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This Black Forest Cake is my version of the famous German chocolate cake, aka “Schwarzwälder Kirschtorte.” It has 4 chocolatey layers, 1 lb of kirsch-infused cherries and a light whipped cream.
It is a stunning and decadent cake but it’s fairly simple to make with just 11 ingredients (which is peanuts for a cake!). The chocolate shavings make this Black Forest cake very forgiving in terms of decoration for those of us who are cake styling impaired :).

This black forest cake is an adult cake as it has kirsch (a cherry liqueur) and isn’t overly sweet. The kirsch is not overpowering but you can tell it’s there. I figured if you slice it into 12 generous pieces, each would have 1 tsp of kirsch. If making this cake for children, omit the kirsch and add a 1 Tbsp sugar to the cherry syrup for more flavor.
*Recipe Tips: You can use thawed frozen cherries or canned cherries. If using canned cherries, select cherries in water or juice, omit the 1/4 cup additional water and use the juice from the can instead. Also, maraschino cherries can be used for the topping/decor. A golden rum would taste good too, but kirsch is more authentic. Watch our easy video tutorial on how to measure correctly!
*Note:
Recipe for the Black Forest Cake updated 4/22/16 to be more fail proof. Several of you mentioned your cakes did not rise as much as mine. I heard you and re-baked the cake. After some testing, I noticed the best results when increasing the mixing time to 8 minutes (rather than 5) and using 4 Tbsp butter (rather than 8). It rose beautifully and perfectly. Enjoy!
Ingredients for Chocolate Cake Layers:
9 large eggs, room temp
1 cup granulated sugar
1 cup all-purpose flour *measured correctly
1/2 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
4 Tbsp (1/4 cup) unsalted butter, melted and cooled (not hot)
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
What you’ll need:
Two 9″ cake pans and flour sifter or fine sieve

Ingredients For the Filling:
4 cups (1 lb) bing cherries, pitted, plus 12 whole cherries for decor (If not in season, see *Recipe Tips)
3 Tbsp kirsch (a cherry liqueur)
1/4 cup cold water
For the Frosting/Topping:
3 1/2 cups heavy whipping cream
1/3 cup Confectioners sugar
1 Tbsp kirsch (cherry liqueur)
4 oz good quality dark chocolate

How to Make Black Forest Cake Layers:
If you’ve never made a European Sponge Cake, watch the video before you get started to see what the batter should look like.
Prep: Preheat Oven to 350˚F. Line the bottom of two 9″ round pans with parchment paper (don’t grease sides).
1. Beat 9 large eggs with the whisk attachment for 1 min on high speed. With the mixer on, gradually add 1 cup sugar and continue beating on high speed a full 8 min. It will be thick and fluffy.
Tip from reader, Hilda: “How do you know u get the right consistency? Lift up your beater (whisk) from the batter. Make a figure “8” using the batter that drip off the beater. Then count to 10 seconds. If the figure 8 still remains on top of the batter, then u have the right consistency. If the figure 8 sinks into the batter before 10 secs, then u need to beat it longer.”

Tip: the mixture it should fall off the whisk and still ‘stand up’ on the cake mixture
2. Whisk together 1 cup flour and 1/2 cup cocoa powder and sift in thirds into the batter, folding with a spatula between each addition. Once all flour is in, continue to fold just until no streaks of flour remain, scraping the bottom of the bowl to get any pockets of flour hiding at the bottom; do not over-mix or you will deflate the batter.
3. Gently fold in 1/2 tsp vanilla and room temp butter, folding as you add butter in a steady stream and scraping from the bottom to make sure you don’t have butter pooling at the bottom. Fold just until incorporated. Divide batter equally between two prepared cake pans and BAKE RIGHT AWAY in fully preheated oven at 350˚F for 20-25 minutes (my oven took 22 min), or until a toothpick comes out clean. Note: Once the butter is added, it must be transferred to baking pans and put into the oven immediately or the batter can deflate quickly.

4. Let cool in pans for 10 min then run a knife or thin edged spatula around the edges to loosen cake. Transfer to a wire rack and remove parchment backing. When cakes are at room temp, and you’re ready to assemble, slice cake layers in half with a long serrated knife.

Making the Syrup for Black Forest Cake:
1. Roughly chop pitted cherries and place in a medium bowl with 3 Tbsp kirsch. Let sit at room temp for at least 30 min, stirring a couple times, then drain cherries in a sieve over a bowl. Keep the cherries and syrup. Add 1/4 cup cold filtered water to the syrup to get about 3/4 cup total syrup.

Making the Cream:
For best results freeze bowl and whisk attachment 15 min before using.
1. Beat 3 1/2 cups heavy cream with whisk attachment on high speed until soft peaks form, add 1/3 cup powdered sugar and 1 Tbsp kirsch and beat on high until stiff and spreadable (1-2 min). Refrigerate until ready to use (tip: keep whisk attachment in the bowl – you can whip it another 30 seconds if it seems slightly loose after refrigeration).

Assembling your Black Forest Cake:
1. Place first cake layer on a cake stand and brush with 1/4 of the syrup. Cover the top with about 3/4 cup frosting (3 ice cream scoops’ worth) and top with 1/3 of the chopped cherries. Repeat with remaining layers and top with the flattest layer. Transfer 1 1/2 cups frosting to a pastry bag with a large flower tip and refrigerate until ready to use (don’t handle the bag too much or the cream will soften). Fill the cracks along the sides of cake with frosting then frost the top and sides with remaining frosting.

2. To make chocolate shavings, you can either melt chocolate in the microwave, spread it thin over the back of a baking sheet with the help of a food scraper, then refrigerate a few minutes and use a food scraper to create bark-like shavings. This is the more authentic way. Alternatively, you can use a potato peeler to shave a chunk of chocolate, It will still be pretty but it won’t have the same “black forest cake” feel to it.
3. Cover sides and top of cake with chocolate shavings leaving a 1″ perimeter on top for piping frosting. Pipe rounds of frosting around the top of the cake and place a whole cherry over each one. Refrigerate cake for at least 4 hours or overnight before serving for the flavors to meld.


Black Forest Cake Recipe

Ingredients
Ingredients for Chocolate Cake Layers:
- 9 large eggs, room temp
- 1 cup granulated sugar
- 1 cup all-purpose flour
- 1/2 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
- 4 Tbsp unsalted butter, melted and cooled, not hot
- 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
What you'll need:
- Two 9" cake pans and flour sifter or fine sieve
Ingredients for Cherry Filling:
- 4 cups 1 lb bing cherries, pitted, plus 12 whole cherries for decor (see *Recipe Tips)
- 3 Tbsp kirsch, a cherry liqueur
- 1/4 cup cold water
For the Frosting/Topping:
- 3 1/2 cups heavy whipping cream
- 1/3 cup Confectioners, powdered sugar
- 1 Tbsp kirsch, cherry liqueur
- 3 oz good quality dark chocolate
Instructions
How to Make Cake Layers: Preheat Oven to 350˚F. Line bottoms of cake pans with parchment (don't grease sides).
- Beat 9 eggs with the whisk attachment for 1 min on high. With the mixer on, gradually add 1 cup sugar and continue beating on high speed a full 8 min. It will be thick and fluffy. Tip: the mixture it should fall off the whisk and still ‘stand up’ on the cake mixture
- Whisk together 1 cup flour and 1/2 cup cocoa powder and sift in thirds into batter, folding with a spatula between each addition. Once all flour is in, continue to fold just until no streaks of flour remain, scraping the bottom of the bowl to get any pockets of flour; do not over-mix or you will deflate the batter.
- Gently fold in 1/2 tsp vanilla and room temp butter, folding as you add butter in a steady stream and scraping from the bottom to make sure you don't have butter pooling at the bottom. Fold just until incorporated. Divide batter equally between two prepared cake pans and BAKE RIGHT AWAY in fully preheated oven at 350˚F for 20-25 minutes (my oven took 22 min), or until a toothpick comes out clean. Note: Once the butter is added, it must be transferred to baking pans and put into the oven immediately or the batter can deflate quickly.
- Let cool in pans for 10 min then run a thin edged spatula around edges to loosen cake. Transfer to a wire rack and remove parchment backing. When cakes are at room temp, and you're ready to assemble, slice cake layers in half with a long serrated knife.
Making the Syrup:
- Roughly chop pitted cherries and place in a medium bowl with 3 Tbsp kirsch. Let sit at room temp for at least 30 min, stirring a couple times, then drain cherries in a sieve over a bowl. Keep the cherries and syrup. Add 1/4 cup cold filtered water to the syrup to get about 3/4 cup total syrup.
Making the Cream: For best results freeze bowl and whisk attachment 15 min before using.
- Beat 3 1/2 cups heavy cream with whisk attachment on high speed until soft peaks form, add 1/3 cup powdered sugar and 1 Tbsp kirsch and beat on high until stiff and spreadable (1-2 min). Refrigerate until ready to use (tip: keep whisk attachment in the bowl - you can re-whip if it seems slightly loose after refrigeration).
Assembling your Black Forest Cake:
- Place first cake layer on a cake stand and brush with 1/4 of the syrup. Cover top with about 3/4 cup frosting and top with 1/3 of the chopped cherries. Repeat with remaining layers and top with the flattest layer. Transfer 1 1/2 cups frosting to a pastry bag with a large flower tip and refrigerate until ready to use (don't handle the bag too much or the cream will soften). Fill the cracks along the sides of cake with frosting then frost the top and sides with remaining frosting.
- To make chocolate shavings, you can either melt chocolate in the microwave, spread it thin over the back of a baking sheet, then refrigerate a few min and use a food scraper to create bark-like shavings. This is the more authentic way. Alternatively, you can use a potato peeler to shave a chunk of chocolate.
- Cover sides and top of cake with chocolate shavings leaving a 1" perimeter on top for piping frosting. Pipe rounds of frosting around the top of the cake and place a whole cherry over each one. Refrigerate cake for at least 4 hours or overnight before serving.
Notes

♥ FAVORITE THINGS ♥
Shown in this post: (no one paid us to write this; just affiliate links for stuff we love):
*The lovely turquoise Fiesta Cake Plate with Server.
*The OXO strainer/sifter is totally multi-purpose!
* This OXO Cherry Pitter (works for olives too!)
*Ofcourse the “workhorse” of the kitchen: KitchenAid Pro 6Qt
*We sure enjoy our Wusthof knife block set. Great knives are essential.

Admit it, you want a slice! 🙂 What’s your favorite cherry dessert (besides this one of course)?



the recipe calls for 4 tbsp 1/4 cup unsalted butter, so is that 4 tbsp plus 1/4 cup, or should it say 4 tbsp or 1/4 cup?
Hi Laverne, that will be 4 tbsp or 1/4 cups. I hope that helps!
Any ideas for someone who isn’t a huge fan of fruit chunks in their cake? Blend up the cherries and put them on top of the cake layer / on top of the whipped cream layer? Leave them out entirely? Blend them along with the syrup to get a thicker filling? Other??
Hi JC, I haven’t tested that but I think it could work. If you experiment, let me know how you liked the recipe
Hi JC,
I don’t like fruit chunks so I pureed the cherry with rest of the ingredients for the filling and it turned out delicious! Give it a go.
Thank you for sharing that with me!
Hi,
Can I use ready to use whipped cream with mascarpone for a cream?
Thanks
Hi Regina, I haven’t tried that combination so I’m not sure how it would blend or hold up. If it is a frosting you are comfortable making, I think there is room to experiment with this cake. The flavor profile should be good.
My son made this for his German class as an assignment. I honestly had a hard time with the recipe because we didn’t use any liquor (it’ll be served to a high school class) and we only had frozen cherries available. I think it would be a million times better with fresh cherries. Couldn’t figure out what to do for the syrup since all we had was very watery cherry juice (a tbsp of sugar as the recipe states to use if you cannot use the liquor doesn’t make anything like a syrup) so we just didn’t do a cherry syrup layer. I didn’t have time to try and turn the cherry water into syrup. He did most of it and it was his first cake. I haven’t tried it because it’s for his class but I know the cake part turned out moist and delicious. I think if the gross frozen cherries don’t ruin it then it will be good. Hoping the whipped cream layer keeps the cherries from sogging up the cake and hoping it holds up well in the fridge overnight. Looked pretty (even if a little lopsided).
Hi Kelly, the “syrup” isn’t supposed to be thick but without the liquor it would be pretty bland. I would add a little more sugar for flavor and still use the cherry juice to give moisture to the cake.
Just made this cake, and it was actually the first time I ever made a cake in my life. I followed the recipe precisely (except I served it to kids with kirsch included, hooray for naptime!). It turned out perfectly, and helped make for a great birthday celebration.
When I was a kid, my mother used to make black forest cake, except she mixed brandy in the whipped cream instead of kirsch. I think that’s the only modification I’d make.
Thanks for providing such great instructions!
Thank you so much for sharing that with me, Gerard! I’m so happy you enjoyed this recipe!
Made this weekend. Followed recipe to a tee. Cake was dry and dense almost inedible even with brushing the cherry syrup on each layer. Whipped cream was delish.
Alot of work but extrememely dry. will not make again.
Hi Jackie, I’m sorry to hear that it didn’t go as expected. I wonder if maybe the cake was over-baked? If it rose properly as in the photos and seemed dry, the most likely culprit is over-baking.
Hi Natasha😊
Im from Lebanon, and now living in the US, we had lots of European desserts which are my favourite😊
Im so glad i found your blog, truly God-sent. Ive been searching for days for a vanilla cake to make white forest cake, ive had black forest and white forest growing up, and they are basted in fruit juices and filled with canned cocktail fruit chunks. I have a recipe that for me for the black forest, and it requires only 4 eggs, i followed then the exact recipe hoping to make a vanilla cake for the white forest, simply by omitting the cacao, it was eggy, and even the texture is different. Do you have a vanilla cake recipe that will work for my forêt blanche?
Thank you in advance,
Lina
Hi Lina! I’m so happy you have discovered our blog! I would recommend using this recipe here for the sponge. When you omitting the cocoa did you substitute anything for the dry ingredient? that could be why the texture was different.
Actually i used 2 Tbsp of powdered milk to replace the cacao along of course with the liquid milk as suggested. Ill definitely make the sponge cake you suggested, thank you very much again😊
Hi Natasha, how did you put the chocolate shavings at the side of the cake? It looks perfect!
Sandrah
You’re so nice, Sandra! Thank you! I just grab a handful and press it in the sides. I hope that helps!
So very relishes. Great recipe and the bonus video and pictures helped.
I’m so happy you enjoyed that, Robin! Thank you for that wonderful review!
Hi Nat, could I half the cream frosting recipe? I just need a bit for touch ups
Hi Su, yes absolutely! You can cut the frosting portion in half and make just 1/2 a batch. I hope you love this black forest cake!
This cake worked a treat. The instructions were clear. I had to convert US measurements to Australian Weights. I think I used more butter than was needed, but it’s was lovely and moist. It was indulgence plus, but oh so worthwhile. A heart attack in every slice! It looked gorgeous as well. Truly yummy, it went down well with a cup of coffee. Thank you
I’m so happy to hear that! Thank you for sharing your great review!
thanks for your lovely and easy to follow recipe!!! it will be my always recipe for this black forest cake…God bless you!
I’m so happy to hear that! Thank you!
I ve done this recipe and it was just like the black forest cake i ate in Lahr, Germany. Easy recipe to follow. Delicious, light and refreshing. The amount of Schnaps in it was perfect. We will surely do it again!
I’m so happy to hear that! Thank you for sharing your great review!
Hi, Natasha. I am really excited to try this recipe! Unfortunately, I have no electric mixer/stand up mixer. Would it be okay to whisk by hand, and if so, for how long will I have to whisk the eggs to get an ideal bake? Thank you for any suggestions.
Hi there Trisa, That will take quite a bit of effort to accomplish by hand. Also, an electric hand mixer (even the best ones), are not as efficient at whipping eggs and sugar as a stand mixer with the wisk attachment so it does take longer to beat and you have to beat until you reach the right consistency. A stand mixer definitely saves time with this classic sponge cake.
I’m about to make your Black Forest Cake. Friends brought back Kirschwasser from the Black Forest for me. I’m a professional baker, and at culinary school years back we did make one, but I can’t use that recipe. I like yours. My question is , when I make the sponge/ Genoise, the day before, can I wrap in cling film and put in refrigerator or leave out?
A tip for your followers for folding, is to turn the bowl as they are folding. Sifting as you suggested is spot on, but turning the bowl as well helps too. Just a suggestion. I’m going to use frozen cherries unfortunately as it’s Christmas. I’m hoping it still will taste good.
I’m a bit confused on your cherry syrup. Usually a simply syrup is water, sugar and a liquor. You have macerated cherries with kirschwasser. Or are you saying to use a cherry liquor? That has syrup already in it?? I’ll be using frozen cherries. And kirschwasser has no sugar in it. Should I perhaps thaw the cherries, then soak them in the kirschwasser. Use that liquid and add enough water to get 3/4 of a cup. Then I can add sugar and make a simple syrup. Or I can take the thawed cherry juice, add enough water, add the sugar, make the simple syrup and then add the kirschwasser. I still would like to use some of the kirschwasser on the thawed cherries. More liquor the better.
Also, your followers can find cherry liquor on line. I’m surprised they were writing you the can’t find it! William Sonoma has it for $16.95. You can find Morello jarred cherries at Trader Joe’s. And you can also find Kirschwasser on line too. My parents were German, so I’m very familiar with Kirschwasser and hv been to the Black Forest. So maybe you can guide your followers when they are having trouble finding ingredients:)
Hi Lynn, you can thaw the cherries, then soak them (and any juice released from cherries while thawing) in the kirsch. Use that liquid and add enough water to get 3/4 of a cup. Then I can add sugar and make a simple syrup.
I made the cake and the genoise came out perfect! Rose beautifully! Excellent instructions. Your recipe is the most authentic. My friends brought me back a small bottle of Kirschwasser from the Black Forest with a postcard that had recipe for the cake but too general. Basically like yours. I did thaw the cherries and I got more than enough juice from it. So I just added some sugar to make a syrup and then added the kirschwasser.
Not sure if you know this, but I had wanted to know how to stabilize whip cream. You can do with gelatin, instant pudding or marshmallow fluff. I use marshmellow fluff. You microwave a tablespoon, or whatever amount of cream you are using and add while whipping the cream. It really works.
I brought to the party last night. I had no idea how it should hv tasted. It’s not a sweet cake. My friends who were in the Black Forest this summer said it tasted just like what they had. Very authentic. Personally, I think it should be made 24 hours ahead so the flavors can meld. But I’m my own worst critic. Everyone at the party said it was amazing.
Thank you for sharing that with us Lynn! Thank you for sharing your wonderful review and tips with us!
i forgot the butter….yikes, stay tuned to see how it turned out
Crossing my fingers for you!
The cake turned out fabulous as always. I did forget to add the butter but it worked out anyway. i find this cake is so much better on day 2, as the ingredients fuse together (especially the alcohol). thank you Natasha!!!
You’re so welcome!
I followed your recipe end to end and the cake turned out great. Wish I could add a picture here. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you for that great review!! We would love to see your photo! simply post it to any social media site and #natashaskitchen
What will be a good quality dark chocolate? Can you recommend any?
Hi Matilde, a good solid chocolate bar would work. Godiva, Lindt, etc. should work.
Thank you! Does it make a difference if it is bittersweet, semisweet?
Hi Matilde, I usually go for semisweet.
Thank you! Can it be done the day before? I may not have time to do it the day of the event
Hi Matilde, making the cake the night before should be fine.
I have made this a couple of times and followed the recipe exactly. Honestly one of my favourite cakes of all time. Turned out delicious and I have had multiple compliments from it. As cherries are hard to find fresh throughout the year I used frozen cherries and thawed them. Added a tsp of kirsch to the liquid and used that as the syrup, this worked well.
Thanks so much, never using a different black forest recipe.
Sounds like you found a favorite! Thank you for sharing this with us!
Hi Natasha,
Thanks so much for this recipe. It yields a delightful sponge and the cherry compliments it really well. I may have gone overboard with the cherry syrup as some of it is leaking out the side of the cake and staining the whipped cream. Any quick fixes or would I have to redo it all?
Sounds like that would make for a pretty color on the frosting! Too much syrup may be problomatic if the cake is too wet. I would reommend using your best judgement if you believe it ruins the cakes flavor. I hope it goes well! 🙂
Hi Natasha, the cake turned out well, a little soggy in the places that were ‘over-soaked’ but still it was great. Thanks again for this recipe! Definitely bookmarking this.
My pleasure!