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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 Natasha, I once spent two weeks developing the perfect (for me) cinnamon roll recipe.
I had countless batches of cinnamon rolls and hours of work put in. I can’t imagine how much more work it would have taken if I had to add photography, video or a production crew. So I think you for all that you do that allows allowing me to just do a few clicks to find a myriad of wonderful recipes. My question is do you know of a variation of this recipe using chocolate crepes and just stabilized whipped cream for the frosting?
Thank you so much for the support! I appreciate it. I have not tested a chocolate variation, but hopefully, that is something we can do in the future.
Hi,just want to know beside this frosting what other method? Because I planning atrip to a forest n couldn’t get whip cream n cheese?
A Buttercream or Swiss Meringue Buttercream would be more stable. Check out this link to my frostings, HERE.
I followed the recipe exactly and found the crepes to be too tough and chewy. Next time I will allow the crepe batter to rest for a couple hours in the fridge before pouring in the skillet.
Hi Nessi! Sometimes that is due to using too much flour. Be sure to measure correctly. I have a tutorial onhow to measure ingredients, HERE. I wish you better results the 2nd try.
When I make crepes, I use cake flour to make them lighter, less chewy…
Do you think i could make a matche crepe cake using this crepe recipe but just adding matcha powder to it?
Hi Alla, I this it’s a good experiment! I have not tested that but feel free to give that a try and share with us how it goes.
Hello Natasha,
Thank you so much for your great recipes, ideas and more!!!
Just wondering if I can finish the cake today and keep it refrigerated for tomorrow? Is it going to taste the same? I need it for my daughter’s birthday tomorrow.
Thank you.
Joanna
Hi Joanna, you sure can, cover the cake with plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight.
Hello, I made this recipe but Instagram used buttercream frosting for in between layers. Within two minutes my frosting became a liquid! It was not melting from heat I know for sure it’s like all the liquid cam out of the frosting… I tried the recipe again with more airy buttercream. Same results. Just left me with a puddly of soggy crepe’s 🙁 what do you think?
Hi Bryce, it may be due to having the cake in the heat. I would recommend refrigerating it before serving to help the frosting set a bit and then definitely keep it out of the sun.
Before I make this recipe, which looks delicious, I have a quick question about alternating fillings between layers. Would it work if I use this frosting alternating with some lemon curd on another layer and so on and so on.
Hi! I think that would work.
Question: I’m thinking of making this for a buffet…how long do you think it can sit out? Seems like it would be ok, but I don’t use evaporated milk often
Hi Kevin it should be alright but I have not tested it out for a very long time to advise of the exact time.
Hey, I tried this recipe and everything went wrong the batter was to watery and when I added flour it still didn’t work and the crepes them self kept ripping and the frosting kept melting even after I put the crepes in the fridge to cool.. can you tell me what I did wrong?
Hi Tori, it’s hard to say what went wrong without being there. If the frosting kept melting, it may have needed more time mixing to stabilize it. You can also put the frosting in the fridge before trying to spread it if it was too runny.
Oh my! Absolutely delicious! Was a little time consuming but so worth it! It’s really easy and it’s amazing with a little whip cream on top 🥰
Thanks for your good comments and feedback, Ruth. Glad you loved the recipe!
Hi Natasha,
I am planning to make this cake for my husband bday. I was wondering if the cream/filling you use for your Medovik recipe would work here? And whether it would also work covering all the cake with it (like with Medovik) insteak of only layeting the filling in between layers. Probably less filling to avoid sliding right?
Thanks!
Diana
Hi Diana. I have not tested this on crepes but I imagine it would taste good and work fine. The frosting is soft so sliding may be an issue. You’d have to experiment with it and see if you want to cover the full cake in the frosting. I would make sure your crepes have completely cooled before stacking and get it in the refrigerator as soon as you’re done so it can harden. Let us know how it works out for you.
Hi Natasha, I’m a married guy who loves to cook and bake and I have to say 9 out of 10 times I choose your recipes and they never fail! Nice job. I made this this morning, it’s in the fridge so it’s not finished yet. I will post pics once I decorate it with the confectioner’s sugar plus berries. Take care!
Hi Ricardo! I’m so glad you enjoy my recipes. Thank you so very much for sharing. I’d love to see pictures. You can tag me #natashaskitchen on Instagram or Facebook! 🙂
This was amazing! I made it one day ahead and it was very moist on the second day! I made this Crepe cake to celebrate Maslenica, this was our interpretation of pancake dessert. It turned out very light, despite many comments saying that the filling is overpowering. As I am from Latvia sometimes it is hard for me to understand exactly what kind of ingredients should I buy because they differ from country to country I guess. For this cake I bought condensed milk, and when I searched online it said that condensed milk both with or without sugar all is called condensed milk. I bought one without sugar apparently, because it was too runny, and mixed with butter it turned out all runny and lumpy, I had to throw it away and got pretty discouraged. I drove to a bigger store and got condensed milk with sugar and the filling turned out amazing! Thank you for the recipe! I will surely repeat it, but I have to find a way to make it more fancy instead of rustic, so I could present it as a birthday cale for example.
Thank you for sharing your experience making this crepe cake and following the recipe. I’m glad it turned out great! I hope you can share a pic with us if you try to make a fancy version of it.
Can i add flavors to it ..i made this recipi and is amazing just want to know if i can add flavor to it
Hi Darwin, I bet that could work! If you experiment, let me know how you liked the recipe.
Super simple and delicious! Used red and green food coloring for a festive spin. Will try to make again and I corporate Nutella either into the frosting or on its own.
Sounds great, Damaris. I think Nutella will be delicious!
Thanks for an incredible cake recipe! It was easy to make and wowed my friends, so delicious.
I’m so happy you all enjoyed that. Thank you for sharing that with us, Robert!
Hi Natasha, I followed the recipe to the T and the frosting was salty. I used Philadelphia cream cheese and unsalted butter, I know for a fact it was unsalted butter because I tasted the condensed milk/butter mix and it wasn’t salty at all. When I tasted the Philadelphia cheese on its own it was quite salty, but once mixed in with the milk/butter and spread on the crepes, it somehow became very salty. Any ideas why this happened? Other than the salt level, the recipe seemed perfect to me.
Hi GG, the frosting should not be salty with Philadelphia (I have tested with that and other brands) unless salted butter was used by mistake — hopefully, it wasn’t mislabeled? There is no salt in the frosting otherwise, so I’m not sure why else the frosting would be salty. I hope that helps to troubleshoot!
Thanks, that is what my research told me as well. I must have had a bad batch of cream cheese, it was noticeably salty when I tasted it on its own.
Hi Natasha,
Can the crepes be made the day before?
Hi Lisa, yes, just let them cool to room temperature then stack them on a large plate, cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight.
Hi Lisa, this recipe is best enjoyed within 2 days of making it.
Can I use salted butter instead of unsalted butter in crepes?
Hi Joey, I haven’t tested this recipe with salted butter but suspect it will be a bit too salty.
Absolutely delicious. I made it for my mom’s Birthday and it was a huge hit with everyone. I highly recommend this recipe.
THat’s so great!! Happy Birthday to your Mom!
I’m trying to make crepe cakes as well. I have a few questions though.
– Do I have to cool the crepes before assembling it with the cream?
– What temperature does the melted butter have to be in?
– Can I use cake flour to make the batter?
Please answer the questions. Thank you.
Hi Eunice, yes we do cool the crapes before assembling the cake. The temperature of the butter is not important. I just melt it in at it whether it’s warm or hot. Also, I have not tried with cake flour so I can’t say if it would be too light for crapes or not.
hello natasha,
do we have to put the cake in the fridge because i’m doing this for a project in school and we can’t really use the fridge there
Hi Nella, it is definitely important to refrigerate the cake after the frosting is on so it can set and be easier to slice