& Cream Sugar-Free ( Recipe)

Macros
245 calories
17g protein
6g fat
16g carbs
Oreo Protein Cake Slice Landscape

Building a protein that actually tastes like dessert instead of a baked protein shake requires a deep understanding of ingredient function. We are taking our standard cake base and elevating it with a massive upgrade: a whipped frosting made from greek , zero-sugar Cool Whip, and crushed cookies. This protein cake delivers a legitimate bakery-style crumb and a thick, mousse-like layer of frosting while packing 17 grams of protein per slice. We use a specific blend of whey and casein alongside blended to completely replace traditional butter and oil in the batter. At just 245 calories a slice for a fully frosted, double-layer dessert, it completely satisfies your sweet tooth while fitting seamlessly into your daily nutrition plan.

If you're looking for other Cake hits, try my:

The Strategy

The secret to keeping a fat-free, high-protein cake from drying out in the oven is moisture retention. Cottage cheese is a powerhouse here. When completely liquefied in a blender, the curds break down into a smooth, thick liquid that mimics the tenderizing effects of heavy cream or buttermilk. The casein protein naturally found in the cheese bonds with the water and eggs, locking moisture into the crumb during the bake so it stays tender enough to support a heavy layer of yogurt and Cool Whip icing.

Why You'll Love This Recipe

  • Elite Macros: At roughly 245 calories, 43g carbs, and 17g of protein per slice—frosting included—it gives you a massive, satisfying slice of layer cake that fits your macros.
  • Legitimate Mousse Icing: By folding zero-sugar Cool Whip into greek yogurt, you get a stabilized, airy frosting that tastes like a rich mousse but carries a fraction of the fat of traditional buttercream.
  • Classic Oreo Flavor: Utilizing allulose and stevia extract in the cake provides deep sweetness without the glycemic spike, while the folded cookies bring that authentic, nostalgic classic oreo flavor to every bite.
  • Structural Integrity: Thanks to the xanthan gum and cake flour, the cake holds its shape perfectly when you cut it horizontally to build your layers.
Oreo Protein Cake Slice

What makes Oreo Cookies & Cream High-Protein Sugar-Free Cake Special?

What makes a layered high-protein cake actually taste like cake? It comes down to the precise interaction between the xanthan gum, the whey/casein blend, and the low-protein cake flour. Standard all-purpose flour combined with creates too much gluten development, leading to a tough, bread-like texture. By using cake flour, we keep the gluten network weak. The xanthan gum steps in to provide just enough structural support so the cake rises tall and can be sliced into layers without crumbling. When paired with our stabilized yogurt and Cool Whip frosting, the result is a tender, tight crumb that replicates a traditional bakery tier cake.

Key Equipment Focus

Digital Kitchen Scale: Precision is everything with high-protein baking. Weighing your allulose, chocolate blend, and flour is the only way to ensure the hydration levels are correct. Volume measurements will ruin this mixture.

9 Inch Springform Pan: Because this crumb is incredibly tender, trying to invert it out of a standard cake pan risks tearing it. A springform allows you to release the sides without stressing the cake structure.

Beast Blender: You must completely liquefy the cottage cheese, eggs, and water. Any residual curds will bake into dense, wet pockets. This blender pulverizes them instantly.

Silicone Spatula Set: Essential for folding the wet and dry ingredients together without developing gluten, and crucial for gently folding the aerated Cool Whip into the greek yogurt without deflating it.

Jacob eating Cake

Ingredient Deep Dive & Strategy

PE Science: You absolutely cannot use 100% whey isolate here. A Whey/Casein blend is essential for moisture and structure, whereas 100% Whey will result in a dry, rubbery texture when exposed to oven heat. The casein in the blend absorbs the liquid from the cottage cheese and holds onto it, ensuring a moist crumb.

Cake Flour: Cake flour is milled finer and contains significantly less protein than all-purpose flour. This prevents the cake from becoming tough and chewy when combined with the heavy protein powder.

Allulose: This rare sugar is crucial for the texture. Unlike erythritol or swerve, allulose actually browns and caramelizes in the oven, giving the cake a traditional golden exterior and retaining moisture on the interior.

Non-Fat Greek Yogurt & Zero Sugar Cool Whip: The base of our new icing strategy. The yogurt provides a massive hit of protein and structure, while the Cool Whip provides aeration and fat-like mouthfeel. When folded together, they stabilize into a thick, spreadable mousse.

Oreo Protein Cake Slice Ingredients

Oreo Cookies: Crushed and folded directly into the icing, the oreo cookie bits soften slightly as they absorb the moisture from the yogurt, creating an authentic flavor profile throughout.

Oreo Cookies & Cream High-Protein Sugar-Free Cake Step by Step Instructions

1. Prep the pan and oven: Preheat the oven to 325°F. Grease your springform cake pan thoroughly and line the bottom with parchment paper for a guaranteed easy release.

2. Whisk the dry ingredients: In a large bowl, whisk together the cake flour, protein powder, allulose, baking powder, salt, xanthan gum, and stevia extract until completely uniform.

Pro Tip: Use your hands to physically break apart any small clumps of allulose before you stir. Allulose tends to clump in the bag, and you want an entirely smooth dry mix to prevent dense spots.

3. Blend the wet ingredients: In your blender, combine the eggs, cottage cheese, and water. Blend on high until the mixture is completely smooth and liquid, with zero visible curds.

4. Fold the batter: Pour the wet mixture into the center of the dry ingredients. Fold gently with a silicone spatula until fully combined and no dry pockets remain in the batter.

Pro Tip: Stop mixing the exact moment the flour disappears. Overworking the batter will develop the gluten in the cake flour and result in a tough, rubbery cake crumb.

5. Rest the batter: Let the batter sit undisturbed in the large bowl for exactly 5 minutes so the xanthan gum and protein powder can fully hydrate and thicken.

6. Bake: Pour the batter into the prepared springform pan and smooth the top into an even layer. Bake at 325°F for 30 minutes, or until the center is set and a tester comes out with moist crumbs. Let the cake cool completely in the pan.

7. Slice the layers: Once the cake has cooled completely to room temperature, release the springform sides. Use a long, serrated bread knife to carefully slice the cake horizontally into two even layers.

Oreo Protein Cake Sliced in Half

8. Whip the icing: In a medium mixing bowl, add the non-fat greek yogurt and the tub of thawed Zero Sugar Cool Whip. Using your silicone spatula, gently fold the two together until completely combined into a thick, fluffy frosting. Crush the 4 Oreos and fold 3 of the crushed cookies directly into the icing.

9. Assemble the cake: Place the bottom cake layer on a serving plate. Spread half of the cookies and cream icing evenly over the layer. Top carefully with the second cake layer. Spread the remaining icing over the top of the cake, then sprinkle the remaining crushed Oreo over the frosting.

Oreo Protein Cake Scooping Icing

Troubleshooting & FAQ

Can diabetics have cake?

While you should always consult a physician, this recipe is designed with a sugar substitute (allulose) rather than traditional cane sugar. Allulose does not typically spike blood glucose levels, making this a much more diabetic-friendly dessert than standard bakery cakes.

Can I add protein powder to a box cake mix?

I highly advise against this. Box mixes are formulated with specific chemical ratios of flour, sugar, and fat. Dumping heavy protein powder into a box mix usually results in a dense, dry, and rubbery brick. It is always better to build a high-protein recipe from scratch.

Why don't you use apple sauce or light butter in the batter?

Blended cottage cheese is superior. While apple sauce adds moisture, it also adds dense, sugary weight that can make a protein cake gummy. Light butter introduces excess water. Cottage cheese provides the perfect fat-mimicking texture along with slow-digesting casein.

What are common mistakes when baking a cake?

The two biggest mistakes are overmixing the batter (which develops too much gluten and makes the cake tough) and overbaking. Because protein powder dries out rapidly under heat, even 3 extra minutes in the oven can ruin the crumb.

Can I make this a chocolate cake base?

Yes. To convert this into a chocolate cake, replace 30g of the cake flour with a high-quality dark cocoa powder or black cocoa powder, and add a splash of vanilla extract to the wet ingredients.

Slice of the Oreo Protein Cake

Substitutions Table

ComponentSwap Options
AlluloseSwerve or granular erythritol (texture will be slightly drier)
Cottage CheesePlain non-fat greek yogurt (must be thick, not watery)
Zero Sugar Cool WhipLight or regular Cool Whip (will slightly increase sugar/calories)
Cake Flour200g All-purpose flour + 40g cornstarch (sifted together heavily)
WaterUnsweetened almond milk or skim milk

Storage

Store the frosted cake in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 4 days. Because of the yogurt and Cool Whip icing, this cake must remain refrigerated. The cake actually absorbs moisture from the frosting as it sits, making the crumb even softer on day two. Do not freeze the fully frosted cake, as the icing will separate and become watery when thawed.

You Might Also Like

If you love layered high-protein cakes as much as I do, these three hits from the archive are worth checking out next.

Sliced Cake oreo cake

The Final Verdict

This layered Oreo Cookies & Cream Cake proves you don't have to sacrifice a massive slice of frosted cake just to hit your daily protein targets. By leaning on the magical combination of greek yogurt and sugar-free Cool Whip, you get a decadent, mousse-like frosting that perfectly complements the tender cake crumb. Get your ingredients weighed out, trust the process, and let me know how it turns out.

Oreo Protein Cake Slice

Oreo Cookies & Cream High-Protein Sugar-Free Cake

5 from 1 vote
A legitimate bakery-style layer cake packing 17g of protein per slice. By utilizing a whey/casein blend, blended cottage cheese, and a thick mousse frosting made from greek yogurt and Cool Whip, this recipe achieves a decadent dessert without destroying your macros.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
Total Time 50 minutes
Servings: 10 slices
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: American
Calories: 245

Ingredients
  

Dry Cake Mix
  • 240 g cake flour
  • 80 g Oreo cookies and cream whey/casein protein powder
  • 95 g allulose
  • 15 g baking powder
  • 4 g salt
  • 3 g xanthan gum
  • 0.8 g stevia extract 0.8 to 1g depending on preference
Wet Cake Mix
  • 3 whole eggs
  • 0.5 cup cottage cheese
  • 0.75 cup water
Cookies & Cream Mousse Icing
  • 16 oz non-fat greek yogurt Must be thick, high quality
  • 1 tub Zero Sugar Cool Whip 8oz standard tub, thawed
  • 4 whole Oreo cookies Crushed for icing and topping

Method
 

  1. Preheat the oven to 325°F. Grease a springform pan and line the bottom with parchment paper.
  2. In a large bowl, whisk together the cake flour, protein powder, allulose, baking powder, salt, xanthan gum, and stevia until fully combined.
  3. In a blender, blend the eggs, cottage cheese, and water until completely smooth.
  4. Pour the wet mixture into the dry ingredients and fold with a spatula until fully combined and no dry pockets remain. Do not overmix the batter.
  5. Let the batter sit for about 5 minutes so the xanthan and protein can hydrate.
  6. Pour the batter into the springform pan, smooth the top, and bake at 325°F for 30 minutes until the center is set and a tester comes out with moist crumbs.
  7. Cool the cake fully before removing from the pan, then use a serrated knife to slice it horizontally into 2 layers.
  8. In a separate bowl, gently fold together the greek yogurt and thawed Zero Sugar Cool Whip until combined into a frosting. Fold 3 of the crushed Oreos directly into the icing mixture.
  9. Spread half the frosting evenly over the bottom cake layer. Place the second layer on top, spread the remaining frosting over the top layer, and sprinkle with the last crushed Oreo.

Nutrition

Calories: 245kcalCarbohydrates: 43gProtein: 17gFat: 5g

Notes

Oreo Cookies & Cream High-Protein Layer Cake Tips & Expert Strategy

WHEY VS CASEIN: You must use a whey/casein blend for this recipe. If you attempt to use a 100% whey isolate, the cake will become incredibly rubbery and dry. The casein is required to hold onto the moisture from the cottage cheese.
COOL BEFORE SLICING: Do not attempt to slice the cake horizontally while it is warm. High-protein baked goods are fragile out of the oven. Let it cool completely to room temperature or chill it in the fridge to ensure a clean cut.
FOLDING THE ICING: Be very gentle when combining the greek yogurt and the Cool Whip. If you stir it aggressively, you will knock all the air out of the Cool Whip and your frosting will become a watery liquid instead of a fluffy mousse.
THE MELLOWING EFFECT: This cake must be stored in the fridge due to the yogurt icing. The cake crumb will actually pull moisture from the frosting as it sits, making the texture softer and the flavors more integrated on day two.
PROFESSIONAL FINISHING TOUCH: To get clean slices when serving, wipe your knife with a warm, damp towel between each cut so the thick mousse frosting doesn't smear across the chocolate cake layers.

Tried this recipe?

Mention or tag @bakedlean!

One response to “Oreo Cookies & Cream Sugar-Free Cake (High-Protein Recipe)”

  1. Jacob Hensley Avatar
    Jacob Hensley

    5 stars
    yum yum yum

5 from 1 vote

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




Subscribe

Recent recipes

Jacob Hensley Founder of BakedLean
Meet jacob, aka

bakedlean

I started BakedLean as a passion project to make healthier, high-protein versions of classic desserts and comfort foods.