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Home › Recipes › Cake

Updated on June 4, 2026 by Liz Marek · This post may contain affiliate links · 522 Comments

White Cake Recipe From Scratch

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This is the perfect classic white cake recipe. It's light, fluffy, moist, and bright white with a delicate crumb. There is a running joke in the cake world that white is not a flavor, that it is really just a vanilla cake without the yolks, but a true white cake is so much more.

close up of a slice of white cake with white buttercream in between the layers

I have been making this white cake for years, and it is the base I reach for more than any other. By dropping the egg yolks and using only egg whites, the crumb bakes up bright white and a little more delicate, which is exactly what you want under a wedding cake or any elegant layer cake. It pairs beautifully with white chocolate ganache, and it is the same sturdy base I use for my Oreo cake and a dozen other flavors. White cake, vanilla cake, and yellow cake are all cousins; the way you use the eggs is what changes the color, flavor, and texture.

Quick Glance at the Recipe: White Cake Recipe

  • Recipe Name: White Cake Recipe
  • Why You'll Love It: Soft, fluffy white cake with a delicate crumb and bright white color that's perfect for decorating.
  • Time and Difficulty: Intermediate. About 15 minutes of active prep and 25 to 35 minutes of baking.
  • Main Ingredients: All-purpose flour, egg whites, butter, sugar, milk, oil, baking powder, and vanilla (plus almond if you like a classic white wedding cake flavor).
  • Method: Traditional creaming method, egg whites added one at a time to whipped butter and sugar, then dry and wet alternated in.
  • Texture and Flavor: Light, tender crumb with a subtle vanilla flavor and moist interior.
  • Quick Tip: Wrap the cakes while still warm and flash chill them to lock in moisture.
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Jump to:
  • Quick Glance at the Recipe: White Cake Recipe
  • What Makes This White Cake Recipe Different
  • White Cake vs Vanilla Cake vs Yellow Cake
  • White Cake Ingredients
  • Why I Bake White Cake At 335º F
  • Why Isn't My White Cake White?
  • How To Make White Cake Step-By-Step
  • Cake Batter and Frosting Calculator
  • Cake Batter and Frosting Calculator
  • Cups of Batter Needed
  • Cups of Frosting Needed
  • Common White Cake Problems To Avoid
  • Final Thoughts
  • Make This White Cake Recipe Your Own
  • Frosting swaps
  • Pan size conversions
  • Make-Ahead and Storage
  • Baking White Cake At High Altitude
  • White Cake FAQs
  • More Cake Recipes To Try
  • Watch: How To Decorate A Cake Step-by-Step
  • Recipe

What Makes This White Cake Recipe Different

This white cake recipe is the one I keep coming back to because it is reliable, bright white, and endlessly adaptable. Here is what sets it apart:

  • Vanilla plus a little almond. That vanilla-almond combo is the classic "wedding cake" flavor. It is optional, but it is what makes people say your cake tastes like a bakery.
  • Egg whites do not need to be pre-whipped. A lot of white cake recipes make you whip egg whites to stiff peaks and fold them in by hand. Mine skips that. You add the whites one at a time to the creamed butter and sugar, which gives you a light, fluffy crumb without the extra bowl or the risk of deflating your whites.
  • All-purpose flour, not cake flour. I use all-purpose here on purpose. It gives the cake a slightly stronger crumb that holds up to stacking, fondant, and filling. If you want the softer, finer crumb that cake flour gives, that is my white velvet cake.
  • Baked at 335º F for a reason. Most recipes bake white cake at 350º F and then tell you to ignore the brown top. I bake lower on purpose, and there is real science to it (whole section below).
  • A true workhorse base. This is the cake under my Oreo cake, and it flexes into strawberry, funfetti, marble, and more. Learn this one, and you have learned ten cakes.

White Cake vs Vanilla Cake vs Yellow Cake

People mix these up all the time, but the difference really just comes down to how the eggs are used.

  • White cake uses only egg whites, which keeps the crumb bright white and the texture delicate.
  • Vanilla cake uses whole eggs, which gives a slightly off-white color and a richer flavor.
  • Yellow cake uses egg yolks, which make the cake deep golden and give it a richer, more custardy flavor.

People laugh and say "white" and "yellow" are not flavors, but ordering an "all egg yolk cake" just does not have the same ring to it. The names are shorthand so bakers know exactly what they are working with. White and vanilla are both popular bases for flavored cakes, while yellow cake is traditionally paired with chocolate buttercream or chocolate ganache.

White Cake Ingredients

This recipe uses traditional baking ingredients you probably already have. I always recommend weighing your ingredients with a digital kitchen scale for the most accurate results, even the liquids. The one ingredient worth a special trip is clear vanilla if you want the whitest possible cake.

  • All-purpose flour provides a slightly sturdier crumb that holds up well for layer cakes. If you prefer a finer, softer crumb, use cake flour, or check out my white velvet cake.
  • Egg whites keep the cake bright white while still adding structure and moisture. Fresh egg whites are best here (boxed/carton whites do not always behave the same in a creamed batter).
  • Granulated sugar sweetens the cake, and when whipped into the butter, it builds the light, fluffy texture.
  • Unsalted butter adds flavor and richness to both the cake and the frosting. It must be soft so it creams properly. If you brown it first, you get my brown butter cake.
  • Milk adds moisture and a soft crumb. Warm it slightly so it does not curdle the room-temperature butter.
  • Vegetable oil, alongside the butter, keeps the cake moist even after refrigerating.
  • Baking powder gives the cake its lift and light texture.
  • Salt balances the sweetness and rounds out the flavor.
  • Vanilla extract and almond extract. Vanilla is the main flavor, and almond adds that classic wedding-cake note. Use clear vanilla if you want to keep the cake extra white. The almond is optional.
  • Pasteurized egg whites and powdered sugar (for the frosting). The Easy Buttercream is a mock Swiss Meringue buttercream that is less sweet than American buttercream and silky smooth.

Why I Bake White Cake At 335º F

The Maillard reaction (the browning that happens when sugars and proteins meet heat) really gets going around 350º F. By baking a little lower, I slow that browning down, which keeps the outside of the cake paler and the crumb closer to true white. Lower and slower also means the cake domes less and bakes flatter, so you have less to trim off the top. It takes a few extra minutes, but you get a whiter, flatter, more level cake, which matters a lot when white and bright is the entire point.

PRO TIP: Every oven is different. If yours runs cool, your cakes may need the full 35 minutes (or a couple more). Go by a toothpick coming out clean and the center springing back, not just the timer.

Why Isn't My White Cake White?

This is the question I get most: "I used egg whites, so why did my cake come out ivory or yellow instead of white?" A few things stack up here:

  • Your extract. Regular vanilla extract is caramel-colored and tints the crumb. Clear (imitation) vanilla keeps it bright.
  • Your butter. Butter has a natural yellow hue, and it varies by brand. More butter, more tint. There is not much to do about it except know that it is normal. If having a white cake is REALLY important, you can substitute half the butter for vegetable shortening.
  • Overbaking and high heat. The longer and hotter the cake bakes, the more the surface browns and the more that color creeps in. This is exactly why I bake at 335º F (see above).
  • Crushed or fine add-ins. Fold your add-ins gently so they don't change the color of the cake.

How To Make White Cake Step-By-Step

Before you start: always bring your cold ingredients to room temperature (or even a little warm) so the batter does not break, preheat your oven to 335º F, and prepare two 8"x2" cake pans with cake goop or your preferred pan release. Weigh everything out before you start mixing.

Measuring cup of liquid ingredients in front of a clear glass bowl of flour in a white kitchen.
  1. Combine your wet and dry separately. Stir the warm milk, oil, and extracts together in one cup. In another bowl, whisk the flour, baking powder, and salt. Set both aside.
creamed butter and sugar int he bottom of a clear bowl
  1. Cream the butter and sugar. Beat the soft butter smooth with the paddle attachment, then sprinkle in the sugar and whip on high until light and very fluffy, about 5 minutes.

PRO TIP: Do not rush the creaming. That 5 minutes of whipping is where you build the air that makes the cake light. It should noticeably lighten in color and look fluffy before you move on.

hand pouring a container of egg whites into a glass bowl
  1. Add the egg whites one at a time. With the mixer on low, add the egg whites a little at a time, letting each fully combine before adding the next. Mix until smooth.
bowl of flour pouring into a glass stand mixer bowl
  1. Alternate the dry and wet. Add ⅓ of the dry ingredients and mix on low until just combined, then ½ the liquids, then dry, then liquids, then the last of the dry. Mix until just combined and stop.
cake batter being poured into cake pans
  1. Bake and chill. Divide the batter into your prepared pans and bake at 335º F for 25 to 35 minutes, until a toothpick comes out clean. Cool 15 minutes, turn out onto a rack, wrap the cakes while still warm, and flash chill in the freezer to lock in moisture. Once cool but not frozen, trim the edges and frost.
oven mitts lifting a cake pan off of a cake layer
  1. Cool 15 minutes, turn out onto a rack, wrap the cakes while still warm, and flash chill in the freezer to lock in moisture. Once cool but not frozen, trim the edges and frost.
easy buttercream frosting
  1. Make the Easy Buttercream. Combine the pasteurized egg whites and powdered sugar in the bowl of a stand mixer with the whisk attachment and whip on medium until thick and glossy. With the mixer running, add the softened butter a piece at a time (it may look curdled at first, that is normal), then add the vanilla and salt and whip on high until light, fluffy, and it no longer tastes like straight butter. For the smoothest finish, switch to the paddle and mix on low a few minutes to knock out air bubbles. This is my easy buttercream frosting, less sweet and silkier than a standard American buttercream.
Frosted white cake on a white platter.
  1. Stack and assemble. Place your first chilled cake layer on a board or stand, spread an even layer of buttercream on top, then add the next layer. Crumb coat the whole cake in a thin layer of buttercream, chill 15 minutes to set, then apply your final coat and decorate.

PRO TIP: If your buttercream looks soupy, your butter was too warm. Pop the whole bowl in the fridge for 15 minutes and re-whip. If it looks curdled, it is usually too cold, just keep whipping and it will come together.

Cake Batter and Frosting Calculator

This recipe makes about 8 cups of cake batter (enough for two 8"x2" rounds or three 6"x2" rounds) and about 5 cups of Easy Buttercream. Use the slider on the recipe card to scale up or down, and the calculator below to figure out batter and frosting for a different pan size.

Cake Batter and Frosting Calculator

Select an option below to calculate how much batter or frosting you need. Adjust the servings slider on the recipe card to change the amounts the recipe makes.

Choose a pan type

Choose a cake pan size
(based on 2" tall cake pan)

Choose a cake pan size
(based on 2" tall cake pan)

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(based on 2" tall cake pan)

Cupcake Tin Size

Choose number of pans

Cups of Batter Needed

8 cups

Cups of Frosting Needed

5 cups

Note: measurements are estimated based off the vanilla cake recipe using standard US cake pans and sizes. Measurements used are for 2" tall cake pans only. Your results may vary. Do not overfill cake pans above manufacturer's recommended guidelines.

Common White Cake Problems To Avoid

  • Cake came out ivory, not white. Usually, the extract or the bake. Use clear vanilla and do not overbake. Baking at 335º F instead of 350º F keeps it paler, too.
  • Dense or gummy crumb. It could be too much mixing, or your ingredients were too cold, and they curdled during mixing, which causes a gummy layer to appear at the bottom of your cake layer.
  • Dry cake. Overbaked, or too much flour from measuring in cups. Weigh your flour and pull the cakes the moment a toothpick comes out clean.
  • The batter curdled, and the cake did not rise. Cold egg whites or cold milk. Everything has to be at room temperature so it emulsifies with the creamed butter instead of breaking it.
  • Cake domed and cracked. Oven too hot. This recipe bakes at 335º F for a flatter top, if yours still domes, your oven may run hot, so check it with a thermometer.
  • Brown top. Normal, especially at higher temps. Trim it off if you want a pure white look, or bake at 335º F to minimize it.

Final Thoughts

White cake gets dismissed as "plain," but a really good one is anything but. It is the little black dress of cakes; it goes with everything. This is the recipe I have made for more birthdays, showers, and weddings than I can count.

If you only learn one cake from me, make it this one. Once you have the white cake down, strawberry, funfetti, marble, and Oreo are all just a few tweaks away.

Make This White Cake Recipe Your Own

This white cake is the jumping-off point for a ton of flavors. A few of my favorites:

  • Oreo cake, chopped cookies folded in plus an Oreo buttercream.
  • Marble cake, swirl in chocolate batter for the classic look.
  • Fresh strawberry cake, real strawberry flavor on this same crumb.
  • Funfetti cake, fold in sprinkles for a birthday classic.

Frosting swaps

The Easy Buttercream is my go-to here, but this cake takes any frosting beautifully. Try a Swiss meringue buttercream for an even silkier, less-sweet finish, a cream cheese frosting for tang, or chocolate buttercream for a black-and-white look.

Pan size conversions

PanBatterBake time at 335º F
Two 8-inch rounds (standard)Full batch (about 8 cups)25 to 35 minutes
Three 6-inch roundsFull batch25 to 35 minutes
Two 9-inch roundsFull batch (thinner layers)22 to 30 minutes
9x13 sheet panFull batch30 to 40 minutes
About 24 cupcakesFull batch, fill liners ⅔ full16 to 20 minutes

A toothpick in the center should come out clean. Check on the early end and add a few minutes at a time; larger and deeper pans always take longer.

Make-Ahead and Storage

Frosted cake keeps about 3 to 4 days in the fridge, but always bring it back to room temperature before serving (cold cake tastes dry and stiff). To work ahead, bake the layers, wrap them warm in plastic, and freeze for up to a week. You can also freeze the fully frosted cake; just defrost it in the fridge for 24 hours before bringing it to room temperature so it does not sweat. This cake is sturdy and chills well, which is exactly why it is so good for stacking and decorating.

Baking White Cake At High Altitude

If you are above about 3,500 feet, this cake (like all cakes) needs a few tweaks. The short version from my high altitude baking guide: raise the oven temperature 25º F, reduce the baking powder by ⅛ to ½ teaspoon, reduce the sugar by 2 Tablespoons per cup, increase the liquid by 2 Tablespoons per cup, ease off on whipping the egg whites, and add 1 Tablespoon of flour at 3,500 feet plus another Tablespoon for every additional 1,500 feet. Take notes as you go, what works for one recipe may need tweaking for the next.

White Cake FAQs

Do I have to trim the brown edges off the cake?

No, that is purely for looks. Trimming the thin browned edges and the dome gives you a cleaner, whiter slice and a level cake for stacking, but the cake tastes exactly the same with them left on.

Do I have to use almond extract?

No, it is optional. The vanilla-almond combination is the classic wedding-cake flavor, but if you are not a fan of almond you can leave it out and use the same amount of extra vanilla instead.

Can I use carton or boxed egg whites instead of fresh?

I recommend fresh egg whites for this cake. Carton egg whites are pasteurized and processed differently, and they do not always incorporate the same way in a creamed batter, so fresh gives you the most reliable rise and texture.

What kind of salt do you use?

I use fine sea salt, but regular table salt works just fine here. If you only have coarse or kosher salt, use a little more since it is less dense by volume.

Is this white cake sturdy enough to stack or cover in fondant?

Yes. The all-purpose flour gives it enough structure to stack into tiers and hold up under fondant. Just chill the cake well before stacking and decorating, and keep it cool until you are ready to serve.

More Cake Recipes To Try

  • Red White And Blue Cake
  • slice of white chocolate raspberry cake on a plate
    White Chocolate Raspberry Cake
  • white velvet cake recipe
    White Velvet Buttermilk Cake
  • closeup of a slice of funfetti cake
    Funfetti Cake

Watch: How To Decorate A Cake Step-by-Step

Before you start decorating, watch the video below where I show you every step of decorating a cake from start to finish. Seeing the process in action makes it much easier to follow along

- Liz Marek.

Start Learning Now
smiling woman holding a decorated cake in her hands

Recipe

close up of a slice of white cake

White Cake Recipe

A white cake recipe that is light, fluffy, full of flavor, and easy to make. A great base recipe for any baker that can be adapted into all kinds of flavors.
Print Recipe Pin Recipe Rate Recipe
Prep Time: 15 minutes minutes
Cook Time: 28 minutes minutes
Total Time: 40 minutes minutes
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: American
Servings: 24 servings
Calories: 629kcal
Author: Liz Marek

Ingredients

White Cake Recipe Ingredients

  • 10 oz milk room temp
  • 2 oz vegetable oil
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1 teaspoon almond extract use clear for a whiter cake
  • 14 oz AP flour
  • 2 ½ teaspoon baking powder
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • 8 oz unsalted butter room temp
  • 14 oz sugar
  • 6 large egg whites fresh not boxed at room temp

Easy Buttercream Frosting

  • 8 oz pasteurized egg whites room temperature
  • 32 oz powdered sugar
  • 32 oz unsalted butter room temperature
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla extract
US Customary - Metric

Instructions

  • Before you begin: Bring the milk, butter, and egg whites to room temperature (cold ingredients will curdle the batter). Preheat the oven to 335º F. Prep two 8"x2" cake pans with cake goop or your preferred pan release. Weigh all ingredients before mixing.

White Cake Recipe Instructions

  • Combine the milk, oil, and extracts in a cup and set aside.
  • Whisk the flour, baking powder, and salt in a separate bowl and set aside.
  • Place the butter in a stand mixer with the paddle attachment and cream until smooth. Sprinkle in the sugar and whip on high until light and white, about 5 minutes.
  • With the mixer on low, add the egg whites one at a time, letting each fully combine before adding the next. If your egg whites are not at room temperature, microwave them for a few seconds, being careful not to cook them. Cold egg whites will curdle the batter.
  • Add ⅓ of the dry ingredients and mix on low until just combined. Add ½ the liquids, then dry, then liquids, then the last of the dry. Mix until just combined. Do not overmix.
  • Divide the batter into the prepared cake pans and bake at 335º F for 25 to 35 minutes, or until a toothpick comes out clean. Cool 15 minutes, turn out onto a rack, wrap warm, and flash chill in the freezer to lock in moisture. Once cool but not frozen, trim the edges.

Easy Buttercream Frosting

  • Combine the egg whites and powdered sugar in a mixing bowl with the whisk attachment. Whisk on low to combine, then on high, adding the butter in small chunks along with the vanilla and salt.
  • Whip on high until light, fluffy, and white. For the smoothest texture, switch to the paddle and mix on low a few minutes to remove air bubbles.

Stack and Assemble

  • Place the first chilled cake layer on a board or cake stand and spread an even layer of buttercream on top. Add the second layer.
  • Crumb coat the cake in a thin layer of buttercream and chill for 15 minutes to set, then apply the final coat and decorate as desired.

Video

Notes

Important things to note before you start
  • Bring all your ingredients to room temperature or even a little warm so the batter does not break or curdle.
  • Use a scale to weigh your ingredients, including liquids, unless otherwise instructed (Tablespoons, teaspoons, pinch). Weighed ingredients are far more accurate than cups.
  • Practice mise en place. Measure everything out before you start mixing so you do not leave anything out.
Ingredient notes
  • Use clear vanilla (and clear or omitted almond) for the whitest cake. Fresh egg whites are best; carton whites do not always behave the same in a creamed batter.
  • All-purpose flour gives a sturdier crumb for stacking. For a softer, finer crumb, use my white velvet cake instead.
Pan options
  • Two 8"x2" rounds: bake 25 to 35 minutes (standard)
  • Three 6"x2" rounds: bake 25 to 35 minutes
  • Two 9"x2" rounds: thinner layers, bake 22 to 30 minutes
  • 9x13 sheet pan: bake 30 to 40 minutes
  • About 24 cupcakes: fill liners ⅔ full, bake 16 to 20 minutes
Make-ahead and storage
  • Frosted cake: refrigerate 3 to 4 days; bring to room temperature before serving.
  • Cake layers: wrap warm in plastic and freeze up to a week. Defrost in the fridge 24 hours before decorating.
  • Frosted cake freezes well too; defrost in the fridge 24 hours before bringing to room temperature.
High altitude
  • Above ~3,500 ft, adjust per my high altitude baking guide: +25º F oven, reduce baking powder ⅛ to ½ tsp, reduce sugar 2 Tablespoons per cup, add liquid 2 Tablespoons per cup, add 1 Tablespoon flour at 3,500 ft plus 1 Tablespoon per additional 1,500 ft.
Critical do-nots
  • Do not use cold egg whites or cold milk; they will curdle the batter and the cake will not rise.
  • Do not overmix once the flour goes in; that is what makes a white cake dense and gummy.
  • Do not bake at 350º F if you want it bright white; 335º F keeps it paler and flatter.

Nutrition

Serving: 1g | Calories: 629kcal | Carbohydrates: 68g | Protein: 4g | Fat: 39g | Saturated Fat: 25g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 2g | Monounsaturated Fat: 10g | Trans Fat: 2g | Cholesterol: 103mg | Sodium: 140mg | Potassium: 105mg | Fiber: 0.5g | Sugar: 54g | Vitamin A: 1282IU | Calcium: 48mg | Iron: 1mg
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

More Cake Recipes for Holidays

  • Easy chocolate cake recipe slice on a white plate with cake in the background.
    Easy Chocolate Cake Recipe
  • closeup of cake slice on a white plate
    Eggless Chocolate Cake
  • Blackberry Cake
  • Finely textured slice of olive oil cake with a dusting of powdered sugar on top.
    Lemon Olive Oil Cake

About Liz Marek

Liz Marek is a professional cake artist, sweet and savory recipe developer, and the founder of Sugar Geek Show, where she teaches cooking, baking and cake decorating through detailed tutorials, food science explanations, and kitchen-tested recipes. She has been creating recipes and teaching baking techniques since 2008, helping bakers of all skill levels gain the confidence to make professional-quality desserts at home.

Liz is known for breaking down complex cooking and baking concepts into simple, approachable methods. Her work focuses on helping people understand not just how a recipe works, but why it works. Through Sugar Geek Show, she shares step-by-step recipes, cake decorating tutorials, and practical baking guides designed to make professional techniques accessible to everyone.

Over the years, Liz has taught thousands of students through online tutorials, classes, and educational content focused on real kitchen results. Her recipes are carefully tested and written to help people succeed the first time they make them.

When she’s not developing recipes or teaching baking techniques, Liz also hosts curated travel experiences for women through her travel brand Soul Sisters.

You can find Liz’s latest recipes, baking tutorials, and food science tips at Sugar Geek Show.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Ri says

    February 26, 2019 at 8:28 am

    Hi Are the liquid measurements in weight or fluid oz? Thanks so much

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      March 04, 2019 at 10:05 am

      They are all by weight

      Reply
  2. Kim says

    February 20, 2019 at 8:37 pm

    Could I use buttermilk instead of regular milk in your recipe? Pros? Cons? Thanks!

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      February 21, 2019 at 10:59 am

      If you want a buttermilk cake, check out my white velvet buttermilk cake recipe 🙂

      Reply
  3. CYNTHIA says

    February 09, 2019 at 3:45 pm

    Hello!
    Your classic white cake instructs to wrap warm cake to chill.
    What do you use to wrap the cake?
    Thank you for your time!

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      February 10, 2019 at 3:48 pm

      Plastic wrap 🙂

      Reply
  4. Cindy says

    February 05, 2019 at 6:27 am

    Hi Liz! First, let me just say I love all your stuff!!! I bake alot of cakes, and always have trouble using up egg yolks, even with alot of lemon curd, etc. I am not concerned with having a pure white cake, so can I use whole eggs with this recipe? If so, how many? Will it change the texture of the cake? Does it affect scupting/carving? What are your thoughts on boxed egg whites in this recipe?? Thanks, and again, I love your ideas, recipes, and cakes!!

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      February 05, 2019 at 12:46 pm

      Yes you can use whole eggs if you prefer, one egg white weighs 1oz and a whole egg weighs 1.67 oz (roughly) so two whole eggs equals about three egg whites. I hope that makes sense.

      Reply
  5. Sher says

    January 31, 2019 at 5:44 pm

    5 stars
    Hello! I am excited to try this recipe! We don't have a good scale. 14oz is same as 1.75 cups. Is this ABOUT what you used? We only have cups. Thanks.

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      February 01, 2019 at 12:15 pm

      Hello, I highly recommend getting a scale to avoid wasting ingredients. Proper measurement of ingredients is very important to your cake turning out. Measuring by cups is not accurate which is why weight is used instead of cups. If you try to guess the cake is not going to turn out. You can get a simple scale at any grocery store.

      Reply
  6. Christina says

    January 26, 2019 at 5:36 pm

    So I have been baking cakes for a very long time and my daughter wanted me to make this recipe with her. Upon mixing the batter, I could already tell something was off from what I’m used to, but I know every recipe will be different, especially with different ovens, weather, ingredient qualities, etc. However, I also noticed the taste of the batter was off as well in a rather unpleasant way, after having followed all directions; it reminded me of other recipes that called for too much of X and I couldn’t quite place what ingredient I was tasting too much of. But I put them into two round cake tins and baked them anyway. I have to say, I am very confused, I haven’t seen many cakes do this. They took nearly 1 whole hour to bake. The texture was very greasy, and saturated in a way that was borderline rubbery and the top formed a solid, caramelised crust. In addition, the taste was remarkably displeasing and bland. I don’t want to say this recipe is awful yet but I’m struggling to find a reason as to why this happened after doing everything exactly, and double checking to make sure everything was at the correct amount, and it was. Help?

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      January 28, 2019 at 10:05 am

      If the recipe seemed off from the very beginning then I am guessing you made a mistake with your ingredients, the eggs and milk where not slightly warm so they didn't mix up properly or you didn't mix them correctly. Since you are the one that made the recipe, you're the only one that can figure out where it went wrong. We used to do this in pastry school when our baking didn't turn out right. Our chef would have us go through the recipe line by line to see where we might have gone wrong. I can assure you the recipe is balanced and turns out great for myself and many others who have tried it.

      Reply
  7. Tammy says

    January 19, 2019 at 5:08 pm

    Could I use buttermilk in this recipe?

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      January 19, 2019 at 11:33 pm

      Check out my white velvet buttermilk cake recipe! It's sooo good and already formulated for buttermilk

      Reply
  8. Michelle Linden says

    January 16, 2019 at 5:00 pm

    I am making this recipe as we speak. Is the batter supposed to be really thick? I have never made a cake from scratch before. Box mix batter is thinner... you can almost pour it into the pans. This is almost as thick as frosting. ?????

    Michelle

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      January 19, 2019 at 11:33 pm

      Yes it's very thick, check out the video in the recipe card 🙂

      Reply
  9. Michelle says

    January 09, 2019 at 7:45 pm

    I am still on the hunt for a vanilla cake and a white cake. I am making a champagne flavored cake but with emulsions because its for a baby shower. Do you reccomend the vanilla cake or the white cake for this?

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      January 10, 2019 at 10:57 am

      You could do either and just replace the vanilla with champagne emulsion 🙂 I think the vanilla cake is moister just make sure you follow the mixing directions properly and your eggs/milk are slightly warm

      Reply
  10. David says

    January 09, 2019 at 9:44 am

    5 stars
    Can you please please pleaseeee convert this recipe into grams. Everytime i convert the recipe myself it goes wrong..you would be a livesafer?

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      January 09, 2019 at 12:34 pm

      Are you using a scale? Your scale should have an oz option as well as grams

      Reply
  11. SILVIA PAULINA VALERO TORRES says

    January 08, 2019 at 1:54 pm

    In the article you say that white cake does not have egg yolks. But in the recipe I see that you have eggs (complete). I do not understan!

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      January 08, 2019 at 4:37 pm

      There are no whole eggs in the recipe, it says egg whites

      Reply
  12. Racheal says

    January 06, 2019 at 2:01 pm

    Im a doctored box mix convert, Ive got a ton of flavors im now trying to convert to scratch. Currently im working on my pineapple cake. How would you incorporate pineapple juice in to the cake without affecting the texture and moisture content?

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      January 07, 2019 at 10:15 pm

      I don't put pineapple juice into the cake because it doesn't add any flavor. Just add in the crushed pineapple and use the pineapple juice as part of the simple syrup afterwards

      Reply
  13. Shar says

    January 04, 2019 at 5:08 pm

    Hi Liz,
    Do you think using carton liquid egg whites for the cake instead of fresh eggs will terriably alter the texture and taste of the cake.. I’d like to make 3 8 inch rounds and never know what to do with the yolks!

    Love your tips, recipes and personal stories and reflections of how you develop your cakes and techniques!

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      January 05, 2019 at 12:30 am

      I do use carton egg whites for my white cake and it works! Just make sure you shake up the box before using and try to use fresh boxed egg whites if that makes sense

      Reply
  14. Angela M says

    January 03, 2019 at 1:10 pm

    I don't have almond extract on hand so could I substitute fresh lemon juice instead?

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      January 03, 2019 at 6:32 pm

      Lemon juice and almond extract are completely different flavors? If you don't have almond extract just leave it out.

      Reply
  15. Judy says

    January 02, 2019 at 10:07 pm

    Until I realized all the unhealthy chemicals in a box cake, I baked, and loved traditional boxed white cakes like Pillbury/Duncan Hines. So would you suggest your Vanilla cake or this classic white for a comparable taste? Also, if I omit the almond extract, would I then use 2 tsp of pure vanilla instead of one? Eager to make this cake, the reviews are great!

    Reply
    • The Sugar Geek Show says

      January 03, 2019 at 6:39 pm

      The closest thing I have tasted to box mix is the white velvet buttermilk cake because it's very soft. If you want that classic white cake mix flavor you want to use clear vanilla extract

      Reply
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