Ermine Frosting

Ermine Frosting (Boiled Flour Frosting)

This is the “old-school” frosting originally used for Red Velvet cake. It’s unique because it starts with a cooked flour paste (a roux), which creates a silky, whipped texture that tastes like a cross between whipped cream and traditional buttercream but is much less sweet.


Quick Specs

  • Prep Time: 15 mins (mostly cooling time).
  • Cook Time: 5–7 mins.
  • Total Time: 25 mins (plus cooling).
  • Servings: Enough for 12–15 cupcakes or a 2-layer cake.
  • Cost: Under $5. It uses basic pantry staples like flour, sugar, and milk.

The 5 Ingredients

  1. All-Purpose Flour (5 tbsp): Your thickening agent.
  2. Granulated Sugar (1 cup): Cooked with the flour to dissolve completely (no grainy frosting!).
  3. Whole Milk (1 cup): The base for your “pudding” roux.
  4. Unsalted Butter (1 cup/2 sticks): Room temperature and softened.
  5. Vanilla Extract (1 tsp): For that classic bakery aroma.

Phase 1: The “Pudding” Base

You aren’t just mixing ingredients; you’re making a starch paste.

  • What to do: In a small saucepan, whisk the flour, sugar, and milk together until smooth.
  • The Heat: Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until it thickens into a heavy, glue-like paste (similar to thick pudding).
  • The Science: Heating the flour and milk causes the starch granules to swell and burst (gelatinization). This provides the structural “backbone” of the frosting without needing pounds of powdered sugar.

Phase 2: The Critical Cool-Down

If you add butter to hot paste, you get a greasy soup.

  • What to do: Transfer the paste to a bowl and cover with plastic wrap (touching the surface so a “skin” doesn’t form). Let it cool completely to room temperature.
  • The Logic: The paste and the butter must be the same temperature to emulsify properly.

Phase 3: The Creaming Step

  • What to do: In a separate large bowl, beat the softened butter with a mixer until it’s pale and fluffy (about 3 minutes).
  • The Logic: You are incorporating air into the fat, which gives the frosting its “light-as-air” volume.

Phase 4: The Emulsion

  • What to do: Add the cooled flour paste to the butter one tablespoon at a time, beating constantly. Add the vanilla at the end.
  • The Indicator: It might look curdled for a second—keep beating! It will suddenly transform into a glossy, cloud-like frosting that looks like whipped cream.
  • The Science: By adding the paste slowly, you are forcing the fat (butter) and water (milk paste) to bind together into a stable emulsion.

Phase 5: The Taste Test

  • The Result: Unlike American buttercream, which can be tooth-achingly sweet, Ermine frosting is buttery and mild. Because the sugar was dissolved in the hot milk, the texture is perfectly smooth with zero grit.

Serving

  • Storage: Since it’s made with a milk-base, keep the cake in the fridge if you aren’t eating it within a few hours.
  • Next Step: This is the perfect partner for Red Velvet Cake or a Dark Chocolate Cake. It’s also stable enough for basic piping and swirls.

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