
This is not only one of the best tasting frostings, but its also great for decorating cupcakes with swirls and covering cakes. The Italian meringue buttercream. I must say though that the cupcakes frosting on the photo did cause me problems, as I had to make it over five times to get it right.
My problem was, when I was adding the sugar syrup to the egg whites. It turned into a milky soup… that have never happend to me before and the only thing that made it ok was simply to buy new fresh egg whites and start over again with the sugar syrup. So it can be a bit tricky to make, but when it’s made it is so delicious.
Italian meringue buttercream (IMBC).
Makes 8 cups.
1/2 cup of cold water (120ml)
2 1/4 cups of caster sugar (530ml / 430gr)
1 cup of egg whites (about 6 egg whites) I use pasturized eggwhites only!
1 1/2 pound of soft unsalted butter (680gr)
1 tsp of vanilla extract
Kitchen stand mixer
First set the timer on 7 mins & pour the eggwhites into the kitchen mixer with whisk attachment.
Step 1:
Place sugar & water in a casserole and bring it to the boil and start the timer. Boil it on medium/low temperature. If the syrup starts to darken quickly turn down the temperature a little.

Step 2:
When the sugar syrup has been boiling for 5 mins. Start the kitchen mixer on full speed and whisk the egg whites for the last 2 mins. When the timer is up the sugar syrup is done. With the mixer still going on high speed slowly pour the hot syrup down the side of the mixing bowl. Discard any leftover syrup in the casserole. Be very carefull not to get burned on the hot syrup.

Step 3:
When all sugar syrup has been added it should look thick and fluffy. Stop the mixer and change for the paddle attachment. To avoid meringue splatter all over your kitchen place a clean kitchen towel over the mixer. Set the timer on 10 mins and beat on high speed. This is how long it takes in my mixer for the mixing bowl to be cool to the touch.
After 10 mins. You should now have a lovely thick meringue like on the photo.

Step 4:
Now its time to add the butter. Start the mixer on high speed and with a knife cut pieces of the butter and add it to the meringue. When all butter is added it will not take long for mixture to turn into nice thick smoothe buttercream. When that happend slow down the mixer and add 1 tsp of vanilla extract. Stop the mixer and scrape down the bowl and start again. I do this two times. You should now have a bowl full of lovely Italian meringue buttercream.

Note: If the IMBC wont combine just continue to whip whip whip. It will eventually get smooth. If you are still having problems, place both bowl with paddle attachment into the refrigerator and let it “cool” down a bit and then whip it again.
You can easily freeze any left over IMBC. Just remember to let the cold IMBC come back to room temperature before you placing it in the mixer to get it smooth.
Flavour options:
Raspberry: 1/4 cup of raspberry puré or more pr. 2 cups of IMBC
Lemon Curd: 1/2 cup of Lemon Curd pr. 2 cups of IMBC
Chocolate: 2-3 oz of melted chocolate, cooled down to 98 F, pr. 1 cup of IMBC
Coffee: 2 tbsp of instant coffee mixed with 2 tbsp of warm (not boiling) water pr 3 cups of IMBC
In my article “Cupcake decorating part 4″ you can learn how to make beautiful swirls on you cupcakes using Italian meringue buttercream.
You can also visit my tutorial section if you want to learn how to make other icings and frostings.
See a video from CakeLove making IMBC here and see how Dyann Bakes make Swiss meringue buttercream here.
Happy Caking!
Louise













476 comments
karan says:
Oct 26, 2012
how long does this icing keep
Louise says:
Oct 29, 2012
I keep mine for 1 week in the refrigerator. Longer if you freeze it. It is important that you let it come back to room temperature. I then take about a cup or more of the icing and gently heat it for a few seconds in the microwave. Add this to the rest and whip it until smooth.
Cloudy says:
Oct 25, 2012
I know that it is buttercream but it always tastes like sweetened butter, it pipes beautifully but I just wish it didn’t taste like you put a heap of sugar into a pound of butter and whipped it. Beautiful pictures BTW.
Heather says:
Dec 21, 2012
Cloudy, I thought the same thing so halved the butter and used shortening to fill the 1 1/2 pound requirement. The consistency was still beautiful, still buttery, but not overwhelmingly. This is my very favorite buttercream, even though it is a bit more labor-intensive than most!
saheda says:
Oct 17, 2012
Can I use meringue powder instead of egg whites?
Louise says:
Oct 17, 2012
You can but I would then recomend you to use another recipe as I have not made this with meringue powder. Try this:http://www.kingarthurflour.com/recipes/italian-buttercream-recipe
Aliena says:
Sep 19, 2012
I have not tried this recipe but just wanted to make sure. Don’t the egg whites start ‘cooking’ when hot boiling sugar syrup is added?
Louise says:
Oct 17, 2012
No, you will not get poached egg whites
Caroline says:
Sep 19, 2012
Brilliant recipe! My first ever IMBC… Will use this again! Thank you…
Kristyn says:
Sep 1, 2012
The instructions for this were not necessarily the best. I had to make this 3 times and look at someone else’s site for advice before I got it right. My IMBC was turning soupy because when you whip the egg whites you need to whip them to stiff peaks, not just for 2 minutes. I also added a pinch of cream of tartar to the egg whites before whipping. The sugar syrup needs to be at 248 degrees Fahrenheit before adding it to the stiff egg whites. Hope this helps.
Jackie says:
Aug 31, 2012
Sometimes the mixtures gets a bit wet and curdled. To fix that, mix it on med/high for quite some time. Eventually it will form a perfect consistency.
Iain Hunt says:
Aug 24, 2012
Love this recipe! I halved all the ingredients bar the butter and when it came time to add the butter I had it all cubed ready. I added each piece until the mixture started to pull together and look like buttercream and then I added a bit more just for good measure!
Thank you very much! I will be using this again and again