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    Home • Recipes • French Desserts

    French Ice Cream Cake (Vacherin Glacé)

    Published: Mar 14, 2020 · Modified: Dec 12, 2025 by Jill Colonna12 Comments · This post may contain affiliate links. Read our disclosure policy

    Jump to Recipe

    Vacherin, the popular French Ice Cream Cake is a celebratory dessert (gluten free). Just add a tub of sorbet, meringue and whipped cream.

    I love how simple this recipe is. I remember the advent of Baskin Robbins in Glasgow at the end of the 70's and my first taste of an ice cream cake. Great memories and so simple to make. - Janice

    slice of ice cream cake with pink outer layers, creamy vanilla inside and topped with cream

    What is a Vacherin Dessert?

    A French Vacherin is an ice cream cake. Not to be confused with the round Vacherin cheese made of cow's milk, this celebration dessert is also round in shape.

    Found in most pâtisseries in France, a classic Vacherin glacé is made up of a meringue base, topped with a layer or vanilla ice cream then raspberry sorbet and finished off with a Chantilly cream, sometimes laced with a little festive tipple and extra meringue around the sides of the cake.

    Vacherin Dessert vs Pavlova

    I've seen some Vacherins on the web that cause confusion, as they call themselves a Vacherin, but are actually pavlovas just with meringue, cream and fruit. So what's the difference between them?

    Unlike a Vacherin, a Pavlova is also made of meringue and whipped cream but it's topped with fruit and no ice cream or sorbet is added. The vacherin is a complete ice cream cake with added meringue and cream.

    ice cream cake topped with cream, meringues and birthday candles

    A French Vacherin Ice Cream Birthday Cake

    My French father-in-law, Jean-Pierre, adores a Vacherin cake. Each time we have a family reunion or party of some sort - whether it's a birthday or an excuse for a special dessert, he always orders a Vacherin Glacé from the local patisserie. It's such a French classic, that most patisseries sell them in the freezer, opposite the counter.

    So, when Jean-Pierre ('le Toucan') was visiting recently, I made my own homemade Vacherin to surprise him for his 80th birthday.

    La Vache! Pink Boobies...

    Surprise, Jean-Pierre! I shocked even myself by a last-minute mind-blowing idea of adding pink colouring to the meringue.  Not exactly a great idea for a very traditional Corsican father-in-law - but let's just say it continued the raspberry sorbet theme.
    I loved how he totally ignored my pink boobies all around the cake, though. Luckily I had a few macaron shells handy to disguise them!

    Vacherin French Ice Cream Cake

    French Ice Cream Cake - Dessert Prepared in Advance

    Moreover, a Vacherin is a perfect ice cream cake dessert made in advance.  Just prepare the day before, the morning itself - or even a few days before.

    If you prefer the Chantilly cream fresh and unfrozen, then add this at the last minute and enjoy adding your own personal decorations.
    I added gold leaf, some pistachios and served cape gooseberries on the side, just as an excuse for some winter fruit, otherwise fresh raspberries are great.

    Vacherin Ice Cream Cake Recipe
    Traditional French Vacherin layers of vanilla ice cream and raspberry sorbet
    Vacherin Ice Cream Dessert Macarons

    How to Make a Vacherin Cake from Scratch

    A Vacherin is more about organising the presentation of ice cream than an actual recipe, to be honest. Traditionally it's made with vanilla ice cream and raspberry sorbet, but I used nougat ice cream with extra raspberry ripple in it. Pistachio ice cream would be wonderful too.

    I make my own meringue base but you could buy yours or even make a macaron base out of it and stick raspberry macarons around the sides of the cake. 

    Warning: If you do buy macarons from a store, ensure they have not been frozen first - otherwise do not freeze and serve at the last minute.

    preparing a stencil and whipping up egg whites to prepare the ice cream cake's base

    First take an 18 cm/7 inch cake ring. Trace a circle on parchment paper. Whip the meringue until stiff peaks are easy to work with a piping bag and pipe it as a spiral in the ring. There's no need to add colouring; keep it white or add a little raspberry powder or food colouring if you prefer a raspberry meringue.

    With the remaining meringue, pipe out little kisses. These will be stuck around the cake at the end.

    spiral of pink meringue and kisses to go in the oven for an ice cream cake
    pipe out a large spiral as the meringue disk as the ice cream cake's base

    Assembling the Ice Cream Cake Layers

    While the meringue is baking in a coolish oven, use the cake ring to mould out both ice cream layers. The ice cream shouldn't be too hard, making it easy to spread it into the ring. For this part, you will need to act fast so that the ice cream is easy to work with (still frozen, not melted!).

    Start with a layer of vanilla ice cream, then another layer with raspberry sorbet. Leave each layer to harden in the freezer for 30 minutes (see recipe card for full details).

    different recipe stages to prepare a French ice cream cake

    Place the meringue disk as a base on a serving plate, and un-mould the ice cream layers on top of it. Then spread over with Chantilly Cream. To finish off, stick on the meringue kisses around the sides of the cake using more cream to hold.

    NOTE: There's no need to add sugar to the Chantilly cream, as there's enough sugar in the meringue and ice cream.

    Place in the freezer until dessert! This ice cream dessert is gluten free.

    a French vacherin topped with Chantilly cream and pink macarons sitting in the freezer
    Vacherin ice cream cake is also good made with macaron shells in place of meringue

    Vacherin Variations

    Here are a few delicious variations to the French ice cream cake, instead of using the classic vanilla ice cream and raspberry sorbet combination:

    • chestnut and vanilla (marron glacé)
    • candied fruit (Plombières) no churn; no ice cream maker needed for this recipe
    • lemon verbena (Verveine)
    • Whisky or Drambuie no churn
    • black sesame
    • wasabi, pistachio, coconut and vanilla - it's unique!
    • rhubarb sorbet with rose
    holding an ice cream cake decorated with piped cream and pink macarons
    Make a Vacherin glacé with raspberry macaron shells instead of meringue

    The ultimate variation to this is a bûche de Noël glacée; this ice cream yule log is made with chestnut ice cream, clementines and candied chestnut - also gluten-free.

    French vacherin ice cream meringue cake with layers

    Vacherin Ice Cream Cake

    Jill Colonna
    A French ice cream celebration cake that's easy to prepare in advance. Just add meringue to layers of vanilla ice cream and raspberry sorbet and top with unsugared Chantilly cream. A gluten free dessert that's found in most French pâtisseries.
    5 from 5 votes
    Print Recipe Pin Recipe
    Prep Time 25 minutes mins
    Cook Time 1 hour hr
    Freezing Time 1 hour hr
    Total Time 2 hours hrs 25 minutes mins
    Course Dessert
    Cuisine French
    Servings 8 people
    Calories 396 kcal

    Equipment

    • Electric whisk or
    • stand mixer with whisk attachment
    • 18cm / 7 inch cake ring or springform pan
    • Piping bag
    • Plain piping tip

    Ingredients
     

    Meringue

    • 3 egg whites
    • 100 g (3.5oz) sugar granulated or fine
    • 100 g (3.5oz) icing sugar (confectioner's/powdered sugar)

    Ice Cream

    • 500 g (18oz) vanilla ice cream or other creamy, soft ice cream
    • 400 g (14oz) raspberry sorbet or rhubarb sorbet

    Chantilly Cream

    • 300 g (10.5oz heavy whipping cream (crème fleurette 30% fat)
    • ¼ teaspoon vanilla powder or few drops vanilla extract
    • 1 tablespoon Chambord Liqueur (or Kirsch) (optional)

    Decor (optional)

    • pistachios
    • fresh raspberries
    Prevent your screen from going dark

    Instructions
     

    Meringue Layer & Decor

    • Trace the cake ring circle on to parchment paper as a guide for the spiral and turn the paper upside down so you can still see it.
      Preheat the oven to 130°C/250°F (110°C fan/Gas ½).
    • Using an electric whisk whip up the egg whites at low speed to soft peaks, then gradually add a third of the sugar until it starts to look brilliant. Then add the rest until the meringue has stiff peaks. Stop the whisk and fold in the icing sugar.
    • Transfer the meringue to a piping bag with a plain, round tip and pipe out into a spiral disk on to the parchment paper.
      Using the rest of the meringue, either pipe out another spiral or pipe out small kisses or little meringues to be put on the sides of the cake. Bake in the cool oven for an hour.

    Ice Cream & Sorbet Layers

    • Using ice cream that's a little soft (for ease of use), place the cake ring on to a rimmed baking sheet and spread the ice cream into an even layer. Place in the freezer for 30 minutes. Then repeat the process by topping with the sorbet. Freeze for another 30 minutes.

    Chantilly Cream and Preparation

    • Whip the heavy cream for about 5 minutes until thickened. (No need to add any sugar as there's enough sugar in the ice cream and meringue.) Once whipped into firm to medium peaks, add the liqueur (if using). Transfer the cream to a piping bag with a star tip.
    • It needs quick work during this stage so that the ice cream doesn't melt.
      Place the meringue spiral on a serving plate then un-mould the ice cream/sorbet cake on top. Spread over a third of the cream all over the surface and stick on the meringue kisses around the sides, sticking on a little extra cream for each meringue. Finish off the rest of the cream by piping it out in a circle around the edges - use your decor imagination here!
      Either serve immediately or freeze for at least another 30 minutes until ready to serve.

    Notes

    To serve: Decorate with pistachios or flaked almonds and raspberries.
    Serve with a dessert wine, rosé Champagne or demi-sec Champagne.
    I would recommend enjoying this dessert in one go. Don't re-freeze this dessert if leftovers (who needs an excuse to eat the whole lot, anyway?). Ideally, make using shop-bought ice cream.
    Springform tin: if using, simply turn out the ice cream layers topped with cream as is or turn upside down over the meringue base.
    Variations: also delicious with homemade lemon verbena ice cream and rhubarb sorbet or enjoy with vanilla ice cream and strawberry sorbet.
    Leftover egg yolks: save these to make these egg yolk recipes.
    Tried it? Rate itTap the stars above & add a quick comment - it helps other readers

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    Portrait of Jill Colonna, French cookbook author in Paris

    Bonjour - I'm Jill

    Author and home cook in Paris. Scottish and French, I've spent 30+ years in Paris sharing lighter, flavourful recipes with less sugar. No fancy techniques - just real food we eat at home. Plus take away my travel tips to taste France like a local.

    Meet Jill

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    Comments

      5 from 5 votes

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      Made this? Please rate this recipe




    1. June Stobie

      August 02, 2023 at 3:27 pm

      5 stars
      I would rate this cake 6 stars if I could. Thank you so much Jill for making this special cake for my special birthday. I thought it was absolutely fabulous especially when it contained the macarons that Lucie made.

      Reply
      • Jill Colonna

        August 02, 2023 at 3:40 pm

        So happy you liked it, Mum. It was a joint effort to say we love you! With macarons made earlier, it was the ideal answer when we weren't in our own kitchen.

        Reply
    2. Sisley White

      March 24, 2020 at 2:03 pm

      5 stars
      Ice cream cakes are so cool (pun not indended). They always remind me of birthday parties on holiday when I was little. I will have to try and make this myself.

      Reply
      • Jill Colonna

        March 24, 2020 at 2:39 pm

        Thanks Sisley - I love how it's fun, adaptable and always festive, whatever time of year!

        Reply
    3. Christina Conte

      March 16, 2020 at 4:30 pm

      5 stars
      I've never had a vacherin, but oh, I would absolutely love it! Love everything about this dessert, especially that it can be made in advance! Great for summertime entertaining! Can't wait for this housebound stuff to be over so I can get on with cooking and baking normally!

      Reply
      • Jill Colonna

        March 16, 2020 at 5:53 pm

        Glad you like this, Christina. Yes, it's great for summertime but it's also very popular over Christmas and New Year too, so it's an ideal celebration cake. Here we're not quite housebound officially until tomorrow but so glad I've stocked up with raw materials to be able to pretend we're carrying on as normal for menus. We just need to be thrifty!

        Reply
    4. Choclette

      March 16, 2020 at 4:11 pm

      5 stars
      Hahaha, love those pink boobies. It's almost a shame your father in law didn't spot them. Gosh, but it looks tempting, meringue cream AND ice-cream. Pinned.

      Hoping you're OK. Are you actually tied to the house, or are you still allowed to go out?

      Reply
      • Jill Colonna

        March 16, 2020 at 5:51 pm

        Hehe - I think he saw these pink meringues but chose not to draw attention to them, which is just as well! Thanks, Choclette - this is our first day of no lycée, husband working from home officially and we are just waiting on our President to tell us tonight that we will be house-bound in isolation (as most people honestly don't appear to be taking this seriously yet it's getting serious). It has just been announced also that all Parisian parks are closing as of tonight. It makes sense! Bon courage with stocking up. Look after yourselves!

        Reply
    5. sherry

      March 16, 2020 at 2:14 am

      this looks very pretty, and it's delicious i'm sure. i think unfrozen cream on top would be wonderful. cheers sherry

      Reply
      • Jill Colonna

        March 16, 2020 at 5:55 pm

        Thanks - it certainly is good, Sherry. I wasn't liking the idea at first of freezing the cream but once I did it (like they do in the patisseries here), it so much easier to prepare the whole thing in advance.

        Reply
    6. Janice Pattie

      March 15, 2020 at 1:24 pm

      5 stars
      I love how simple this recipe is. I remember the advent of Baskin Robbins in Glasgow at the end of the 70's and my first taste of an ice cream cake. Great memories and so simple to make.

      Reply
      • Jill Colonna

        March 15, 2020 at 3:49 pm

        Now I can just imagine how special that memory, Janice. Yes, it's so easy to make at home and now that we can't go to restaurants (since last night the French government have announced that all restaurants and cafés are closed due to the virus), all the more reason to make all the special occasions at home ourselves. Take care of yourself!

        Reply

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    Portrait of Jill Colonna, French cookbook author in Paris
    Welcome

    Bonjour - I'm Jill

    Author and home cook in Paris. Scottish and French, I've spent 30+ years in Paris sharing lighter, flavourful recipes with less sugar. No fancy techniques - just real food we eat at home. Plus take away my travel tips to taste France like a local.

    Meet Jill

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