Angel Food Cake with Strawberries & Whipped Cream
A Classic Birthday Cake Worth Making from Scratch
Angel food cake is renowned for its airy, fluffy texture and simplicity. Like cotton candy, it melts in your mouth, yet feels so much more refined. This vintage sponge, dating back to the 1800s, with a mysterious history built on whispers of an East and Far East origin, is made with cake flour, baker’s sugar, egg whites, cream of tartar, and sea salt. It reaches peak elegance when enhanced with vanilla, almond extract, or citrus juice. Top with dried or fresh fruit, compote, chocolate, edible flowers, or whipped cream, and it’s an edible masterpiece. In other words, it’s your canvas to create whatever brings you joy.
This is my mother’s favorite cake, so much so that it’s often made from a store-bought box, since time is always of the essence when she craves this light, floating-on-clouds delight. For her 84th birthday, I baked the classic version, just for her, creating a beautiful work of art to mark this special milestone.
The Recipe
Tips
Slow or Fast: You can to make this by hand — nothing wrong with that, or speed things up using a modern stand mixer. It’s up to you.
Pan: Write this down on a sticky note: don’t grease the pan! Angel Food Cake doesn’t care for grease. It’s fussy like that. And it prefers to cool upside down — reminds me of Archie. Immediately out of the oven, invert the pan onto the neck of a bottle or rack and cool for 2-3 hours to prevent the cake from collapsing. The best tube pan to use has a removable bottom, which makes it easier to remove the delicate cake cleanly.
Flour: Cake flour is low in gluten — perfect for those whose bellies resist traditional flour. I often use Swans Down Cake Flour or King Arthur Unbleached Cake Flour when baking cakes. To sift flour or sugar, use a sifter over a piece of wax paper. Use the paper to pour over the mix.
Sugar: Baker’s sugar is best for light and airy cakes — its crystals are smaller than those of regular white sugar. It dissolves quickly and doesn’t weigh the delicate cake down. You can find it labeled Baker’s sugar, ultrafine, or caster sugar.
Eggs: Remove from the refrigerator and let them come to room temperature before using. Separate the eggs from the whites while still cold, then whip them at room temperature. This helps to elevate the volume of the cake.
Salt: Sea salt and fine-grain kosher salt are best suited for this cake.
Substitutions
Extracts: Vanilla Madagascar Bourbon, Amaretto, pineapple, mango, peach, wild strawberry, blueberry
Juice: Orange, tangerine, pineapple
Gluten-free: I recommend King Arthur Gluten-Free Measure-for-Measure Flour. I use this for family gatherings — my sister prefers gluten-free. This way everyone at the table can enjoy the celebration without being left out. Nobody puts baby in the corner!
Serving Suggestions
Serve with whipped cream and fresh berries—strawberries, blueberries, blackberries—either on their own, mixed, or cooked into a compote. In spring, add cherries or orange slices; in summer, enhance with pineapple or mango; in fall, or for a special occasion, try chocolate shavings, chocolate sauce, or edible flowers like nasturtium, rose, marigold, or lavender.
Pair with a sweet wine — something a little sweeter than your cake, depending on the elements you’ve added for serving. The sweeter the plate, the sweeter the wine. Choose a Late Harvest Riesling (fruity with bright acidity), or a Moscato d’Asti (fragrant and low in alcohol). Both are perfect places to start.
Once everything is ready, gather round the table, and toast to Mom!
She’d probably say it’s better than the box. She’d be right.
I’m Jen Blair — food and wine writer, culinary memoirist, and WSET Diploma candidate writing from the Coachella Valley desert.
The Dinner Bell: Uncorked celebrates the stories that simmer beneath every great meal. From the Coachella Valley desert, I uncover heritage recipes passed down through generations, trace the history of forgotten vines, and recreate the flavors that carry us back to the people and places we love. Every Friday a recipe worth making. Every Sunday the story behind it. Pull up a chair — there’s always room at the table.




