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Receta Southern Style Coconut Cake with a Whipped Coconut Cream Cheese Frosting
by Foodiewife

I am a life long member of the "I love coconut" fan club. I must really love coconut cake, because I've already shared three different coconut cake recipes on my blog (starting in 2009). My favorite cake is white cake. Hands down. End of story. I prefer an all egg-white cake, or it's not a genuine white cake. Am I right?

But, did I really need another coconut cake recipe? Maybe. Maybe not. But, when you have five egg whites leftover from a lemon custard recipe, white cake seems like a good way to use them. Coconut seems to be synonymous with Easter treats, and I hadn't baked a cake in a while.

We were having dinner guests, so this seemed like the perfect time to bake a cake. I'm loving this brand of USA cake pans, and I just got these square ones. I wanted a cake recipe that wouldn't be too fussy to make-- but I wanted a lot of coconut flavor. I'm a fan of LorAnn oils and flavors and their coconut flavor is something I keep on hand. King Arthur unbleached cake flour is also a "must" in my pantry, because I always get tender cakes when I use it.

The batter isn't complicated, either. The dry ingredients are measured into a mixing bowl, then butter and coconut milk is mixed in. The wet ingredients are whole milk, eggs whites and coconut flavor and a little pure vanilla extract.

I prepped the pans with non-stick spray and lined the bottom with parchment paper. The recipe said to bake the cakes for 35-40 minutes. Erring on the side of caution, I always set two timers-- one to check 5 minutes earlier. Ding! The cakes were baked at 30 minutes.

The reason I love these cake pans so much, is that the cakes baked evenly and released without any problems. Whew!

There are two versions of frosting, for this cake. First, a buttercream frosting is made with a combination of cream cheese and butter. Win! Let's up the ante a bit. How about making a filling with real whipped cream, and some of the buttercream whipped into it?

Uh-huh. Brilliant. It's silky and billowy and just the right balance of sweet.

The final step is to frost the remaining cake with the cream cheese/buttercream frosting...and you need coconut, of course.

You definitely want to refrigerate this cake for at least two hours, before serving.

Here's why: The cake slice on the left isn't chilled as much. You can see that the filling is softer and the cake crumb is very loose. The slice on the right is chilled, and slightly brought to room temperature. The "crumb" is a bit tighter and the filling is set.

TASTING NOTES: The cake was super moist, thank goodness. I loved the beautiful white color, and the sweetness wasn't overpowering. In fact, this cake had the perfect balance of coconut flavor without being over-the-top sweet. The filling was my favorite part because the whipped cream toned down the sugary sweetness of buttercream frosting. How can anyone not love a cream cheese/buttercream frosting? There's that subtle tartness of the cream cheese and the crunch of sweetened coconut. NOTE: This time I chose not to toast the coconut, only because I wanted a pure white cake. If you want toasted coconut cake, go for it!

In case you are wondering if you can make these into cupcakes-- I would say "yes", but you'd have to choose which frosting you'd want to use. Or, you could pipe in a filling and then frost them-- but that sounds like a lot of work.

Here are my other three coconut cake recipes:

Here's the recipe: