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A homemade cake mix is an inexpensive, easy, and convenient alternative to store-bought mixes. You can bake so many delicious cakes using this mix as a base.
Table of Contents
- Making Your Own Cake Mix
- Ingredients You’ll Need
- What Can You Make with Homemade Cake Mix?
- Vanilla Cake Recipe
- Yellow Cake Recipe
- Chocolate Cake Recipe
- Cobbler Recipe with Cake Mix
- Cupcakes from Cake Mix
- More Cake Mix Recipes
- Storing Homemade Cake Mix
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Frosting – The Most Important Part of the Cake
- How to Make Homemade Cake Mix
- Homemade Cake Mix Recipe
Making Your Own Cake Mix
Wouldn’t it be great to reach into the pantry for a delicious cake mix with known ingredients you can make in a hurry? This is the advantage of making your own cake mix. I love having this mix on hand for many reasons:
- It makes a beautiful, moist, and delicious cake.
- It’s easy, convenient, and inexpensive.
- This basic mix can be made into any cake – vanilla based or chocolate based. This cake mix recipe will make 5 cakes.
- It will keep in the pantry for up to 3 months. You don’t have to refrigerate the mix.
I adapted these recipes from a cookbook called “Make-A-Mix Cookery.” It originally belonged to my grandma. It is full of recipes for every type of mix – desserts, sauces, breads, you name it! We recently posted a recipe from this same book for Basic Cookie Dough Mix, so check that out as well.
Ingredients You’ll Need
- Cake flour (don’t use all purpose flour)
- Sugar
- Baking powder
- Salt
- Vegetable shortening (don’t use vegetable oil)
What Can You Make with Homemade Cake Mix?
You can add-in any number of flavor combinations to make the perfect homemade cake. We’ve included a few basic recipes below for delicious, moist cakes you can make with this cake mix – a vanilla cake, a yellow cake, a chocolate cake, and a cobbler. You can make two 8-inch round cakes, or one 9×13 cake with these recipes. Feel free to take these recipes and make them your own. If you make something amazing, let us know in the comments!
Vanilla Cake Recipe
To make a vanilla cake or white cake, preheat the oven to 375 degrees.
- Combine 3 ⅓ cups of the Homemade Cake mix with ¾ cup milk in a large bowl or stand mixer. Using a hand mixer or the whisk attachment on a stand mixer, beat at medium speed for 2 minutes.
- In a separate small bowl, use a fork to beat 3 egg whites together. Add the beaten egg whites and 1 teaspoon vanilla to the large bowl. Mix for two more minutes. Be sure to scrape the sides of the bowl often.
- Pour the cake batter into a greased 9×13 baking dish. Bake for 25-30 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center of the cake comes out clean. Cool before frosting.
Yellow Cake Recipe
For a yellow cake, preheat the oven to 375 degrees.
- Combine 3 ⅓ cups of the Homemade Cake mix with ¾ cup milk in a large bowl or stand mixer. Using a hand mixer or the whisk attachment on a stand mixer, beat at medium speed for 2 minutes.
- Beat 2 eggs in a separate bowl. Add the beaten eggs and 1 teaspoon vanilla to the batter. Mix for two more minutes.
- Pour the cake batter into a 9×13 baking dish, greased or sprayed with cooking spray. Bake for 25-30 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center of the cake comes out clean. Cool before frosting.
Chocolate Cake Recipe
A similar method is used for a chocolate cake, but we are adding cocoa and melted butter. Preheat the oven to 375 degrees.
- Whisk together 3 ⅓ cups of the Homemade Cake mix with 9 tablespoons of cocoa in a large bowl or stand mixer until well-blended. Add ½ cup milk and with a hand mixer or whisk attachment, blend at medium speed for 2 minutes.
- In a separate bowl, use a fork to beat 2 eggs. Add the egg mixture, another ½ cup milk, and 2 ½ tablespoons of melted butter to the batter. Blend on medium speed for an additional 2 minutes.
- Pour the batter into a greased 9×13 baking dish. Bake for 25-30 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center of the cake comes out clean. Cool before frosting.
Cobbler Recipe with Cake Mix
You can also use this prepared cake mix to make a cherry, apple, or peach cobbler! Start by preheating the oven to 350 degrees.
- Pour 2 cans of pie filling (approximately 42 ounces) into a 9×13 baking pan.
- Sprinkle 3 ⅓ cups of Homemade Cake Mix over the pie filling.
- Drizzle 1 cup of melted butter over the cake mix.
- Bake for 45 minutes or until the cake topping is golden brown. Serve immediately with ice cream or whipped cream.
Cupcakes from Cake Mix
Any of the cake recipes above can be used to make 24 cupcakes. Prepare the batter as outlined above.
- Place cupcake liners in muffin pans.
- Fill the cupcake liners approximately 2/3 of the way full.
- Bake at 350 degrees for 20 minutes. Allow the cupcakes to cool before frosting.
More Cake Mix Recipes
You can use 3 ⅓ cups of Homemade Cake Mix in place of a store-bought cake mix in any of your favorite recipes using a cake mix. Here are a few we think you will love:
Funfetti Cake Mix Cookies: Use homemade cake mix and rainbow sprinkles in place of the Funfetti Cake Mix ingredient in the recipe, omit the vegetable oil.
Cornbread with Cake Mix: Replace the yellow cake mix listed in the recipe ingredients with 3 ⅓ cups of homemade cake mix. Omit the butter in the recipe.
Cake Mix Coffee Cake: This coffee cake will be even more moist and delicious by using our homemade cake mix instead of a box cake mix. Omit the yellow cake mix and oil in the recipe and replace it with 3 ⅓ cups of homemade cake mix.
Chocolate Pudding Cake: Mix 3 ⅓ cups of homemade cake mix with 9 tablespoons of cocoa powder to replace the box of Devil’s Food Cake mix required in the recipe. This recipe only uses three other ingredients: chocolate chips, chocolate pudding, and milk.
Storing Homemade Cake Mix
If you store this cake mix in an air-tight container, it should last 10-12 weeks. Make sure to store it in a cool, dry place.
If you bake the cake, you can freeze it for up to three months. The best way to freeze a layered cake is to freeze the layers separately. Wrap each cake layer in plastic wrap and then in aluminum foil. Then, using a permanent marker, label the cake type and the date you put the cake in the freezer. When you are ready to serve, remove the cake from the wrap and frost while frozen. Then let thaw for about 30 minutes to an hour.
Frequently Asked Questions
This cake mix can be used as a homemade vanilla cake mix, white cake mix, yellow cake mix, chocolate cake mix, birthday cake mix, or whatever kind of cake you’d like. You can even use it to bake cupcakes or cake mix cookies, it’s really up to your own imagination!
Yes, just pick which cake base you prefer – white, yellow, or chocolate and fill cupcake liners 2/3 full. Bake at 350 degrees for 20 minutes.
This homemade cake mix can be made gluten-free. Choose a gluten-free cake flour that can be substituted 1:1 for regular cake flour, like Authentic Foods Steve’s Gluten Free Cake Flour.
Read Next: Easy Dessert Ideas
Frosting – The Most Important Part of the Cake
You can frost these cakes with anything you’d like – buttercream, cream cheese, whipped cream, store-bought, homemade – anything!
If you need more frosting inspiration, check out these recipes:
How to Make Homemade Cake Mix
Homemade Cake Mix
Video
Ingredients
For Homemade Cake Mix
- 8 cups cake flour
- 6 cups sugar
- ¼ cup baking powder
- 1 1/2 teaspoons salt
- 2 1/2 cups vegetable shortening
For Vanilla Cake
- 3 1/3 cups Homemade Cake Mix
- 3/4 cup milk (see notes for high altitude baking adjustments)
- 3 egg whites
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- frosting we use our Chocolate Buttercream recipe
Instructions
For Homemade Cake Mix (makes 5 cakes)
- Combine flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt in a large bowl. Stir until well mixed. See recipe notes for high altitude baking adjustments.
- Cut in shortening using a fork, a pastry cutter, or your fingers. Store in an airtight container for 10-12 weeks.
For Vanilla Cake (15 servings)
- Combine Homemade Cake Mix and milk. Whisk until well combined or use an electric mixer.
- Add egg whites and vanilla extract. Stir until well combined.
- Pour into two greased, 8-inch cake pans or one greased 9×13 pan.
- Bake at 375 for 25-30 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted into the middle of the cake comes out clean.
- Let cool completely and then frost.
- Add sprinkles if desired, then slice and serve.
Notes
Baking at high altitudes
When preparing the homemade cake mix, make the following adjustments: 3,000 feet: Decrease the baking powder in the mix by 1 ½ teaspoons. Decrease the sugar by ⅓ cup.5,000 feet: Decrease the baking powder in the mix by 2 teaspoons, decrease the sugar by ½ cup.
7,000: Decrease the baking powder in the mix by 3 teaspoons, decrease the sugar by ¾ cup. When preparing a cake from the cake mix, make the following adjustments: 3,000 feet: Increase the milk by 2 ¼ teaspoons.
5,000 feet: Increase the milk by 1 ½ tablespoons.
7,000 feet: Increase the milk by 3 tablespoons.
Where is the orange frosting recipe?
Im not sure why it’s not linkable in the post but here is the direct link– it is in our orange roll recipe: https://www.favfamilyrecipes.com/homemade-orange-rolls/
I’m really hoping to receive a reply.
I’ve made the mix and I’m just not sure, since it has the shortening , it’s a little heavier and I don’t know if 3 1/2 cups is packed cups for making the cakes?
We didn’t pack it down like you would brown sugar, we just scooped and measured it like you would flour.
I’ve been reading the comments and for those who are having issues with the cakes “falling” the problem could be your altitude. I live at 4300 ft. above sea level and any recipe formulated for a lower altitude will sink in the center. Cake mixes used to have high altitude adjustments printed on the box.
King Arthur Flour has these suggestions for altitude adjustments on their website:
https://www.kingarthurbaking.com/learn/resources/high-altitude-baking
I don’t know how to apply these to the mix, but it shouldn’t be too difficult to figure out.
I also have the Make-a-Mix cookbook and have been experimenting with this cake mix. Twice I tried to use it to make a bundt cake (3-1/2 cups mix, 1 package instant pudding, 1/2 cup oil, 4 eggs, and 1 cup of liquid). At least one of the cake recipes in the book uses this combination. Both times, the cake rose and then sank after I removed it from the oven. This is surely unrelated to high altitude, as I live less than 300 feet above sea level. I have compared the ratios of flour, sugar, baking powder, and fat in several from-scratch recipes and this is what I concluded: the mix doesn’t have enough baking powder, and, since it already has fat, in the form of shortening, it doesn’t need more. (It appears from the labels of store-bought cake mixes that they contain little, if any, fat.) I just tried out my theory, adding an additional teaspoon of baking powder and a teaspoon of vanilla, since the mix doesn’t have any flavoring. I did not add any additional oil or fat of any kind. My bundt rose and stayed up as it cooled. I’ll be trying other combinations with different liquids, especially using part liqueur and part water.
Hello, I made your homemade cake master mix, and then made a cobbler using the cake mix. I followed the directions exactly for both. The cobbler crust did not rise, and I don’t understand what happened. Is there something else I should do? I used Swans Down cake flour
and checked the box to see how many servings was in there. It turned out to be exactly 8 cups required in the master mix recipe, so I didn’t measure the cake flour. Maybe I should have. I am working with a convection oven/microwave. I set the convection oven to 350 as the recipe called for. Also, when I made the master cake mix, it wasn’t that lumpy. It was more powdery when I went to sprinkle it on top of the fruit in the pan. I used a glass baking 9×13 dish. Any suggestions would be great. I love making my own master mixes, not only for the health benefits, but because the store-bought commercial varieties have propylene glycol in them, which is not a good ingredient. Thank you, in advance, for your response and feedback.
It could be that there was more flour than needed in the box. I also haven’t baked with a microwave convection oven so I am not sure if that is a contributing factor.
Hello Kelsey, thank you so much for responding to my question. I guess the lesson is to measure out the cake flour the next time. Just wondering, can I do anything with the rest of the master cake mix that I have to help it rise because I want to make another cobbler on Wednesday, Dec 20?
I haven’t encountered this problem before so I can’t say for sure, but baking soda and/or baking powder can help a cake to rise more. I would suggest starting there!
Thank you, Kelsey, I will try your suggestion.
This is amazing!!
If you scroll down to the bottom of the page you will see the recipe card with the full recipe!
My husband is diabetic and I usually substitute sugar when I’m baking and cooking . At least part of it. Could I use monk or stevia without sacrificing the rising of the cake ? Thanks
We haven’t tested this recipe with a sugar substitute so I can’t say.
I would like to try this recipe, but what vegetable shortening (healthiest option) does everyone use, I’m in Australia.
I did this base with the chocolate cake version and the cupcakes horrendously sunk! The only thing I didn’t do to the original mix is add in the shortening, I added it when making the chocolate mix. I incorporated all of the ingredients in a huge container originally and followed the recipe. Help!
The amount of shortening listed is for the whole batch of cake mix. How much did you add to your chocolate cake mix?
If using right away, can you substitute butter for the shortening?
Sure!