How to Make the World's Most Succulent Cake

Finished buttercream succulent cake | Erin Gardner | Bluprint

Succulent plants are fascinating to look at, in a desert or on a dessert. Seriously, just check out the piped-buttercream design above. The shapes! The colors!

There are so many reasons to pipe one of these edible terrariums. For one thing, buttercream succulents require far less precision than buttercream flowers, so they’re a good learner’s project. Plus these designs are more unisex than floral ones. Isn’t there a man in your life who deserves one of these wonderful cakes?

Buttercream Succulent Cake

Level: Intermediate

Buttercream Succulents | Erin Gardner | Bluprint

What You Need

  • American buttercream
  • Gel food coloring (we used Americolor)
  • Small bowls
  • Crumb-coated cake (we used a 6″ round cake)
  • Small icing spatula
  • Piping bags
  • Scissors
  • Couplers
  • Rose tip
  • Leaf tip
  • Small and medium round tips (we used Ateco 5 and Bakery Crafts 9)
  • Flower nail
  • Small parchment paper squares
  • Sheet pan or plate
  • Instructions

    1. Frost the Cake

    Creating the textured buttercream surface | Erin Gardner | Bluprint

    Tint enough gray buttercream to frost the whole cake. It’s OK if you end up with extra, because you can use it as a base for your succulent colors.

    Frost your crumb-coated cake. Drag a small icing spatula around the sides to create the textured lines. Set the cake aside at room temperature.

    2. Prep Your Succulent Colors

    Tinted buttercreams and piping tips | Erin Gardner | Bluprint

    Tint small amounts of buttercream in various succulent shades — gray, blue, green, purple, rust. Succulents come in so many different varieties, you can pretty much use whatever color you like! Here is a general breakdown of the color combos we used:

  • Forest green: leaf green, super black and chocolate brown
  • Lime green: sky blue and lemon yellow
  • Sage green: leaf green and chocolate brown
  • Rust: orange, chocolate brown and super black
  • Purple: super black, violet and fuchsia
  • Cut the tips off your piping bags (we used four bags) and fit them with couplers. Fill the bags with the different shades of buttercream as you go.

    3. Get Your Other Piping Materials Ready

    Pipe a dab of buttercream | Erin Gardner | Bluprint

    Prepare the flower nail before piping any of your succulents. Using a dab of buttercream, stick one of the parchment squares to the surface of the nail. Turn the nail upside down and press it against your tabletop to flatten the paper.

    Place on a parchment square | Erin Gardner | Bluprint

    Repeat this process before you pipe each succulent. Adding a parchment square lets you safely move each finished succulent to a cookie sheet to firm up.

    4. Pipe a Rose-Tip Succulent

    Buttercream Flower for Succulent Cake

    In the center of the floral nail, pipe a small mound of sage-green buttercream. Hold the piping bag so the skinny end of the rose tip is touching the parchment paper and the side of the tip is touching the piped mound.

    Piping a mound to start | Erin Gardner | Bluprint

    Apply a small amount of pressure while lifting the tip up along the side of the mound of buttercream.

    Piping the first petal| Erin Gardner | Bluprint

    Quickly bring the tip back down again, releasing pressure as the tip returns to the surface of the flower nail. It should look like you’ve piped a tiny rainbow, or a lowercase n, up and over about a third of the mound of buttercream. Repeat until petals have been piped all around the mounded center.

    Adding more layers of petals | Erin Gardner | Bluprint

    Continue piping layers of petals, making the petals a little longer with each layer. Offset petals when you begin a new layer, starting in the center of a petal from the row before. The peak of the rainbow or top of the n should intersect where two petals overlapped in the row before.

    5. Try Another Kind of Rose-Tip Succulent

    Green Buttercream Succulent

    This design is very similar to the first, with a slight change to the center.

    Piped coil center | Erin Gardner | Bluprint

    In your non-dominant hand, hold the flower nail between your thumb and pointer finger. With the same sage green, start with the fat end of your tip sitting vertically against the surface in the center of the flower nail.

    Adding petals | Erin Gardner | Bluprint

    Add layers of petals using the same method as for the first succulent. Keep the n’s short and squat to create a more compact effect.

    6. Create a Two-Toned Rose-Tip Succulent

    Brown and Green Buttercream Succulent

    To created a variegated petal effect, add stripes of buttercream to your piping bag before filling. We smeared a thin line of the rust buttercream up the center of the bag before filling the rest with the sage green. We placed the rose tip onto the coupler so the thin end of the tip was lined up with the stripe.

    Adding the first petal | Erin Gardner | Bluprint

    Pipe a mound of buttercream in the center of the nail. Hold the bag so the tip is almost horizontal, with the fat end of the tip touching the mound of buttercream.

    Adding a second petal | Erin Gardner | Bluprint

    You will be piping a similar rainbow or n motion, but this time you’ll move horizontally around the center of the mound. Repeat upward with more layers until the mound is covered with petals.

    7. Make a Leaf-Tip Succulent

    leaf tip succulent

    Fit a piping bag with a leaf tip, then fill with forest-green buttercream.

    Piping a mound | Erin Gardner | Bluprint

    Pipe a mound in the center of a flower nail. Hold the tip vertically against the surface of the flower nail, so the opening almost looks like a little mouth about to gobble up the piped mound of buttercream in the center. The pointed ends of the leaf tip should just almost be touching the center mound.

    Piping a leaf petal | Erin Gardner | Bluprint

    Repeat with more petals all the way around the base of the center mound. Add more layers of petals until the entire mound is covered. Make the petals shorter as you reach the top.

    Finished first layer | Erin Gardner | Bluprint

    You can try adding two colors to the piping bag for some color variation here as well.

    8. Whoa, Check Out this Round-Tip Plant

    Spiky Green Piped Buttercream Succulent

    Fit a piping bag with a medium-sized round tip, then fill with lime-green buttercream.

    Tall skinny mound of buttercream | Erin Gardner | Bluprint

    Pipe a tall, skinny mound of buttercream onto the floral nail. Hold the opening of the tip at the base of the mound against the surface of the buttercream.

    Piping a line | Erin Gardner | Bluprint

    Pipe a line of green frosting, pulling the tip away from the mound and releasing pressure as you go. Repeat until the entire mound is covered. Make the lines shorter as you reach the top.

    Place the tray with all your finished succulents in the fridge for at least 10 minutes or until they are chilled all the way through. This makes them easier to handle and arrange on top of the cake.

    9. Arrange Your Desert Garden

    Using an icing spatula | Erin Gardner | Bluprint

    Gently peel the parchment paper off one of your chilled succulents. Place it on top of your frosted cake. Keep the succulent in place with a dab of buttercream if the frosting on the cake has crusted. Use a small icing spatula to slide succulents into place.

    You can create a layered effect by piping a mound of buttercream before adding a succulent. Add even more realism by filling in the gaps and edges of your arrangement with smaller succulents piped directly onto the cake.

    Finished succulent ropes | Erin Gardner | Bluprint

    Fit a piping bag with a small round tip, then fill with the remaining dibs and dabs of green buttercream. Pipe a line over the edge of your cake, and go back over the line a few times to thicken it. Pipe small dots up and down the entire line, leaving spaces in between to create a vine effect. Repeat with more lines and dots.

    You can also pipe clusters of tiny dots to fill in some of the gaps between larger succulents, completing your arrangement by adding extra petals where needed.

    Stand back and admire your buttercream masterpiece!

    Share tips, start a discussion or ask one of our experts or other students a question.

    Make a comment:
    characters remaining

    6 Responses to “How to Make the World's Most Succulent Cake”

    1. fryd extracts

      Thanks for sharing . Amazing article

    2. fryd extracts

      Amazing article you have here . Thanks for sharing

    3. on up mushroom bars

      Thanks for finally writing about > Succulent Cake Buttercream Piping Tutorial | Craftsy | www.craftsy.com < Liked it!

    4. pixbet.c9m

      Valuable information. Lucky me I found your web site accidentally, and I'm stunned why this coincidence didn't came about earlier! I bookmarked it.

    5. mr.mushies

      I every time spent my half an hour to read this website's posts every day along with a mug of coffee.

    6. Samantha Macfarlane

      great tutorial! Thanks!