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Strawberry Buttercream Frosting + Video

Strawberry buttercream frosting is easy to make with butter, jam, powdered sugar, and a pinch of salt. It’s creamy, fruity, and great for spreading on cakes or piping onto cupcakes.

Strawberry frosting piped onto cupcakes.

Strawberry frosting is a staple for cakes and cupcakes alike. The fruity flavor is great on vanilla, chocolate, coconut, and even lemon or lime cakes.

I’ve used this same strawberry buttercream frosting on my strawberry cake with jello, strawberry sugar cookie bars, and strawberry lime cupcakes. It’s easy to spread or pipe.

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Strawberry buttercream frosting made with jam in a bowl.

Strawberry Frosting with Jam

This strawberry buttercream uses strawberry jam or strawberry preserves to give the frosting its fruity flavor.

Jam is a thick spread made from crushed or puréed fruit and sugar. Preserves are another thick fruit spread made from whole fruit cooked with sugar, creating a chunkier spread.

Look for a brand that looks thick through the jar and has little to no added sugar, since there will be powdered sugar added for the frosting. You don’t want it to be overly sweet.

If using preserves, keep in mind the size of strawberry chunks. You don’t want one with very large pieces. Especially if you plan to put the strawberry frosting in a piping bag.

Ingredients for strawberry buttercream frosting: powdered sugar, strawberry jam (preserves), butter, salt.

Can I make strawberry frosting with fresh strawberries?

Of course you can make your own jam with fresh strawberries for this frosting. You will need to make it ahead of time and allow it to cool completely before using it.

Try my low sugar strawberry freezer jam. It’s easy to make in the microwave.

You can also purée fresh strawberries (strain it to remove the seeds, if desired), add a little sugar and a splash of lemon juice. Then cook it on the stovetop, stirring frequently until the fruit reduces to a thick, jammy texture. Cool completely. Then use it in the strawberry frosting recipe below.

Cooking the fruit is important! If you just added strawberry purée to the frosting, you wouldn’t be able to use very much of it before the frosting becomes overly soft and runny. Plus you’d miss out on a lot of strawberry flavor.

Using jam packs the frosting with flavor because the fruit is concentrated during the cooking process. Strawberry frosting made with jam will still be sturdy enough for spreading and piping without adding gobs of extra powdered sugar. Plus it’s an easy ingredient to find at the store or make from home.

Frozen strawberries can be cooked down for this recipe. Just keep in mind they will put off more liquid than fresh berries, so it may take longer to reduce and thicken.

You can always mix a Tablespoon or two of cornstarch with the sugar that you add to the puréed strawberries to help it thicken sufficiently. I do that when I make pie filling like in this Blueberry Cream Cheese Pie.

Strawberry buttercream in a piping bag with some cupcakes piped with strawberry frosting.

How to Make Strawberry Buttercream Frosting

Now that you’ve got the strawberry part figured out, you will need butter. This is buttercream after all. Unsalted butter with a pinch or two of salt to bring out the flavor and offset some of the sweetness is perfect. Don’t skip the salt!

Salted butter will work great too, although if you’re sensitive to salt, you may find it too salty. Better to start with none and add some to taste.

You can use half butter and half shortening if you are worried about the frosting melting in humidity, but the best flavor is going to be created with all butter.

  1. Simply beat the butter and strawberry jam with an electric mixer until creamy and smooth.
  2. Add the powdered sugar one cup at a time, beating until combined between each addition. Add a pinch or two of salt and mix together.

This strawberry buttercream will be slightly softer than vanilla frosting, but should still be thick and pipeable.

PRO TIP: If the frosting still seems too soft after adding the powdered sugar, throw it in the fridge to firm it up.

This strawberry buttercream is great for cakes, cupcakes, cookies, and any other dessert you’d want to put it on. Like my fresh strawberry cupcakes! Try it today!

Bowl full of strawberry buttercream frosting.

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Strawberry frosting piped onto cupcakes.
4.41 from 132 ratings

Strawberry Buttercream Frosting

Created by Amber Brady
Prep: 10 minutes
Total: 10 minutes
Strawberry buttercream frosting is easy to make with butter, jam, powdered sugar, and a pinch of salt. It's creamy, fruity, and great for spreading on cakes or piping onto cupcakes.
Yields24 servings

Ingredients

  • ¾ cup (170 g) unsalted butter, (12 Tbsp) room temperature
  • ¾ cup (228 g) natural strawberry preserves, (or low-sugar jam)
  • 3 cups (360 g) powdered sugar
  • pinch salt

Instructions
 

  • Using an electric hand or stand mixer, beat the butter with the natural strawberry preserves/jam until light and creamy. (Might not be completely smooth until you start adding powdered sugar.)
  • Add powdered sugar 1 cup at a time, beating well after each addition.
  • Add a pinch or two of salt and mix until combined.
  • Spread strawberry frosting onto cake or scoop frosting into a piping bag fitted with a large star tip (Wilton 2D or 1M) to pipe frosting onto cupcakes. 

Video

Notes

  • Recipe yields approximately 3 cups of frosting. Enough to cover a 13×9-inch cake, a two layer 8-inch cake, 15-18 cupcakes if piping a layered swirl on top, OR 24 cupcakes if spread on top with a knife/spatula.
  • Store frosting at room temperature up to 2 days or in the refrigerator up to 1 week.

Nutrition

Serving: 2 Tbsp | Calories: 113kcal | Carbohydrates: 27g | Cholesterol: 1mg | Sodium: 16mg | Sugar: 24g
Disclaimer: Nutritional values were calculated using a third-party tool and are provided as an estimation only.
Sharing this recipe with a link is both encouraged and appreciated. Copying/pasting and/or screenshots of full recipes to any social media is strictly prohibited. Content and photographs are copyright protected.

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4.41 from 132 votes (132 ratings without comment)

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2 Comments

  1. Can this be frozen? Thank you

    1. I personally haven’t tried freezing it, so I’m not positive, but I think it would be ok.

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