Halloween Pumpkin Cake

Servings: 24

This eye popping pumpkin is sure to cause a stir!


All You Need Is ...

  • Small check mark in a circle icon 2/3 cup (160ml) vegetable oil, plus extra for greasing
  • Small check mark in a circle icon 2 boxes Betty Crocker™ Super Moist™ Devil’s Food Cake Mix
  • Small check mark in a circle icon 1½ cups (375ml) water
  • Small check mark in a circle icon 6 extra large eggs
To decorate
  • Small check mark in a circle icon 2 1/2 tubs Betty Crocker™ Creamy Deluxe™ Vanilla Frosting
  • Small check mark in a circle icon Green food colour gel
  • Small check mark in a circle icon Orange food colour gel
  • Small check mark in a circle icon 1 flat-bottom ice-cream cone, trimmed
  • Small check mark in a circle icon Icing sugar, to dust
  • Small check mark in a circle icon 75g black ready to roll icing

Betty's Easy Steps

  1. Preheat the oven to 180°C (160°C for fan-forced oven). Grease and line the base of a 1.5 litre ovenproof Pyrex glass bowl.
  2. Remove the enclosed frosting sachet from the cake mix and reserve for another use. Make up 1 box of cake mix using the oil, water and eggs called for on the pack instructions. Pour the cake mixture into the bowl and level the top.
  3. Bake in the centre of the oven for 1 hour 5 minutes-1 hour 10 minutes or until a round bladed knife inserted into the centre of the cake comes out clean. Remove from the oven and leave to cool on a cooling rack for 10 minutes. Turn the bowl over onto the cooling rack and leave the cake to fall out of the bowl naturally. Remove the bowl and leave the cake to cool fully. Peel off the baking paper.
  4. Grease and line the cooled bowl again. Make up the second box of cake mix with the remaining vegetable oil, water and eggs according to the pack instructions, and bake as before in the bowl using the instructions above.
  5. Carefully trim the top of each cake, to create a level surface for them to stick together. Also trim 1 cake on the smaller end so it has a larger base to sit on the cake board. Place this cake onto the cake board with the trimmed smaller end cut-side down.
  6. In a small bowl, colour 100g of the frosting with enough green food colouring to give a bright green colour and set aside. In a medium bowl, colour the remaining frosting with the orange food colouring until it is bright orange.
  7. Spread a scant quarter of the orange frosting onto the top of the first cake with a spatula. Top with the other cake, creating a pumpkin shape. Spread a thin layer of orange frosting over the entire cake to seal in the crumbs. Chill for 45 minutes, then continue to ice the cake with the remaining orange frosting. Using a spatula, draw it up from the base of the pumpkin, going all around the cake. This creates the ridges of the pumpkin.
  8. Frost the ice cream cone with the some of the green frosting. Place the ice cream cone upside down onto the top of the cake for the stem. Place the remaining green frosting into a disposable piping bag fitted with a fine or writing piping nozzle. Pipe leaves and tendrils onto the pumpkin around the stem.
  9. Dust a work surface with icing sugar and roll out the black icing to a thickness of 2-3mm. Cut out eyes, a nose and mouth, then stick these onto the cake to form a face.

Betty's Tips

  • Flavour the cake mix with orange zest for a citrus hit!
  • As food colouring gels can vary in strength, use as much as you need to get the bright, strong colours required for the orange pumpkin cake and green leaves and tendrils.