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This crepe cake is beautiful and delicious! Everyone will think it took you hours to prepare but it’s so simple when you’re using our fail proof blender crepes recipe. This is the easiest 30 layer cake you’ll make with 15 crepes and 15 layers of cream.
I’ve been in love with the idea of crepe cakes since I first laid eyes on them; elegant with rustic charm and so pretty! I’ve tested several variations of this crepe cake for some time when I discovered the winning cream for it; based on our popular Spartak layer cake (my favorite cake on the planet). The frosting has a delicate and wonderfully creamy but light flavor it has sweetened condensed milk in it so you know it’s good. I hope this crepe cake becomes a new favorite for you – both to make and enjoy!
We have included Amazon affiliate links to our favorite cooking tools used to make this cake.
You don’t need any fancy equipment for homemade crepes, just any blender to whirl the ingredients together and a good non-stick 9″ pan. I also suggest a thin edge spatula to easily flip over the crepes. I’ve been using this method of making crepes for years and I will never get tired of this recipe!
Ingredients for Crepes (makes 15 crepes):
1/2 cup warm water
1 cup milk
4 large eggs
4 Tbsp unsalted butter, melted, plus more to sauté
1 cup all-purpose flour *measured correctly
2 Tbsp granulated sugar
pinch of salt
*Watch our easy video tutorial on how to measure correctly
For the Crepe Cake Frosting:
1 cup (16 Tbsp) unsalted butter, softened at room temperature
12 oz sweetened condensed milk (from a 14 oz can – filled by weight)
8 oz cream cheese, softened at room temperature
2 tsp vanilla extract (make your own with 2 ingredients!)
How to Make Crepes:
1. In the bowl of a blender, add the crepe ingredients in the order they are listed: 1/2 cup warm water, 1 cup milk, 4 large eggs, 4 Tbsp melted butter, 1 cup all-purpose flour, 2 Tbsp sugar and a pinch of salt. Blend until well combined, scraping down the sides with a spatula if needed then set aside.
2. Heat a medium (9-inch) non-stick pan over medium heat. Add a tiny dot of butter and spread it around with a spatula to lightly coat. Once the butter is hot, add about 3 Tbsp of batter, or enough to lightly coat the bottom of the pan, swirling the skillet as you add the batter to evenly coat the bottom of the pan. Sauté about 30 seconds per side or until lightly golden then flip using a thin edged spatula and sauté another 30 seconds or until the second side is golden. Remove to a clean surface such as a cutting board and allow the layers to cool to room temperature before stacking them.
Note: When using a good non-stick (un-scratched) skillet, you will only need to add butter to prime the pan for the first crepe since there is butter in the batter.
How to Make Crepe Cake Frosting:
1. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with whisk attachment, beat butter and condensed milk with whisk attachment on high speed 7 minutes. It should look whipped and lightened in color.
2. Add 8 oz of softened cream cheese 1 Tbsp at a time while mixing on medium high speed. Continue beating for 3 minutes or until no longer lumpy. Add 2 tsp vanilla and whisk until well incorporated and smooth. Some tiny lumps are ok and will not be noticeable once the cake is ready to enjoy.
Assembling the Crepe Cake
1. Place the first crepe layer onto your serving platter and spread about 3 Tbsp or 1 ice cream scoop of frosting between each crepe layer for a total of 15 crepes and 15 layers of cream.
2. Refrigerate the cake for at least 6 hours or until frosting has firmed up (can be made 2 days ahead) – it will be much easier to slice after refrigeration and won’t slide apart. To serve, dust with powdered sugar and top with fresh berries if desired.
Note: If your skillet was larger/smaller or if you made your crepes thicker, you may get a differing number of crepes and that’s ok :).
Crepe Cake Recipe

Ingredients
For the Crepes (makes 15 layers)
- 1/2 cup warm water
- 1 cup 2% milk
- 4 large eggs
- 4 Tbsp unsalted butter, melted, plus more to sauté
- 1 cup all-purpose flour, *measured correctly
- 2 Tbsp granulated sugar
- 1/8 tsp salt
For the Crepe Cake Frosting:
- 1 cup unsalted butter, softened at room temp, (16 Tbsp)
- 12 oz sweetened condensed milk, (from a 14 oz can)
- 8 oz cream cheese, softened at room temp
- 2 tsp vanilla extract
Instructions
How to Make Crepes:
- In the bowl of a blender, add crepe ingredients in the order they are listed: 1/2 cup warm water, 1 cup milk, 4 eggs, 4 Tbsp melted butter, 1 cup flour, 2 Tbsp sugar and a pinch of salt. Blend until well combined, scraping down the blender with spatula if needed.
- Heat a medium (9-inch) non-stick pan over medium heat. Add a tiny dot of butter** and spread it around with spatula to lightly coat. Once butter is hot, add about 3 Tbsp of batter, or enough to lightly coat the bottom of the pan, swirling the skillet as you add the batter to evenly coat the bottom of pan. Sauté about 30 seconds per side or until lightly golden then flip using thin spatula and sauté another 30 seconds or until second side is golden. Flip crepe out onto a clean surface such as a cutting board and let layers cool to room temp before stacking.
How to Make Crepe Cake Frosting:
- In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with whisk, beat butter and condensed milk on high speed 7 min. It should look whipped and lightened in color.
- Add 8 oz of softened cream cheese 1 Tbsp at a time while mixing on medium high speed. Continue beating for 3 minutes or until no longer lumpy. Add 2 tsp vanilla and whisk until well incorporated and smooth. Some tiny lumps are ok and will not be noticeable in the cake.
Assembling the Crepe Cake
- Place first crepe layer onto serving platter and spread about 3 Tbsp or 1 ice cream scoop of frosting between each crepe layer, totaling 15 layers of crepes and 15 layers of cream.
- Refrigerate cake for at least 6 hrs or until frosting has firmed up (can be made 2 days ahead) - it will be much easier to slice after refrigeration and won't slide apart. To serve, dust with powdered sugar if desired and top with fresh berries.
Notes
**When using a good non-stick (un-scratched) skillet, you only need to add butter to prime the pan for the first crepe.
Nutrition Per Serving
If you make this recipe, I’d love to see pics of your creations on Instagram, Facebook and Twitter! Hashtag them #natashaskitchen
Question: Have you tried making homemade crepes? Do you use a skillet or do you have one of those fancy crepe makers – and if so, would you recommend that to the rest of us? Let me know in a comment below and you will win a lifetime of my appreciation ;).
Hi! Would it be okay if i used store bought cream instead of making the frosting from scratch? This looks promising and I’ll be sure to test it out!
Hi Chimmy, I think it would be fun to experiment but without testing the specific kind of cream, it’s difficult to say yay or nay.
I bought mascarpone cheese, and at room temperature just add powdered sugar to taste, a little of fresh squeezed lemon, vanilla, amaretto and just lightly mix it with a spoon to combine.There is your cream. It’s so easy and delicious. It’s better than store bought cream.
Thank you so much for sharing that Lydia.
Thank you Natasha.
Also I forgot to add, don’t whip the mascarpone because it turns into butter like consistency. Just fold all the ingredients into it to combine with a spoon gently, smooth it out.
I made this crepe cake but the frosting is way too overpowered by the cream cheese flavor. The crepe recipe was great though.
Hi Jenny, if you prefer a non-cream cheese frosting, there is definitely room to experiment with a different frosting.
How can I freeze my leftover crepe cake.
Hi Kathleen, I haven’t tried freezing it so I’m not sure if it freezes well but it is worth experimenting!
This crepe cake recipe is so good! I tried it by this way at home & got a excellent result.Thanks for sharing this.
That’s so awesome! I’m so happy you enjoyed that Mahir!
This was a terrible recipe. I mean just awful, and I’m a good baker. It came out fine, looked great, everyone thought it was so pretty……and then gross! Wayyyyyyyyyy too sweet and greasy. Butter should never be used as a filling, EVER! Next time I’ll use a whipped cream based filling. Just yuck
Hi Noel, I’m sorry to hear it didn’t work out for you. This has been a popular recipe but you can definitely swap out the cream if you prefer one without butter.
@Noel-never heard of buttercream??
I was wondering if I could cocoa powder to make chocolate crepes¿
Hi Ash, I haven’t tested that but I think it would work if you substituted equal parts of a little bit of the flour for cocoa.
has anyone tried to double this and make 30 layers??
Hi Angie, I haven’t doubled this recipe to make 30 layers but I think it could work!
thank you ! my daughter loves Lady M cakes, so made your crepe cake this weekend. Came out great! almost gone 🙁
I’m so happy to hear that, Lena!!! Sounds like you need to make more asap!
I tried the recipe. The crepes were fantastic and easy! I added color on mine in honor of Valentine’s Day 🙂 the icing however did not go over well with my family.. I think it was a tad too rich with all of the butter, milk and cream cheese. Perhaps I’ll try it again with whipping cream sub some of the condensed milk..
It’s a wonderful post for me! My children have been craving for crepe cake for a long time but I often buy it from bakery shops near my house. The grease of butter blended with cream and eggs creates fantastic taste in my tongue.
That is the best when kids love what we moms make. That’s so great!
I don’t have a blender, can I make these without it?
Hi Yelena, if you have a large food processor, it could work – you just want to make sure you don’t go over the max liquid level on the food processor so it doesn’t spill out through the center or top. You could also use an electric hand mixer in a deep bowl.
I was able to make it with just a whisk and a bowl and it came out delicious!
I have one of those “fancy” crepe makers at home which I prefer to use but I’m at my daughters house out of state and decided to make her family the crepe cake. She doesn’t have one so I used her non-stick skillet with rounded corners and it worked just fine. It’s all in the wrist to spread the batter.
That it is George! Thank you for sharing that with us!
Hi! I’m looking forward to making this for a party six days from now, is there any way to freeze or refrigerate the cake so that I can make it today and serve it on Friday?
Hi Victoria, I haven’t tried freezing it so I’m not sure if it freezes well but it is worth experimenting!
You asked if folks recommend crepe makers. The short version is no. I used a non-stick pan today instead of my big crepe maker or my little crepe pan to fit the diameter of my cake stand. For a crepe cake I want all the layers exactly the same size, which I can’t pull off with my crepe maker. It’s fun, big (maybe 12″ in diameter), goes anywhere there’s an outlet, although it has a short-ish cord. But…it’s no faster than a pan, and you have to use this T-shaped wooden dowel tool to spread out the batter which takes a bit of getting used to and is just more complicated than swirling batter in a pan. I rarely get the batter all the way to the edge although I’ve practiced enough that I can make them round. The spreading tool has to sit in a container of water (a bread pan with an inch of water works best for me) the whole time to keep the wood from sticking horribly to the wet batter. Plus you need a very big non-stick spatula to flip a giant crepe…. A crepe maker is a big, round griddle with one temperature setting, so unless you want to make really big crepes a lot, you don’t want to store single-use equipment. Non-stick pans work great. So do crepe pans which have low flared sides that make it easy to get in the pan and flip it. Unless your family is crepe-obsessed like mine, a non-stick pan, especially one with sides that flare, is a much more useful tool because it’s multi-use. Don’t bother with a crepe maker or crepe pan.
Thank you so much for sharing this with me, Miriam! I have heard mixed reviews and this definitely helps!
I used to work in a Russian crepe place and agree with what Miriam said 100%. First, about the size of the crepes, unless your family is really big on crepes (there are LOTS of delicious and even healthy(ish) savory recipes that can be made) and you’d use it a few times a week, it’s not worth it. Also, the T-shaped wooden thing takes training and practice.
Thank you so much for sharing that with me.
Natasha can the butter be skipped all together in the frosting? Wouldn’t cream cheese and the condensed milk thicken enough together?
Hi Lydia, I haven’t tried that so I’m not sure if it would thicken up enough. Sorry I can’t be more helpful!
I am going to try condensed milk and mascarpone cheese combo. Wish me luck…
I hope you love it!
Tasted great. I bought crepes, which saved a lot of time.
Thank you for this great review, Emma! I’m so happy you enjoyed that!
Great recipe i want to try it once
I can’t wait to hear how you liked it!
I made this for the work potluck and everyone thought it was so cool and LOVED IT! I doubled the crepe recipe because I wanted to have left over crepe batter. However I used almost all to make enough crepes. ( I made around 20). I mixed in raspberries to the frosting and decorated with are the top. The powered sugar evaporated overnight unfortunately. I also used greek yogurt instead of some of the milk, due to running out of milk.
Will definitely make again! Will try to sub low fat cream cheese for regular cream cheese and applesauce for some of the butter in the crepes.
Thank you so much for sharing this with me Ellen!
Can I use regular milk?
Hi Vikli. It would work fine using a whole milk.
Hi Natasha,
May i know the 1/2 cup warm water & 1 cup milk is how many litre? I planning make it by this coming weekend.
Thanks.
Penny
Hi Penny, in the print friendly section towards the bottom of the post, under the list of ingredients, you can click “Metric” to get the metric measurements. Hope that helps!
Hi Natasha,
I’ve tried making it today and everything seemed to be ok but when i tried it after refrigerating for 6 hours it turned hard like butter. Was difficult to even cut it into slices. The frosting was whipped well though. What could have been the problem?
Hi Kirby! It shouldn’t be butter like, however, it will stiffen up in the fridge. It is best to have the cake rest for 15-30 min on the counter until it softens up again.