Blue Velvet Vanilla Pound Cake is the kind of cake that gets noticed before anyone takes a bite. The slices show off deep blue ribbons running through a buttery vanilla crumb, with a thin glaze that settles into the ridges.
The flavor is still classic pound cake. You get butter, vanilla, a little cream, and just enough cocoa in the blue batter to give it that velvet-style warmth without turning it into chocolate cake.
Butter, Cream, Blue Swirls
Use room-temperature butter, eggs, and cream so the batter blends smoothly. Cake flour keeps the crumb fine, while a small cocoa-blue batter gives the cake its velvet look.
- Cake flour. Gives the pound cake a softer crumb than all-purpose flour.
- Salted butter. Brings rich flavor and structure to the batter.
- Granulated sugar. Sweetens the cake and helps the butter whip light.
- Large eggs. Build the dense but tender pound cake texture.
- Heavy cream. Adds moisture and a fine, plush crumb.
- Vanilla extract. Keeps the cake fragrant and classic.
- Cocoa powder. Adds a quiet velvet note to the blue swirl.
- Butterfly pea powder or blue gel color. Creates the deep blue ribbons.
- Powdered sugar and milk. Make a quick glaze that drips neatly over the Bundt ridges.
Swirl And Bake Gently
- Prepare the pan. Heat the oven to 315°F and coat a 10 to 12 cup Bundt pan very well with baking spray.
- Cream the butter. Beat the butter until smooth and pale, then add the sugar and beat until lighter.
- Add eggs and vanilla. Mix in the eggs one at a time, scraping the bowl often, then blend in the vanilla.
- Finish the batter. Add the cake flour and salt on low speed, then fold in the heavy cream just until the batter looks even.
- Color the swirl. Stir 1 1/2 cups batter with cocoa powder and butterfly pea powder or blue gel color.
- Layer and marble. Spoon half the plain batter into the pan, add blue batter in dollops, cover with remaining plain batter, and swirl once or twice with a knife.
- Bake and cool. Bake 75-85 minutes, until a tester comes out clean. Cool 15-20 minutes, then turn out onto a rack.
- Glaze the cake. Whisk powdered sugar, milk, vanilla, and almond extract until thick but pourable. Spoon over the cooled cake.
Blue Velvet Vanilla Pound Cake
The best version of Blue Velvet Vanilla Pound Cake tastes like a real pound cake first and a novelty cake second. That means creaming the butter well, adding the eggs slowly, and treating the color as a swirl rather than the whole recipe. I like butterfly pea powder for a softer natural blue, but gel coloring gives a brighter party look. A tiny spoonful of cocoa keeps the blue batter from tasting flat. The method is similar to classic velvet-style cakes, but the tight Bundt crumb makes it slice cleanly for a dessert table. If you like vanilla-forward cakes, try this with the same calm serving style as Flourless Vanilla Bean Greek Yogurt Cake.
Why Low Heat Helps
Pound cake batter is heavy with butter, sugar, eggs, and flour. A lower oven gives the center time to bake before the outside gets too dark. King Arthur Baking uses a slow bake for its velvet pound cake, which is a useful reminder that dense cakes need patience. Start checking at 75 minutes. The cake is done when a skewer reaches the deepest part and comes out clean or with a few moist crumbs. If the top browns early, lay foil over it loosely. Do not press it down or it can stick to the cake surface.
Color Without A Wet Batter
Liquid food coloring can thin a small portion of batter faster than you expect. Gel color is easier to control because a little goes a long way. Butterfly pea powder works too, though the shade can look more denim-blue than electric-blue after baking. The original blue swirl style often uses butterfly pea powder in the tinted batter, as shown in this blue velvet swirl cake method. Mix the color into only part of the batter. That gives dramatic slices and keeps the vanilla flavor clear. For another rich pound cake direction, Decadent Butter Pecan Pound Cake is a good next bake.
Glazing Without Hiding Swirls
Let the cake cool fully before glazing. Warm cake melts the glaze and sends it sliding into a thin shell at the bottom of the plate. A good glaze should fall from the whisk in a slow ribbon. If it looks stiff, add milk by the teaspoon. If it looks watery, add a spoonful of powdered sugar. Vanilla alone tastes clean, while a little almond extract makes the cake feel bakery-style. Keep the glaze pale so the blue and vanilla slices still stand out. For a fruitier pound cake table, pair slices with Fruit Pound Cake with Strawberries and Pineapple.
Serving And Keeping Slices Fresh
This cake cuts best after it has rested for at least an hour. Use a thin serrated knife and wipe it between slices if the glaze is sticky. Serve it plain, with berries, or with a spoonful of whipped cream. Leftovers keep well because pound cake is rich. Wrap the cut side tightly so it does not dry out. You can also freeze slices with parchment between them. The color makes it fun for birthdays, showers, and patriotic dessert spreads. If you want a classic frosted cake beside it, Classic Vanilla Birthday Cake with Buttercream Frosting fits the same vanilla mood.
Summary
Serve this cake at room temperature so the crumb tastes soft and rich. A serrated knife gives the cleanest slices through the glaze and swirl.
FAQs
- What makes this a blue velvet pound cake?
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The blue velvet look comes from tinting a small portion of vanilla pound cake batter with blue color and a little cocoa powder. The cocoa gives the swirl a soft velvet flavor without making the whole cake taste like chocolate.
- Can I use gel food coloring instead of butterfly pea powder?
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Yes. Use blue gel coloring a little at a time until the batter looks vivid. Gel is stronger than liquid coloring, so it adds less extra moisture to the cake.
- Why did my pound cake stick to the Bundt pan?
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Bundt pans need careful greasing in every ridge. Use baking spray with flour, or brush softened butter into the pan and dust it with flour. Let the cake cool for 15-20 minutes before turning it out.
- Can I make this cake ahead?
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Yes. Bake the cake one day ahead and store it covered at room temperature. Glaze it the day you serve it for the cleanest look.
- How should I store Blue Velvet Vanilla Pound Cake?
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Keep it tightly covered at room temperature for up to 3 days. For longer storage, wrap slices well and freeze them for up to 2 months. Thaw at room temperature before serving.
- Can I bake this in loaf pans?
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Yes. Divide the batter between two greased 9×5-inch loaf pans. Start checking around 55 minutes, and pull them when a tester comes out clean or with a few moist crumbs.
References
Sources cited in this recipe.