Chocolate Mousse Cake Filling Recipe Buttercream Frosting

So you’re standing in the kitchen, staring into the fridge like it might magically bake something for you. Been there. And now you want something chocolatey, creamy, dramatic, and worthy of showing off but without turning your kitchen into a crime scene? Perfect. This chocolate mousse cake filling with buttercream frosting is basically dessert royalty that somehow still feels chill and doable. Let’s make it happen.
Why This Recipe Is Awesome
First of all, it tastes like effort, even though it’s surprisingly low effort. Love that for us.
The chocolate mousse filling is light, fluffy, and not-too-sweet, while the buttercream frosting is rich, smooth, and unapologetically indulgent.
Why you’ll love it:
- It’s soft, creamy, and ridiculously chocolatey
- Works for layer cakes, cupcakes, or “I ate it with a spoon” situations
- Looks fancy enough for guests but forgiving enough for real life
- Idiot-proof, IMO. If I can do it without panicking, so can you
Basically, this recipe understands you.
Ingredients You’ll Need

For the Chocolate Mousse Cake Filling
- Dark chocolate (200g) – The real stuff. Skip compound chocolate unless you enjoy disappointment
- Heavy cream (1 cup) – Cold, please. Warm cream ruins vibes
- Butter (2 tbsp) – Unsalted, because control matters
- Powdered sugar (2 tbsp) – Just enough sweetness
- Cocoa powder (1 tbsp) – Optional, but highly encouraged
- Vanilla extract (1 tsp) – Because chocolate loves company
- Pinch of salt – Tiny, but powerful
For the Buttercream Frosting
- Unsalted butter (1 cup / 226g) – Soft, not melted. Big difference
- Powdered sugar (3–4 cups) – Adjust based on sweetness tolerance
- Heavy cream or milk (2–4 tbsp) – For that silky texture
- Vanilla extract (1–2 tsp) – Don’t be shy
- Pinch of salt – Trust the process
Step-by-Step Instructions

Chocolate Mousse Filling
- Melt the chocolate.
Chop the dark chocolate and melt it gently using a double boiler or microwave (short bursts, stir often). Add butter and stir until smooth. Let it cool slightly warm, not hot. - Whip the cream.
In a cold bowl, whip heavy cream with powdered sugar and vanilla until soft peaks form. Don’t go wild you want fluffy, not butter. - Fold, don’t fight.
Add the melted chocolate to the whipped cream in two batches. Fold gently using a spatula. This isn’t a workout. Keep the air in. - Finish it off.
Sprinkle in cocoa powder and salt. Fold once or twice more until smooth and dreamy. Chill for 20–30 minutes to firm up slightly.
Buttercream Frosting
- Beat the butter.
Add softened butter to a bowl and beat on medium-high for 3–4 minutes until pale and fluffy. Yes, it takes time. No shortcuts here. - Add powdered sugar gradually.
Mix in powdered sugar one cup at a time. Start slow unless you enjoy sugar clouds everywhere. - Adjust the texture.
Add cream or milk, one tablespoon at a time, until smooth and spreadable. Beat well after each addition. - Flavor it.
Add vanilla and salt. Beat again until light, fluffy, and dangerously spoonable.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Overwhipping the cream.
If it looks grainy, you went too far. Congratulations, you made butter-adjacent sadness. - Using hot chocolate in the mousse.
Warm chocolate + whipped cream = melted mess. Let it cool. Be patient. - Skipping the salt.
“It’s dessert, I don’t need salt.” Wrong. Salt = flavor glow-up. - Butter too cold or too melted.
Cold butter = lumpy frosting. Melted butter = soup. Aim for soft like room-temp vibes. - Rushing assembly.
Chill the mousse before filling the cake. Gravity is not your friend otherwise.
Alternatives & Substitutions
- Milk chocolate instead of dark?
Yes, but reduce powdered sugar slightly unless you like super-sweet desserts. - Dairy-free option?
Use coconut cream (the thick part only) for mousse and vegan butter + plant milk for frosting. It works shockingly well. - Cream cheese buttercream instead?
Swap half the butter with cream cheese. Tangy + chocolate = elite combo. - Less sweet frosting?
Add an extra pinch of salt or use whipped buttercream style with more cream. - Espresso kick?
Add 1 tsp instant coffee to melted chocolate. Chocolate + coffee = personality.
Final Thoughts
This chocolate mousse cake filling with buttercream frosting is one of those recipes that makes people think you really know what you’re doing even if you were winging it the whole time. It’s rich, fluffy, dramatic, and honestly kind of therapeutic to make.
So go on. Fill that cake. Frost it generously. Lick the spoon.
Now go impress someone or just yourself with your new dessert skills. You’ve earned it.
