Light and fluffy marshmallow frosting. Delicious to eat and easy to make!

Growing up, my mother used to wax poetic about the amazing marshmallow frosting she liked to make as a girl. And now ages and ages later, I’m finally giving it a try.
Okay, this isn’t my mom’s recipe–part of the mystique of her frosting is that the recipe was lost to time–but according to her, this one turned out very similar, so win!
This frosting is so much fun. Watching egg whites and sugar go from clear, eggy liquid to light and billowy clouds of marshmallow deliciousness is like watching a magic trick.
I’ll be using this frosting next in a recipe next week and since cooked frosting always intimidated me when I first started baking, I thought I’d give this one its own post before then and walk through it step-by-step.
You will Need: Heat-proof glass bowl * or stand mixer bowl Stand mixer * or handheld electric mixer * Whisk Medium to large saucepan for boiling water
First, you’re going to whisk eggs, sugar, cream of tartar, and salt in a large heat-proof bowl or the bowl of your stand mixer. Heat an inch of water (fill the pot up to your first knuckle) in a large pot until simmering and place bowl of egg whites over the water. Make sure the bottom of the bowl is not touching the boiling water.

Stir eggs over simmering water until they reach 120°F. This will take about 3 to 5 minutes. If you don’t have an instant-read thermometer, one, you should get one *, it will change your life. Two, at 120°F, your mixture will feel hot to the touch, just past the point of comfortable.

Remove bowl from heat and use your stand mixer or hand-held electric mixer to beat the egg whites on high for another 3 to 6 minutes. They should become bright white and fluffy. They won’t be able to form stiff peaks because they are so sticky, but when you lift the beaters out of the mixture, the peaks should stand pretty tall before flopping over.

Transfer to a piping bag or use a large plastic bag with the tip cut off to pipe onto some delicious cupcakes, like maybe my Gooey Chocolate S’mores Cupcakes …

Then very carefully brown under your broiler for a couple of minutes or toast with a kitchen torch. And done!

More Favorite Frosting Recipes
- Small-batch Vanilla Frosting
- Small-batch Chocolate Frosting
- Small-batch Cookie Dough Frosting
- Small-batch Cream Cheese Frosting

Ingredients
- ▢ 4 large egg whites room temperature
- ▢ 1 cup ( 200 g) granulated sugar
- ▢ 1/4 teaspoon cream of tartar
- ▢ Pinch of salt
- ▢ 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract optional
Instructions
- Fill a medium to large pot with 1 inch of water and bring to a simmer.
- In a large heat-proof bowl (or the bowl of your stand mixer), whisk together egg whites, sugar, cream of tartar, and salt.
- Place bowl over the simmering water on the stove, making sure the bottom of the bowl is not touching the water. Heat, whisking constantly until eggs reach 120°F.
- Remove bowl from heat and use your hand mixer or electric mixer to beat the egg whites on high for 5 minutes or until light and fluffy with peaks that mostly hold their shape.
- If desired, add vanilla extract and beat for another 30 seconds until well-mixed.
- Transfer immediately to a piping bag or use a large plastic bag with the tip cut off to pipe onto cupcakes.
- Very carefully brown under your broiler or toast with a kitchen torch. This step is optional, but the frosting is quite sticky until toasted.
Notes
Nutritional Information Adapted From ChowHound
Classic crepes for two stuffed full of whipped cream, strawberries, and blueberries and topped with strawberry syrup make a perfect patriotic breakfast.

Hey, are you a crepe person? I really wasn’t until I started making them myself (full disclosure, that was about a month ago) and now I’m like all crepes all the time.

It’s been fun trying different sweet ways of eating them–until recently, I had only eaten crepes in savory dishes, but my favorite is still the way I made them the very first time I cooked them myself, stuffed with strawberries, blueberries, and cream cheese whipped cream.
Crepes are a fantastic base for so many flavors, but they really shine when topped with the tart fresh taste of strawberries and cream. Oh man, my mouth is watering just writing about them.

These red, white, and blue crepes for two are super easy, make the perfect amount and would be one heck of a patriotic breakfast any national holidays we might have coming up here in the States…

More Small-batch Breakfast Recipes
- Pancakes for One
- Fluffy Buttermilk Pancakes for Two
- Banana Pancakes for Two
- Small-batch Cinnamon Rolls

Ingredients
Crepes
- ▢ ½ cup ( 60 g) all-purpose flour
- ▢ 1 large egg
- ▢ ⅓ cup milk any percentage
- ▢ ¼ cup water
- ▢ 1 tablespoon unsalted butter melted, plus more for greasing
- ▢ 1 tablespoon sugar
- ▢ ¼ teaspoon vanilla
- ▢ ⅙ teaspoon salt
Toppings
- ▢ ½ cup strawberries thinly sliced
- ▢ ¼ cup blueberries
- ▢ 1 cup cream cheese whipped cream (optional) or
- ▢ 1 cup whipped cream (optional)
- ▢ Strawberry syrup store bought or homemade
Instructions
- Combine all crepe ingredients in your blender and blend until mixed, about 10 seconds. Let the batter rest in the refrigerator for 1 hour.
- Heat an 8-inch skillet over medium heat and grease surface by running a stick of butter over it.
- Using a 1/4 cup measuring cup, pour batter into hot pan while gently rotating it so that the batter coats the surface evenly.
- Cook until the edges start to curl and the crepe loosens from the pan. Use a thin spatula to flip and cook on the other side for about 10 seconds until just done.
- Place on a parchment paper-lined baking pan and repeat with the rest of the batter (you don’t need to re-grease the pan between), stacking the crepes gently as you go.
- Take a warm crepe from the pile and spread whipped cream (or cream cheese whipped cream) over half of it. Add sliced strawberries and blueberries and fold in half and then quarters. Drizzle with strawberry syrup. Serve 2 stuffed crepes per person.
Notes
These are the perfect s’mores cupcakes: a graham cracker base, soft and decadent chocolate cake, gooey Hershey’s chocolate buttercream center, and toasted marshmallow frosting.

It’s week four of my June Barbecue Menu where I’ve spent the month putting together an entire meal’s worth of BBQ courses. I started with Strawberry Limeades , followed that up with Loaded Baked Potato Salad with Yogurt as the side, used some Basil and Garlic Steak Marinade on some gorgeous rib-eyes for the main course, and now it’s time for dessert!
And surprising absolutely no one in the world who knows me, it’s s’mores themed. S’mores Cupcakes!! I love s’mores. They are the best part of summer and if I can s’moreize anything, I will.
I just typed the word “s’mores” so many times it doesn’t look real any more.
S’mores.
These cupcakes are total show stoppers. I’ve tested them a couple times since they are multi-step cupcakes, and every time leftovers go out into the world, they are met with rave reviews. They even got a “this is the best cupcake I’ve ever tasted” from one taste tester. Sooooooo.
There’s a lot going on with these cupcakes, so I’m going to break it down for you.

We start with a brown sugar graham cracker base. It’s a little crunchy, a little crumbly, and the beeeeeest thing. I’m obsessed with it.
On top of that, there is the chocolate cupcake. This cupcake is moist and chocolatey and amazing.
Inside of the cupcake, we have more chocolate. Here’s the thing about s’mores. A classic summer s’more HAS to use Hershey’s chocolate bars. I will fight you on this. So of course, for the inside of my s’mores cupcakes, I used Hershey’s bars to make the 2-ingredient chocolate buttercream frosting. It’s my favorite part of the cupcakes.

Finally, there is the marshmallow frosting. This stuff is beautiful and fluffy and a perfect marshmallow dream sitting on top of the cupcakes. Sadly, for those of us who like to make our s’mores by setting our marshmallows on fire, it is not the right type of flammable to do this with–I did not try to set my cupcake on fire (I did), but they do toast up absolutely beautifully.
And yes, these S’mores Cupcakes are what I like to call “project cupcakes.” They are kind of involved but so much fun to make and so satisfying.
Like my Brooklyn Blackout Cupcakes , making these cupcakes is a multi-step process, but none of the steps are hard, and I wrote an entire post walking you through making the easy marshmallow frosting. If you are a s’mores lover or one of those people who likes weekend baking projects with impressive results, you have to try these.

Ingredients
Chocolate Buttercream
- ▢ 2 Hershey’s Bars 3 oz of chocolate
- ▢ 8 tablespoons ( 4 oz) unsalted butter
Graham Cracker Layer
- ▢ 1/4 cup graham cracker crumbs ( 2 1/2 ) graham crackers
- ▢ 1/4 cup ( 30 g) all-purpose flour
- ▢ 2 tablespoons ( 25 g) brown sugar
- ▢ 3 tablespoons ( 1.5 oz) melted butter
Cupcakes
- ▢ 4 tablespoons ( 2 oz) unsalted butter
- ▢ 1/4 cup ( 1.5 oz) semi-sweet chocolate chopped (high-quality chips are fine)
- ▢ 1 tablespoon vegetable oil
- ▢ 1/2 cup ( 60 g) all-purpose flour
- ▢ 1/4 cup ( 20 g) unsweetened cocoa powder sifted
- ▢ 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
- ▢ 1/4 teaspoon baking soda
- ▢ 1/4 teaspoon salt
- ▢ 1/2 cup ( 100 g) granulated sugar
- ▢ 1 large egg and 1 large egg yolk at room temperature
- ▢ 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
- ▢ 1/4 cup buttermilk
- ▢ 1/4 cup hot coffee or hot water
- ▢ 5 cups marshmallow frosting see recipe for when to start the frosting
Instructions
Start Chocolate Buttercream
- Start the buttercream about an hour before you are ready to make your cupcakes. In a small saucepan, over medium heat, melt together butter and chocolate until completely melted. Stir together and then remove from heat.
- Allow to cool on the counter for 10 minutes before placing in the refrigerator until solid, about 1 hour.
Graham Cracker Layer
- Preheat oven to 350° Line cupcake pan with grease-proof liners.
- In your food processor, pulse graham cracker pieces until they are a fine crumb. Add in flour and sugar and pulse until combined. Drizzle in butter and continue to process until completely incorporated. If you don’t have a food processor, you can crush the graham crackers with a rolling pin in a plastic bag and mix everything in a bowl.
- Divide graham cracker mixture between cupcakes cups, a little less than one tablespoon per cup, and use your fingers or a shot glass to press mixture down firmly.
- Bake for 5 minutes until tops look set.
Cupcakes
- In a medium microwave-safe bowl, microwave butter until almost completely melted. Add chocolate and oil and microwave for 30 seconds. Stir. Microwave for an additional 15 seconds if necessary, until chocolate is completely melted. Stir until well-combined and set aside to cool.
- In a medium bowl, whisk together flour, cocoa powder, baking powder, baking soda, and salt. Set aside.
- In a large bowl, whisk together sugar, eggs, and vanilla extract. Whisk in cooled chocolate mixture. (It can be warm, but if it is hot to the touch, set aside for another couple of minutes. You don’t want to scramble the eggs!)
- Whisk in half of the flour mixture until just combined. Add all of the buttermilk and mix. Whisk in the last of the flour, mixing until just combined.
- Whisk in the coffee (or water). The batter will be thin and runny. It’s supposed to look like that.
- Fill cupcake tins just under 3/4 of the way full (if you transfer the batter to a liquid measuring cup first, it makes filling easier). Don’t overfill–you might have a tiny bit of batter left over.
- Bake for 15-18 minutes, until a toothpick inserted into the center of the cupcakes comes out clean.
- Take chocolate frosting mixture out of the refrigerator and set on the counter to soften while your cupcakes cool.
Finish Chocolate Filling and Assemble
- Allow cupcakes to cool completely, about half an hour. Once cupcakes are cool, use a handheld electric mixer, or scoop softened chocolate mixture into the bowl of your stand mixer and use the whisk attachment, to whisk mixture on medium-high until light in color, about 2 minutes.
- Using a serrated knife with a sharp tip, cut a cone-shaped piece out of the center of each cupcake. You don’t have to be neat about it, and you can discard (or eat) the cone.
- Transfer chocolate frosting to a plastic bag by placing the bag over an empty cup and scooping the mixture inside. Seal bag and snip off one of the corners. Use the bag to “pipe” chocolate mixture into the cupcakes and fill to the top.
- Make marshmallow frosting and top cupcakes with big swirls using a piping bag.
- Turn broiler on high and place cupcakes on a tray in the oven. Watch closely and do not walk away from the oven. Leave cupcakes in just long enough to toast the marshmallow frosting, 2 to 4 minutes.
Notes
Nutritional Information Cupcakes Adapted From Baker by Nature Chocolate Buttercream Adapted From Cookies and Cups
Light and fluffy marshmallow frosting. Delicious to eat and easy to make!

Growing up, my mother used to wax poetic about the amazing marshmallow frosting she liked to make as a girl. And now ages and ages later, I’m finally giving it a try.
Okay, this isn’t my mom’s recipe–part of the mystique of her frosting is that the recipe was lost to time–but according to her, this one turned out very similar, so win!
This frosting is so much fun. Watching egg whites and sugar go from clear, eggy liquid to light and billowy clouds of marshmallow deliciousness is like watching a magic trick.
I’ll be using this frosting next in a recipe next week and since cooked frosting always intimidated me when I first started baking, I thought I’d give this one its own post before then and walk through it step-by-step.
You will Need: Heat-proof glass bowl * or stand mixer bowl Stand mixer * or handheld electric mixer * Whisk Medium to large saucepan for boiling water
First, you’re going to whisk eggs, sugar, cream of tartar, and salt in a large heat-proof bowl or the bowl of your stand mixer. Heat an inch of water (fill the pot up to your first knuckle) in a large pot until simmering and place bowl of egg whites over the water. Make sure the bottom of the bowl is not touching the boiling water.

Stir eggs over simmering water until they reach 120°F. This will take about 3 to 5 minutes. If you don’t have an instant-read thermometer, one, you should get one *, it will change your life. Two, at 120°F, your mixture will feel hot to the touch, just past the point of comfortable.

Remove bowl from heat and use your stand mixer or hand-held electric mixer to beat the egg whites on high for another 3 to 6 minutes. They should become bright white and fluffy. They won’t be able to form stiff peaks because they are so sticky, but when you lift the beaters out of the mixture, the peaks should stand pretty tall before flopping over.

Transfer to a piping bag or use a large plastic bag with the tip cut off to pipe onto some delicious cupcakes, like maybe my Gooey Chocolate S’mores Cupcakes …

Then very carefully brown under your broiler for a couple of minutes or toast with a kitchen torch. And done!

More Favorite Frosting Recipes
- Small-batch Vanilla Frosting
- Small-batch Chocolate Frosting
- Small-batch Cookie Dough Frosting
- Small-batch Cream Cheese Frosting

Ingredients
- ▢ 4 large egg whites room temperature
- ▢ 1 cup ( 200 g) granulated sugar
- ▢ 1/4 teaspoon cream of tartar
- ▢ Pinch of salt
- ▢ 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract optional
Instructions
- Fill a medium to large pot with 1 inch of water and bring to a simmer.
- In a large heat-proof bowl (or the bowl of your stand mixer), whisk together egg whites, sugar, cream of tartar, and salt.
- Place bowl over the simmering water on the stove, making sure the bottom of the bowl is not touching the water. Heat, whisking constantly until eggs reach 120°F.
- Remove bowl from heat and use your hand mixer or electric mixer to beat the egg whites on high for 5 minutes or until light and fluffy with peaks that mostly hold their shape.
- If desired, add vanilla extract and beat for another 30 seconds until well-mixed.
- Transfer immediately to a piping bag or use a large plastic bag with the tip cut off to pipe onto cupcakes.
- Very carefully brown under your broiler or toast with a kitchen torch. This step is optional, but the frosting is quite sticky until toasted.
Notes
Nutritional Information Adapted From ChowHound

Easy Marshmallow Frosting
Ingredients
- 4 large egg whites room temperature
- 1 cup ( 200 g) granulated sugar
- 1/4 teaspoon cream of tartar
- Pinch of salt
- 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract optional
Instructions
- Fill a medium to large pot with 1 inch of water and bring to a simmer.
- In a large heat-proof bowl (or the bowl of your stand mixer), whisk together egg whites, sugar, cream of tartar, and salt.
- Place bowl over the simmering water on the stove, making sure the bottom of the bowl is not touching the water. Heat, whisking constantly until eggs reach 120°F.
- Remove bowl from heat and use your hand mixer or electric mixer to beat the egg whites on high for 5 minutes or until light and fluffy with peaks that mostly hold their shape.
- If desired, add vanilla extract and beat for another 30 seconds until well-mixed.
- Transfer immediately to a piping bag or use a large plastic bag with the tip cut off to pipe onto cupcakes.
- Very carefully brown under your broiler or toast with a kitchen torch. This step is optional, but the frosting is quite sticky until toasted.