Boxed Cake Mix Hack: Tastes like you paid $6 a slice!

Just a couple of ingredient swaps you can make a regular cake mix taste like you've paid 6$ a slice for bakery cake. This hack is easy, replaces oil with butter and turns a cake mix into a delicious buttery, rich, dense crumb cake, perfect for any special occasion.

Just a couple of ingredient swaps you can make a regular cake mix taste like you’ve paid $6 a slice for bakery cake. This hack is easy, replaces oil with butter and turns a cake mix into a delicious buttery, rich, dense crumb cake, perfect for any special occasion.

I totally dragged my feet through the creation of this for my oldest child. We were in the grocery store because we ran out of bananas (our household goes through a half dozen every day) and what did we happen to walk past? An end cap of boxed cake mix. Cue the negotiation from my toddler:

Mommy, I want that!
Me: No, I’m not getting that but if you want cake I would be happy to make one for you!
Mommy I want that one! And I want to make it with you!
Me: Hmm (I’m disbelieving of this, most “help” is usually just chocolate chip stealing)
Mommy please, we can bake together! We bake this, you and me forever! (cue the arms in the air and the twirling).
Me: *Groan* Ok.

And I lost. To be honest, I sort of planned on ditching the box on our way back to the checkstand, but then I completely spaced on it until we got to the checkout area and who was watching me like a hawk? Yup. Sold.  So we get home and I stuffed it into the back of the cupboard. Later that same day, my toddler who for some reason was in love with the idea of baking this cake comes up to me and says: “Mommy you a chef, we make cake together” and I completely melted. We pulled out our favorite tiny chef hat and apron and our amazing Learning Tower (yes, a chair would work too and yes, I am a paranoid mom who loves the railing all around) and we got to work.

I am the first to admit, I am not a fan of cake mix. It is this weird overly crumbly, way too soft weird tasting cake and since I know how easy they are to make from scratch I actually think they are kind of overpriced. So I set off to the land of happiness and time wasting (Pinterest) and found a link to a hack for cake mixes.

Why did it make it onto the blog? Because this hack makes an altogether dull cake mix box taste fantastic! And since it happened to be the same weekend as my cake obsessed toddler’s birthday, we did an easy side by side comparison.

A total of 25 people, both adults and children taste tested my from-scratch birthday cake with purple frosting and this cake mix hack with the same frosting. The result? Not a single person said “cake mix” to me. In fact many of them complimented the cake (and some thought this was better than my recipe)! I have to agree, it was so good, if the box came with these directions I think it would really up the game for cake mixes.

The crumb was tender, denser, buttery and rich. The distinct “cake mix flavor” was unrecognizable. Trust me, try it and you won’t regret it!

So lets get down to the hack!

Just a couple of ingredient swaps you can make a regular cake mix taste like you've paid 6$ a slice for bakery cake. This hack is easy, replaces oil with butter and turns a cake mix into a delicious buttery, rich, dense crumb cake, perfect for any special occasion.
4.84 from 43 votes
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Boxed Cake Mix Hack: Tastes like you paid $6 a slice

Just a couple of ingredient swaps you can make a regular cake mix taste like you've paid $6 a slice for bakery cake.
Course Dessert
Cuisine American
Keyword Boxed Cake Mix Hack
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 35 minutes
Total Time 40 minutes
Servings 12
Calories 566 kcal
Author Sabrina Snyder

Ingredients

  • 1 box Betty Crocker Yellow Cake Mix (this is what was picked out, I couldn't tell you which mix is best)
  • 4 eggs
  • 1 cup melted butter
  • 1 1/4 cup milk
  • 3 cups Buttercream Frosting

Instructions

  1. The only directions to note are that whatever the back of the box directs you to use, you have to:
  2. Add an additional egg.
  3. Replace the water with milk, same amounts.
  4. Replace the oil with melted butter. DOUBLE the amount.
  5. Cook with the same directions that are printed on the box.
Nutrition Facts
Boxed Cake Mix Hack: Tastes like you paid $6 a slice
Amount Per Serving
Calories 566 Calories from Fat 243
% Daily Value*
Fat 27g42%
Saturated Fat 13g81%
Cholesterol 97mg32%
Sodium 584mg25%
Potassium 97mg3%
Carbohydrates 75g25%
Sugar 55g61%
Protein 4g8%
Vitamin A 595IU12%
Calcium 134mg13%
Iron 1.2mg7%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

Just a couple of ingredient swaps you can make a regular cake mix taste like you've paid 6$ a slice for bakery cake. This hack is easy, replaces oil with butter and turns a cake mix into a delicious buttery, rich, dense crumb cake, perfect for any special occasion.

Just a couple of ingredient swaps you can make a regular cake mix taste like you've paid 6$ a slice for bakery cake. This hack is easy, replaces oil with butter and turns a cake mix into a delicious buttery, rich, dense crumb cake, perfect for any special occasion.
Just a couple of ingredient swaps you can make a regular cake mix taste like you've paid 6$ a slice for bakery cake. This hack is easy, replaces oil with butter and turns a cake mix into a delicious buttery, rich, dense crumb cake, perfect for any special occasion.

About the Author: Sabrina Snyder

Sabrina is a professionally trained Private Chef of over 10 years with ServSafe Manager certification in food safety. She creates all the recipes here on Dinner, then Dessert, fueled in no small part by her love for bacon.

Dinner, then Dessert, Inc. owns the copyright on all images and text and does not allow for its original recipes and pictures to be reproduced anywhere other than at this site unless authorization is given. If you enjoyed the recipe and would like to publish it on your own site, please re-write it in your own words, and link back to my site and recipe page. Read my disclosure and copyright policy. This post may contain affiliate links.

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Comments

  1. I have been wanting to try this cake mix hack. I am 99% a from scratch baker, but there really is no problem with a box.
    When I read your directions, you state to put 1 1/4 cups milk, but then state to put the same amount of milk as the box states, that would be 1 cup.
    Also, you state to double the amount of butter. That would be 2/3 cups, not 1 cup as stated in your recipe.
    So, do I follow your directions or the back of the box doubling the butter to 2/3 cups and keeping the liquid (the milk) 1 cup or use your directions for 1 1/4 C milk and 1 cup butter.

    Thanks!
    Laura

    1. My box must have asked for different amounts so just follow the instructions with your box amounts and that should work.

  2. I saw a lot of complaints of the cake falling after coming out of the oven. Mine has only been out for about 10 minutes and aside from falling slightly in the oven (the center rose high out of the pan and then sunk back down) and the outside baking much quicker than the center I didn’t have much difficulty with the recipe. I am yet to taste it but it smells fantastic

  3. This looks great! Can your subs be picked as needed? For example, add an egg and use whole milk but keep the oil in the same amounts. Or another switch as needed.

    Also, would this work with DH Perfectly Moist Strawberry Supreme or is that just marketing LOL?

    1. You need to double the amount of oil with melted butter for this to work. I haven’t tried it with that particular box mix but if you decide to try, I’d love to know what you think. Thanks!

  4. I made this tonight with a white cake. I turned out fabulous! I hate boxed cakes but my husband just has to buy them when they are sale. I ate 2 pieces! I can deal with boxed cake this way. Make sure you follow the instructions right. It says use butter for oil but double the amount. So 1/3 cup oil would be 2/3 cup butter. Oddly I was out of unsalted butter and salted butter turned out fine.

  5. I can’t help but think maybe the people who failed at this are in higher altitudes or something? I made this with my daughter and it was easily the best cake we’ve ever made. Usually, we just follow the instructions as printed because I’m not much of a baker but she loves to make things in the oven, and I can safely say we’ll never make it to spec again!

  6. I’ve always just added 1 teaspoon of vanilla extract into the water amount called for on the package directions & then baked the cake or cupcakes. This is simple & does the trick. Makes it taste homemade.

    1. Yes, vanilla is huge flavor boost. This recipe calls for swaps that also affect the texture to make it taste more homemade. Happy thanksgiving!

    2. Wait, you left out what the little chef’s feedback. The story was the best part, though I will try the hack. With a little less butter, but will try it sometime, alot of butter tends to kill my baked but that is prolly due to where I live. Will play safe and de/in-crease on the next.

  7. My GF box mix already says to use 1 stick butter (not oil). Should I still double it to 2 sticks? The other ingredients match up with what you say.

    1. I’ve not tested this using a GF box mix so I’m not sure of the right answer. If you decide to test, then yes. I’d double it.

  8. Honestly, I I’m ready to make this cake, I have melted butter cooling, eggs sitting to get to room temperature, and now I’m seeing all of the comments that the correct amount of ingredients is totally confusing! I have a Betty Crocker cake mix. States 3 eggs, so I’m using 4 eggs. Asks for 1-1/4 C of water so I am replacing with 1- /4 cups of milk, not one cup? I’m also seeing one C of butter, which is TWO sticks of butter – even though the recipe on the box calls for 1/2 C of oil. I really don’t want to end up with something that ends up in the garbage can so clarification woukd be greatly appreciated. Thank you!

    1. Yes two sticks of butter , can’t go wrong with extra butter. I just made a Betty Crocker mix and it came out perfect!!

  9. This hack is the best ever for last minute events. Most of my friends cannot believe it is not “from scratch”. Thanks to your toddler for prompting it.

  10. I am using a 10″ springform pan. I hope it is all the hype and more! I will update, but I have to say that the batter looked really thin, is that normal?

  11. This hack can be found all over the internet, and it does work. But you made one mistake, and notice many mention that their cakes/cupcakes collapsed. Your INSTRUCTIONS say “Replace the oil with melted butter. DOUBLE the amount”, but your INGREDIENTS say ” 1 cup melted butter”. Most box mixes call for 1/3 cup oil, so by your “instructions”, that would be 2/3 cup oil, yet your “ingredients” call for a full cup. That’s probably why many cakes/cupcakes fell flat after baking.

    1. Actually Niki the box I’m using calls for 1/2 cup oil so therefore I would use a cup of butter. Her ingredients were for the mix she was using but her directions go for any mix someone is using – so no mistake made!!

  12. I had been wanting to “fancy up” a box of cake mix I had in the pantry for awhile now…I heard it was possible a long time ago so I searched and this recipe came up. It was perfect!! I melted 2 stick of unsalted butter and let them cool to room temperature, then mixed as directed. I do want to say I had to let it cook about 10 minutes longer than what the package says with this recipe — when I went to check it after 35 minutes it had risen a LOT but still looked slightly gooey in the middle so I put it back in for 10 minutes, tested it with a toothpick in the middle to be sure and it was perfect. Perhaps that is why the other commenters are having issues…mine did fall after being out of the oven but it fell to normal expected cake height, nothing like a pancake. I wasn’t patient enough to put it in the fridge…I had to have a piece right away and it was worth every calorie! My only regret was not making homemade frosting but there’s always next time. Thank you for sharing this great boxed cake mix hack!

  13. Mine fell as well. Here’s what I used: Betty Crocker Super Moist Vanilla Cake. The package required 3 eggs, I used 1 additional egg, totaling 4 eggs; required 1 cup water which I replaced it with 1 cup of whole milk; and required 1/2 cup of oil which I replaced with 1 cup of unsalted softened butter (4 sticks). The batter was very thick. I then baked in (2) 9 inch cake pans at 325 degrees farhrenheit for a total of 35 minutes versus 24-29 minutes as indicated on box. I tested each cake with toothpicks, and they both came out clean. I then removed the cakes from the oven and in short time, they fell. I think that next time I would not purchase the “super moist” cake mix. This may have been the problem. We shall see. Thank you for sharing your experiences 🙂

    1. One of the issues might have been the butter. If you used 4 sticks of butter, that would be 2 cups. Each stick is a half of a cup. I’m getting ready to try it. Hoping for good results.

      1. Another thought comes to the fact that butter is made of a mix of fat and water and oil is completely made of fat. When using butter, the water in it evaporates in the heat. Causing it to expand in the oven, then fall at room temperature after the steam is gone. Just a thought. Hope this helps.

  14. Salted or unsalted butter? I only buy salted usually, but it seems like this would need unsalted since oil is not salty. Thanks!

    1. Mine too! Think I may have over-mixed. I’m going to try again now, i’ll update with how it goes!

  15. Living in the south, we are born learning how to do things a little differently just because that’s how it’s done! I used this hack and gave it 5 stars… of course that was in doing it the southern ways. It was not mentioned but my eggs were at room temperature, I sifted the cake mix beforehand… you’d be surprised what is left in the sifter… looks like grits! And I used evaporated milk. Did everything else as prescribed and it came out perfectly and beautifully. I am pleased. Thank you. Will use this hack again. I am gluten free, dairy free, and sugar free but still make things for others. They proclaimed it delicious! Oh yeah… also used convection oven setting. But other than that… ha!

  16. The first thing I ever baked by myself was a box cake mix. I was 6.
    Told Momma I wanted cake.
    She was busy, so told me to make one myself. She said “you can read can’t you? Just read the directions on the box”.
    I was pretty proud of myself!

    1. Good for you! And be proud now still. I don’t remember at what age I started baking, but I do remember that the first thing was a boxed cake mix. I think I was older than 6, probably age 10, give or take a year. I loved baking and became the baker in my house until moving out several years later.

  17. Nope, Nope, Nope. Cake fell as it was cooling. A LOT. I read the comments before I started so I used two cake pans and made a few cupcakes. Looked good coming out of the oven then collapsed. I think there’s too much butter – replace 1/3 cup of oil with a whole cup of melted butter? Too much. People who followed the recipe exactly and it turned out perfectly – how did you do it?

    1. The notes say to only double the amount of oil that is required on the back of the box. Sounds like you tripled it. I would say try it again but only use 2/3 cup of melted butter for the same box mix you just tried.

      1. Per the given instructions, it says 1 cup of melted butter in the list. It should only be 2/3 cup of butter in the list. Maybe some are following given list before reading whole recipe??????

  18. What do you think about subbing egg whites for eggs, to get a fluffier cake? I don’t want it to be too rich/dense!

  19. Not the success on try #1 I would have like to have seen. The cakes rose alarmingly while baking and while they tested done and pulled from the sides, they collapsed horribly making for a dense cake. (RATS!)

    This however, IMO was not the fault of the recipe — but rather — the size of the pans I used. I will try this again and divide into 3 pans OR will use larger cake tins so that the more delicate cake won’t have to hold up so much height.

    (recipe readers — give this a try — but learn from my mistake!)

    1. I wish I had read these comments first! My two 8” pans are over flowing in the oven.
      OMG. I just realized what I did wrong as I type this.

      I only used 2 cake pans but 2 boxes of mix. 1 with each daughter. Omg.

  20. OMG tried this and worked SO WELL!!! Will definitely be doing again. Came out moist and fluffy and doesn’t taste like usually how box mix comes out. Thanks so much!

  21. I love wedding cakes, so I thought I would try this recipe! I mean….it’s from an expert? I followed these directions exactly! The cake looked absolutely delicious when I took it out of the oven, It rose to the top of the pan!! I was excited to try it? I continued with making my dinner and when I came back to put icing on the cake! It had fell flatter than a pancake?and tasted AWFUL?What a waste of perfectly good ingredients!! Very disappointing!

    1. Oh no! It sounds like the cake might not have been fully baked before taking it out. Sometimes the outside appears to be done but the inside still isn’t set. Did you check it with a toothpick before removing it?

    2. Mine fell too. They puffed up nicely, I made sure the center poke was clean and even left it in the oven a couple of extra minutes to be sure. They were golden brown and fell to prebaking height within 10 mins of being out of the oven. It tastes good but is so flat I cut each in half so I could add height with fillings.

  22. I do not bake well at all. I wanted to make a special cake for my daughter’s 16th birthday. Just the thought of doing this made me very nervous. The cake turned out beautiful and tasted amazing. My 19 year old son said it was better than store bought. I might be baking more often. Thank you for the tips.

      1. I had a box of red velvet cake ans made it using this recipe on a whim… and WOW. I had a few neighbors who came by to chat so I shared it with them, and they were all very impressed! Some even ate up to 3 slices of the finished cake because they were that good! The cake turned out moist, fluffy and rose to a nice square shape (based on the pan). I had no issues with the cake falling as other commenters had and baked the cake for exactly 30min and then let it rest 5min in the hot oven + 30min cooldown. I followed the recipe loosely (milk mixed with water because I ran out of milk) but it still turned out great. I will only be using this recipe to bake my boxed cake mixes from now on! Thank you!!!

    1. So disappointed. I tried it twice and both times the cupcakes sank dramatically in the center. I used the Duncan Hines brand with yellow cake and strawberry. Both boxes turned out terrible. Such a waste of butter and eggs. The cake also didn’t look moist and yummy like the picture. I’d post pictures if I could.

  23. My cake tastes great but it is only 1 inch thick. When I took it out from the oven it was high and when I let it cool it sank! What did I do wrong? First time this has ever happen to me.

    1. Oh no! Sinking could have been from a few different reasons. It could have needed to bake longer, make sure to open/close oven door carefully, but the biggest one is to make sure you’re not over-mixing the batter. Hope this helps next time.

  24. I really struggle with making cakes as something or the other goes wrong …. loved this hack as I can at least a make delicious cake from a box mix and it tastes nothing like a box mix … thank you for making a baking disaster moms life better …

  25. Hi sabrina quick question you said we have to double the butter so if it says 1/2 oil and were subsisting it for butter do we put 1/4 butter since its double?

    1. I’ve not tested it that way but if you decide to try, I’d love to know how it turned out. Good luck!

  26. Yummy cake – I typically don’t care for a boxed cake mix but with the additions made using this recipe and the buttercream icing recipe, it was delicious. My family enjoyed it as well. Will save and make again! Thanks for sharing!

  27. Sabrina,

    I know this is supposed to be a hack for cake mix, which should ultimately be almost as easy as simply following the directions. However, on my second attempt I used the time while my butter was melting and cooling to separate the eggs and whip the whites. It complicated the recipe slightly, but it didn’t add any time to the project. Results were quite nice.

  28. Hi, I just made this tonight with your butter cream frosting recipe too.

    We’ll find out how it tastes tomorrow but I’m optimistic! If you say it’s great I take your word for it! ?

    My Betty Crocker box said 1 cup water ( not 1 1/4 cups) like your modified/improved recipe stayed ( you said same amounts) so I just wanted to mention that as a friendly FYI ?

    Thanks for the recipe!!
    Nancy

    1. Thanks for letting me know – sometimes the cake mixes vary or they change their formula. Standard when I wrote the recipe was 1 1/4 but that may have changed 🙂

      Let me know how the cake turned out!

  29. Don’t use this recipe for cupcakes. They turned out horrible. Flat greasy and they spread all over. Works absolutely great for layer cakes though.

      1. I read your comments while my cupcakes were in the oven baking! I was so worried they would be a flop. They weren’t. They turned out huge and perfect! Don’t be afraid to try them again, Joyce!

  30. I love this recipe! We have tried it with store brand and Pillsbury cake mixes. Both turn out great! Rave reviews from kids and adults plus it is so easy. Thank you! ?

  31. Thank you for this great recipe. It works perfectly except that I added 5 minutes for dark or coated pans and then added 10 minutes to the cooking time. Thank you.

  32. Can I use water rather than milk but still make the other changes? I’m serving someone with a dairy allergy.

      1. Dairy allergy also means no butter, so make note of that. Also; most box cake mixes have the “may contain milk” warning on them. I’d bake from scratch for someone with a dairy allergy.

  33. I tried this: Added an egg, used milk instead of water, and butter instead of oil (one stick, which is about .50 more than the oil in the instructions). I also added a tiny bit of vanilla extract.
    It was really good. Held together well, tasted moist. I think next time I’m going to use lemon or orange juice.

  34. This was great information! I used a yellow cake mix adding instant white choc pudding an extra egg yolk, whole milk and used oil, followed directions on box for baking. It was light, fluffy and delicious! Topped with homemade fudge frosting… yummy!! Thanks

      1. I followed the exact directions but my cake came out flat, dense and undercooked. I had added 10 minutes to the cooking time. Dunkin’ Hines classic yellow mix. Don’t know what happened

        1. Oh no! Cakes will tend to come out that way if the batter is over beaten. Try just folding the batter next time and popping it right in the oven next time. Good luck!

        2. Quick question, can I place the cake layers in the fridge once cooked and cooled then frost in the morning.

          Awesome moist cake recipe.

          1. Yes, but I would recommend wrapping them in plastic wrap so that they don’t soak in anything from the refrigerator while in there. You can actually keep them in the fridge for up to a week. Enjoy!

  35. Came across this recipe and thought I would give it a go. I am a Baker, but always looking for new ways of doing things. So heres what happened, I mis-measured my butter, (I know, bad Baker, lol). Anyways, so I did swap the water for milk, which even amounts across is only 1 cup milk, not 1 1/4 cups. But since I was doubling, 2 cups, however, the butter I only did 1 cup, not 2 cups like I should have, and to be honest, came out just fine. Also, this was for a 12 inch cake in a 3in high pan. So tip: start the baking at the 350° F for about half the time, then lower to 330° F for the rest. This works with all cake sizes. Gives you the initial rise, then the lower temp continues to bake without crusting the outside.

    1. Sorry, correction, the oil to butter transition was right, I was thinking of something else I did, myy apologies. On a side note though, this a great recipe, I would definately do again.

  36. Would margarine work instead of butter? or should I stick with just oil?…as those are the only 2 options I have in household.

    1. I haven’t tested it with either so I couldn’t tell you for sure, but I’d probably say margarine since it’s meant to be a closer butter substitute. That much oil would weigh down the cake.

  37. This is a fail proof formula. Everyone always loves my cakes, I just recently started using box hacks for convenience. I only have a problem with the calories…..it pushes them up. So, if your gonna splurge, go all the way.

  38. May I ask the weight on your cake mix for the above recipe? Some cakes maybe collapsing because cake mixes are smaller now. I read some where to buy an extra box and add 1/3 cup of the 2nd box to the first box

  39. I agree with the other commenter who thinks Duncan Hines box mixes are the best. I used a coconut one, and only had salted butter, so I used it. I had new, dark, non-stick pans, so I lightly oiled them, used parchment paper in the bottom, and lightly oiled it. I also baked at 325 as the box directed for 27 minutes.
    They came out lovely, but did fall some upon standing. However, I sliced them into two layers when cool, and they have a lovely crumb, and are moist. The flavor was very good. I think for my cake- lemon curd between the layers, 7 minute frosting in the middle, top and sides, with coconut over all, it will be fine, and fool even the most picky cake-a-holic at dinner.

  40. Ok so I didnt double the butter. I put them into a 9in round. I baked it according to direction and at the end of the 30 min it was not at all cooked. Now I do live in Las Vegas however were not that high in altitude. What did I do wrong? Side not they are rising pretty high.

  41. I’m making a Pillsbury Funfetti cake for my granddaughter in a Wilton Wonder Mold Doll cake. I’ve read that the cake needs to be dense to hold the large mold. Any suggestions on how to alter the box recipe which calls for 1 c water, 1/2 c oil, 3 whole eggs.

  42. Cake did not come out as described. Was way too moist and falling apart. Had to freeze what I could salvage to frost it. The taste was good but would not say the substitutions enhanced any flavors. Would recommend just sticking with the box recipe.

  43. So, do you double the amount of butter before melting, or after? In other words, do I melt 2 sticks of butter and that’s all I need?

  44. Do you recommend still adding a simple syrup after baking or omit simple syrup if I use the buttercream as an added ingredient?

  45. I don’t mean to disrespect your thread ms sabrina by correcting you b cuz you very obviously know sp much more than I do when it comes to cooking albeit I have only tried once to make a cake from scratch and had mixed up which order yo whip the ingredients in-instead of whipping the sugar eggs a d butter together I forgot and thought I’d make up for it AFTER adding the flour (bcuz thats when remembered too, little late) and I remember I was so excited to surprise my bf with his favorite cake homemade with candles first thing when he woke up in bed, and I did..it was just that it was cornbread cake practically. The whipping or over mixing of the flour created the perfect dense course cornbread consistency- everything else about it was on point bcuz I followed every other instruction to a tee so if I may offer my opinion ladies? Cake baking=a science in and of it’s own. You change the slightest detail and you change the outcome. Maybe Sabrina’s cake box mix had more baking powder or maybe she used a more expensive type of butter in turn had a fattier consistency which would mean when she was mixing her ingredients it would have been able to lightly churn as opposed to less fatty dense butters that would not produce desired effects (really I think it’s all the above) but remember when I said it’s a science? Well there are all these crazy wonderful tiny molecular changes happening in your oven when it’s kept at the desired temp (preheat for consistency) and that desired temp is no more for x amount of time every time you open the oven to check so you could’ve opened it during a very key period and when you did so you lowered the temp accidentally and than it was no able to continue the same changes once it heated back up b cuz it was stunted or the appropriate amount of time wasn’t tacked onto the original time to calculate the oven reheating for every time it was opened…just a thought. Right now I have my personal concoction of your recipe mixed with a pudding cake recipe and am very excited to see the end result. 😀

  46. Ugh, just made this cake & it completely fell once I took it out of the oven.
    I used Duncan Hines Butter recipe, which is my go-to box mix. I used 1 additional egg, substituted whole milk for water and doubled the butter from 7 tablespoons to 14. The box instructions say to beat with mixer for 4 min, but I only did 2 min since several comments below say overmixing will cause the cake to fall.
    Not sure what to change; hate to waste any more ingredients on another cake! Having company tomorrow!

    1. You need to use whole milk for this recipe to work with the butter. Just follow the recipe card and you should have better results. Good luck!

  47. Sounds like a great idea. I will give it a try. I wanted to let you know that the nutritional info is incorrect. It says 12 servings, 36 calories per serving and 1 gram of sugar. I wish it were like that. Ha!

  48. It’s in the oven, smells delicious! Just worried that it will flatten out like it did for others who made it! Did u figure out why their cakes were collapsing?

    1. If you live at higher altitude, add some extra flour-about 1/4-1/3 cup. And use a bundt pan. At 8,500ft, a falling cake is nature’s reminder of where you live. I’ve never been successful with layer pans and rarely a 9X13 pan. Buttercream it to the nines–yummmmy.

  49. Did mine as three layers as I always do with a box mix, same as others have said, flat as a pancake ?
    Not sure of taste yet

  50. I am happy to have found this recipe tweak … two of my closest friends are getting married, and I am helping with the cake. I was comparing recipes and ran across this. today we are doing the test cakes to compare cream cheese icings. Looking forward to seeing how this will work.

    On a related note, any favorite recipe for a pipe-able Cream cheese icing?

  51. If adding say, fresh grated carrots, drained pineapple tidbits, walnuts and raisins to a box mix of carrot cake, shouldn’t the wet ingredient such as milk, eggs or butter be reduced to compensate for the additional moisture from carrots and pineapple?

    1. I’ve never tested it using all of those additional add ins so I’m not sure of what advice to give. If you decide to try, I’d love to know what worked for you. Thanks!

    2. No. The added ingredients are fine without adding or subtracting any liquids. I add ingredients like that all the time for my family’s cakes.

  52. This is great. I’m actually a pretty big fan of boxed cake mixes even in there default form, happened across this idea one day many years ago and have been doing it that way ever since. There’s truly no reason to bake a cake from scratch when you can do this, unless you’re trying to make a cake that a mix just won’t suffice for.

  53. Yes, it works for chocolate. Result: a big beautiful birthday cake almost as good as my chocolate torte! To a (Pilsbury) devil’s food box recipe: I added an extra egg white, whipped the whites to fluffy peaks in one bowl. In separate bowl I added one stick of butter to the oil (1cup total), added half cup of cocoa powder, exchanged the water for milk, mixed the rest of the ingredients including the extra egg yolk and then folded the mixture slowly into the egg whites. Baked in a spring form pan. Filled between the layers with chocolate buttercream and covered outside with whip cream icing: Stir two cups of heavy cream, a cup of cocoa and a cup of powdered sugar together, let sit 20 minutes in fridge, whip into whipped cream and ice. Thanks for the hack. Where do I post the photos?

    1. How awesome!! You can post your photos on instagram using the hashtag #dinnerthendessert . I can’t wait to see them!!

  54. Sabrina, Thank you and I just love your site because I’ve had so many of the same questions the other have had. I stopped buying Duncan Hines or any others because they cut the ounces in their package and every since my lovely applesauce walnut cake recipe they use to have doesn’t work anymore. It collapses. Thought it was me but ????
    Today, I’m making one of those GIANT CUPCAKE cakes! I have the DH Classic Devil’s Food mix and am wondering if all your suggestions would work with this particular silicone bakeware? I guess my urgent question for today mostly concerns this silicone bake mold.

    1. I haven’t tested it but I wouldn’t see why it wouldn’t work. If you decide to try, I’d love to know how it turned out. Good luck!

  55. Hi! I tried your suggestions and it has a great flavor and texture. The only thing is that for some reason the middle of the cake stuck to pan. Any sugggestions ?

    1. I’m so glad you enjoyed it but sorry about it sticking. Just make sure to prepare your pan either with shortening/flour or a baking spray before putting in the cake mix. If you use the shortening/flour method, you can usually catch it better if a spot is missed. Hope this helps!

  56. Made this today. Wanted to try out a new bundt pan and this is what I used. Delicious and my son told me after that he’d been craving icing, so it was a win win.

  57. I would think adding double the amount of fat without increasing dry ingredients would lead to an “underbaked” cake. This sounds wonderful to me taste wise, do you know if this would work for a wedding cake tier? Does the cake rise as much as usual?
    Thank you!

  58. I tried this “Cake Mix Hack” and it was wonderful! No one could tell that it wasn’t really home-made. I will use this every time I use a cake mix. Thank you so much for the hint!

  59. I am going to make this recipe but have a question. The box mix calls for 1 cu water but you substituted 1 1/4 cups of milk, why?

        1. I’ve not tested it so I’m not sure. If you decide to try, I’d love to know how it turns out. Thanks!

  60. I wouldn’t use too much butter, 1/2 a cup is fine. I made it and instantly felt the need to chug a glass full of milk and maybe check my cholesterol level. Other than that it was really moist and soft

  61. I loved this hack when I tried it on a yellow cake mix, but I am wondering how I should go about the butter for a Butter Golden cake mix that calls for 7 tbsp of softened (not melted) butter. Should I still melt all the butter? Should I still double the butter? Would really love to know, thanks!

  62. I have a box of Duncan Hines classic white cake and it calls for 3 large egg WHITES (which I know is so the yolk doesn’t turn it yellow). Instead of adding an extra egg, and because I don’t care about it turning yellow, would just using three whole eggs work (not adding an extra since there’s the extra yolks)?

    1. I’ve never tested it so I’m not comfortable recommending it. I’d love to know how it turns out if you decide to try!

    1. When you’re baking, you want to be relatively precise about the ingredients you’re adding or it could throw the flavors out of balance, so you want to use unsalted butter and add the precise amount of salt a recipe calls for instead of using salted butter which could have different amounts of salt in it.

    1. I haven’t tested it but I don’t see why not. If you decide to try, I’d love to hear how it turned out.

      1. The recipe did not specify salted or unsalted butter. I bought salted assuming that was the default. Please amend your recipe. (I wondered about this at the store but it’s too late since I already bought the butter and I’m just now reading comments). I think I will make my cakes without trying your hack simply because I can’t afford to have them not turn out well. But thank you for posting this information.

  63. I really want to try this hack but there are so many different cake mix add ins to get to! I just noticed my duncan hines cake mix only calls for 1/4 cup of oil rather than the 1/2 cup that most box mixes call for. I have another that calls for a stick of softened butter instead of oil. I am curious whether anyone has noticed a difference with different brands of mix. I a pretty sure I remember liking Duncan Hines the best when I have done comparisons, but I don’t remember whether it was comparing mixes made with butter or not (my comparison was using only the box instructions).
    I will come back to give my review for a double butter cake.

  64. Great info! The original blog AND the comments. I actually love boxed cake mix, so this should be interesting.
    I will add, never ever buy Pillsbury Cake Mix. It is the worst (a little bit texture, a lot taste).
    The best cake mix is Duncan Hines.
    I know that only some flavors come in certain brands (like the funfetti only with Pillsbury… I think ??), but if you don’t believe me, buy the same common flavor in Pillsbury and Duncan Hines. Make both, by the box (I don’t know if the hack makes it different, so…). You will see. Most likely I tried it with devil’s food cake because that is my favorite.

  65. Hi Sabrina, I wonder if you can help? I bought the Betty Crocker Super moist cake mix with butter. Which means it calls for 1/3cup softened butter (no oil). Should I still double the amount of butter?
    thanks so much!

  66. I have attempted at least 8 different recipes for my daughter’s upcoming First Birthday Party and none have been the amazing cupcake that I want. So I’m going to try these hacks with a box mix and am super excited to finally get a good result (hopefully!) Thanks for posting these ideas. 

  67. I just made this and it’s THE FLUFFIEST, THE LIGHTEST cake I have ever tasted! I’m DEFINITELY gonna make this my new cake! THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR SHARING THE RECIPE! !!

  68. Made this recipe yesterday, and OMG, it was SO DIVINE!! Even though I only had a limited amount of butter left (I used half butter and half margarine) it still tasted so buttery, and decadent! The only change I made was that I added about 1 1/2 teaspoons of vanilla extract. I also didnt mix it with an electric mixer, like some other user said not to, for fear of overmixing. My cake layers didn’t rise much, but I think that’s because I didn’t fill them a lot. I’d imagine a simple fix would be to use a little baking powder. They also turned out slightly dry, but for the taste, it was worth the sacrifice! And nothing a little sour cream can’t fix ? Other than that, this cake was so rich and perfect, and the best I’ve ever made! (I will email you pictures of it if you want)

  69. Thank you! I will also join Rick in being one of the few boys in your blog comments, that appreciates the tip! And if works out well, You’ll be my next go to person for recipes and ideas! Sincerely, Robert

  70. I’m a guy that loves to bake. As a teen (many moons ago) I worked in a bakery and they had the best tasting cakes, and frosting I’ve ever had. That was 43 yrs ago. I have searched and tried everything to make, or buy anything similar to the flavors of those cakes since with no avail. I was wondering if you had a white cake hack, not using yolks? White frosting? Thank You, Rick

  71. I would strongly suggest cutting the mixing time to 60-70% on funfetti cakes if you’re going to do this. Will save you a redo and trip to the grocery store!

  72. I tried this cake hack a few times now and most of the time my cakes turn out wonderful. Made two different kinds–cake and cupcakes–for my sons birthday and they were a huge hit. However, sometimes my cake turns out very dense. What am I doing wrong?

    1. Hmm, it’s kind of hard to say. If you’re using the same ingredients and mix, I’m not sure why it would work out some times and not others. Could it possibly be that the more dense ones are mixed a bit more?? Sorry, I really wish I had a concrete answer to help.

  73. I am one of those people who hate box cake mixes. But my reason is because of what the box cake people (Duncan Hines, Betty Crocker, etc.) did to the mixes when they decided to cheat us out of a few ounces of mix and changed the ingredients making the cakes not as good as they used to be. This past weekend I was stuck and had to come up with something in a hurry, so I followed advice I’d been given which was to buy 2 boxes (in this case it was Duncan Hines Chocolate Fudge Cake), place ingredients from box #1 in mixing bowl then weigh in an extra 3 oz of ingredients from box #2. This makes up for the 18.25 oz mixes we used to get instead of the 15.25 oz we get now. I just couldn’t stop there, so I searched the Internet (good thing). Changed the 1-1/2 cups water to 1-1/2 cups milk, 1/3 cup vegetable oil to 2/3 cup butter and added an extra egg making it 4. I figured that if this fails, I’ll just cover it all up with my homemade Swiss Meringue Buttercream Frosting. Everyone loves that so much, it doesn’t matter what’s underneath. But, to my great surprise, the cake turned out terrific with a very fine crumb, dense and moist and it was almost 2″ high in a 9×13 pan. When I read some of the comments where there were failures, I started to wonder if that extra 3 oz made the difference. So, posted my comment to get your thoughts — or anyone else..

    1. This was EXACTLY what I needed to read!!!!ive been making cakes for years using this box hack and never understood why my cakes & cupcakes always fell flat as soon as I took them out of the oven. They tasted ok and everyone swore they were the best tasting cupcakes… but I was always disappointed and just assumed I was a bad cake baker. I just tried this and added 3 extra oz of cake mix… I FINALLY have perfect cupcakes!!!! I’m thrilled!!! Thank you thank you thank you thank you!!!!!  I can’t believe I never came across this tip before!! 

  74. I made this today, best cake I have ever made, (I am not known for my baking abilities but this was fantastic).. It was a duncan hines yellow cake and it tasted like I bought it at a bakery… it was dense, but moist, no issues with it rising or sinking in the middle, it was perfect…. (be careful not to beat the batter with an electric mixer or over mix it, that has created many failures)

    1. Renee, you’re absolutely right about not over-beating the batter. I find that beating the eggs in a separate bowl with a fork before adding to the mix allows you to do less mixing.

  75. I know that this is an older post, but I tried this today, and followed everything… My cakes exploded and while the box said to cook for 40 minutes, at an hour they were still undone all the way through. I was so sad, as I was hoping this would turn out. 🙁

    1. Oh no, that’s definitely not good. I’m so sorry. I’d be happy to troubleshoot with you to try and figure out what happened. This is a tried and true hack that I’ve used many times. Feel free to email me at [email protected]

  76. I tried this recipe with a betty crocker chocolate fudge cake mix and made 24 regular size cupcakes. The batter was thick and creamy, but it didn’t rise well. Baked them according to package directions. All my cupcakes sank in the middle. They tasted good, but we’re very moist and messy.

    1. Bummer, I wonder if the fudge factor made the difference. If you’d like, you can email me at contact @ dev.dinnerthendessert.com and we can troubleshoot more to try and figure out what exactly happened. Happy to hear they still tasted good though.

    1. Sorry for the delay in responding to this, it got caught in the spam filter somehow. How did your cake turn out? I can’t say the batter has ever been runny or thin for me, can I ask which box mix you used?

  77. I tried this recipe tonight and am disappointed and will go back to using the sour cream method. My cupcakes sunk in the middle and they are not as moist. I followed everything exactly. The batter was also to much like mousse which made it very difficult to make even cupcakes.

    1. Oh no! I’m so sorry. The recipe has been tested extensively to work but if you would like to troubleshoot I would be happy to discuss it further. Email me at contact @ dev.dinnerthendessert.com

  78. I tried your recipe using a French vanilla mix. Mine came out really dense and heavy. Do you measure the butter after it is melted or cut off the measure from the stick and then melt it?

    1. How much oil was the box mix asking for? The one I used asked for a half cup, so it was 1 cup melted butter as a replacement. Just double it and yes, it’s the melted measurement you’re looking for.

      1. I’m confused – can you please clarify. Here you said to use “the melted butter measurement”, but you said previouosly “before it’s melted”, as below:
        LACI CLARK — MAY 9, 2018 @ 11:54 AM REPLY
        Do you measure your butter before melted or is that 1 full cup of when melted?

        SABRINA — MAY 9, 2018 @ 11:07 PM REPLY
        before it’s melted ?

        1. Lillian leidner Really did you actually get upset over this smh. I did a small catering event with this recipe absolutely amazing reviews. Thank you very much!

        1. You’ll want to measure the butter before it’s melted. Sorry for the confusion, clearly I need more coffee at times before responding, haha!

  79. OMG, Sabrina! I use the Cake Mix Doctor to “fix” cake mix cakes but your hack even better! I’m always frustrated that my cakes don’t have that rich flavor that restaurant cakes have. This does it! Yum. Thank you, Sabrina.

    1. Hi Jessy,

      The thing with the butter is intentional to make the cake have a denser, more luscious bakery flavor. Any alteration to it would sort of take a step backwards from trying to recreate a bakery flavor with a box mix, so it really isn’t recommended. Maybe looking for a light cake recipe would be a better option because I’m not sure how well this would turn out with 1/2 the butter.

  80. I too cook from scratch. I did a taste test with a large group, and it was interesting. I made a scratch wedding cake and a box cake and everyone but one young man loved the scratch cake. He said that he grew up on box cakes so that was what he Was used too.
    Cakes and breads are sooooo easy to make…. I loved your story the most. I too let my children in the kitchen to cook and bake and today my son is considering Culinary school in New York.
    But it was your mom story that captured my heart,

    1. Aww thanks Bonnie! I try to keep to whole foods as much as possible but sometimes it just is all about the moments instead. There was so much fun in that experience I wouldn’t have traded it 🙂

  81. I know this is an older post… so hopefully you see this… have you tried this hack with gluten free box cake mix? I always find they are SUPER dense and/or light, but VERY dry 🙁
    Just curious! If not, I’ll give it a shot next time anyway 😉

  82. I have made this “boxed cake miracle” many times. It is a true winner! It is now my go to for any event from showers to atta girl celebrations. No longer do I invest the time it takes to make my cakes from scratch. This is just as good if not even better!

    1. Sorry this comment took so long to get to, it ended up in my spam filter somehow! I know you’ve probably made this recipe long ago at this point but if you still want to troubleshoot I am always available via email too contact @ dev.dinnerthendessert.com

  83. Olive oil is supposed to yield a tender crumb; would you recommend subbing OO for any of the butter? Also, what’s you opinion of using clarified butter as an alternative to melted butter?

    1. Sorry this comment took so long to get to, it ended up in my spam filter somehow! I wouldn’t substitute olive oil as the flavor is quite pronounced. I find butter is a good ingredient to use here. I haven’t tried baking with clarified butter so I can’t attest to how it would work/taste. If you do try it I would love to hear how it turned out though?

    1. Sorry this comment took so long to get to, it ended up in my spam filter somehow! Sorry I realize how late I am getting back to you, but I’ve never even seen that sort of cake mix before.

  84. I just used this hack for chocolate cupcakes. They turned out perfect. I added this hack to the side of my fridge! On a sticky note, a place reserved for only the tried and true recipes.

  85. Would this Recipe make good cupcakes can I make this two days before and leave it on counter in airtight container Thanks

    1. Sorry this totally got snagged in my spam filter and I just saw it. Yes, they would definitely be fine, just ice them right before you need them…although I’m guessing your event happened already and I missed the window to help. Sorry. 🙁

    1. Your box mix calls for a full cup of oil? The one I used asked for a half cup, so it was 1 cup melted butter as a replacement.

  86. I am going to try this ….my daughter-in- law to be asked me if I could make her and my son their wedding cake. I bake all the time so “why not”. She wants a “crazy Daisy” cake with rich butter cake and buttercream frosting. This will probably what I will fix….wish me luck and thank you for this cake mix idea.

    1. I hope you love it! The cake is rich and delicious and I didn’t get a single “hmm box mix?” reaction to it at all! And congratulations on your son’s wedding!

  87. I live near Santa Fe, New Mexico. The elevation here is nearly 6000 feet – are there any adjustment to this recipe (other than those on the box) that you would recommend? Thank you!

    1. No, I think you are good to go with whatever it printed on the box. 🙂 This recipe is incredibly easy and not fussy.

  88. You are so creative. Never wouldve thought to use box cake and turn it into something elegant looking. Great job!

  89. Pillbury makes these cool all natural cake mixes now- no artificial flavors or colors! Great for people who think they don’t approve of cake mix. 🙂

    1. Thanks! I have to say when I tried it I was super skeptical (I actually thought “this better be good I spent more on the butter that went into this than the cake itself!”) so I was totally pleasantly surprised!

  90. And so it begins…..there is a reason those cake mixes and sweetened cereals are at kid level. I always have to reach to the top shelf to get the puffed wheat. This is making me want cake of any kind!

  91. Wow that is a really pretty little cake. I so need to try this for my daughter’s birthday tea party in April.

    1. One year I did it just like that and did the frosting in rainbow colors. Thinner layers, six colors of frosting in between and I didn’t ice the outside. You would’ve thought I was a superhero my oldest loved it so much.

  92. What a fun way to make a boxed cake look (and taste like a million bucks). I am going to suggest something like this for my birthday cake!

  93. Ooh I’m going to have to try this with cake mixes from now on. It’s crazy how much of a difference that change made.

      1. Why do you have to double the butter? Just curious. I have to make cupcakes for a wedding and I want to try to doctor up a cake mix.

        1. Cake mix is lighter in texture and doubling the butter gives weight to the crumb which makes it denser and richer. 🙂

  94. I always use a box mix when i make a cake. I will have to try adding the extra ingredients when i make a cake tomorrow for dessert.

  95. I love to bake on Sundays and make all the goodies we want for the week. I will have to try this hack when i make my cake. I have a Spice cake mix i want to make.

  96. What a great idea. That looks super good, not to mention my kids would love the fact its a little circle! Looks great I’m going to try this!

  97. I am all about these type of life hacks and this is one that is sure to come in handy. I like to consider myself a bake from scratch gal, but more often than not a time shortage has me using a boxed mix.

    1. Yes! I love knowing little cheats here and there when I am in a bind. I can’t tell you how often my 1 minute microwave ganache recipe has saved my behind at a dinner party when a different dessert sauce failed.

        1. Sorry for the delay, this message got snared in the spam filter. What kind of mix did you use? How much did you mix it? If you want to trouble shoot send me an email directly at contact @ dev.dinnerthendessert.com

        2. Sweetheart it all depends on what size cake pa sweetheart it all depends on what size cake pain n you used.  Maybe you should check the Internet for a measuring chart. It will help you a lot

      1. My cakes did the same thing! My layered cake did not look layered. Flat but moist and tasty! I used a generic brand box mix. I’ll keep playing with it. 

          1. I’m so sorry. It sounds like either it was over mixed or maybe needed to bake a little longer. Adjusting those two things should help solve this issue.

  98. What a great way to variate a cake mix! I never thought to try different ways to mix a cake mix differently.

  99. I do these hacks all the time and LOVE it! It tastes SO much better than what comes out of the box. They are way more light and fluffy. You cake looks awesome!

  100. I am wicked lazy when it comes to baking, so I use boxed mixes all the time. I will try your hacks next time.

        1. Sorry this totally got snagged in my spam filter and I just saw it. Yes it would be the same! 🙂