How to Use Natural Food Coloring to Make Frosting of Every Hue (2024)

Ditch the dyes! These substitutes for food coloring work to tint everything from royal icing to buttercream and are made with ingredients you can pronounce.

By

Karla Walsh

How to Use Natural Food Coloring to Make Frosting of Every Hue (1)

Karla Walsh

Karla Walsh began her career at FITNESS magazine in 2010. Since, she's worked at a wide variety of publications full-time, including BHG.com, Recipe.com and as a cross-brand social media specialist. From search engine optimization to features for print to video strategy, she has a diverse background in all things magazines. At the start of 2019, Karla chose to pursue full-time freelance writing and has contributed to more than 3 dozen brands.

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Updated on February 11, 2021

It's true, store-bought food dyes are affordable, convenient, and make many baked goods like cookies and cake recipes look fabulous. But many of us are seeking ways to reduce the artificial ingredients in our diets. The FDA says not-so-natural frosting colorings are Generally Recognized as Safe (GRAS) at the levels we consume them in. However, they're really just like makeup for food. They allow us to dress up something that's perfectly beautiful as is. We get it, though. Sometimes you want more than plain ol' white frosting, so we tapped our Test Kitchen pros to try out a variety of substitutes for food coloring. Ahead, the best of the best natural frosting coloring ideas for every color in the rainbow.

How to Use Natural Food Coloring to Make Frosting of Every Hue (2)

How to Color Frosting Naturally

Before we dish about how to master natural food coloring for frosting, we have a disclaimer: Pretty much every natural substitute for food coloring will be less vibrant or intense as the commercially-bought bottles of food dye. For the deepest hues, use as concentrated a natural color base as possible, but note that the more you use, the more you might catch a hint of the flavor. (This might actually be an asset with something like strawberry; probably not so much with spinach in a dessert recipe.)

You have two options for natural dyes for frosting:

Concentrated Liquids

These offer more color and can be made using a juicer or you can create a purée by blending an ingredient and pressing it through cheesecloth or a fine-mesh sieve. Use as much produce as it takes to get 1 cup of strained liquid. Then, reduce the liquid in a skillet over medium heat to concentrate the color and remove extra water that might dilute the frosting. Aim for about ¼ cup concentrated liquid as the finished product.

Powders

These mix in and dissolve easily. Fruit and vegetable powders are easy to DIY by blending freeze-dried produce in a spice grinder or food processor. For fruits that have seeds, such as strawberries, pass them through a fine-mesh sieve too. Cocoa, coffee, tea, spices, and spirulina are already in powder form, so those are easy options.

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Just as you would with food dyes, start with a small amount of these natural frosting coloring options and add more as needed to adjust the color to your desired tint. For royal icing, start with 1½ teaspoons of powder or ¾ teaspoon liquid concentrate per cup of icing. For natural food coloring for buttercream frosting, you'll need more; try 1 tablespoon of powder or 1½ teaspoons concentrate per cup to start and scale up as needed.

Test Kitchen Tip: To avoid clumps, dissolve the natural powder dye in about 1 tablespoon of water before mixing in the frosting itself.

How to Use Natural Food Coloring to Make Frosting of Every Hue (3)

Natural Frosting Coloring Ideas for Every Shade

The only limits for substitutes for food coloring are your time and imagination. Feel free to use the guidance above to experiment and find your own personal favorite natural food colorings for frosting, try our Fresh Strawberry Buttercream recipe as a guide, or try our suggestions below for how to color frosting naturally.

  • Pink: Concentrated beet juice, concentrated strawberry juice, strawberry powder, raspberry powder.
  • Red: Beet powder.
  • Orange: Concentrated carrot juice, carrot powder, sweet potato powder.
  • Yellow: Saffron, turmeric. (Simmer 8 ounces water with ⅛ teaspoon of either, then reduce to ¼ cup of concentrated liquid.)
  • Green: Matcha, spinach powder, spirulina.
  • Blue or purple: Blueberry powder, concentrated blueberry juice.
  • Brown: Cocoa, tea, coffee.
  • Gray or black: Activated charcoal.

Play around with these natural frosting coloring alternatives, then report back in the comments about what worked best for you.

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How to Use Natural Food Coloring to Make Frosting of Every Hue (2024)

FAQs

How do you make natural food coloring for frosting? ›

Mix a little beet juice with white buttercream frosting to create the most beautiful natural pink frosting that is completely free of artificial food dye. To create dark pink or red frosting, add more natural beet juice. The taste from the small amount of beet juice needed goes undetected when mixed with frosting!

How do you use natural food coloring? ›

Use water from boiled veggies or fruit.

You can boil green vegetables like peas, or red fruits like cranberries for example, to extract the coloring. Then use the colored water that's left behind to color other foods and recipes. It's an easy, natural way to add coloring to food.

How to naturally color frosting brown? ›

To every 1 cup of white icing, add 1 tablespoon of the darkest unsweetened cocoa powder you can find. Mix well. This will result in a very still icing. Add warm water by 1 drop at a time, mixing after each addition, until you get your desired consistency.

How to get vibrant frosting colors? ›

Read It!
  1. Gel Food Coloring. Add a couple drops of food coloring into your microwave safe bowl full of white buttercream and stir well to combine. ...
  2. Heat it Up. Microwave the bowl for 6-8 seconds. ...
  3. Voila! Once your base is super deeply colored, you can add it to the rest of your buttercream and stir to combine!
Jun 1, 2022

What food coloring is best for frosting? ›

To color your buttercream frosting, you're going to need food-grade dyes. I recommend gel colors over traditional food coloring, and there are two types of colors I primarily use: the Wilton Color Right Color System and AmeriColor.

Can I use liquid food coloring for frosting? ›

Then, by the time you're anywhere near getting the colour that you want, you've completely changed the consistency of your buttercream. So liquid colouring for buttercream is a no no. The only instance where I use liquid food colouring is in cake batter, specifically our Red Velvet Cake.

How long does natural food coloring last? ›

Normally, the natural food color last for at least one year in normal condition. If the storage condition is cool and without light, the color can last longer.

What are the pros and cons of natural food coloring? ›

Natural colors are healthy, but there is a disadvantage that the color is unstable, you must use a large amount for good color. Meanwhile, artificial colors are very durable and we just need a small amount can brighten the color of the dish.

How do you set natural dye? ›

In most cases, you'll need to prep the fabric for dyeing with something called a mordant to help set the dye. It's not a hard step, and possible mordants include vinegar, soy milk, or salt. For veggie scraps, pre-soak your fabric in a mix of 1 cup vinegar + 4 cups water. For fruit scraps, 1/4 cup salt + 4 cups water.

What two food colors make brown? ›

Mix red and yellow in a 1:10 ratio (1 drop red to 10 drops yellow) for tan. Add 1 drop blue for a darker brown. Add red or yellow if the dye looks gray or black.

What makes natural food coloring? ›

Natural food colors originate from a wide range of sources like vegetables, fruits, spices, algae and/or other edible natural sources. They offer a wide spectrum of colors and impart color when added to food or drink.

What is a natural food coloring source? ›

Offering One of the Largest Libraries of Natural Food Colors on the Market
  • Annatto Extract.
  • Beet Juice.
  • Beta Carotene.
  • Black / Purple Carrot.
  • Blue Fruit Juice Color.
  • Blue Shade Vegetable Juice Colors.
  • Blue Spirulina Extract.
  • Butterfly Pea Powder.

What is a good substitute for red food coloring? ›

Try using concentrated beet juice in place of red food coloring. Berries - Raspberries, Cranberries, Currents, Goji, Strawberries are all the most red when they are fresh and in season. Berries make a star feature to a dish whether they are cooked, pureed or just left raw.

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