7-Minute Frosting (Foolproof Recipe)
This foolproof 7-Minute Frosting is a classic for a reason. It’s light, fluffy, easy to spread, and the perfect topping for just about any cake. Old-fashioned and never out of style, its smooth, marshmallow-like texture is sure to make you, your family, and your friends smile!

A Quick Look At The Recipe
- Recipe Name: 7-Minute Frosting
- Ready In: 7 minutes
- Serves: 4
- Calories: 278 cal
- Main Ingredients: 1 cup sugar, ¼ teaspoon salt, ½ teaspoon cream of tartar, 2 Egg whites, 3 tablespoons water, 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- Why You'll Love It: This failproof 7-minute frosting recipe is a light, smooth, and fluffy cake topping like marshmallow cream that melts in your mouth.
Light and Fluffy 7-Minute Frosting
If you’ve never had this old-fashioned frosting, you’ve been missing out! This recipe has been a timeless favorite since the early 1900s, and it’s easy to see why. It’s fluffy, glossy, and light-tasting icing reminiscent of meringue… only better and spreadable!
Growing up, I had it atop my grandmama’s coconut cake and my Aunt Sue’s famous pound cake, and boy, oh boy, it was always a treat!
There are many reasons to love this recipe, but most importantly, it’s quick to make, easy to spread, and doesn’t include a double boiler like so many others. It comes out perfect every time, so if you’re a beginner baker looking for a foolproof frosting recipe, you’re in the right place!
I’d recommend watching our quick video tutorial before you start your recipe so that you can get a nice visual!
Reader Rating
“Love love this recipe! My grandmother made this same recipe long time ago and it’s a family favorite!” – Julia

Recipe Ingredients
- Sugar
- 2 eggs (for the whites only)
- Cream of tartar (don’t substitute!)
- Salt
- Vanilla
Want to Jazz Up Your Frosting? Try These Ideas
- Use brown sugar instead of white sugar.
- Fold about 3 ounces of melted chocolate chips into the finished frosting. You want both products to be at the same temperature.
- Use a different extract flavor instead of vanilla, such as peppermint or almond.
- You can also torch the frosting like you would with this coffee pie with meringue.
How to Make 7 Minute Frosting
1. Add Ingredients to a Pot
Start by adding your sugar to a thick-bottomed sauce pot.

Pro tip: You’ll want to use a good stainless steel pot for this. Definitely not one with a nonstick coating, because we are going to beat it for several minutes and all that mess would flake off and get in your icing – so don’t do that!
Next, add the salt, then the cream of tartar and the egg whites.



Pro tip: When separating your eggs, do it in a separate bowl first. The icing won’t turn out if even a little bit of yolk gets mixed in with the whites. This way, if a yolk breaks, you won’t have to waste all your ingredients.
Finally, add the water. We don’t add the vanilla extract until the end.

2. Heat & Beat
Place this mixture over medium-low heat (about a 4 on my stove) and then turn the electric mixer on.
Beat this constantly for about 5 to 7 minutes, or until sugar dissolves and stiff peaks form.

A word of caution
Right now, you might be thinking, “Okay, this is crazy. This is never going to form stiff peaks. I’m sure this is as good as it will get. I might as well give up and just ice the cake.”
Don’t! This is one of those recipes that must be followed to the letter. If you go rogue, you get rogue results. Maybe they’ll be good, maybe they’ll be bad, but they won’t be on me. Stick with it, I promise it’ll work.


Look! We have stiffness! You can see how the frosting reaches and maintains the trail left by the beaters rather than sliding back into a glop. This is what we want.
3. Fold in the Vanilla
Now add in your vanilla extract and fold it in. Maintain that perfect trail left by the beaters and keep any icing from sliding back down to smooth. Remove this from the heat and have a little taste of it – pure marshmallow heaven.


Ice your cake with this 7-minute frosting, and you’re good to go.

Oh my goodness, how light and fluffy does that look?
If you’re looking for other foolproof frosting recipes, check out my creamy chocolate frosting or royal icing recipe.
Does this frosting need to be refrigerated?
No, you don’t need to refrigerate this frosting! I’ve found that a cake frosted with this recipe will be perfectly fine covered on the counter for up to two days. After that, the frosting will start to melt into the cake. I suggest making and frosting the cake the day you are going to serve it for the best results.

7-Minute Frosting FAQs
The main difference between these frostings is that Swiss meringue buttercream is cooked, then mixed off the heat. Meanwhile, this frosting is mixed as it cooks on the stovetop.
If you just toss that granulated sugar into your egg whites, it won’t dissolve properly. You’ll end up with a gritty frosting, and nobody wants that! By taking a minute to make a simple syrup first, you ensure that sugar melts down nice and smooth, giving you that silky, fluffy frosting we’re aiming for. It’s a small step that makes a world of difference.
It’s normal for this 7-minute frosting to have tiny sugar crystals mixed amid the fluffy velvet cream. This is part of the frosting’s texture, so don’t worry, you haven’t done anything wrong! The crystals add to its unique, fluffy, velvet-cream consistency. Just close your eyes and enjoy the smoothness of this marshmallow fluff-like icing as it melts in your mouth.
Did you try this 7-minute frosting? I’d love to hear how it turned out for you! Please share your experience and any sweet stories by leaving a rating and comment below.

Ingredients
- 1 cup sugar
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- ½ teaspoon cream of tartar *do not substitute
- 2 Egg whites
- 3 tablespoons water
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
- Combine all of the ingredients except the vanilla in a stainless steel heavy-bottomed saucepan.1 cup sugar, ¼ teaspoon salt, ½ teaspoon cream of tartar, 2 Egg whites, 3 tablespoons water
- Place mixture over medium-low heat and beat with an electric hand mixer constantly for 5-7 minutes, or until icing is fluffy and stiff peaks form when the beaters are removed.
- Remove from heat and stir in the vanilla. Ice the cooled cake.1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Notes
- You’ll need two recipes of this icing to ice a layer cake. Fortunately, this recipe doubles beautifully, so there’s no need to make two separate batches, just double it and make it all at once.
- If you want to jazz up your frosting, here are some fun additions:
- Use brown sugar instead of white sugar.
- Fold about 3 ounces of melted chocolate chips into the finished frosting. You want both products to be at the same temperature.
- Use a different extract flavor rather than vanilla, like peppermint or almond extract.
- You can also torch the frosting like you would meringue.
Nutrition
“Peoples s’posed to be nice. That’s just the way you do things.”
~Grandmama

Hey, just wondering if I’d be able to toast this frosting, using a kitchen torch, without it melting or doing something funky.
I’m looking for a simpler 7-MInute Frosting recipe that isn’t such a pain in the *** ^_^ and I love it when the frosting has that campfire-marshmallow taste and look to it.
Thanks!
You likely could but I’m afraid I really don’t know as my husband gets nervous when I mention using torches in the house 😉
I’ve brulee’d this iceing in chocolate cupcakes and the results were perfection
Hi Christy. I am looking for a recipe for my wedding cake that won’t be to sweet. Ideally suited to being frozen also as I need to be away from home just before the wedding. My mom had a great layer cake recipe that has cream of wheat between the layers. It’s not sweet at all which is great. Do you think this icing would work for me and if not can you recommend something else. Thanks for your help. I will be tirring her white cake with my chocolate cake.
Thank you very very very much I tried it and it is amazing
I am so glad to hear that you liked it Sara!!
This recipe whips up well, but I was not a fan of the flavor. Tasted too strongly of cream of tartar and salt, even after following the directions exactly. I had to add more sugar and add light corn syrup to make it somewhat edible.
When you double the recipe do you double the cooking time too? Or is it still 5-7 minutes?
From my experience it cooks in the same time.
Hi Christy,
I’m not sure what I’m doing wrong… when I’ve made recipes (similar to this) in the past, the frosting “shrinks” on the cake in a couple of hours. I’ll pile it up on the cake and by the next day it’s half as much? It tastes amazing, but it’s always been pretty much make it and serve immediately.
Does your do that? What can I do to make it more stable? I can’t wait to try your recipe this weekend! Making a coconut cake for my favorite sister in law!
Seems like possibly not enough sugar, not beaten long enough or too cool temperature.
I just made this frosting for a very special cake. Coconut cake with 7 minute frosting was my mom’s favorite cake. She passed away last October and today would have been her 83rd birthday. I made a cake in her memory and it looks beautiful! I have never made a 7 minute frosting so I was a bit apprehensive but it worked as written. Thank you for posting this simple yet elegant recipe.
I am so sorry for your loss Annita. I am glad the icing turned out and I hope you enjoyed the cake in honor of your Mom. And the walk down memory lane.
Can you make chocolate icing by adding cocoa?? How much would you add to your recipe?
I’m sure you could but I’ve never tried it so you’ll have to experiment. Please report back, sounds delicious!
You would have to add the cocoa or melted chocolate after the frosting is done as the egg whites won’t beat otherwise. I learned this the hard way making a chocolatey runny mess that I turned into cake adding more ingredients. Not one to waste. ☺