Chocolate Whipped Buttercream Frosting that tastes like light chocolate whipped cream frosting. This whipped chocolate frosting is the best!
I’m not much of a frosting person. So many times frostings are heavy and overly sweet. Not this Chocolate Whipped Buttercream Frosting, though.
It’s super light and fluffy – like an ultralight chocolate mousse in frosting form. And since this frosting falls in the semisweet to bittersweet chocolate range, it isn’t too sweet either.
Tips to make chocolate whipped buttercream frosting
A couple notes about this frosting – first, the cooked milk/flour mixture needs to be completely cool before continuing on. If it’s still warm, it will melt the butter, and the frosting will be too loose.
Second, don’t cut the whipping steps short. The frosting needs to be whipped on high for several minutes in order to have its ultralight texture.
Also, a reader (thanks again!) left a comment saying that chilling the frosting helped it come together for her. So, please check out the comments below the recipe.
*Note – I had several comments saying that the frosting was separating. I worked on the recipe and changed it to make it whip up easier.
More chocolate frosting recipes!
- Chocolate Buttercream Frosting
- Chocolate Cream Cheese Frosting
- Chocolate Malted Milk Frosting
More whipped buttercream frosting recipes!
- Whipped Buttercream Frosting
- Whipped Brown Sugar Buttercream Frosting
- Vanilla Bean Whipped Buttercream Frosting
If you’ve tried this chocolate whipped buttercream frosting recipe, don’t forget to rate the recipe and leave me a comment below. I love to hear from people who’ve made my recipes!
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Chocolate Whipped Buttercream Frosting
Ingredients
- 1/2 cup all-purpose flour
- 1 ½ cups milk
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1 ½ cups salted butter at cool room temperature
- 1 3/4 cups granulated sugar
- 1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder I use Dutch-processed
- Pinch of salt
Instructions
- In a small saucepan, whisk flour and milk together until well-combined.
- Heat, stirring constantly, until it thickens.
- Remove from heat, and let it cool to room temperature.*
- Stir in vanilla.
- While the mixture is cooling, cream the butter, sugar, cocoa powder, and salt together until light and fluffy on medium high, about 5 minutes.
- Add the completely cooled milk mixture.
- Beat it for about 5 minutes on high until it looks like whipped cream. It may look separated at first, so keep beating it until it comes together and looks like a whipped cream.
- If it looks separated after about 7 minutes of whipping, cover, and chill for about 30 minutes. Then, continue whipping for about 5 minutes, or until it looks like whipped cream.
Notes
**Nutrition facts are estimates.
Nutrition
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Published 8/23/13. Updated with new photos and tips 6/18/18.
Reader Interactions
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Comments & Reviews
Stephannie says
How soft should the butter be? Trying to eliminate the variables for my broken mixture
Kate says
Sure! The butter should be at cool room temperature. This would be about 65-68F. Visually, the butter will look the same as it does when you take it out of the fridge. It should feel a little cool to the touch (but not like cold clay the way it does straight from the fridge), and the butter should dent in the area where you press on it. It shouldn’t be smooshy anywhere. If you have any other questions, please let me know!
Stephannie says
It tastes great but it still looks separated. I got the milk mixture thick, I creamed the butter and sugar until I didn’t hear or feel the sugar grains, I refrigerated the mixture and then beat for the time stated. Yet it still looks broken.
I gave it a 4 because it was light and not overly sweet which was what I wanted. Could you perhaps do a video for us to see what we are doing wrong why yours does not get broken at the end?
Kate says
Absolutely! In the mean time, you may find the video and step-by-step photos on my vanilla version helpful. Can I ask why you chilled the mixture before beating it?
Mia says
I now have your buttercream in the fridge to cool down extra cause it split… So hopefully it works… Missed that the milk flour mixture needed to be a thick paste… I just boiled until it thickened…
So I’m crossing fingers and toes that it will come together cause I don’t have stuff to make new….
But on the other hand if it doesn’t… I’ll just have to eat it with a spoon :-D
Cause damn it is good!!!
Lots of love from sweden
Kate says
Hi! Once it cools down in the fridge, you can try to whip it. I’ve heard from people who have had good luck doing that. I hope that it works out for you!!
Rebeca says
I made this but added 3oz. Of 53% dark chocolate chips and 1 T. of espresso powder to the warm flour mixture. It made an amazing mocha frosting!
Kate says
How fun! Thanks for your notes! It’s great to hear the things that have worked well for others. =)
Cynthia says
This frosting is delicious! I would have liked more info on the milk/flour mixture – specifically how high should the heat be when cooking and how thick should it be.
Kate says
Thank you! I’m so glad that you liked it. And thank you for that. I’ll add more information to help with that.
Juliane says
Unsure on star level as I’m just starting, but I’m sure it will be lovely. QUESTION! I have just two (precious) sticks of butter (1 cup). Will that affect things overwhelmingly? I have opted to use coconut milk (high fat) so am hoping that that will ease the remaining stick of butter that would be missing. Please respond (it’s 10:36AM, EST and will begin prep by 11:00AM EST. (Son’s birthday- 7/27)
Kate says
Hi! I’m not sure how well coconut milk will stand in for butter. The best thing to do would be to scale the recipe down by 1/3 so that your ratios will stay the same.
Amanda L says
This was amazing. The comments were also super helpful. I ended up cooking the milk and flour mixture longer than I imagined on a first read—it really does need to be thick paste, as stated, for anyone else attempting for the first time. I decreased the sugar by 1/4 cup and increased the chocolate by 1/4 cup based on the comments. It came together beautifully, I tasted it in intervals and it went from gritty to fluffy and smooth almost spontaneously, about 3 minutes in. I was looking for a recipe without confectioners sugar because I thought I was out—I found some before I started but was so intrigued by our similar feelings towards frosting I decided to this one anyway. So glad I did!
Kate says
Yay!! I’m so glad! I appreciate your notes. It helps to hear the things that have worked for other people. Thanks for taking the time to comment!
Mckenzie says
Any idea if using brown sugar would intensify the flavor? I’m wanting a caramelized taste, and thinking of mixing your brown sugar frosting with this. Ever tried it?
Kate says
I haven’t tried it, but I’d be interested to hear how it works out if you try it! =)
Shirley says
I tried your white buttercream frosting recipe and LOVED it. But, I was worried my sugar wouldn’t completely dissolve; so I heated the sugar with the milk to dissolve it, let it cool then added the flour. It worked great. Thank you for a delicious frosting that isn’t so sweet I have to scrape it off. I’m going to try this chocolate recipe next.
Kate says
Thank you! And thank you for your note about adding the sugar to the milk/flour mixture! I’ve received questions about that, but I hadn’t tried making it that way. I hope you enjoy the chocolate version, too! =)
Christi says
Can I pre make this frosting and store in refridgerator for a day or two?
Thanks in advance!
Kate says
Hi! Are you planning to pipe the frosting? It sets up in the fridge, so you’ll need to let it come up in temp a bit before you use it. It works fine to spread, but it’s a bit more difficult to pipe with after it’s been chilled. Hope that helps!
Vicki says
Can I use a mix of milk and heavy whipping cream?
Kate says
I haven’t tried using heavy whipping cream. However, I have heard from people who have tried using part heavy cream, and they’ve said that it worked out well for them. Hope that helps!
Isabelle Devigon-thevenot says
This butter cream is the most delicious ever,I put orange blossom instead of vanilla and it’s eventually.
Would just like to know if I could managed with even less sugar?
How icy do you think I could cut down?
Many thanks
Isabelle Devigon-thevenot says
I meant heavenly not eventually?
Kate says
Thank you so much! I’m not sure! I would probably try cutting 1/4 of a cup and then go from there. Hope that helps! =)
Emma says
IS this recipe good on a cake
Kate says
It is! It works well on cupcakes or on cakes. =)
Mark says
I felt 1/4 c of cocoa powder didn’t five the icing a true chocolate flavor. I had increased the cocoa powder to a full cup, mixed in in incraments, to release a sock it to ya out of the world chocolate taste.
Kate says
I’m glad that you were able to make it to your liking! If you like a rich chocolate flavor in your frosting, you might like my chocolate buttercream frosting too.
Stephanie says
My daughter was baking this weekend and I asked her to try this recipe for the frosting. We loved the frosting, even though it was a touch runny (she said she probably did not let the flour-milk paste cool sufficiently). We’ll be trying it again!
Would adding powderized dry fruit (like strawberries) to make a fruit flavored frosting work instead of the cocoa powder?
Kate says
That would certainly make a difference! I’m glad that you still enjoyed it though. =) I would suggest starting with my vanilla version of this frosting, and then you can add a powdered dry fruit to it to create a fruity frosting. Please let me know if you have any questions!
Erin O'Brien says
I am not sure about the chemistry but the flour/milk thing is essentially a really thick pudding with no cornstarch. Here’s what I would try if i wanted to experiment-
1 cup milk,
1 cup fresh or frozen strawberries or a half cup of prepared strawberry syrup
1/2 cup of flour
1 tsp lemon juice
Start with the white frosting recipe. Blend strawberries to a thin puree and heat in a saucepan until reduced to half cup. Combine milk and flour as per original recipe, then when hot, add strawberry puree, whipping constantly until the paste spoken of in the original recipe is achieved. Stir in lemon juice along with the vanilla extract, and beat with a spatula until smooth. This should get you a strawberry flavored paste.
Kate says
Thank you!
Karen says
This was EXACTLY what I was looking for- a light and fluffy DELICIOUS frosting. Worth the time and worked beautifully. Thank you.
Kate says
Yay!! I’m so glad! Thank you for coming back to comment! =)
Ilka Volkmann says
I’ve been making this icing for decades and I love it. If you add the vanilla to the butter mixture and combine the cooled flour mixture one heaping tablespoon at a time, beating well between additions, it will become fluffier and won’t separate.
For those who find most icings too sweet, the texture and fluffiness of this icing won’t suffer with a modest reduction of the sugar.
Kate says
Thank you for the tip! =)
Saniyah says
I am just learning the new tips and tricks, so i wanted to know if you could use unsalted butter
Kate says
You can. If you use unsalted butter, you will want to add a pinch or two of salt to the frosting. Hope that helps! =)
Elisha says
I was skeptical of this frosting recipe because it seemed very time intensive, and I’d never heard of making the flour/milk mixture to beat into a buttercream. But man, was it worth it! As someone else mentioned, the mixture was gritty after beating the butter, sugar and cocoa, but as soon as I added in the cooled flour/milk mixture it really came together. I didn’t have any trouble with separation, and it got light and fluffy almost immediately. For good measure I still beat it for a few minutes. Thanks for sharing – this will be a new favorite when I have time for the steps!
Kate says
I’m glad that it was worth the effort! =) It definitely takes longer than a regular buttercream. Thank you for coming back to comment!
Niki S says
I followed this step by step and my icing came out liquid. Not whipped cream like at all ?.
Kate says
Hey! Sorry to hear that! There are two things that could have gone wrong. First, either your butter or your milk/flour mixture was too warm. Second, the milk/flour mixture was too thin. It needs to be the consistency of a thick paste. If it’s too wet or watery, you’ll end up with liquid frosting. Hope that helps!