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Aaannnndddd, she’s back!

So I did mention something about health and/or diet food in my last post, and while this recipe is the latter, it is most certainly not to be confused with the former. I posted about my rainbow cake here, and it got a lot of traffic on over to my livejournal, and everyone wanted the “recipe.” The cool thing is that if you’re making something so distractingly colourful, people will think it’s delicious no matter what.

This presents me with the option to use an old Weight Watchers trick—the one-point cupcake. Except I’m making a cake and I created my own frosting. Kinda. I’ve seen it done before, but I swear I made it up first!

This cake is suitable for many occasions:

  • A child’s birthday
  • Your mom’s birthday
  • Coming out to your conservative parents
    • If you’re a lesbian, they’ll be thrilled that you won’t be forgoing your feminine kitchen duties.
    • If you’re the kind of gay dude who makes cakes for your parents, they were probably on to you anyway.
  • Coming out to your conservative parents on your mother’s birthday
  • Your friend’s jam band CD release party

. . . so I’m sure you’ll find a use for this recipe soon.

And of course, you can use any white cake recipe you’d like. This is just how I make it because I have delusions of wearing size 2 someday.

Oh yes, and do me a favour: DOUBLE THE RECIPE AS PHOTOGRAPHED HERE!! The recipe at the bottom is accurate, but this made for a really REALLY small cake, and there was not nearly enough frosting, especially considering its lightness.

Okay, on with the ingredients.

how to: rainbow cake!

That’s all. Notice the lack of fat in here? Mmmmmm . . . chemicals. Though I don’t need to defend my method thanks to the double-dub (WW) aspect, even when I make a “real” cake I usually use box mix because let’s face it: Betty’s been doing it way longer than I have, and has pretty much perfected the art.

Pour a can of soda (12 oz) 2-12 oz cans of soda into the cake mix two boxes of cake mix. No eggs, no oil, no water, no sweat.

how to: rainbow cake!

The action shots weren’t too thrilling. Now we measure it.

how to: rainbow cake!

I’m going to round to 30 oz 60 oz because I have six colours and isn’t that just too convenient? It worked out to 3/4 c 1.5 c per colour, measurementwise. So I divvied that up and used my gel colours.

how to: rainbow cake!

(the gel colours, while not as good as pigment dye, are much bolder than the very liquidy food colouring you probably grew up with)

how to: rainbow cake!

The first colour you drop into the pan, use about 2/3 of the mix for that colour. Otherwise, the top (last) colour will really dominate. I used a heaping 1/4 c 1 cup of each colour.

how to: rainbow cake!

Drop the colours, one by one, into the middle of the pan, in neat concentric-ish gobs. Remember the cake is going to be sliced in the side there, so mixing it around on top isn’t going to make your slices any more psychedelic (trust me, I did the three-dimensional thinking for you already).

When you’re three colours in, start doing the reverse with the other pan. Since I’m going in rainbow order: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple, I got from red to yellow in the first pan, then purple, blue, green in the second. This is so that your two pans are equal if your measurements aren’t exact (and they’re not likely to be).

how to: rainbow cake!

Now finish up.

how to: rainbow cake!

Follow the box’s baking instructions and do your dishes.

how to: rainbow cake!

Such lovely dishes!

Now for the frosting: 1 box 2 boxes of fat free sugar free pudding mix, and 8 oz 16 oz (two of the 8 oz tubs pictured) of fat-free whipped topping. Or sugar-free. Or light. Or regular. They’re all pretty much the same. But that’s it.

how to: rainbow cake!

Holy shit, the cake’s done! Toothpick clean and everything! Get that shit out of the oven!!!

how to: rainbow cake!

The purple top kind of made a little turkey silhouette.

how to: rainbow cake!

The frosting will be a little tough to spread, so treat it like a buttercream (I guess, I’ve never frosted a cake with buttercream). Putting gobs all over, then smoothing in worked well for me.

how to: rainbow cake!

And look at that thing! It’s so pretty-lookin.

how to: rainbow cake!

Here’s what this particular cake looked like. See how it’s tiny and too rounded and it kind of isn’t all that great? That’s because I didn’t double the recipe. It’s a mistake I’ll only make once.

how to: rainbow cake!

Here’s what that really should look like: same process, twice the batter.

DSC_0598

Mmmmm.

Sunny Day Rainbow Cake

2 boxes white cake mix
24 oz of clear diet soda (2 cans, ginger ale and sprite work well)
gel food colouring
16 oz whipped topping
2 oz instant fat-free sugar-free pudding mix (2 smallish boxes)

The Dieting
Mix the cake mix with the soda according to regular instructions on box. It will be lumpy afterward. Again, you can use any white cake recipe you want, this is just how I do it.

The Rainbowing
Measure the total volume (by my estimate, 64 oz), then divide by 6 and measure into separate bowls. There are 8 oz in a cup, so 64/6 = 10 to 11 oz, or 1 cup + 2 tbsp.

Stir colour into each bowl with its own spoon. For the first colour into the pan, measure out 2/3 to 3/4 of your mix (in this case about 1 c) as close to the middle as you can. Drop in your first three colours, then work on the other pan with the last three colours. So if you’re doing rainbow order, the first pan should have red, then orange, then yellow, and now the purple, blue and green go into the second pan. As a recap, this is so both layers are roughly the same size.

Bake the cake for however long the box tells you to bake it. Check it when the box says to, but usually it’ll need an extra 5 or 10 minutes or maybe more because of the density of the soda method. Just keep baking, checking back every 5 minutes or so until a toothpick to the center comes out clean. Let cool completely before moving to a wire rack.

The Frostinging
Meanwhile, make your frosting. Just mix the pudding mix in with the whipped topping for a few minutes. Dye if you’re into that.

Frost your fat-free cake with your fat-free whipped frosting. Eat.

Edit 1 (one week later)


No children were harmed in the making nor consumption of this cake.

People seemed to miss the point that I am a 25-year-old woman on a diet with no kids. Since kids don’t really need fat-free anything, there’s no need to use the soda recipe if you don’t like the idea, and if you don’t like dye, don’t make this for dinner for them every night for a month. Okay, folks, thanks for the allowance to disclaim.

Edit 2 (two weeks later)


A note to Weight Watchers (the people on the diet, not the company):
WW has long advertised 1/12 of a cake mix with diet soda to be a “one point cupcake.” I have no idea why they insist this is the case when according to the “as packaged” nutrition information, this much cupcake has 170 calories, 3g fat and no fiber . . . by my calculation, that’s 4 points. That said, 1/12 of this recipe, (2 box mixes + 16 oz whipped topping + 2 oz or so pudding mix) works out to 10 points a slice. Not bad considering that a comparable cake would be 14 points.

Edit 3 (two months later)


FAQ
Here are questions I get over and over again about this cake. I just don’t want to answer any more emails about it. These questions apply to any cake, so please don’t blame your epic fail on me.

Omg my cake burnt!
Next time don’t bake it for as long.

My cake stuck to the pan!
Grease your pan better next time.

My cake burnt/stuck to the pan/was underdone/crumbled. Is this because of the food colouring I used?
No, the food colouring has nothing to do with the failure of your cake. You baked it too long/didn’t grease enough/didn’t bake long enough/moved it before it was cool.

I’m making this for my kids, can I use non-diet soda for this cake?
I don’t know why you would, you certainly wouldn’t be saving much in the way of calories, and I don’t really think your kids need more sugar. Just make a regular cake and then put food colouring in it, it will look the same, promise.

If I don’t make it with soda, will the colours run?
No. In fact, like I keep saying, please just use whatever the hell cake recipe you like. Please. The rainbow part has nothing to do with Weight Watchers.

The frosting, it’s so thick!
Yes, buy a tub of Duncan Hines frosting as a backup plan.

The cake, it fell apart!
Let it cool before you move it, and more importantly, don’t jostle the thing about.

I don’t like the cake this made, blech!
You probably aren’t on a diet, so I don’t know why you bothered to make diet cake.

I don’t get it, you make two cakes and then you put them on top of each other?!
Yes, it’s called a layer cake, and pretty much any cake you buy at a grocery store is constructed in the same manner.

But I don’t *like* food colouring.
Well, you’re wasting your time reading this, aren’t you?

I totally saw this on Something Awful’s Goons with Spoons Rainbow Cake thread, way to steal the idea, asshole.
Me too, fellow goon, me too. And in fact, I posted my original rainbow cake there. If you have no idea what I’m talking about and would like to see about a hojillion rainbow cakes, and a rainbow cheesecake, please check out the thread that put this on my radar.

DSC_0603

9/26/2014
closing comments because way more spam bots are hanging around than humans, and after at least 2000 actual people comments, there probably isn’t much left to say. however, my email address remains active, so if you wanna be social, send it that way.

thanks, internet, this was fun.

  1. Casey Said,

    Wow, I came for the cake, but stayed for the comments. Entertaining to say the least.

    Love your blog. Keep rocking it.

  2. Laura Said,

    LOVE THIS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Can’t wait to make one!

  3. Shannon Said,

    Ok I haven’t read all the comments but I must say, most of you are freaking idiots with the comments. Seriously, either look at the cake and go ok that’s cool and go on your merry way or keep quiet. I think most have forgotten the old passage if you have nothing nice to say then keep your mouth shut (Ok with my own little twist).

    As for alternatives, there is such a thing as applesauce instead of soda or pumpkin puree. I use it all the time instead of oil. Oil goes bad in my house so fast that it’s cheaper and easier to add applesauce (organic unsweetened to boot). Unless you live in a bubble people you are going to have chemicals in your body no matter what either by water, breathing, touching stuff. Use hand sanitizer??? UM hello chemicals. Just admire how pretty the cake is and if you don’t like it, then get over it and go to something else, it’s not like you have to sit there and see the cake and comment on it.

    I think I’m going to make this with my daughter, fill her up with all the chemicals and junk, only I’m not going to make it with that recipe, just my recipe and my chemical food coloring that is just soo yummy.

    I think you did a wonderful job on the cake and can’t wait to make it myself, although I think we might do cupcakes as I promised her not too long ago that we could do cupcakes and haven’t had a chance to yet. Thanks for the inspiration.

  4. María Said,

    I don’t urdenstand! You made two cakes and then you put them one over the other????Pleas contact me in my mail.

  5. Jesse James Said,

    yo

    and thats all i have to say.

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  8. Carol Said,

    What lovely colors! I am going to make this into cupcakes for my daughter & her LGBT Club at school.

    No, I’m not a big fan of artificial colors and diet soda, but I’m not planning on eating this recipe 5x a day, every day, for the next 5 years. Moderation is a good thing… and fear is really, really annoying.

  9. Carrie Said,

    Hi there! I made the cake & it was enjoyed by all! But I forgot to take pictures of the making process. Would you mind if I coppied you pictures to post the process on my blog??

  10. Catherine Said,

    So I just tried to make this. It completely fell apart! What happened?
    I was a bit confused about the instructions, because it said at the beginning no eggs, no oil, no water, but later under The Dieting it said: Mix the cake mix with the soda according to regular instructions on box.
    I just took the dry cake mix and put in the soda. Did I do it wrong?

    Anyway, it tastes delicious! but it completely fell apart and icing it was very difficult. I’m worried about what’ll happen when I cut it :-/

    Maybe better luck next time 🙂

  11. Jen Said,

    Pretty and controversial, it doesn’t get better than that.

  12. Carol Said,

    The cupcakes were a huge success! Thank you!

  13. Nicole Jackson Said,

    Oh man, you’ll never see this down here, but my daughter’s birthday is next week. I’d like to make this for her. If I’m making it for a kid, will regular soda make it TOO sweet or will it be ok?

    Thanks!

  14. ananymous Said,

    I can’t read through all of the comments on here to see if anyone else has mentioned this, but it reminds me A LOT of another REALLY COOL cake that I saw. If you type “Steamed Rainbow Eggwhite Cake” or “Steamed Rainbow Egg White Cake” (diffrent pics come up with the diffrent spellings of egg white) into Google you can see what I mean. The cooking method is obviously diffrent, as well as ingredients, but a similar look!

  15. Dana Stone Said,

    I’m going to do this for my son’s science birthday party. He has baked cake with me before and he will think its cool that we don’t follow the recipie!

    I’ll let each kid make their own cupcake. I bet the kids will love the soda/cake mix/coloring as a fun activity!

  16. Carolyn Said,

    SUPER FUN CAKE!!! I Stumbled on your blog a day ago, and wracked my single girl brain until I came up with a semi-legitemate excuse for trying out this cake – my neighbors! Took it over there tonight, the kids loved it, and I’ve already got two people asking for the recipe. I used the regular liquid food coloring (not gel), and while it didn’t turn out quite as brite as in the photos, it still turned out great!

  17. Keith Said,

    This cake looks awesome! I first saw it on Flickr (you should check out Steph Goralnick’s photos, she’s great. http://www.flickr.com/photos/sgoralnick/).

    Anyway, I’m a complete newbie when it comes to anything related to baking, and I have a question so basic I’m almost embarrassed to ask. So, um… how do you stack the two parts of the cake on top of each other? One photo shows both halves of the cake just after they’re done baking. Both halves look like they’re concave on top. In the last photo, it looks like the bottom half has a nice, flat top so the top half can sit on it evenly.

    How? Do you saw off the domed part with a bread knife (and then eat it)? That’s what I’d do.

  18. aleta Said,

    It’s a layer cake, so you make two layers, level one off for the bottom, and then generally I leave the top domed because I think it looks more traditional that way. And yes, eat the trimmed part before you frost because that’s when it tastes best. =)

  19. nicegirl Said,

    this cake ROCKS i have never seen a cake made with soda ALSOME

  20. Ashley Said,

    This cake is absolutely awesome! What great color and looks like fun to make. I’m defineately trying this one!

  21. howtoeatacupcake Said,

    Rainbow cakes rock! I started a tradition of making one every year for my little brother’s birthday! 😀

  22. Anima Said,

    My cake fell apart as well, but I may have used too much food coloring (I was not happy with the shade of green I was getting) and on top of that I forgot to grease the cake pans. Though the test toothpicks came out clean, there were still gooey portions in the bottom-center of the cake. I left them in the suggested five additional minutes, but the tops were browning and ruining the colors, so I pulled ’em.
    You should submit this recipe over at allrecipes.com, their rainbow cakes are pathetic in comparison.
    Oh! I absolutely loved the frosting. It was hard to spread, it’s true, but absolutely delicious.

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  24. Crazy Daisy Said,

    Just clicking blog to blog and came across this… beautiful cake… thanks for sharing. Your blog is going on the bookmarked list! 🙂

  25. Tommy Isbell Said,

    So,

    My girlfriend and I attempted making this last night and it was totally a failure of epic proportions.

    The cake burned on the bottom and stuck to the pan like mad.

    The only thing that turned out was the “frosting”.

    Grr…..

  26. Jennifer Glamour Said,

    This is the coolest cake that I have EVER seen! I cannot wait to make it for my kids. Plus, they will love helping me make it too. I really think that this cooking lesson will be a memory that they will never forget. Thank you so much for sharing it with us! Plus, your pictures are colorful and lovely!

    I’m sorry that there are a few negative nellies that just HAD to post here with their stupid advice. Almost all of prepared food has food coloring in it, even the cake mixes that we all use have food coloring. So the people who are complaining eat it all day, probably while they are gulping down diet soda! HA idiots! Maybe they are just bored and lonely because they don’t have a rainbow cake!!! :-0

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  28. Cynthia Said,

    I love this and will definitely try it. I once ate jello that looked very similar but was unable to get the recipe as to how they mixed all the colors without actually blending together into one color. I live in Bisbee (a town that was dying and hippies invaded and made the town alive again, lots of tourists) where tye-dyeing is very popular and I bet this cake would be a hit here. People who don’t appreciate you sharing your recipe have no business being on your site) I think it’s fantastic. Thanks!!!!

  29. HJ Said,

    I think I like you FAQ more than the entire recipe. 🙂
    I’ll have to try this some time.

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  32. Diane Said,

    This is great! My mom’s 83rd birthday is April 1st and I am totally going to make this!

  33. Krista Said,

    I made this cake Tuesday. You can see it here: http://typical-ramblings.blogspot.com/2009/03/hidden-rainbow.html

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  36. Bohni Said,

    got an a+ in cooking class!!!:) >_<

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  39. La Manzana Ingrávida Said,

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  40. gadoo gadoo Said,

    she is very perfect in rainbow cake made….yumy yummy.

  41. sharon canada Said,

    what size pans are they? and is it in one whole cake mix/pop per pan?
    thanks

  42. Constance Said,

    Your blog is awesome! I love the cake idea! BTW I also bake, and am 25. Rock on!

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  44. danakscully64 Said,

    Stephy, this doesn’t contain gelatin, the mix is pudding, which is gelatin free. I’m a vegetarian, I read labels like crazy.

    I HAVE to try this recipe. I eat healthy for the most part, but this is a special occasion thing. I will report back 🙂

  45. renata Said,

    que lindooooooooooooooo. i’m hungry. (L)

  46. GKH Photography » Blog Archive » The Rainbow Cake Said,

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  47. Sol Said,

    It was sooooo much fun making this cake!!!

    thank you!!

  48. Jill Said,

    You are awesome!! I know my kids will flip for this cake. I am going to try both the diet and conventional versions. Keep up the fantastic work!!

  49. cathi Said,

    Hello. Do you think this would work with Schnuck’s brand white cake mix using the directions on the box? With the food coloring and what not?

  50. danakscully64 Said,

    So… I made the cake. The batter was AWESOME, tasted great, but after it was baked, it came out too heavy. I won’t be making the diet version of this again, full fat for me next time. The colors were beautiful though! Thank You so much for sharing this recipe, my 3 year old niece enjoyed making this.

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