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I Baked a Three Ingredient Sponge Cake

How to Make a Light, Airy 3-Ingredient Sponge Cake (Foolproof)

I love a kitchen shortcut that feels like magic. This 3-ingredient sponge cake uses only eggs, sugar, and flour—no butter, no baking powder. The lift comes from whipped air and gentle handling. It’s a perfect base for layered cakes, trifles, or a simple dusting of powdered sugar. If I can pull this off without drama, you can too.

  • Eggs, sugar, and flour make a light, airy cake
  • Fold in flour gently to preserve the air
  • No baking powder or butter needed
  • Ideal for layers, trifles, or dusted with sugar

What Is a Sponge Cake?

A sponge cake rises by trapping air in whipped eggs and sugar, then folding in flour for structure. No chemical leaveners—just patience and a good whisk. The result: soft, springy texture and an elegant crumb. For a quick comparison of textures and techniques, see the sponge cake vs butter cake breakdown.

Ingredients (That’s It!)

Ingredient Amount Note
Eggs 4 large Room temperature whips better
Sugar 120 g (about 2/3 cup) Granulated is fine
All‑purpose flour 120 g (about 1 cup) Sift for a finer crumb

I bold the ingredients because they deserve respect—they do all the work.

Step-by-Step Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 180°C / 350°F. Grease and line a 20 cm (8‑inch) pan (or use an appropriate alternative).
  • Beat eggs and sugar until very pale, thick, and tripled in volume (several minutes with a mixer, longer by hand). This traps the air.
  • Sift the flour. Fold it into the egg mixture gently in two additions—stop when streaks disappear.
  • Pour into the pan and bake 20–25 minutes. The top should be golden and spring back lightly.
  • Cool on a rack: let the cake rest in the pan 5–10 minutes, then turn out. Dust with powdered sugar or use immediately.

Tips on Technique

  • Use room‑temperature eggs — they whip bigger and faster.
  • Sift the flour to avoid lumps and keep crumbs fine.
  • Don’t overfold—gentle, steady turns keep the air intact. Overfold = dense cake. If you run into texture issues, see advice on common cake blunders and fixes.
  • Resist opening the oven early; sudden drafts can deflate the rise.

Flavor Variations (Keep It Simple)

  • Vanilla: 1 tsp vanilla extract — classic.
  • Lemon: Zest of 1 lemon — bright and fresh.
  • Cocoa: Replace 2 tbsp flour with 2 tbsp cocoa powder — light chocolate note.
  • Almond: 1/2 tsp almond extract — nutty, grown‑up twist.
  • Coffee: 1 tbsp instant coffee dissolved in 1 tsp water — subtle mocha.

Additions should be small so they don’t deflate the batter.

What You Can Do with This Sponge Cake

  • Eat plain: dust with powdered sugar and sip tea.
  • Layer cake: split, spread jam or whipped cream, stack — a great way to turn this into an elegant multi‑layer dessert.
  • Trifle: cube, soak with syrup, layer with custard and fruit.
  • Tiramisu twist: thin slices with coffee and mascarpone.
  • Cake for two: bake in a smaller pan and enjoy leftovers — or try other quick single‑serve ideas like a microwave mug cake.

Once, I made it in a blender bottle on a whim. It worked—kitchen experiments approved.

Storage

Place Time Tip
Room temperature 1–2 days Wrap in foil or store in a cake tin
Fridge 4–5 days Airtight container; bring to room temp before serving
Freezer Up to 1 month Wrap tightly in plastic and foil; thaw slowly

Light, Elegant, and Amazingly Simple

  • Light — feels like a cloud in your mouth.
  • Elegant — looks fancy even when improvised.
  • Simple — three ingredients, little effort, big reward.

If life gives you eggs, sugar, and flour, make a sponge cake. They laugh. Then they eat it.

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Conclusion

This little recipe proves that sometimes less is more. With just eggs, sugar, and flour you get a light, airy sponge cake that’s elegant and forgiving. The trick: trap the air, handle the batter gently, and don’t overfold—trust me, I’ve had my flat victory. If your cake does sink or deflate, these tips for a sinking cake can help. It’s simple, reliable, and surprisingly proud of itself.

For more kitchen hijinks and quick wins, visit https://xendrie.com.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What makes this cake so light with only three ingredients?
A: Whipped eggs trap air; sugar stabilizes the foam; flour provides structure. No butter or baking powder needed.

Q: Do I need baking powder or butter?
A: No. The whipped eggs provide the lift. If you’re curious about methods that skip chemical leaveners entirely, see guidance on making cakes without baking powder.

Q: How do I get the best texture?
A: Beat the eggs and sugar until very fluffy, sift the flour, and fold gently. Time and a light touch matter most.

Q: Can I add flavors or keep it plain?
A: Yes—vanilla, citrus zest, or a little cocoa are great. Keep additions small to avoid deflating the batter.

Q: How should I store the sponge cake?
A: Cool completely, then wrap in plastic or store in an airtight container. Best within 2–3 days for optimal softness.

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