Mini Strawberry Heart Cakes

These mini strawberry heart cakes are soft, fluffy, and strawberry-forward, filled with a gooey strawberry center and finished with a smooth pink coating and glossy strawberry drizzle.
They’re perfect for Valentine’s Day, gifting, or anytime you want something cute but still polished — and this recipe is intentionally designed so nothing goes to waste.
If you’re someone who loves a dessert that’s equal parts cute and comforting, these mini strawberry heart cakes are it. They’re nostalgic, a little indulgent, and way more fun to make than they look.

Ingredient Overview
Here’s what makes these mini cakes work so well:
- Fresh strawberries are blended and strained into a purée that’s used both in the cake and in the strawberry sauce on top.
- Freeze-dried strawberry powder boosts strawberry flavor without adding excess moisture.
- Sour cream and buttermilk keep the cake light, tender, and evenly baked.
- A small batch of strawberry buttercream is used only as a dam to hold the filling in place.
- White compound melting wafers create a smooth, soft coating with a classic snack-cake bite.

Step Overview
- Make the strawberry purée
Blend and strain the strawberries, then divide the purée between the cake and the strawberry sauce. - Bake the strawberry cake
The batter is mixed using an alternating method (flour → buttermilk → flour) for a smoother texture and more even bake. - Prepare the filling and buttercream
The strawberry filling is cooked just until soft and gooey, and the buttercream is mixed thick enough to pipe a clean dam. - Cut, torte, and assemble
Cut the cake into 3-inch hearts, slice each heart in half, fill with strawberry filling, and chill until firm. - Dip and finish
Dip the cakes in pink coating, let them set, then finish with a spoonful of strawberry sauce on top.

About the Extras (Don’t Skip This)
This recipe intentionally makes extra cake, extra frosting, and extra coating.
After cutting the 6 mini heart cakes, you’ll have plenty left over — and that’s a good thing.
I highly recommend:
- making cake pops or cake balls with the extra cake and frosting
- dipping them in the remaining coating
- or cutting mini heart cakes with a smaller cutter and dipping those as well
It turns one bake into multiple treats and keeps everything from going to waste.

Whether you’re making these for Valentine’s Day, a special occasion, or just because, these mini strawberry heart cakes are one of those bakes that feel extra special without being fussy. And don’t forget to use up the extras — cake pops and mini hearts are half the fun.

Mini Strawberry Heart Cakes
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Add 275 g fresh strawberries to a blender and blend until completely smooth.
- Strain the purée through a super-fine mesh strainer, pressing with a spatula to remove seeds and pulp.
- Measure out 80 g strained strawberry purée for the cake batter.
- Reserve 120–135 g strained strawberry purée for the strawberry sauce.
- Preheat the oven to 325°F (165°C). Line a 9×13 jelly roll pan with parchment paper.
- In a medium bowl, whisk together all the dry ingredients:
- 2 cups (240 g) cake flour, 1½ tsp baking powder, ¼ tsp baking soda, ½ tsp salt, and 1½ tbsp freeze-dried strawberry powder.
- In a separate large bowl, whisk ¾ cup (150 g) sugar and ¼ cup (50 g) oil until glossy.
- Whisk in 2 eggs, one at a time, mixing well after each addition.
- Whisk in ¼ cup (60 g) sour cream, 1½ tsp vanilla, and 80 g strawberry purée until smooth.
- Set aside the ½ cup (120 ml) buttermilk.
- Add half of the dry ingredients to the wet mixture and gently mix until just combined.
- Add all of the buttermilk and mix gently.
- Add the remaining dry ingredients and fold just until smooth, being careful not to overmix.
- Spread the batter evenly in the prepared pan and tap the pan firmly on the counter 2–3 times to level.
- Bake for 18–22 minutes, until the top is matte and the center springs back when lightly pressed.
- Cool completely, then chill the cake for at least 1 hour before cutting.
- In a small saucepan, combine ¾ cup (115 g) strawberries, 2 tbsp sugar, a pinch of salt, and ¼ tsp lemon juice.
- Cook over medium heat until the strawberries are soft and releasing their juices.
- Blend until smooth.
- Let the filling cool completely before using.
- Beat ½ cup (115 g) softened butter until completely smooth.
- Add 100 g powdered sugar and beat until fully combined and smooth.
- Add 2 tbsp freeze-dried strawberry powder and beat until smooth.
- Add a pinch of salt and 1 tsp vanilla, then mix until incorporated.
- Transfer buttercream to a piping bag or zip-top bag.
- In a small saucepan, combine 120–135 g strawberry purée, 2–3 tsp sugar, and a pinch of salt.
- Stir ½ tsp cornstarch with 1 tsp water, then add to the saucepan.
- Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until the sauce thickens and becomes glossy.
- Remove from heat and let cool completely.
- Use a 3-inch heart cookie cutter to cut hearts from the chilled cake.
- Using a serrated knife, carefully slice each heart horizontally in half, creating two thin layers.
- Pipe a buttercream dam around the edge of the bottom cake layer using about 1–1½ teaspoons buttercream.
- Fill the center with 2½–3 teaspoons strawberry filling.
- Top with the second cake layer.
- Chill assembled cakes for 30–45 minutes until firm.
- In a deep heat-safe bowl or 4-cup glass measuring cup, gently melt 24–28 oz white compound melting wafers.
- Stir in 2½–3 tbsp Crisco until smooth and fluid.
- Tint with pink gel food coloring.
- Dip each chilled cake into the coating, letting excess drip off.
- Clean the bottom edge with an offset spatula and place on a rack to set.
- Spoon 1–2 teaspoons strawberry sauce onto the top of each cake.
- Allow one controlled drip to fall down the side.
- Let the coating fully set before serving.
Notes
Notes & Storage
- This recipe intentionally produces extra cake, frosting, and coating beyond the 6 heart cakes.
- Use the leftover cake and frosting to make cake pops or cake balls, and dip them in the extra coating so nothing goes to waste.
- You can also cut mini heart cakes from the scraps using a smaller heart cutter and dip them just like the larger cakes.
- A serrated knife makes it much easier to torte the heart cakes cleanly and evenly.
- For best results, chill the cake thoroughly before cutting and assembling.
Storage
- Refrigerator: Store assembled heart cakes in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 3 days.
- Bring to room temperature: For the best texture, let the cakes sit at room temperature for 20–30 minutes before serving so the coating softens slightly.
- Freezing (uncoated): Uncoated cake layers can be wrapped tightly and frozen for up to 2 months. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator before assembling.
- Cake pops: Cake pops made from leftovers can be stored in the refrigerator for up to 5 days or frozen for up to 1 month.



