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A 3-layer chocolate cake, with Oreo buttercream, a chocolate drip, and even more Oreos make a delectable & showstopping Oreo drip cake!

The dripping Oreo Drip Cake

Oreo favourites

One of my dad’s colleagues recently had their last day at work, and because she has been one of my most enthusiastic taste testers (and just the loveliest person ever), I wanted to bake something properly special. Naturally… that meant a drip cake. You know I can never resist making a big showstopper, especially for an occasion.

And even though I didn’t actually get a slice of the finished cake (tragic, I know), I did “accidentally” taste-test several spoonfuls of the buttercream during decorating. Purely for quality control, obviously. The reviews from the office were glowing… apparently it disappeared within minutes!

I’ve been itching to make another Oreo bake for a while, and turning it into a full drip cake felt perfect. The Oreo buttercream alone is enough to convert anyone.

A whole Oreo Drip Cake

The sponge

I used the same idea for the cake from my Salted Caramel Drip Cake and my Biscoff Drip Cake, just using less self-raising flour, and adding in some cocoa powder to make it chocolatey and rich. The layers bake up soft, moist and sturdy enough to build a tall cake without collapsing, exactly what you want for a drip cake.

  • Butter – unsalted butter or baking spread at room temperature is the best way to go for the perfect fluffy sponge
  • Sugar – for most of my sponge recipes I use light brown sugar but you can use caster, golden caster or dark brown sugar
  • Eggs – 8x medium eggs roughly translate as 400g of egg weight, most of my recipes run on medium eggs unless specially stated otherwise
  • Flour – self-raising flour will provide the rise needed for three beautiful tiers of delicious sponge
  • Cocoa powder – I replace 75g of flour with cocoa powder to give that rich delicious chocolate flavour throughout the sponge as well as the buttercream frosting
  • Baking powder – an optional extra to provide a lighter texture to the sponge, many have said they don’t like adding the extra as it is already in the flour, I will leave that choice to you.
  • Milk – If you’re mixture is slightly thicker than desired you can use whole milk to gradually loosen the mixture, use one tbsp at a time!

I know three-layer cakes often look a bit intimidating, but they truly aren’t any more difficult than two layers. They just LOOK ten times more impressive, the wow factor alone makes all the effort worth it and the taste matches the presentation perfectly.

A slice missing of an Oreo Drip Cake

Oreo buttercream

For the frosting, I stuck with the same Oreo buttercream recipe I use for my Oreo cupcakes because it’s simply perfect, fluffy, sweet, creamy, and packed with Oreo biscuit flavour. I used 300g of butter and 650g of icing sugar, then blitzed an entire pack of Oreos into a fine crumb and mixed them in. It makes enough to fill the layers, coat the outside, pipe on top, and still have a little leftover to sneak spoonfuls of.

The texture is dreamy. There’s something about adding the crushed biscuits that makes it so easy to smooth around the cake, I honestly don’t know why, but I’m not questioning it. This will boost the presentation of your cake from standard to spectacular, a smooth coating of Oreo buttercream really will look like an expensive showstopper by the time you’re finished.

A hand placing an Oreo on an Oreo Drip Cake

The drip

I tried a new method of doing the drip on this cake, by using oil. I’ve seen people having a few problems making the ganache drip as ganache can be quite temperamental, so after reading up on the oil method I had to try it.

You only use between 1-2tbsp of oil for this amount of chocolatey, and you can’t detect it once its added. It just makes the chocolate runnier, and easier to use, whilst keep its shine. You can just use melted chocolate, but often this can be harder to use as its thicker, and it well set very solid. I’m surprised I didn’t eat some of it myself, but I resisted to make sure it look better.

If you wanted to use a ganache however you can, simply use 150g of dark chocolate and 150g of double cream! (Read about the ganache drip here… Caramac Cake)

The top of an Oreo Drip Cake

Decoration

Once the drip had set slightly, I piped little swirls of Oreo buttercream around the top and added whole Oreos for decoration. A sprinkle of crushed Oreos finishes it off, because when you think you’ve added enough Oreos… always add a few more.

This cake is bold, chocolatey, and cookies-and-cream heaven. It’s fun to make, fun to decorate, and an absolute delight to present. I adored every minute of making this one, and the finished result brought so many smiles. I hope you love it as much as my dad’s colleagues did!

A fork cutting into an Oreo Drip Cake

Two tier versions

I get asked all the time on my blog and social media if this cake can be made smaller, perfect for a more intimate family celebration or birthday. The good news? Absolutely! With a few simple tweaks, you can create a slightly smaller Oreo cake that’s just as delicious and impressive.

For a smaller version, I recommend using two 8″cake tins. You can adjust the ingredients as follows:

  • 300g butter
  • 300g sugar
  • 245g flour
  • 55g cocoa powder
  • 1.5 tsp baking powder
  • 6 medium eggs
  • 3 tbsp milk

Baking time may increase slightly, around 5–10 minutes longer, depending on your oven and tin. For the decoration, you can use roughly two-thirds of the original buttercream and toppings, which still makes for a gorgeous, indulgent cake.

This scaled-down version is perfect for smaller gatherings and still delivers all the Oreo, chocolate, and cookies-and-cream goodness of the full-sized drip cake. It’s a flexible recipe that adapts beautifully for any celebration

A whole Oreo Drip Cake

Tips & tricks

  • You obviously don’t have to make straight edged buttercream if you don’t want to, but I just like the look of it. You can slather it on, and it’ll still taste damn delicious.
  • However, if you do want to make it like this, I seriously recommend using a metal scraper for the decoration of the buttercream, and the disposable piping bags.. I wouldn’t be anywhere without them.
  • All of the decorations are completely optional , but I love this style of cake.
  • This cake will last in an airtight container for 3 days.

A slice taken from an Oreo Drip Cake

A fork cutting into an Oreo Drip Cake

Oreo Drip Cake!

A 3-layer Chocolate Cake, with Oreo Buttercream, a Chocolate Drip, and Even More Oreos Make a Delectable & Showstopping Oreo Drip Cake!
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Category: Dessert
Type: Cake
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cook Time: 30 minutes
Cooling/Decorating Time: 2 hours 30 minutes
Total Time: 3 hours 10 minutes
Servings: 15 People
Author: Jane's Patisserie

Ingredients

Cake Ingredients

  • 400 g unsalted butter/baking spread
  • 400 g light brown sugar
  • 400 g eggs (roughly 8 medium)
  • 325 g self raising flour
  • 75 g cocoa powder
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • 4 tbsp whole milk

Oreo Buttercream Frosting

  • 300 g unsalted butter (room temp - not baking spread)
  • 650 g icing sugar
  • 154 g Oreos (1 pack)
  • 2-5 tbsps whole milk

Decoration

  • 175 g dark chocolate
  • 1-2 tbsps vegetable/sunflower oil
  • Oreos
  • crushed Oreos

Instructions

For the Cake!

  • Heat the oven to 180ºc/160ºc fan and line three 20cm/8inch cake tins with baking parchment – leave to the side.
  • In a stand mixer, beat together the butter and light brown sugar until light and fluffy. Add in the flour, cocoa powder, beaten eggs, baking powder and beat again briefly till combined – try not to over beat the mixture! If its really thick, mix in the whole milk to loosen. 
  • Divide the mixture between the three tins and smooth it over – bake for 25-30 minutes until a skewer comes out clean when poked, and when the cake springs back.
  •  Once baked, leave the cake to cool in the tin for 10 minutes, and then remove and leave to cool fully on a wire rack. If the cake has domed slightly, leave the cake to cool upside down to flatten it slightly.

For the Decoration!

  • In a stand mixer, beat the room temperature butter with an electric mixer until it is smooth and loose and then beat in the icing sugar 1/3 at a time until its fully combined. Keep beating the buttercream for a few minutes so it starts to get fluffier and lighter.
  • In a food processor, blitz the packet of Oreo’s to a fine crumb, and add into the buttercream. Beat the buttercream again till smooth, and use the Milk to loosen it to a smooth consistency.
  • Once the cakes are cooled, put the first layer on the serving plate spread some of the buttercream onto the top of the first layer, add the second cake on top, and then top again with some of buttercream and then add the final sponge layer. Only use about 2 tbsps of buttercream per layer so that you have enough to decorate with!
  • With the leftover buttercream, as you can see, I covered the sides (and top) too! Do a first layer of around the edge and top using a large metal scraper and refrigerate for 10 minutes. Repeat again with a slightly thicker layer of buttercream. 
  • I slather it on all over using an off -set spatula, and then run the metal scraper round until its smooth. If the Oreo’s were blitzed to a really fine crumb like you need, the buttercream can still be smooth around the edges even though there is biscuit in the mix!
  • Once finished, melt the dark chocolate in a heat proof bowl until melted. Add in 1tbsp of oil and beat till smooth, continue to add oil till you get to a drippy consistency. I used 1+1/2 tbsps total. Using disposable piping bags, pipe it round the edge of the cake, edging over slight bits to create the drip. 
  • You don’t need to use too much per drip as it’ll drop quite far down by itself! Fill in the top in with the rest of the chocolate so the top is also covered. Refrigerate the cake for about 15 minutes.
  • Using some left over buttercream, pipe little rosettes of buttercream onto the top and add a whole oreo – sprinkle on some crushed oreos and huzzah! You’re done! Enjoy!

Notes

  • You obviously don’t have to make straight edged buttercream if you don’t want to, but I just like the look of it! You can slather it on, and it’ll still taste damn delicious.
  • However, if you do want to make it like this, I seriously recommend using a metal scraper for the decoration of the buttercream, and the disposable piping bags.. I wouldn’t be anywhere without them!
  • All of the decorations are completely optional – but I love this style of cake! To make a smaller version of the cake, use:
    • Two 8″cake tins
    • 300g butter
    • 300g sugar
    • 245g flour
    • 55g cocoa powder
    • 1.5tsps baking powder
    • 6 medium eggs
    • 3 tbsps of milk
    • And it might take an extra 5-10 minutes to bake and use 2/3 of the decoration recipes!
  • This cake will last in an airtight container for 3 days!

346 Comments

  1. Vicky Fennell on January 17, 2018 at 4:34 pm

    Hi,
    I’m wanting to bake this tomorrow but i’m worried that it wont fit into any container I have. What is the approx height of the cake?
    Thank You

    • Jane's Patisserie on January 20, 2018 at 8:07 pm

      Sorry this is a bit late – but probably about 6 inches or more depending on how high your sponges come out!



  2. Donna on January 16, 2018 at 8:43 pm

    Hi Jane, can you freeze the sponges?

  3. Holly on January 4, 2018 at 10:55 am

    Hi,
    Just wondering if the larger cake serves about 12-15 people roughly how many would the smaller version serve? Thanks x

  4. Tricia on January 3, 2018 at 7:43 pm

    Hi Jane! I’m planning to make this cake for my brother’s birthday. I need help though as I don’t have any self raising flour available, only all purpose flour. How could i substitute? Thanks for your help!!!

    • Jane's Patisserie on January 3, 2018 at 8:19 pm

      Hiya! Are you in the US? Do you have cake flour?



  5. Amy O on December 31, 2017 at 6:02 pm

    Just made this for my son’s 18th birthday – complete success – thanks so much for the fab recipe!

  6. Emily on November 24, 2017 at 6:17 am

    What if I can’t fit all 3 cakes on the same shelf?

  7. Sarah McHugh on November 16, 2017 at 8:26 pm

    I’ve made this cake about five time it is always a winner!!! I’ve just came on here to get the chocolate drip recipe as found your one of using oil set far better than cream. I’m currently making a kinder drip cake using your recipe and must say that buttercream is the best ever!!!!
    I love your site and the variety – also your standard buttercream mixture! Before i found your site i found that the consistency of
    my buttercream was never right however your recipe is perfect. So keep up the great work and keep the srummy recipes coming 🙂

  8. Cara on November 9, 2017 at 12:07 pm

    I made this for my boyfriends birthday and it tasted amazing! the only thing was the buttercream was incredibly sticky so when i applied it to the cake, it was taking parts of the cake off. and idea what could have gone wrong for next time?

    • Jane's Patisserie on November 9, 2017 at 12:08 pm

      Most likely your Buttercream was too thick still as it should glide on easier than that. Try adding in 1-2tbsps of boiling water and beating so it’s really smooth. It’s also easier to use a large tool to help spread it on to prevent a problem.



  9. Claire Howarth on October 29, 2017 at 12:19 am

    Hi, I was wondering if you had tried this frosting with golden Oreos instead of chocolate Oreos? I’dm thinking of trying this with a a vanilla sponge. Thanks in advance.

    • Jane's Patisserie on October 29, 2017 at 1:01 pm

      Have a look at my custard cream cake for an idea – if does work in the same way, and would work for this! The Buttercream does tend to look lumpy though rather than like Oreo buttercream.



  10. Haffajaffa on October 28, 2017 at 11:01 pm

    Hi Jane,
    I have found that my chocolate drip often starts to bloom after a few days which doesn’t look very pretty. How would I stop this from happening?

    • Jane's Patisserie on October 28, 2017 at 11:03 pm

      Do you mean the chocolate turns white? That’s down to the sugar crystals in the chocolate usually being melted too harshly. Try melting slower, and more gently perhaps? Often depends on brand of chocolate as well.



  11. Laura on October 18, 2017 at 2:31 pm

    Hello, would you be able to convert the weighted measurements into cups and things since I do not have a scale for cooking. Thank you

    • Jane's Patisserie on October 18, 2017 at 3:21 pm

      I’m afraid I can’t as I find cup measurements really unreliable. It’s worth googling the converts.



  12. Hasina on October 13, 2017 at 7:21 pm

    Hi, I would like to know how much of the ingredients I would need in order to make this cake to serve 10 people.

    • Jane's Patisserie on October 14, 2017 at 3:41 pm

      I would use the same amount or make the smaller version thats noted in the Tips and Ideas section.



  13. Mary jenkins on October 9, 2017 at 2:12 pm

    Hi this Oreo cake I have made a few times everyone loves it

  14. Janice on October 1, 2017 at 3:10 pm

    Would I be able to make this cake 4 layers for more height? X

    • Jane's Patisserie on October 3, 2017 at 2:31 pm

      Of course. bake the mixture into two tins, and split each cake in half. or increase the mixture for another layer.



  15. Sophie Leachman on September 1, 2017 at 2:17 pm

    Hi Jane

    I’m wanting to make a drip cake for my Mum’s birthday, i wanted to make it a white choc drip rather than dark, would this still work the same with the oil?
    Also if you use a turntable how do you get your cake from the turntable to a cake board or whatever?

    As others have said your recipes are fab and so easy to follow. I made your Rolo cheesecake a couple of weeks ago! Yum!

    Thank you xx

    • Jane's Patisserie on September 1, 2017 at 3:20 pm

      It would be much less oil – maybe a teaspoon instead? And I use a cake lift, or I put it on the board to decorate it in the first place, and put that on the turntable. X



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