Cake • British Classic • Vegetarian

Mary Berry's Victoria Sponge: The Foolproof Classic Recipe

By M Azeem ~70 minutes 8 slices Easy
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Mary Berry's Victoria sponge — light golden British cake filled with raspberry jam and whipped cream, dusted with sugar

Mary Berry's Victoria sponge is a light, golden British cake made with equal weights of butter, sugar, flour, and eggs, filled with raspberry jam and whipped cream. She uses the all-in-one method, everything beaten together at once so beginners get a fluffy, even crumb with minimal fuss in under an hour.

Recipe Overview at a Glance

DetailInformation
Prep time15 minutes
Bake time25 minutes
Cooling time30 minutes
Total time~70 minutes
Servings8 slices
Calories (per slice)~480 kcal
DifficultyEasy (beginner-friendly)
Tin size2 x 8-inch (20cm) round tins

How Do You Make Mary Berry's Victoria Sponge? (Quick Method)

  1. Preheat the oven to 180°C (160°C fan / 350°F).
  2. Beat all sponge ingredients together until smooth.
  3. Divide between two greased, lined tins.
  4. Bake for 25 minutes until golden and springy.
  5. Cool, then fill with jam and whipped cream.
  6. Dust with sugar and serve.

That's the shortcut. Below, you'll find the detailed version with measurements, visual cues, and expert tips.

The History and Charm of the Victoria Sponge

The cake takes its name from Queen Victoria, who enjoyed a slice with her afternoon tea. After Prince Albert's death, Victoria's lady-in-waiting Anna, the Duchess of Bedford, helped popularize afternoon tea and the sponge became a fixture.

The original recipe was filled only with jam. Cream came later, as refrigeration made fresh dairy easier to store. Today the jam-and-cream combination is the standard, though purists still debate whether cream belongs at all.

Why does it endure? It's simple, affordable, and endlessly adaptable. The Women's Institute even uses a strict version (jam only, no cream) as a benchmark for judging baking competitions across the UK.

Ingredients: Why Quality Matters

Mary Berry's recipe follows the classic equal-weight ratio. For two 8-inch sponges:

For the sponge:

  • 225g (8 oz) softened unsalted butter
  • 225g (8 oz) caster sugar
  • 4 large eggs, at room temperature
  • 225g (8 oz) self-raising flour
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract (optional)

For the filling:

  • 4–6 tbsp raspberry or strawberry jam
  • 300ml (½ pint) double cream, whipped
  • Icing or caster sugar, for dusting

What Does Each Ingredient Do?

IngredientFunction
ButterAdds richness and moisture
Caster sugarSweetens and helps create a tender crumb
EggsBind and add structure plus lift
Self-raising flourProvides the rise and framework
Baking powderExtra insurance for a tall, even sponge

Why Should Ingredients Be at Room Temperature?

Cold butter won't beat smoothly, and cold eggs can curdle the batter. Room-temperature ingredients blend into a silky mixture that traps air essential for a light sponge. Take everything out of the fridge an hour before baking.

What Is the All-in-One Method (and Why Does Mary Berry Use It)?

Traditional sponges use the creaming method: beat butter and sugar first, then add eggs and flour in stages. Mary Berry favors the all-in-one method for this recipe: you simply beat every ingredient together at once.

MethodStepsBest for
CreamingMultiple stages, longerBakers who want maximum air
All-in-oneOne bowl, one beatBeginners and speed

The all-in-one approach works because the added baking powder guarantees the rise, so you don't rely solely on air beaten into the butter. It's faster, harder to mess up, and produces consistent results.

Step-by-Step Instructions

  1. Prep your tins. Grease two 8-inch round tins and line the bases with parchment.
  2. Combine everything. Put butter, sugar, eggs, flour, baking powder, and vanilla into a large bowl.
  3. Beat until smooth. Use an electric mixer for about 2 minutes, just until the batter is well blended and pale. Don't overbeat.
  4. Divide the batter. Spoon equally into both tins and level the tops. (A kitchen scale ensures even layers.)
  5. Bake. Place on the middle shelf at 180°C (160°C fan) for 25 minutes.
  6. Check doneness. The sponges should be golden, springy to the touch, and shrinking slightly from the tin edges. A skewer should come out clean.
  7. Cool. Rest in the tins for 5 minutes, then turn out onto a wire rack and peel off the parchment.

How Do You Make the Perfect Jam and Cream Filling?

Once the sponges are completely cool, it's time to assemble.

  1. Choose your jam. Raspberry is traditional; strawberry is a popular alternative. Use a good-quality jam with real fruit content.
  2. Whip the cream. Beat 300ml double cream until it holds soft peaks. Stop before it turns stiff and grainy. Add 1 tbsp sugar if you like it sweeter.
  3. Assemble. Spread jam on the bottom sponge, then top with whipped cream. Place the second sponge on top.
  4. Finish. Dust with icing or caster sugar.

Mary Berry Victoria Sponge with Buttercream

Prefer buttercream to fresh cream? Buttercream holds up longer at room temperature, making it ideal for warm days or transporting cakes.

Mary Berry's vanilla buttercream:

  • 100g (3½ oz) softened butter
  • 225g (8 oz) icing sugar, sifted
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1–2 tbsp milk

Beat the butter until soft, gradually add the icing sugar, then mix in vanilla and enough milk to reach a spreadable consistency. Spread over the bottom sponge, add jam, and sandwich together.

Mary Berry Chocolate Buttercream

For a chocolate twist, swap 25g of the icing sugar for cocoa powder, or melt 50g dark chocolate and beat it in once cooled. This pairs beautifully with a chocolate sponge for birthday cakes.

How Do You Scale the Recipe for Larger Cakes?

The equal-weight ratio makes scaling easy. Here's a quick reference:

Tin sizeButter / Sugar / FlourEggsBake time
7-inch (18cm)175g each320–25 min
8-inch (20cm)225g each425 min
9-inch (23cm)280g each525–30 min
10-inch (25cm)350g each630–35 min

For a Mary Berry birthday cake, use the 9 or 10-inch version, fill with buttercream and jam, and decorate with sprinkles, fresh berries, or a chocolate ganache drip.

Troubleshooting: Common Victoria Sponge Problems

ProblemLikely causeFix
Sinks in the middleOven opened too early; too much raising agentKeep door shut; measure carefully
Dry spongeOverbaked; too much flourCheck at 22 min; weigh flour
Uneven riseTins unevenly filled; oven hot spotsWeigh batter; rotate tins
Crumbly textureOverbeaten or overbakedBeat just until smooth
Dense, flat cakeCold ingredients; expired baking powderUse room-temp items; fresh powder

What Are the Best Variations and Personal Touches?

  • Lemon sponge: Add the zest of one lemon to the batter and use lemon curd in the filling.
  • Coffee and walnut: Add 1 tbsp dissolved instant coffee and fold in chopped walnuts.
  • Berry layered: Add fresh sliced strawberries alongside the jam and cream.
  • Decoration: Top with fresh berries, edible flowers, or a simple dusting of icing sugar.

Dietary Adaptations

NeedSwap
Gluten-freeUse gluten-free self-raising flour + ½ tsp xanthan gum
Dairy-freePlant-based block butter + coconut cream
Reduced sugarCut sugar by 25g; flavor with extra vanilla

How Should You Serve and Store a Victoria Sponge?

Serve at room temperature, sliced into wedges, with a cup of tea the classic British way.

Storage tips:

  • Cream-filled: Refrigerate and eat within 2 days.
  • Buttercream-filled: Store in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 3 days.
  • Unfilled sponges: Freeze (wrapped) for up to 3 months. Thaw before filling.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the difference between a sponge cake and a Victoria sponge?

A true sponge cake relies on whipped eggs for lift and often contains little or no fat. A Victoria sponge is a butter-based cake (a "pound cake" style) using equal weights of butter, sugar, flour, and eggs, plus a raising agent.

What is the 3-2-1 rule in baking?

The 3-2-1 rule typically refers to pastry ratios (3 parts flour, 2 parts fat, 1 part water). A Victoria sponge instead uses a 1-1-1-1 equal-weight ratio of butter, sugar, flour, and eggs.

How do I make my Victoria sponge light and fluffy?

Use room-temperature ingredients, don't overbeat the batter, include baking powder, and avoid opening the oven before 20 minutes. These four steps create the lightest crumb.

What is the secret to a good Victoria sponge?

The secret is the equal-weight ratio combined with the all-in-one mixing method, plus baking powder for guaranteed lift. Precise measuring matters more than fancy technique.

Can I make a Victoria sponge ahead of time?

Yes. Bake the sponges up to a day ahead and store them airtight, or freeze unfilled sponges for up to 3 months. Fill on the day you plan to serve for the freshest result.

Why did my Victoria sponge sink in the middle?

The most common causes are opening the oven door too early, an oven that runs too cool, or too much raising agent. Keep the door shut until at least 20 minutes have passed.

Can I use plain flour instead of self-raising?

Yes add 2 teaspoons of baking powder per 225g of plain flour to mimic self-raising flour. The recipe already includes extra baking powder, so adjust accordingly.

How long does a Victoria sponge last?

A cream-filled sponge lasts 2 days refrigerated. A buttercream version keeps 3 days at room temperature in an airtight container. Plain sponges freeze for up to 3 months.

Can I make a Victoria sponge without eggs?

You can substitute each egg with 60g of unsweetened applesauce or a commercial egg replacer, though the texture will be slightly denser and less airy than the original.

Mary Berry's Victoria sponge filled with raspberry jam and whipped cream
★ Recipe Card

Mary Berry's Victoria Sponge

Prep15 min
Bake25 min
Cool30 min
Total~ 70 min
Servings8 slices
Calories480 kcal

Ingredients

For the sponge

  • 225g (8 oz) softened unsalted butter
  • 225g (8 oz) caster sugar
  • 4 large eggs, at room temperature
  • 225g (8 oz) self-raising flour
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract (optional)

For the filling

  • 4–6 tbsp raspberry or strawberry jam
  • 300ml (½ pint) double cream, whipped
  • Icing or caster sugar, for dusting

Instructions

  1. Prep your tins: Grease two 8-inch round tins and line the bases with parchment.
  2. Combine everything: Put butter, sugar, eggs, flour, baking powder, and vanilla into a large bowl.
  3. Beat until smooth: Use an electric mixer for about 2 minutes, just until the batter is well blended and pale. Don't overbeat.
  4. Divide the batter: Spoon equally into both tins and level the tops. A kitchen scale ensures even layers.
  5. Bake: Place on the middle shelf at 180°C (160°C fan) for 25 minutes.
  6. Check doneness: The sponges should be golden, springy to the touch, and shrinking slightly from the tin edges. A skewer should come out clean.
  7. Cool: Rest in the tins for 5 minutes, then turn out onto a wire rack and peel off the parchment.
  8. Fill and finish: Spread jam on the bottom sponge, top with whipped cream, sandwich with the second sponge, and dust with icing or caster sugar.

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