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The strawberry jello filling sandwiched between the Russian biskvit cake layers is quite memorable and as my sister put it, “this is the stuff my dreams are made of;” that pretty much sums it up!
You can easily make this Strawberry Jello Cake your own by changing up the flavor of the jello and top with different berries. Laura K., one of my friends from church graciously shared this recipe with me. She brought it to a church potluck and it was deeee-licious! I was so surprised how easy the strawberry filling was to make.
Unfortunately for me, I made the first cake on Thursday and went on to eat way too much of it. I made a second Strawberry Jello Cake on Saturday (of the same week) for a family dinner; it was devoured. And out of the corner of my eye; I caught a stand-off for the last slice; my pregnant sister won of course. Anyway, not a crumb left behind.
Laura makes this cake in a 13×9 glass pyrex dish so you can see the jello layers through it; probably a more practical way to make this cake; Thank you Laura for this amazing recipe. My entire family loved it!
Russian Biskvit Cake Ingredients:
6 eggs (cold or room temp)
1 cup granulated sugar
1 cup all-purpose flour (sifting not required) *measured correctly
Whipped Cream Frosting Ingredients:
1 cup heavy whipping cream
1/4 cup powdered sugar
Filling/Decor:
8 oz Cool Whip, thawed
6 oz package of strawberry jello
1 lbs Fresh strawberries
1/2 cup blueberries, or whatever fruit you have on hand.
How To Make Strawberry Jello Cake:
Start with the Jello Filling since it takes some time to set:
1. In a large mixing bowl, make jello according to the instructions on the package, but use 1/2 of the cold water. I.e. for a 6 oz package of jello, add 2 cups boiling water and 1 cup cold water. Let Jello sit at room temperature until it is soft set and jiggles a little (while you work on the rest of the cake), then beat in thawed 8oz cool whip (see step 7 for the cake layers).
How To Make the Cake Layers:
If you’ve never made a European Sponge Cake, watch this video for the basic version and see just how simple it is!
Preheat oven to 350˚F.
1. Line two 8″ or 9″ round cake pans (ideally one should be a springform pan) with parchment paper. (Note: If all you have is a spring form pan, you can bake the batter in the springform and then cut in half when it cools, but you will have better, fluffier results if you divide it between two cake pans; I tested it both ways).
2. In the bowl of an electric mixer with the whisk attachment, beat together 6 eggs and 1 cup sugar on high speed for 12 minutes or until 3 times in volume and thickened.
3. Sprinkle flour over the top and use a spatula to gently fold in 1 cup all-purpose flour until all lumps are gone (the flour tends to congregate on the bottom so make sure you stir from the bottom up and scrape around he edges of the bowl).
4. Divide your batter in half between the 2 lined baking pans and bake at 350˚F for 16-20 min or until top is golden brown and toothpick comes out clean. Remove baked cake from the pan being careful not to squish the top (use a plastic knife or a thin spatula to release the edges from the pan) and let it cool to room temperature on a wire rack. Wash the springform pan.
5. Once your cake has cooled, place the skinnier layer back into the bottom of your springform pan.
6. Slice your strawberries in half (or thirds if they are very large) and place them facing tightly against the walls of the springform pan.
7. At this point, you’ll want to beat 8oz cool whip into your jello which should be starting to thicken. Pour your jello cream over the bottom cake and strawberries being careful not to knock down the strawberries. Smooth over the top.
8. Place the top biskvit layer over the top and Refrigerate for 2 hours or until jello is set then remove from fridge to decorate.
To Decorate the Cake:
- Beat together the cold heavy cream and powdered sugar until whipped and spreadable. I transferred it to a pastry bag and piped roses using a Wilton 2D tip. Start in the center and work your way out in circles; staying close to the surface of the cake. It’s really pretty easy to do, but practice a couple on a plate before you turn your cake into a Picasso ;).
- Pile fruit in the center in whatever design you like; they look good just piled up too. Put back in the fridge a couple more hours or overnight to allow the jello to fully set before serving or the cake will be too dainty and will fall apart easier when sliced. Also, you take it out of the springform mold, fold some plastic wrap and wrap it around the jello part of this cake to keep it in place while it firms up fully.
Notes:
The second time I made this cake, I lined the walls of the spring form mold with plastic wrap for easier release, but even without plastic wrap, it cut away from the springform pan pretty easily. Also, the second time I didn’t put strawberries along the walls and jut made a plain jello layer with strawberry slices on top of the jello; the big strawberries make it hard to slice, but they are pretty; it’s a trade-off).
You’ll love this cake. It’s the good stuff.
Strawberry Jello Cake Recipe

Ingredients
Biskvit Cake Ingredients:
- 6 eggs, cold or room temp
- 1 cup granulated sugar
- 1 cup all-purpose flour, sifting not required
Frosting Ingredients:
- 1 cup heavy whipping cream
- 1/4 cup powdered sugar
Filling/Decor:
- 8 oz Cool Whip, thawed
- 6 oz package of strawberry jello
- 1 lbs Fresh strawberries
- 1/2 cup blueberries
Instructions
To Make the Cake and Jello Filling:
- In a large mixing bowl, make jello according to the instructions on the package, but use 1/2 of the cold water. I.e. for a 6 oz package of jello, add 2 cups boiling water and 1 cup cold water. Let Jello sit at room temperature until it is soft set and jiggles a little (while you work on the rest of the cake), then beat in thawed 8oz cool whip (see step for the cake layers).
- Line two 8" or 9" round cake pans (ideally one should be a springform pan) with parchment paper.
- In the bowl of an electric mixer with the whisk attachment, beat together 6 eggs and 1 cup sugar on high speed for 12 minutes or until 3 times in volume and thickened.
- Sprinkle flour over the top and use a spatula to gently fold in 1 cup all-purpose flour until all lumps are gone.
- Divide your batter in half between the 2 lined baking pans and bake at 350˚F for 16-20 min or until top is golden brown and toothpick comes out clean. Remove baked cake from the pan being careful not to squish the top and let it cool to room temperature on a wire rack. Wash the springform pan.
How to Assemble the Cake:
- Once your cake has cooled, place the skinnier layer back into the bottom of your springform pan.
- Slice your strawberries in half (or thirds if they are very large) and place them facing tightly against the walls of the springform pan.
- At this point, you'll want to beat 8oz cool whip into your jello which should be starting to thicken. Pour your jello cream over the bottom cake and strawberries being careful not to knock down the strawberries. Smooth over the top.
- Place the second cake layer over the top of the jello and refrigerate for 2 hours or until jello is set then remove from fridge to decorate.
To Decorate the Cake:
- To decorate, beat together the cold heavy cream and powdered sugar until whipped and spreadable. I transferred it to a pastry bag and piped roses using a Wilton 2D tip. Start in the center and work your way out in circles; staying close to the surface of the cake.
- Pile fruit in the center in whatever design you like; they look good just piled up too. Put back in the fridge a couple more hours or overnight to allow the jello to fully set before serving or the cake will be too dainty and will fall apart easier when sliced. Also, you take it out of the spring form mold, fold some plastic wrap and wrap it around the jello part of this cake to keep it in place while it firms up fully.
I just made this and it looks wonderful! I can’t wait until it’s set. For people asking, 8 oz of Cool Whip is the same as 1 L. And, 6 oz of Jello is the family-size pack (or 2 of the small packages). I only had 1 small strawberry jello, so I used a raspberry jello package too.
Have you ever come across the Karpatka cake? Websites say it’s Polish from the Carpathian mountains. But the Carpati run between Poland and Ukraine, so I’m sure the Ukrainians make something similar. It’s also very much like french eclairs. Considering a Ukrainian princess became Queen Anna of France in the 11th Century, it’s not surprising that their is some French influence in Ukrainian culture.
I spent some times looking up Karpatka cake after you asked about it. It sure sounds good and I’ll be on the lookout for a good recipe. I’ll be sure to share it if I find a great one. Let me know if you come across something first 😉 I imagine an eclair cake tastes amazing! 🙂
Hi there. Is there any translation for Cool Whip for someone living in NZ? Hoping there might be something I can use. Thanks.
I haven’t really tried making this with anything else. I really want to try with whipped cream but some of the proportions would have to change or it wouldn’t firm up enough. I just haven’t tested it with anything else.
Hi Natasha!
Would this recipe work with beaten heavy whipped cream instead of the cool whip?
Hi Alla, I haven’t tested it with that substitution although I’ve had very good intentions about trying it, I just haven’t gotten a chance. If you do test it, let me know how it goes. You might let your jello mixture thicken up a little more before adding the whipped cream so it doesn’t melt the whipped cream too much.
I made this cake for Lunar New Year and it turned out beautiful! The cake was so light, fluffy, and amazingly delicious. And it was all eaten up! There was not a crumb left on the plate. I love the simplicity of the recipe for the biskvit. This and the kiwi strawberry cake are my favorite thus far. Thank you again for another fabulous recipe!
You’re welcome! I’m so glad you enjoyed it! 🙂
Hi Natasha I was wondering if you have a recipe for chocolate sponge cake recipe,oh and I love all your recipes.
The only chocolate sponge cake that I currently have posted is this: https://natashaskitchen.com/2013/03/07/chocolate-cherry-roll-with-rum-cream-a-video-recipe/. Also, there’s a chocolate sponge made and broken up into this cake: https://natashaskitchen.com/2011/01/06/russian-cherry-layer-cake/
How do you get the cake out of the mold?
I use a very thin edged spatula to work the cake out of the mold. Did you use parchment paper?
I haven’t made it yet I was just curious how u get the jello part out. Do you use the form that clicks open? It doesn’t fall apart? I wanna make this but I was curious first how it works!
I use a springform mold which makes it way easier!!! I don’t think it would work without the springform mold (where the sides click open). It holds together alot better if you don’t put the strawberries around the edges, but it still stays together pretty well. Use a thin edged spatula or a knife to remove the cake from the walls.
I was so close to finishing this cake, but got interrupted by my water braking. will definitely try baking this cake soon.
Oh my goodness! God bless you and your babe!
Hi Natasha,
All your recipes are super!
I was wondering if there is a difference between using parchment paper and bakers spray? I have always been using the spray, and now looking through all of your recipes wondering if using parchement paper gives you better results?
Thanks for sharing all of your full proof recipes!
I think it depends on the recipe. Biskvit tends to stick pretty well since there is no oil used in the batter so I used the parchment instead. It just depends on the recipe 🙂
hey natasha, if cake is dry, use liquid jello when it cools a little to drizzle cake layers before you add cool whip to it. It adds swirls in the cake part and taste moist. Or like you added sprite/sweet club soda on the birds milk cake.
That’s a great idea Laura, thank you very much :).
I wonder if substituting a pink layer of birds milk for the jello would be good…
yes ofcourse it would be good, but it won’t have that sour sweetness of strawberries 🙂
im a little confused about the frosting? should the ingredients be beaten together and then thicken? Mines a little too watery. Thanks
Hi Alina, If you are referring to the pink center portion, you may have just beat the cool whip in too early. If that is the cake, let it sit for a little while and it should thicken. If you put it in the fridge it will thicken quickly, but be careful that it doesn’t set in there or it will be hard to spread.
When it says 8 oz Cool Whip, does that mean the container of 8 oz or like 8oz as a cup? I was just wondering because for many recipes it says that and I dont know it its a cup or the whole container.
Cool Whip comes in 8 oz containers so you would use entire container of cool whip.
Hey girl approx. how long do u wait for jello to set. its been ! 1/2 hours:( lol
What part are you on? Is the cake fully made and you are waiting? It’s at least 3 hours and best if overnight to let it fully set.
hey girl it doesn’t look to bad I think the mixture soaked into the bottom layer hehe. next time ill fully wait 4 jello to set
Just wait until it’s getting thicker, not fully set. Maybe try to have a colder coolwhip (not frozen, just thawed in the fridge) and it should firm up faster.
is the jello and whip cream suppose to be wet? mine is really watery
It’s supposed to start thickening up to about a yogurt consistency. Was your jello getting a little jiggly when you mixed in the cool whip? As long as you followed the water amounts for the jello in the instructions, it should thicken up in the fridge and should be ready to go for tomorrow! Let me know how it goes.
Makes sence thanks soo much darling!
hey girl im a little confused, with the jello part. so I add 2 cups boiling water and 1/2 cup cold instead 1 cup? Making this rite now n a bit confused
Add 1 cup of cold water. Usually you add 2 cups of cold water, so I wrote to use 1/2 of the cold water.
Will all the fruit get soggy if i make it a day ahead?
No it won’t it’s best to make it a day ahead. It’s best to decorate the top with fresh fruit the day of your dinner, but it will be ok if you do it the night before.
Hey Natasha! I’ve just made this cake recipe for my birthday party, and it was awesome. I t just got very delicious. Thank you very much Natasha
Awesome!! Happy Birthday to you, happy birthday to you, happy birthday dear Jahaziel (cool name by the way!), happy birthday to you!! 🙂
Thanks natasha! By the way, Alina’s tip about pinneaple juice really works, I think it turned the cake doubly delicious…. I love your web.
Grettings from México. 😀
You are welcome Jahaziel :).
can I make this day ahead?
Definitely, that’s what I did. Its best when made a day ahead, gives some time for jello to settle in.
Hey Natasha,
Cake looks amazing, but for some reason I’m having issues with the cool whip and jello mixture. Its not getting thick and/ or creamy.. What am i doing wrong? How long should be beating it for?? thanks.
Did you make sure to wait for the jello to start thickening up a bit at room temp before adding the cool whip?
I guess I didn’t wait long enough, I was short on time and wanted to get this cake ready for a couple of guests. This recipe wasn’t presented in a cake form, lol.. I used ramekin bowls instead, I placed a layer of the cake inside and pour the “liquid” jello mix on top. The jello mix set in the refrigerator and everything turned out cute and still amazing. 🙂
Great thinking under pressure Tanya. I’m glad that it still worked out :).