Perfect Pumpkin Roll Cake
Soft, moist and stuffed with real pumpkin flavor, a perfect pumpkin roll cake is well within your reach with the right tools and technique. In todays video, I demonstrate just how to achieve it.
Ideally, you want your pumpkin roll without any unsightly cracks or tears and the right ratio of cake to filling. The cake should have a soft and tender crumb and when you cut into the log with a sharp serrated knife, {wiping between each swipe} it should be compactly coiled without the filling oozing out everywhere. Pinterest also tells me that you can easily cut into a cake with floss. Thanks Pinterest.
Today, I show you precisely how this is possible to achieve in my video, going through each step with you because I’ll be honest, my first attempt at a jelly-roll style cake was a cake-tastrophe. #Caketastrophe hashtag nouglypieces because I gobbled it all up before anyone could see. It tasted just fine but the aesthetic was horrendous and I wasn’t about to serve shredded bits of cake piled high on a platter to anyone. Lesson learned. Part of what I learned is that cakes are a lot like pets, if that makes any sense. They all have different but very specific needs. Without the proper attention, they refuse to cooperate but with specialized training {and in this case, I quite literally mean you have to train this cake} they will finally yield the most desirable results.
Without further ado, I bring you two of my favorite things. Pumpkin and cake because ’tis the season for pumpkin! If I had any reservations at all for trading sunny days for cooler weather, the bounty of spice, warmth, and pumpkin-y goodness completely eradicates those. I like to usher in autumn with pumpkin spice ice cream or pumpkin spice frappuccino in one hand and a plate piled high with these pumpkin rolls in another. I invite you to celebrate the occasion with me by whipping up a batch of this soft and delicious cake, stuffed with spiced cream cheese frosting.
https://youtu.be/wbgIsVdwip0
- ¾ c unbleached flour
- ½ ts baking powder
- ½ ts baking soda
- 1½ ts pumpkin spice
- ¼ ts fine salt
- 3 room temperature eggs
- ½ c brown sugar
- ¼ c granulated sugar
- 2 ts pure vanilla extract
- ⅔ c pumpkin puree
- 8 oz room temperature cream cheese
- 4 oz room temperature unsalted butter
- 1 tb heavy cream
- 1 ts pure vanilla extract
- 1 ts pumpkin spice
- ¼ ts salt
- Powdered sugar (to taste)
- In the first bowl, sift together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, pumpkin spice, and salt.
- In the second bowl, crack in the eggs and blend them together with both sugars.
- Splash in the vanilla and blend in the pumpkin.
- Combine the first and second bowl slowly. Stir until just combined and don’t over mix.
- Line a cookie sheet with parchment and evenly spread the batter.
- Bake at 350 for 12-14 minutes.
- While the cake is baking, create the filling by blending the cream cheese, butter, cream, pumpkin spice, salt, and powdered sugar until light and fluffy. {I only added in about ½ c sugar but how much is up to you}
- When the cake is baked, lift out of the pan and roll to “train” the cake to stay in the rolled shape. Allow to cool.
- When the cake is completely cooled, peel off the parchment and spread the filling all over, leaving about an inch of a border all around. Re-roll (as tightly as you can without tearing) and slice to serve.
The first day of autumn also marks my daddy’s birthday so there’s even more to celebrate so cheers to all things wonderful to come!
Love,
Your Squishy Monster ^.~
‹ Korean Grilled Pork Belly For an Incredible Father ›
WONDERFUL!! I LOVE ANY THING pumplin!!
What a sweet pumpkin treat
I make a pumpkin roll every single year and it’s hands down one of my favorite treats ever! Thanks for the reminder, nom nom nom!
I love the idea if pumpkin rolls. A great recipe to welcome autumn.
u are the autumn dessert queen! move over little debbie..we have the Squishy! hehe awesome looking recipe, i have been craving pumpkin pie.
Pumpkin rolls are so festive this time of year, Angela. Happy Autumn! And, thanks for sharing…
Oh man, I can’t wait for pumpkin pie to start appearing in store shelves again. So excited.
So jelly of your cake roll. Making a cake roll is on my bucket list so now I can find at least two of my bucket list recipes on your blog – this one and kimchi.
love this post it looks delish girl! xO!
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Thanks, Unni!
Yay for bucket lists AND cake plus kimchi!
’tis the season =)
Happy Autumn, Louise!
I’m ready for it now with arms wide open =)
Maybe that should be my new monicker =)
It’s like a rite of passage =)
Thanks, Uru!
Meeee too!
That’s a perfect pumpkin roll, Angie.
So seasonal and delicious looking. I would love one with a cup of tea. Looking forward to the ice cream recipe.
I love roll cakes and a pumpkin one at this time of the year sounds and looks amazing!
i just bookmark this recipe and save for next christmas….hehhe
Hooray!
Thanks, Nik!
I just posted it =)
Thanks, Angie!
Hi Angie! I love pumpkin and I love this roll! I was wondering if you can do a post where they decorate the roll. I’ve seen something like that. I think its called a deco roll where they trace a design and then put the cake batter over? I’ve seen other videos but it looks too complicated. Love your stuff!
I’m writing it down for the books right now, Anne. When I do, I’ll be sure to devise an easier method =)
Yay thank you!
My pleasure, Anne!
This looks amazing…and you make it look so easy! I made mine and it split down the middle in two places! what am I doing wrong? Any suggestions would be appreciated. Thanks!
Sorry…that’s suppose to be a sad face not a mad-looking face!
Hey Christine, this is a great question and I hope I can help. Before it even bakes, you don’t want to over mix the batter. This makes for a tougher, denser cake. You want something light and easily malleable. When it’s baking, you want it in a flat vessel (I use something that hasn’t been too abused …a new-ish “traditional” cookie sheet works well here). I once did it in a casserole dish and it split on me and was a disaster. While it’s cooling, it’s important to “train” the cake in the jelly roll shape by rolling it up (with the parchment) and allowing it to cool all the way down. Allowing it to completely cool and come to room temperature allows it the time to get familiar with its shape and doesn’t disturb the cake too much when it’s filled later. Let me know if you have any other questions and keep baking! =)
Angie–I have been looking for a pumpkin roll recipe that is made on a cookie sheet–as all the others state jelly roll pans–my question is do you have a recipe for making a chocolate cake jelly roll?????Great video and directions–thanks for helping out>>>>>>>>
Thank you so much, Norma! Try omitting the puree/spice and subbing with melted chocolate and cinnamon instead =)
Love your videos but some things are not clear to me..(1) after baking, to train the cake, do you cool cake at room temp or do you put in fridge? (2) is it heavy cream or heavy WHIPPING cream? (I know it says ‘heavy cream’ but just want to be sure because I don’t yet know the difference..I’m anal (3) ‘ts’ is teaspoon right? I made it once already but I was confused about those things and it didn’t come out right so I want to be right this time..I’m REALLY excited to make this again!!
Hello Zane, I like to cool at room temperate {to speed things up you can def. utilize the fridge method} and either heavy/whipping cream will work. TS is teaspoon. On my blog, tablespoon will be marked TB. I hope this helps and let me know if you have anymore questions =)
Hi I will try this it’s looks yummy…
I hope it’s a delicious success for you–please let me know =)
I personally didn’t because my pan was brand new. Just the parchment worked for me but if you’re concerned, an extra bit of insurance wouldn’t hurt. You can definitely spray both the underside and topside with spray to ensure nothing sticks =)
Hi Angie,
Do you grease the cookie sheet before you put the parchment paper on or not?
Your pumpkin roll looks delicious. Thank you for the recipe and video.
An absolute amazing recipe alongs with great and clear also cute
I was thinking of making this for Thanksgiving (because PUMPKIN!), and ideally make it ahead of time… like, this weekend. Do you have any suggestions as to storage of the roll to keep it as fresh as possible until Turkey Day? I use a different, buttercream frosting recipe.
I do plan on wrapping it tightly in plastic wrap. Fridge or freezer?
I love your reason–because pumpkin!! This cake doesn’t have much fat in it so it won’t keep as tender as long as say, a cake with oil. Though, if you whipped it up this weekend, I’d freeze it just to be extra sure and give yourself an adequate amount of time to thaw it out so it reaches room temperature and has that soft fluffy texture you’re after. I’d cool it completely {or it will sweat profusely} and assemble and double or triple wrap in plastic then an outer layer of foil. Love and good luck, Dara!
Hi. I was looking for recipes for this online and I came across yours. I am making this for my mom for Christmas eve. I was wondering when I need to make it and how to transport it. Any ideas would be greatly appreciated!
I actually traveled with this cake last month and it seems to transport well. I made mine a day before and rolled it up in 2 layers of cling then snugly tucked it into a form fitting box/carrier. I left mine at room temperature and would highly recommend doing that or keeping it frozen until the day you need it, bringing it to room temperature several hours before. One of my readers has even suggested using a slice of table bread to keep the cake moist overnight.
[…] If you’d like to follow along with a written recipe, you can find one here. […]
[…] Swiss rolls are pretty good, and while trying to figure out how to not waste a pumpkin, I stumbled upon SquishyMonster’s recipe of a pumpkin roll cake. […]
Hi can I add pecans?
Hi Angela can I add pecans?
Hi, Elvia! Yes, that would be awesome!! Please let me know how it turns out =)
One more question, what kind of butter salted or unsalted?
I personally like baking with unsalted but it can be up to you too =)
Hi Angela, can you please tell me the size of your pan. thanks
Hi, Esther! Thanks for being here, I appreciate you! The pan size is listed under “serves” right beneath the recipe authors name. {15 x 10} btw =)
My only pan I have is a 15×12 approximately…. Can I still use your measurement of ingredients… Or maybe add an extra amount to fill for the 2 inches difference in pan size?
Thank you!
Hi, Adri! You should be just fine =) Thank YOU!
If I made this today and we are eating it tomorrow, should I leave it out (covered) or put it in the fridge?
Love this recipe but when I made it it was really thin and cracked acrossed it in many places. Do you have and suggestions?
Hi, Emma! Was it baked in a pan with the same/similar dimensions? I find that the initial “training” of the cake is very important as well as making sure the cake is never over baked to prevent cracks. With all my cakes, I tend to slightly under bake {as it will continue to set with residual carry over heat along with it resting in a hot pan if not utilizing a baking rack}. Let me know and we’ll trouble shoot from there =)
Since it’s just tomorrow, I’d leave it out, covered {as long as your room temperature doesn’t get too warm}. I like to triple wrap the log and dust with powdered sugar just before serving. If you do choose to chill, I’d make sure to take it out 1-2 hours before serving so it softens to room temp. Happy holidays, Kellee!!
Hi, awesome recipe. I can’t seem to get the filling to come out all fluffy like yours. Mine keeps coming out more liquid with clumps. Any tips? Thanks a bunch
Hi, Kareem! Everything should ideally be at room temperature. If you’re using heavy cream or whipping cream, it should become fluffier as you whip. If anything, too much whipping stiffens it too much to the point of butter, lol. Let me know and we’ll go from there =)
What can I substitute the heavy cream with? Well the filling not taste right if i choose to not add that ingredient?
First time making a pumpkin roll cake!!! So excited to get started
Happy Thanksgiving, Liza! The cream makes it silky and fluffy. If you don’t mind a denser filling, you can omit it.
Awesome website & very well-done Pumpkin Roll vid. Compared to the majority of how-to vids on YouTube, yours can easily be classified as professional…made carefully with culinary love…a joy to watch. I plan to explore your recipes further when I have time.
You hinted in the video that you weighed your flour, like any good baker worth his/her salt. Yet, your recipe states 3/4 cup. Can you give us the weight you used?
Thanks!
Good afternoon, Brian! Thank you so much for being here! Happy baking! 3/4 cup of flour should be 93 grams in weight =)
Just made this today. Rolled it the long way and a large crack occurred. I’m guessing I overbaked. Made the filling and it came out to be wwaayyy too much filling. Should I cut the filling recipe in half if I roll it long way. Didn’t think it would make a difference.
Hi, Cindy! The length of the cake long ways is not as stable as the wider short ways {if that makes sense}. That paired with any possibility of overworking the batter when it was mixed and a definite yes to the over baking will create cracks. It also helps to cool your cake completely. As for the filling, it depends on how thickly you applied it but I do typically call for a bit extra of most anything as it’s always better to have too much vs too less =)
I just made this today, and the cake part came out MUCH thinner than yours. I used the exact same size pan 15 x 10. I even made sure not to over mix as you suggested. Would more baking powder make it rise more or do I just need more batter than your recipe calls for? Any suggestions are appreciated!
Hi, Mary! I recently had to toss my baking powder out as I didn’t realize how old it was {straight from the shop}. I made this a few weekends ago and it performed well for me. It is definitely a bit thinner than most roll cakes I’ve tested but the fluffy filling compensated it for me. You can certainly double the recipe to suit your needs. Happy baking and Happy Thanksgiving!
Thank you….and Happy Thanksgiving to you too!!!
I made this pumpkin roll and so delicious! I had a few cracks, made sure not to overwork the batter, but may have baked 2 min too long as I thought it was still wet looking after 12 min. On the filling, approx. how much powdered sugar does everyone use, I looked up other recipes and found anywhere from 1-4 cups! I used 2, but less may have been better, just wondering what everyone else uses. Thanks
annyeonghaseyo!!!!
My mother is a very picky lady when it comes to pumpkin rolls and this Christmas I will try to make my very first one. Your video was the best one on YouTube and exactly what I was looking for! I can’t wait to try it!
Thank you so much, Candace! Happy Holidays!!
I used 3/4. Tried 1/2 cup, but still wasnt sweet enough. I found zen for me at 3/4 c.
Thanks for this recipe ! I really tried to follow it as exactly as you outlined it . My cake didn’t crack when I rolled it while hot but did crack when I had the frosting inside and tried to roll a second time :-((( heart breaking ! What do you think went wrong ?
Hi Angie ! I really tried to be exact while following this great recipe . My cake didn’t crack while first rolling it when hot but cracked when I rolled it with the filling . Any advice on how I can avoid that ?
Hi, Natasha! It could be a number of things. A light hand when mixing the cake together will prevent a denser finished product. A soft and tender crumb will be much more malleable. The cake size, amount of filling, and how long you’ve trained your cake until it’s completely cooled can also impact the rolling of the cake and its ability to stay together. Sometimes, I “train” the cake loosely then coil tighter as need be but it definitely needs to be completely cool. I would say maybe even up to 45 minutes just to be certain. I hope this helps =)
I attempted this recipe last night. When I rolled the cake to “train” it, it rolled beautifully and there were absolutely no cracks. The problem for me occurred after it had cooled.when I attempted to unroll the cake it stuck to the parchment paper and the cake itself was very very sticky and almost seemed too moist. I was unable to salvage it at all. Any idea why this happened and any suggestions on what I can do to prevent it from happening again?
Hi, Nikki! It sounds like atmospheric moisture is the culprit here. It’s one of the reasons I can’t make macarons on most days here on island. The cake should be *just* cooled. It can also help to blend the sugars and egg a bit longer. The sugars create a hygroscopic environment. Lastly, the cake may be slightly undercooked. I hope this helps =)
My family loves this but still have trouble rolling it do you have any tips?
Thank you