Red Velvet Cake Truffles
As you may already know from a previous post, Red Velvet Cake is by far my favorite type of cake. So when I saw these Red Velvet Cake Balls from Bakerella, I had to try them. Her original recipe calls for a red velvet cake mix and cream cheese frosting from a jar. I’m sure that would be a much easier way to make them, but I decided to make them from scratch. I think ready-made cream cheese frosting tastes a little funny, and making a cake doesn’t really take that much longer than using a box anyway. The down side of this, though, is that they need to be refrigerated because of the cream cheese. I brought these to choir rehearsal a few weeks ago, but when I was calling them Cake Balls, everyone thought they needed a more elegant name, so I’ve decided to call them Red Velvet Cake Truffles from now on. This is obviously a recipe you can do a lot of playing with depending on the occasion (for instance, Bakerella now has an adorable Cupcake Pops version), so you may be seeing more of these in the future!
Red Velvet Cake Truffles
Here’s the basics of what I did, adapted from Bakerella. Feel free to let your creativity shine!
- Make a quarter sheet cake. (I used the Red Velvet Cake recipe you can find here, which will fit in a quarter sheet pan, though just barely.)
- While it’s cooling, make some frosting. (I used this cream cheese frosting, but without the peppermint.)
- When the cake is cool, crumble it up into a big bowl. Add enough frosting so it will hold together in balls (probably about 16 oz, the size of one can of frosting).
- Roll into balls, or whatever shape you wish, and chill in the fridge or freezer until nice and firm.
- Melt some chocolate or candy coatings according to the directions on the package for dipping. (If you’re using chocolate, you probably will need to add a little bit of oil to it when you’re melting it.)
- Dip the truffles into the chocolate or candy. I did some dark chocolate and some white chocolate. I thought the dark chocolate tasted better, but the white was prettier and looked more like a traditional red velvet cake. You could also drizzle them afterward with a different kind of chocolate or color of candy, dip them into sprinkles or other toppings while the chocolate is still warm. The possibilities are endless!
Tags: Cake, Chocolate, Dessert, finger food


May 7th, 2008 at 1:28 pm
They look delicious!! Where you happy with how they turned out?
May 7th, 2008 at 1:28 pm
I meant “were you happy” not where!!
May 7th, 2008 at 9:37 pm
Hi Stefanie,
Yes I was very happy with them. They weren’t too much trouble, but they looked pretty and kind of whimsical, and they tasted delicious as well.
May 21st, 2008 at 6:03 am
This is a GREAT idea! I love waldorf red cake (same thing right?) and this looks like a great way to do it. I’m definitely going to try it. the frosting I use is always temperamental though, really dependent on the humidity of the day. Maybe I’ll try this one instead. Very cool idea! thanks