy. When incorporating wet/dry ingredients, be sure to either whisk on very low speed or you can also use a rubber spatula to fold them into each other. The key is not to over mix here. If the egg white batter gets overmixed, it will also prevent baking up fluffy. Also, how fresh is your cream of tartar? It’s important for that to be fresh. Even though the batter is somewhat liquidy, it should be bubbly/frothy. Otherwise, it may not have been whisked to stiff peaks or possibly overmixed later on. Lastly, the pan should not be greased. That helps the batter “cling” to the sides as it rises in the oven, and prevents deflating. Hope I was able to help? I encourage you to try again, as this is really a super duper angel food cake 🙂 Thanks for writing in, Nicole! 🙂

    • Tiffany

    Do you think I could use the egg white beaters instead?

      • chewoutloud

      Tiffany, I’ve never use Egg Beaters, so I’m not sure about the results; I’d definitely want to do recipe testing with that before I give you good advice on it 🙂 If you do try it, let me know how it turns out. 🙂

    • Payrick Lin

    Hi, first time trying to bake! where should the oven rack be placed? My family and I can’t wait to try this!

      • chewoutloud

      I usually place oven rack on lower middle position… gives the cake some breathing space 🙂 Hope you guys love it as much as we do 🙂

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