How To Make Patterned Roll Cake: Recipe & Tutorial (2024)

This super cute strawberry patterned roll cake tutorial is by Japanese baking blogger, Junko, whose deco roll cakes have taken the baking world by storm.

With the publication of her book, Deco Roll CakesHow To Make Patterned Roll Cake: Recipe & Tutorial (2), Junko shares with us the secrets of her eye-catching cake artistry, including her fantastic selection of patterned templates. Jelly roll cakes/Swiss rolls will never be the same again!

The strawberry pattern on the deco roll cake above may look difficult to achieve but it is done just by piping some pink batter, baking it, and drawing the seeds and leaves on later — which is really easy to do!

To learn how to make more patterned roll cakes in other designs, you’ll find directions further down at the bottom of this Japanese deco roll cake recipe by Junko.

Strawberry Patterned Roll Cake Tutorial: Ingredients

(for a 25cm/10inch square baking pan)

For the roll cake:

  • 4 eggs (in separate bowls: 3 egg yolks, 1 egg white, 3 egg whites)
  • 35 g + 30 g caster sugar
  • 60 ml water
  • 40 ml vegetable oil
  • ½ tsp vanilla extract
  • 80 g cake flour – for the cake (Cake flour is a super light, low-protein flour popular in the US but isn’t widely available in the UK. To make your own cake flour, add three tablespoons of cornflour to a cup of plain flour, then measure out as required for this recipe).
  • ½ tsp cake flour for pattern
  • 1/8 tsp red liquid coloring
    (diluted with ¼ tsp water)
  • a pinch + 1 tsp cornflour

For the syrup:

  • 10 g caster sugar
  • 20 ml hot water
  • ½ Tbsp Kirsch liqueur

For the filling:

  • 14 g caster sugar
  • 150 ml whipping cream
  • 10 strawberries

To finish:

  • ½ tsp cocoa powder (dissolved in 1 tsp hot water)
  • ½ tsp matcha powder (dissolved in 1 tsp hot water)

Strawberry Patterned Roll Cake Tutorial: Instructions

Before you start:

  • Weigh and measure all ingredients.
  • Line a baking pan with parchment paper. Dip a paper towel in vegetable oil and lightly grease parchment paper.
  • Preheat oven to 170°C.
  • Make a parchment cone and have a fine-tipped brush at hand also.

For the egg yolk batter

Beat 3 egg yolks in a mixing bowl. Add 35 g caster sugar, and beat with an electric mixer until mixture is light. Mix in 60 ml water, 40 ml vegetable oil and ½ tsp vanilla extract. Sift in 80 g cake flour and continue to beat until batter is sticky.

For the pattern

Take 1 tsp egg yolk batter from Step 1 and place into a bowl. Add ½ tsp cake flour and mix well.

Dilute 1/8tsp red liquid food colouring with ¼ tsp water. Add diluted colour, little by little, to bowl from Step 2 to make a pink batter.

In a clean bowl, beat 1 egg white with an electric mixer until glossy and stiff peaks are about to form. Add a pinch of cornflour and continue to beat until stiff.

Add 3 Tbsp meringue from Step 4 to batter from Step 3 and mix well. Pour into paper cone.

Cut tip of cone and pipe strawberry shapes onto parchment paper. Bake in preheated 170°C oven for 1 minute.

For the cake batter

In a clean bowl, beat 3 egg whites using an electric mixer. Once it thickens, mix in 30 g caster sugar until mixture is glossy and stiff peaks are about to form. Add 1 tsp cornflour and continue to beat until stiff.

Mix remaining meringue from Step 4 with meringue from Step 7. Add meringue mixture, one-third at a time, to remaining egg yolk batter from Step 1. Mix until smooth and no traces of meringue are left.

Pour batter onto baking pan with baked pattern (see below). Spread batter evenly with a scraper. Gently tap pan on table two to three times to remove any air pockets.

To bake

Bake in preheated 170°C oven for 14 minutes, or until a skewer inserted into cake comes out clean. Remove from oven and cover with a new sheet of parchment paper. Invert pan on a wire rack and unmould cake.

Peel off parchment paper from bottom of cake immediately and place it back on top of cake to allow latent heat to escape. Leave cake to cool.

To assemble

For the syrup: Dissolve 10 g caster sugar in 20 ml hot water. Leave to cool, then add ½ Tbsp Kirsch liqueur.

For the filling: Add 14 g caster sugar to 150 ml whipping cream in a bowl. Place bowl in an ice bath and beat with an electric mixer until stiff peaks form. Cut strawberries into quarters.

Flip cake over, so pattern faces down on parchment paper. Trim two opposite ends of cake at a diagonal. Make shallow cuts 2-cm apart on surface of cake. Brush with syrup, then spread cream filling evenly, leaving a 3-cm space at the opposite end.

Place cut strawberries on cream filling. Starting from end closest to you, roll cake outwards using parchment paper to help keep cake level. Once strawberries are inside roll, hold firmly and finish rolling tightly. Wrap cake up with parchment paper and twist both ends to secure roll.

Refrigerate for at least 1 hour.

Using fine-tipped brush, draw strawberry seeds using ½ tsp cocoa powder dissolved in 1 tsp hot water, and stalks using ½ tsp matcha powder dissolved in 1 tsp hot water. Slice both ends off deco roll with a warm knife before serving.

More Japanese Deco Roll Cake Design Ideas

To create your own unique deco roll/japanese roll cake, take any pattern you fancy and trace over it with parchment paper. Line your baking tin with this patterned paper (pencil side down, of course) and then pipe over the pattern with your colored batter and follow the remainder of the instructions above.

This strawberry patterned roll cake recipe & tutorial is reprinted with permission from Deco Roll CakesHow To Make Patterned Roll Cake: Recipe & Tutorial (8) by JUNKO, published by Marshall Cavendish.

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How To Make Patterned Roll Cake: Recipe & Tutorial (2024)

FAQs

How to make roll cake without cracking? ›

Add more cream along the short edge of the cake which is to be rolled first. This will prevent the cake from cracking due to large gaps in between the folds.

Why does my Swiss roll crack when I roll it? ›

If your sponge cracks when you try to roll it, it could be two things: it was over-baked and dried out on the surface, and/or it was too cold when you tried to roll it. Since this recipe is simplified with whole eggs instead of beating the eggs separately, it slightly lacks the flexibility from whipped egg whites.

What is the shape of the Swiss roll? ›

The spiral layered shape of the Swiss roll has inspired usage as a descriptive term in other fields, such as the jelly roll fold, a protein fold, the "Swiss roll" metamaterial in optics, and the term jelly roll in science, quilting and other fields.

How to stop roulade from cracking? ›

To prevent a Swiss roll cracking when rolled, trim off its crusty edges then, while it is still warm, put it on greaseproof paper dusted with caster sugar. Roll it up loosely, rolling the paper with it, and leave it to cool in its wrapping.

How do I stop my cake from cracking and doming? ›

Check the temperature once your oven is preheated—if it's much higher, check your oven's manual to calibrate it so that 350 degrees actually means 350 degrees. Patterson also suggests simply lowering the temperature by 10 degrees if you notice your cakes significantly doming all the time.

Do you let Swiss roll cool before rolling? ›

It's important that the cake is warm so it can set in the right shape. If it's too cold, it won't roll properly. Once rolled, leave it to cool completely. When you're ready to fill, unroll the cake very carefully, slowly flattening it again.

How do you not break a Swiss roll? ›

To ensure the swiss roll is assembled without a crack make sure to roll the cake sheet when warm. The cake has greater flexibility when warm, so it can easily be moulded to your preferred shape. That way later, when it is layered with cream, it is significantly easier to shape.

Do you roll a Swiss roll straight from the oven? ›

ROLLING A SWISS ROLL

Always roll it up straight from the oven while it's still pliable.

What is the difference between Swiss roll cake and Japanese roll cake? ›

Despite the emphasis on the filling, Japanese rolls tend to be lighter and less sweet than European and American Swiss rolls: Japanese do not like overly sweet desserts and add much less sugar to the cake and the filling.

What is the difference between jam roly poly and Swiss roll? ›

Jam swiss rolls are typically a soft vanilla sponge perfectly complimented by smooth vanilla buttercream and raspberry jam. Whereas, Jam roly poly is traditionally made as a suet pudding wrapped in muslin or foil and steamed, then filled with jam and served with hot custard.

What is a rectangular cake called? ›

A sheet cake or slab cake is a cake baked in a large, flat, rectangular cake pan.

How to roll cake without breaking? ›

Step 3: Roll Cake with Towel Inside and Cool

Starting with a short side of the cake, roll up the towel and the warm cake together into a spiral. Yes, the towel will be inside your baked cake roll. This step helps to form the cake roll shape later without any cracking. Roll to the end of the towel.

Why did my swiss roll go rubbery? ›

This happens when you are not gentle enough when folding the dry ingredients into the wet. A genoise sponge requires very gentle and slow folding. You need to preserve as much air in the batter as possible, otherwise it can become rubbery. Why did my cake crack during the first roll?

Why are my cake balls cracking when I roll them? ›

If the cake is too cold and the icing is too warm when it is coated, the shell will crack from the difference in temperature. We know hot objects typically expand while cold objects shrink in size, so it makes sense that the spherical treat could split once it's settled and cooled down.

How to stop a yule log from cracking? ›

Take care not to knock out the air from your sponge mixture as you fold in the flour – once the sponge is baked, the tiny pockets of air keep the sponge pliable enough to roll without cracking, while retaining a light and fluffy texture.

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