• Rose gold luster dust mixed with a touch of vodka makes a paint — brush it onto white chocolate ganache for a seamless metallic finish
• The drip goes on first, then the dust. Trying to do it in the other order is a mess.
• A dry brush gives you more shimmer than a wet one — less product, more reflection
• Rose Gold Luster Dust does the heavy lifting here, but a dusting of Pink Luster Dust on top adds depth
Rose Gold Drip Cake
This cake looks like it came from a high-end bakery. It didn’t — it took about 20 extra minutes and the right edible glitter for cakes. Here’s exactly how to pull it off.
Ingredients
Ingredients
- 2 8-inch Baked vanilla cake layers (your recipe or box mix)
- 3 cups Vanilla buttercream
- 1/2 cup White chocolate ganache (warm, pourable)
- 1 tsp Rose Gold Luster Dust
- 1/4 tsp Pink Luster Dust
- 1/4 tsp Gold Luster Dust (optional, for accents)
- 1 tsp Vodka or clear extract (for mixing)
- 1 Food-safe paintbrush (soft bristles)
Instructions
Layer your cake with buttercream, then apply a smooth crumb coat. Chill for 20 minutes. Come back and add your final coat — you want a clean white surface so the rose gold really pops against it. Chill again until firm, at least 15 minutes.
Warm your white chocolate ganache until it’s just pourable — not hot, not thick. Too hot and it runs all the way to the plate. Too cool and the drips stop halfway down. Test it on the back of a cold spoon first. When it drips slowly but steadily, it’s ready.
Spoon the ganache onto the top edge of the cake and nudge it gently over the sides with a spoon or offset spatula, spacing drips as you go. Then pour the remaining ganache over the top and spread it flat. Chill the cake for 10 minutes to let the drip set completely before you touch it with anything.
Combine 1 tsp of Rose Gold Luster Dust with just enough vodka to make a thick, paintable paste — start with 1/2 tsp of liquid and add more drop by drop. It should coat the brush but not drip off it. The alcohol evaporates fast, so mix it right before you use it.
Using your soft-bristle brush, paint the luster dust mixture directly onto the set ganache drips. Work from top to bottom, following the shape of each drip. You don’t need full coverage — uneven application actually looks better. The shimmer reads differently at different angles, and that variation is what makes it look metallic instead of just colored.
Once the paint is dry (2-3 minutes), take a clean dry brush and dust Pink Luster Dust lightly over the top of the cake in a circular motion. Then go back with a tiny amount of Gold Luster Dust — just a whisper of it — on any raised details or edges. That’s what gives the finished cake its depth. One color is nice. Three layered together is something else.
Add any final decorations — dried rose petals, gold-dusted chocolates, or nothing at all. The cake holds at room temperature for a few hours, or refrigerate and pull it out 30 minutes before serving. The shimmer stays put either way.
Tips
The most common mistake is adding too much vodka. You want the consistency of watercolor paint — not a wash, not a paste. If your mixture looks watery or translucent when you apply it, add more luster dust. The final result should look opaque metallic on the first pass.
Dark or milk chocolate ganache will swallow the shimmer entirely. The Rose Gold Luster Dust needs a light, neutral surface to reflect off. White chocolate ganache is it. If you want tips on other surfaces that work well with edible glitter, the full breakdown is in our guide to using edible glitter on cakes, cupcakes, and cookies.
For dusting the top of the cake, resist the urge to load the brush. Tap off most of the dust onto a paper towel before you touch the cake. Then apply in a light, sweeping motion. You can always add more. You can’t take it off once it’s on the frosting.
[ld_schema_recipe]
{
“@context”: “https://schema.org/”,
“@type”: “Recipe”,
“name”: “Rose Gold Drip Cake”,
“description”: “A vanilla layer cake with white buttercream and white chocolate ganache drip, finished with rose gold luster dust paint and a dusting of pink and gold edible glitter. Metallic, shimmery, and far easier than it looks.”,
“image”: “https://lusterdust.com/wp-content/uploads/rose-gold-drip-cake.jpg”,
“author”: {
“@type”: “Organization”,
“name”: “Luster Dust”
},
“prepTime”: “PT30M”,
“cookTime”: “PT35M”,
“totalTime”: “PT65M”,
“recipeYield”: “12 servings”,
“recipeCategory”: “Dessert”,
“recipeCuisine”: “American”,
“keywords”: “edible glitter for cakes, cake with edible glitter, edible cake glitter, rose gold drip cake, luster dust cake, shimmer cake”,
“recipeIngredient”: [
“2 8-inch baked vanilla cake layers”,
“3 cups vanilla buttercream”,
“1/2 cup white chocolate ganache (warm, pourable)”,
“1 tsp Rose Gold Luster Dust”,
“1/4 tsp Pink Luster Dust”,
“1/4 tsp Gold Luster Dust (optional)”,
“1 tsp vodka or clear extract”,
“1 food-safe soft-bristle paintbrush”
],
“recipeInstructions”: [
{
“@type”: “HowToStep”,
“name”: “Stack and frost the cake”,
“text”: “Layer the cake with buttercream, apply a crumb coat, and chill for 20 minutes. Apply the final coat and chill again until firm, at least 15 minutes.”
},
{
“@type”: “HowToStep”,
“name”: “Make the drip”,
“text”: “Warm white chocolate ganache until just pourable. Test on the back of a cold spoon — it should drip slowly and steadily.”
},
{
“@type”: “HowToStep”,
“name”: “Apply the drip”,
“text”: “Spoon ganache onto the top edge and nudge drips over the sides. Pour remaining ganache over the top and spread flat. Chill 10 minutes to set.”
},
{
“@type”: “HowToStep”,
“name”: “Mix luster paint”,
“text”: “Combine 1 tsp Rose Gold Luster Dust with approximately 1/2 tsp vodka to form a thick, paintable paste. Adjust to watercolor paint consistency.”
},
{
“@type”: “HowToStep”,
“name”: “Paint the drip”,
“text”: “Using a soft-bristle brush, paint the luster dust mixture onto the set ganache drips from top to bottom. Uneven application looks intentionally metallic.”
},
{
“@type”: “HowToStep”,
“name”: “Dust the top”,
“text”: “Once the paint is dry (2-3 minutes), dust Pink Luster Dust over the top in circular motions with a dry brush, then add a whisper of Gold Luster Dust to edges and raised details.”
},
{
“@type”: “HowToStep”,
“name”: “Finish and serve


