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Perfect Italian Buttercream Frosting is a rich, smooth, and incredibly delicious traditional icing that is the best choice to decorate cakes and cupcakes.

This is the same kind of buttercream frosting that you’ll find on many professional wedding cakes. Its silky texture is unlike any other frosting or icing recipe that you’ll ever find, it is gorgeous when piped, and can be flavored and colored in countless ways.

Italian buttercream being piped onto black surface
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Why this recipe works:

When you consider how perfectly smooth, rich, creamy, and heavenly this buttercream frosting is and how incredibly easy it is to use for decorating, it will soon be one of your favorites.

  • Italian buttercream is considered more difficult than traditional American buttercream only because you must get the hot sugar syrup to an exact temperature, but once you get the hang of this recipe it is actually super easy to make.
  • This frosting is a decorator’s dream! It is incredibly smooth and creamy. When refrigerated it gets hard because of all the butter, which makes it perfect as a crumb coat before your final layer of frosting or fondant is added.
  • Italian buttercream holds up really well at room temperature. You can use it to decorate both cakes and cupcakes.
  • If you like a frosting that is rich and buttery and not too sweet, this is your kind of recipe!

Whether you use it for a dry crumb frosting base only before adding fondant and fancy decorations, or you cover the entire cake in buttercream frosting, it truly is one of the most gorgeous things you can put on a cake.

How to make my Italian buttercream:

  1. First step is to get the sugar mixture to the soft ball stage. This is done by heating the sugar and corn syrup in a pot over the stove. You must use a good thermometer to ensure it is the correct temperature.
  2. Next you will beat the egg whites. Once they begin to get foamy but soft peaks haven’t formed, you will add the hot sugar syrup.
  3. Then you will add the softened butter, one cube at a time.
  4. Finally, you will mix in the vanilla extract. If you’re wanting to color the frosting, this is when you would add the food coloring.
process photos of how to make Italian Buttercream Frosting

Cooking tips:

  • You must get your sugar to the soft-ball stage which is 235 degrees F. I live close to sea level, so this is the temperature I go by. At high altitudes, water boils at a lower temperature. For example, at 4500 feet above sea level, water boils at 204° F. If candy is cooked until it reaches the soft-ball stage on a candy thermometer, it will have cooked too long.
  • I add a bit of corn syrup to my recipe because it adds a beautiful sheen, but this can be omitted if you want to make a pure Italian buttercream recipe.
  • I recommend mixing the egg whites while the sugar syrup heats up. Ideally you want them ready as soon as the sugar syrup hits it’s temperature.
  • When you whip your egg whites, you want them to have a lot of air and a beautiful sheen, but do not let them get to the stiff peak stage.
  • Remember to be patient. I’ve had a lot of readers who had this recipe turn out perfectly and others who couldn’t get it to work. Once you start adding the butter, it will look awful, but you just have to keep mix and just like magic, you will end up with the best buttercream frosting.
This is the Best Buttercream Frosting with a rich, smooth, and incredibly delicious traditional icing that is the best choice to decorate cakes and cupcakes.

Different types of buttercream frosting:

If you’re like me, you probably grew up making what is considered American buttercream. As far as taste goes, that is still my preference, but some consider it too sweet.

If you didn’t realize there are different kinds of buttercream frosting, here’s a quick summary:

  1. AMERICAN: Powdered sugar + softened butter + milk + vanilla
  2. SWISS MERINGUE: Egg whites + sugar whisked together over boiling water and then beaten with butter 
  3. FRENCH: Egg yolks + homemade sugar syrup + butter
  4. ITALIAN: Homemade sugar syrup + egg whites + white sugar + softened butter
chocolate cupcake with swirl of buttercream frosting on top

Since Italian Buttercream can be more difficult to make, you might be more interested in making these other super easy frosting recipes:

And what good is frosting without a delicious, moist, scratch made cupcake or cake recipe!

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Italian Buttercream Frosting

Prep20 minutes
Cook20 minutes
Total40 minutes
Servings 12 servings
Perfect Italian Buttercream Frosting is a rich, smooth, and incredibly delicious traditional icing that is the best choice to decorate cakes and cupcakes.

Video

Ingredients 

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Instructions 

  • Add the sugar and corn syrup to a small saucepan, drizzle a few tablespoons of water over the sugar, and stir together until the sugar is all moistened. It will have a wet sand feeling about it. Cook the sugar over medium high to high heat to the softball stage of 235 F using a candy thermometer. Use a pastry brush to lightly water down the inner sides of the sauce pan to prevent crystallization. When the sugar is done, turn off the burner (if gas), or move the pan off the burner (if electric).
  • Begin to whip your egg whites with a whip attachment in a stand mixer. When the meringue begins to look opaque, but is not to any sort of ‘peak’ stage yet, slowly pour the cooked sugar syrup down the side of the mixing bowl, as the mixture is whipping on a medium speed. Allow the mixture to whip until glossy medium peaks form and the meringue is cool to the touch.
  • Turn the mixer on a low speed, and add the butter, one stick at a time. Be sure meringue is cool to the touch first so that the butter doesn't melt! Mix until the mixture comes together. Don't be scared! The mixture will separate and look terrible before it comes together again, which It will- I promise. Be patient.
  • Once the mixture is smooth and wonderful-looking, add the vanilla and whip just until combined.

Notes

Makes about 4 cups – more than enough to frost a two layer 9-inch cake
Cooking tips:
  • You must get your sugar to the soft-ball stage which is 235 degrees F. I live close to sea level, so this is the temperature I go by. At high altitudes, water boils at a lower temperature. For example, at 4500 feet above sea level, water boils at 204° F. If candy is cooked until it reaches the soft-ball stage on a candy thermometer, it will have cooked too long.
  • I add a bit of corn syrup to my recipe because it adds a beautiful sheen, but this can be omitted if you want to make a pure Italian buttercream recipe.
  • I recommend mixing the egg whites while the sugar syrup heats up. Ideally you want them ready as soon as the sugar syrup hits it’s temperature.
  • When you whip your egg whites, you want them to have a lot of air and a beautiful sheen, but do not let them get to the stiff peak stage.
  • Remember to be patient. I’ve had a lot of readers who had this recipe turn out perfectly and others who couldn’t get it to work. Once you start adding the butter, it will look awful, but you just have to keep mix and just like magic, you will end up with the best buttercream frosting.

Nutrition

Serving: 4tbsp, Calories: 369kcal, Carbohydrates: 23g, Protein: 1g, Fat: 30g, Saturated Fat: 19g, Cholesterol: 81mg, Sodium: 27mg, Potassium: 29mg, Sugar: 23g, Vitamin A: 945IU, Calcium: 10mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Did you make this? Leave me a comment below

This recipe was originally published in November 2017 and has been updated with helpful information, ingredient and process photos, as well as recipe tips. Don’t worry – the recipe hasn’t changed!

Hi! Iโ€™m Krissy.

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221 Comments

  1. THE best recipe ever! It’s As soft as whipped cream frosting but perfect for the Indian summer when whipped cream frosting becomes runny very fast. Thanks for the recipe! ?

  2. Hi if you don’t have corn syrup what substitute can I used. I am not in US
    and here where I am in Spain I don’t think I am going to find it.

  3. My family can’t do dairy. Has anyone tried this with some other than butter? I have butter flavored coconut oil but not sure it would whip the same. Any suggestions?

  4. 4 stars
    Absolutely amazing…taste like butter, texture of whipped cream, pipes like buttercream! What more could you ask?

  5. 5 stars
    I was really excited to find this recipe, I’ve made caramels, and fudge successfully. Now, I’ve just wasted all those ingredients. Especially the butter! This just tastes like straight butter.

    1. I won’t deny there’s a lot of butter in this recipe. Its all about personal preference. Sorry you didn’t like it.

  6. Will not use this recipe again. Icing does crust and because of the butter, does not do well at room temp either. On top of that, it isn’t very tasty. Waste of ingredients.

    1. Sorry to hear that! The icing definitely does not crust and I didn’t say that it did in the recipe, so I hope I didn’t make you think it would. Buttercream is actually not my favorite as far as taste goes, but if its made correctly, it is very easy to work with, especially for decorating.

  7. I’m so bummed–I got to the stage where you add the butter and at that point it was smooth, creamy and tasty (It would not have held a shape well) but when I added the butter I only had one stick of real butter and the rest of it was margarine. Word of advice-Don’t use margarine. ๐Ÿ™ It tasted gross. My question is-can you skip the butter part and just whip the egg white sugar mixture? I am so disappointed-I had stupidly even doubled the recipe b/c I wanted lots of frosting and just threw it all in the garbage.

    1. Noooooo. Never use margarine! Like, for anything! And you can totally omit the butter, but then it wouldn’t be buttercream. It would just be meringue. ๐Ÿ™‚

    2. Margarine was originally invented to fatten up turkeys! It used to come with a packet of yellow coloring that you kneaded into it to make it look like butter. Nasty chemicals is all it is!

      1. Yes….margarine is only one molecule apart from that of plastic…..never use it! Butter or organic coconut oil….much better choices.

    3. Oh man, I know exactly how you feel mate, made the same mistake whilst making american buttercream. It tasted so gross and the consistency was absolutely terrible!(not to talk about the color).
      But in the end I was able to save it by adding artificial flavoring, it wasn’t at all as I would have wanted it but somehow halfway edible.
      I will never use margarine again, mark my words children…

  8. Your recipes are awesome..Please tell the cup(sugar) measurement and water measurement for this recipe. Thanks in advance