Vanilla Chiffon Cake
Vanilla Chiffon Cake! “Chiffon” is a great word. It sounds pretty and it conjures up images of softness, airiness and luxury, like the namesake fabric. Those are all lovely traits for a cake, no? Who doesn’t want a cake that is soft, airy and luxurious?

Table of contents
What is Chiffon Cake?
What makes chiffon cake unique is the fact that it’s sort-of a cross between a rich buttery cake and an airy sponge cake. It’s got the best of both worlds.
The lightness comes from first whipping up the yolks with the other ingredients and then folding in whipped egg whites. There’s also a generous dose of baking powder in the batter to help expand all those air bubbles.
When baked in an ungreased tube pan, this cake puffs up super-high and is light as a cloud.
Because there’s oil in the cake, it stay soft even when refrigerated.
That means this is the perfect base for cakes that require refrigeration. One of my favorite ways to use vanilla chiffon cake is to make a spectacular cream-filled Strawberry Tall Cake. You could also fill this cake with light and airy Fresh Strawberry Mousse.
Ingredients

Ingredient Notes
- Cake Flour – Low protein cake flour makes a very tender cake. I prefer bleached cake flour for the softest crumb, but unbleached cake flour will work.
- Oil – The oil not only adds moisture to the cake, but also coats the flour which prevents gluten formation. Oil stays liquid when chilled, so the cake will stay soft, even when refrigerated.
- Eggs – The eggs form the structure for the cake. Since the eggs are whisked the cake is very light.
- Baking Powder – It looks like a lot of baking powder in the recipe. But this cake needs to rise high in the oven. The structure from the eggs will support the air in in the cake and the baking powder will expand those bubbles for the lightest cake.
Process Photos
See the recipe card for detailed measurements and instructions.

- Combine the eggs, oil, water and in a mixing bowl.
- Mix until the ingredients are emulsified.
- Add the dry ingredients and mix to combine.

- Increase the speed to high and whip for 1 minute. Set the bowl aside.
- Whip the whites with sugar until the reach full peak.
- Fold the whites into the batter.

- Spread the batter into the pan. Bake until the middle of the cake springs back with lightly pressed.
- Cool the cake in the tube pan upside down so it doesn’t collapse.
- If you bake the batter in regular round pans cool right side up.
FAQs about Vanilla Chiffon Cake:
Chiffon cakes are traditionally baked in an angel food cake pan. The batter can also be baked in two 8 inch x 3 inch round pans to make a layer cake. This recipe can also be baked into a dozen cupcakes (use cupcake liners).
If the cake is baked in a tube pan, treat it like an angel food cake and cool it upside down. Cool layer cakes in the pans.
If you baked the cake in a tube pan and greased the pan the cake can sink. If you took the cake out of the pan before it was completely cooled, or if you didn’t cool it upside down, the cake could sink. If you overwhip the eggs your cake won’t rise as high as it could.
A chiffon cake will stay fresh at room temperature (if it doesn’t have a filling) for 3-4 days.
A cake without filling can be stored at room temperature for 3-4 days. If the cake has a perishable filling, it should be refrigerated.
Yes, because it’s made with oil instead of butter, chiffon cake will be soft even if refrigerated.
Yes, wrap the cake in two layers of plastic wrap and freeze for up to 3 months. You can also freeze individually wrapped slices. Defrost in the wrapping at room temperature.
You also should try my Lemon Chiffon cake and Chocolate Chiffon cake recipes.
I have so many cake recipe for you to try. Vanilla Buttermilk Cake, White Cake, Vanilla Butter Cake, Chocolate Butter Cake, Old Fashioned Chocolate Cake, Genoise sponge cake, Angel Food Cake and Chocolate Genoise.


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Vanilla Chiffon Cake
Ingredients
- 3 ½ oz vegetable oil (½ cup)
- 6 large eggs (room temp, separated)
- 6 oz water (¾ cup)
- 1 tablespoon vanilla extract
- 10 oz cake flour (2 ¼ cups, see note)
- 12 oz granulated sugar (1 ½ cups, divided)
- 1 tablespoon baking powder
- ½ teaspoon table salt
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 325 °F. For a traditional chiffon cake, use an ungreased 10" tube pan. If you want to make a layer cake line two 8”x3" cake pans with parchment paper or butter and flour the bottom of the pans only.
- Combine 3 ½ oz vegetable oil, 6 egg yolks, 6 oz water and 1 tablespoon vanilla extract in a mixer bowl. Mix on medium speed until well combined.
- Sift 10 oz cake flour with 1 cup of the sugar, 1 tablespoon baking powder and ½ teaspoon table salt. With the mixer on low, add the dry ingredients to yolk mixture. Whip on high speed for 1 minute, then set aside
- Whip 6 egg whites on medium speed to soft peak. Gradually add the remaining ½ cup sugar, increase the speed to medium high and whip to full peak. Fold the whites into the yolk mixture in three increments.
- If making a layer cake, divide the batter between the two pans. If you're using a tube pan, pour all the batter into the pan. Bake until the middle of the cake springs back with lightly pressed, 30-35 minutes for the layers or about 50-60 minutes for the tube pan.
- Cool the cake completely in the pan. If using a tube pan cool the pan upside down.
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Hi
Done this cake with amount ingredients for a 7′ tube pan.
Can I double check that the amount of baking powder is actually 1 tablespoon?
It seems a lot. I have not found any chiffon cake with similar amounts of ingredients having a tablespoon of baking powder.
My cake has basically exploded!
Thank you
I halved the ingredients and left out quite a bit of batter to fill just over half pan. I couldn’t edit my initial post
Yes, I’ve made this cake many times and the amounts are correct. If you read through the post I note that I use a generous amount of baking powder to get a big lift along with the whipped eggs. I do this purposely to make a very, very light crumb. What height is your 7″ tube pan? The cake was tested in a 10″ angel food cake pan that is 4″ tall. The volume of that pan is 16 cups. The volume of a 7″ x 3″ tube pan would be 6 cups. So you’d need just 1/3 the batter of the full recipe in that pan.
(Posting a new comment because I don’t see a way to edit my first one.) I’m seeing in the comments that it actually is intended for layer pans with 3″ sides. So the pans listed are probably correct after all. Noting the layer pan height on the recipe would be helpful. 🙂
I’ve edited the instructions to note the pan height.