This Strawberry Milkshake Ice Cream Cake consists of layers of strawberry cake that are sandwiched with strawberry ice cream and frosted with sweetened whipped cream. It is such a delicious and fun ice cream cake!
Do you love a good ice cream cake? You can also check out this Red Velvet Ice Cream Cake, Peanut Butter Cup Ice Cream Cake, or these Cookies and Cream Ice Cream Cupcakes.
I mentioned earlier this week, but my daughter’s birthday was last month, and she is a strawberry fanatic. Everything must be strawberry. Which of course, includes her birthday cake.
The thing is – in January, let’s be honest. Strawberries aren’t exactly good. Or February for that matter, despite all of the chocolate covered strawberries that make an appearance around Valentine’s Day.
And since no other flavor than strawberry will do for her birthday, I have never tried a strawberry cake made from just fresh strawberries. Because right now, I’m afraid that strawberry flavor just wouldn’t carry through.
So I’ve done the next best thing, and I’ve found a cake that I’ve made several times now – full of strawberry flavor. Sure, it uses strawberry gelatin and frozen strawberries, but my daughter loves the cake. And that’s what really matters.
So a few weeks ago, I was watching the Rachael Ray Show, and Buddy Valastro was on, showing easy ways to make impressive cakes. One of the cakes he made was a Strawberry Milkshake Cake.
I saw that cake, and I knew that I wanted to make this cake for Abbi’s birthday.
But as her birthday came closer, plans changed, and just a strawberry cake was made. But I still wanted that milkshake cake. So I did what anyone does with a craving does – I made it. 🙂
I didn’t use the same recipe that Buddy shared, but instead I used this tried-and-true strawberry cake and sandwiched it with strawberry ice cream.
When I was done, I knew I had a winner. I made a Root Beer Float Ice Cream Cake last year that we loved, but I really loved the pink, strawberry twist to this ice cream cake. And even though it’s February and freezing outside, and even though the forecast is calling for snow, I think anytime is a good time for ice cream cake!!
More Strawberry Recipes
Strawberry Mousse
Strawberry Wonton Cups
Strawberry Cupcakes
Strawberry Bread
Strawberry Tart
Strawberry Milkshake Ice Cream Cake
Ingredients
Ice Cream
- 1 container 1.75 quarts strawberry ice cream
Cake
- 1 box 15.25 oz white cake mix
- 1 3 oz box strawberry jello
- 1 15-oz container frozen strawberries in syrup, thawed and pureed
- 4 eggs
- 1/2 cup vegetable oil
- 1/4 cup water
Frosting
- 2 cups heavy cream
- 1/2 cup powdered sugar
For topping
- Fresh Strawberries
- extra sweetened whipped cream
Instructions
- Line 2 9-inch cake pans with plastic wrap, allowing enough overhang to go over the sides of the pan. Remove the ice cream from the freezer and allow it to soften slightly. Spread the ice cream evenly in the prepared pans. Cover the top with plastic wrap and return to the freezer and freeze completely, at least 4 hours.
- Preheat oven to 350°F. Grease 2 9-inch cake pans, line the bottoms with parchment paper or waxed paper, then grease the paper.
- In a large bowl or the bowl of a stand mixer, combine the cake mix and the jello powder. Add in the pureed strawberries, eggs, vegetable oil and water and mix until thoroughly combined. Divide the mixture evenly between the two prepared pans and bake until a tester inserted in the center comes out clean, about 20 minutes. Cool for 10 minutes, then turn out of the pans onto a baking rack to cool completely.
- When cool, wrap in plastic wrap and freeze while the ice cream freezes.
- Place the whipping cream in a large bowl and whip until slightly thickened. Gradually add the powdered sugar and continue to whip until thick with stiff peaks.
- To assemble the cake, unwrap the cake layers and with a serrated knife, cut each of the cakes in half to form 2 thinner layers. Place one layer on a cake stand or cake plate. Unwrap one of the ice cream layers and place on top of the cake layer. Repeat with another cake layer, the remaining ice cream layer, and one more cake layer. (Reserve the remaining cake for the outside of the cake.) Trim the ice cream if needed for the edges to be flush.
- Frost the entire cake with the whipped cream. In a bowl, crumble the remaining cake layer and then press into the outsides of the cake.
- Freeze until ready to serve.
- Right before serving, add additional whipped cream and fresh strawberries to the top.
Nicole R Sossei says
How far in advance can I make for Granddaughters birthday…planning on making it Sunday and serving on Tuesday is this ok
Deborah says
That should be fine! Just make sure to take it out of the freezer a little early to let it defrost enough to be able to slice it.
Angela Pack says
Really yummy! Everyone loved this cake. Ended up keeping the top layer thick instead of putting the crumbs on the outside, I really liked it this way.
Kaley says
How many days ahead can you make this cake and leave it in the freezer before serving?
Sosanna Folz says
I’ve made this cake for three birthdays in a row now – it is easy to make, easy to put together and looks lovely – it also tastes delicious! I bake this in 4 pans so don’t have to deal with cutting layers – the cake bakes very easily, so there is no need for trimming! Thank you for this recipe – it is a family favorite now!
Deborah says
I’m so glad it has been such a hit!! <3
Alex says
Hi! This looks great. If the cake is sitting in the freezer until it’s ready to serve, won’t the sponge cake part be frozen? How do you make sure the cake part isn’t frozen, but the ice cream is?
Deborah says
The cake part is still frozen when you serve it, but I let the cake sit out for about 30 minutes before serving. That way it’s soft enough to cut through and eat, but the ice cream is still frozen.
Debbie Burns says
Can’t wait to eat this tomorrow – the cake smelled so good while baking and the crumbs taste fabulous! Hint for cutting the cake – take a long piece of floss, wrap around the middle of one layer, keep pulling tight until it slices in half. Repeat for second layer. I did this when the cake was almost cooled but not frozen. Super simple!
Larna says
So Ive made this stunning cake for my daughters 5th birthday tomorrow and I’m just wondering how long before serving you would take it out of the freezer so the cake isn’t too frozen (I don’t mind softish ice cream)?
Monica says
Hey,
Wondering if you’ve tried this cake recipe and how the timing went for you in order to not have hard, frozen cake but also not having super soft ice cream. Could you let me know any tips. I think I may make this for my daughter’s 2nd birthday in August.
Thanks!
CakeSpy says
OMG! I am preparing a batch of links for National Strawberry Ice cream day and this is perfect. I am going to link to this sweet cake! I love it.
Deborah says
Thanks so much!!
Rebecca Berinsky says
In the past when we tried making ice cream cakes, the cake/brownie froze so hard that it wasn’t comfortable to eat while the ice cream was still solid. Is there a trick to getting the right consistency?
Deborah says
I usually have to let it sit out for a little bit so that it’s soft enough to cut and eat. I think it’s hard to reach the perfect timing so that the ice cream is still hard and the cake is soft, but I don’t mind if the ice cream is softer.
sundas says
I made it. .n it turned it super sticky. .a complete disaster. .what I did wrong? I followed the recipe though
Deborah says
Hi Sundas – what turned sticky?
Lauren says
Hi there,
If I cannot get hold of strawberry jello powder what do you suggest?
Thanks.
Deborah says
I don’t know of a good substitution for the jello powder. I would probably suggest to make a different strawberry cake and use it to build the ice cream cake.
Rylan says
Is it ok to use a scratch cake instead of box?
Deborah says
I’m sure it would work just fine with a scratch cake!