Gluten-Free Yellow Cake Recipe - Gluten-Free Baking (2024)

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An easy gluten-free yellow cake recipe. Dairy-free. Perfect for birthdays and other special occasions.

Gluten-Free Yellow Cake Recipe - Gluten-Free Baking (1)

Why You’ll Love This Gluten-Free Yellow Cake

This is an easy one-bowl gluten-free cake recipe. Unlike my gluten-free white cake, which is amazing, but requires several specific steps, this recipe is similar to a box mix. You mix all the ingredients in one bowl, give the batter a mix, and bake. It’s easy enough to make on a busy weeknight and yummy enough to be served at birthday parties. There’s a lot to love with this cake.

  • Easy to make. It’s a one-bowl recipe.
  • Dairy-free.
  • Moist (not gummy!).
  • Tender with a tight, soft crumb.
  • Perfect for birthday parties.

Gluten-Free Yellow Cake: Key Ingredients

Gluten-Free Yellow Cake Recipe - Gluten-Free Baking (2)

Gluten-Free Flour. I developed this recipe with Bob’s Red Mill 1:1 Gluten-Free Flour blend. This blend is easy to find and affordable. If you use a different flour blend, you might experience different results. Look for a flour blend that contains xanthan or guar gum. Without these ingredients, the cake won’t rise as high.

Granulated Sugar: For the best flavor, texture, and color, use regular granulated sugar. Cane sugar (also called sugar in the raw) may be used in this recipe. The cake will have a darker color and a slight caramel flavor. Brown sugar should be avoided as it contains moisture from the molasses that will affect the texture of the cake.

Vegetable Oil. This cake recipe uses liquid vegetable oil. It gives the cake a moist and tender crumb. Avoid olive oil or any other strong flavored oil. (Unless you want the cake to taste like olive oil, of course.)

Vanilla Extract. To achieve the classic yellow cake flavor, the recipe uses vanilla extract. If you prefer an almond flavor, replace the vanilla extract with half almond extract and half vanilla extract.

Gluten-Free Yellow Cake Recipe - Gluten-Free Baking (3)

Gluten-Free Yellow Cake: Tips for Success

  1. Grease the cake pans. Coat the cake pans with nonstick cooking spray or brush with solid shortening and dust with gluten-free flour.
  2. Whisk the dry ingredients. Take a minute to whisk together the dry ingredients together. This ensures that the baking powder is evenly distributed throughout the mixture. Folks tend to rush through this step. If I can encourage you to do one thing, it would be to slow down and whisk the mixture for a minute.And I mean a minute. Use the timer on your phone and whisk, whisk, whisk.

Gluten-Free Yellow Cake Recipe - Gluten-Free Baking (4)

  1. Check the bottom of the bowl for dry flour. Gluten-free flour loves to cling to the bottom of a mixing bowl. Before pouring the batter into the prepared pans, take a spatula and scrape the bottom of the bowl. If you see streaks of flour, stir them into the batter.
  2. Cool the cakes on a wire rack. After removing the cakes from the oven, allow them to cool in the pan for about five minutes. At this point, they are really delicate. Removing them from the pan right away can cause them to break. After five minutes, turn them out onto a wire rack to cool. This allows the steam to escape from the cakes. If they remain in the pan, the steam can cause the cakes to stick.

Gluten-Free Yellow Cake Recipe - Gluten-Free Baking (5)

  1. Let the cake cool before frosting. Before frosting your cake, make sure it’s totally cool. The center of the cake loves to hold on to heat. Take your hand and place it on the center of the cake, the way you’d place your hand on a baby’s back. If it feels warm, don’t frost it yet. A warm cake + frosting=melted, messy frosting.

Gluten-Free Yellow Cake Recipe - Gluten-Free Baking (6)

Gluten-Free Yellow Cake: FAQs

Can I make this cake without eggs?

I haven’t tested the cake egg-free, sorry.

Can I make this cake with a sugar substitute?

I haven’t tested the recipe with a sugar replacement.

Can I use this recipe to make cupcakes?

Yes. Directions for making cupcakes are included below in the notes section of the recipe.

Can I use this recipe to make a sheet cake?

You sure can! It makes a 9×13-inch sheet cake. Directions for baking are included below the recipe.

Gluten-Free Yellow Cake Recipe - Gluten-Free Baking (7)

Gluten-Free Yellow Cake Recipe - Gluten-Free Baking (8)

4.95 from 20 votes

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Gluten-Free Yellow Cake

An easy gluten-free yellow cake recipe. Dairy-free. Perfect for birthdays and other special occasions.

Servings 2 8" or 9" round cakes; one 9" x 13" cake, or 24 cupcakes.

Ingredients

For the Gluten-Free Yellow Cake

  • 2 1/2cupsgluten-free flour blend, see note (12 1/2 ounces; 355 grams)
  • 1 1/2cupsgranulated sugar (10 1/2 ounces; 298 grams)
  • 2 1/4teaspoonsbaking powder
  • 3/4teaspoonsalt
  • 1cupvegetable oil(7 ounces; 198 grams)
  • 2/3cupwater or milk(5 1/3 ounces; 150 grams)
  • 4large eggs(about 8 ounces out of shell; 226 grams)
  • 2teaspoonsvanilla extract

For the Chocolate Frosting

  • 4cupspowdered sugar, sifted (16 ounces; 453 grams)
  • 3/4cupDutch-process or natural cocoa powder, sifted (2 1/4 ounces; 65 grams)
  • 1cupbutter or dairy-free butter replacement, softened(8 ounces; 226 grams)
  • 1/4teaspoonsalt
  • 1/4cupmilk, water, or coffeeplus more as needed, see note (2 ounces; 56 grams)

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven and prepare the cake pans. Adjust oven rack to center position. Grease two 8-inch round cake pans with gluten-free nonstick cooking spray. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

  2. Make the Batter. Whisk together gluten-free flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt in a large bowl. Add oil, milk, eggs, and vanilla extract. Blend until smooth.

  3. Bake the Cakes. Divide batter equally between the two prepared cake pans. Bake until a cake tester inserted into the center of the cake comes out clean, about 30 minutes.

  4. Cool. Remove pans from the oven. Allow cakes to cool in the pan for five minutes and then turn out onto a wire rack to cool completely.

  5. Prepare chocolate frosting. Whisk together powdered sugar, cocoa powder, and salt in a small bowl.

  6. Beat butter for 30 seconds on high speed until light. Stop mixer. Add powdered sugar mix and milk or coffee. Mix, on low speed, until creamy. If frosting seems dry, add additional milk or coffee until smooth and creamy.

  7. Frost Cake. When cake is cool, fill and frost the cake.

Recipe Notes

Gluten-Free Flour Blend

This recipe was tested with Bob's Red Mill 1:1 Gluten-Free Flour Blend. Replacing the flour with another brand might change the texture of the cake. Be sure to use a flour blend that contains xanthan gum. If it doesn't, add 1 teaspoon of xanthan gum to the flour. Whisk to combine. Then use as directed.

Sheet Cake Directions

Lightly grease a 9 x13-inch pan. Bake the cake until golden brown about 40. Allow cake to cool in the pan. Prepare frosting as directed above and frost cake when cool.

Cupcake Directions
Line two 12-cup muffin pans with cupcake liners. Spoon batter into muffin cups, about 2/3 full. Bake until a toothpick inserted into the center of the cake comes out clean, about 20 minutes. Prepare frosting and frost cupcakes when cool.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Joan M Carrow says

    Gluten-Free Yellow Cake Recipe - Gluten-Free Baking (9)
    I have a Baking Business and I just made this for a customer ! I made myself a sample ! If you follow the recipe as stated your cake will come out fine . I used a scale to weight all my ingredients ! IT IS DELICIOUS !!!

    THANK YOU ,
    JOAN

    Reply

    • Elizabeth says

      Hooray! Glad you liked it!

      Reply

  2. Evita Morin says

    Gluten-Free Yellow Cake Recipe - Gluten-Free Baking (10)
    My 6-year-old LOVED this cake for his birthday. I’ve experimented with different recipes for my celiac son over the years, but this is the one I’ll be using from here on out. My whole family agrees, 5 stars!

    Reply

  3. Mary G says

    Gluten-Free Yellow Cake Recipe - Gluten-Free Baking (11)
    Perfect. Read the notes, followed the instructions and didn’t make substitutions.

    Reply

  4. Jennifer says

    Gluten-Free Yellow Cake Recipe - Gluten-Free Baking (12)
    The chocolate frosting and cake compliment each other perfectly!! I made a half batch for my first time as it was just for me. Delicious!!!

    Reply

  5. AJ says

    Gluten-Free Yellow Cake Recipe - Gluten-Free Baking (13)
    Moist and delicious as a sheet cake, freezes well. Additional bonus – it is dairy free. Thank you!!

    Reply

  6. Debbie says

    I don’t understand, the batter came out super thick instantly as I was blending it, more like cookie dough, I followed the recipe exactly. I could hardly get it to spread in the pan, more like bread or cookie dough thickness. The only difference was I used a different flour brand. We’ll see how it turns out?

    Reply

    • Elizabeth says

      I’m sure it was the flour blend. They vary greatly by brand. Which one did you use?

      Reply

  7. Lindy says

    Gluten-Free Yellow Cake Recipe - Gluten-Free Baking (14)
    This is my new go to yellow cake! I’ve struggled to find a gf vanilla cake recipe that isn’t dense or gummy and this one is perfection. Perfect crumb, tastes delicious, and simple ingredients!

    I used a flour blend similar to Better Batter with no other substitutions and got 22 perfectly domed, golden brown cupcakes.

    Reply

  8. Claudita says

    Hello Elizabeth!
    Can the cake be made ahead of time and put in the freezer? Thank you!

    Reply

    • Elizabeth says

      It sure can! Just be sure to let it cool completely before you freeze it.

      Reply

  9. J says

    I’m sorry about this ahead of time … I don’t find it amusing at all to put recipes out here like this. I too used a diff flour because it’s what I had, and it turned out extremely gummy, I’m waiting to see how this will end up. It’s almost a joke . If y’all are going to put out recipes maybe put a WARNING in red specifying that if you use a diff flour YOU WILL END UP WASTING 4 eggs, flour, sugar, oil etc etc . I’m pretty much housebound and have been craving something sweet as all of us have. I will say it’s not the first time it’s ended up like this but I can say I’m tired of y’all putting out recipes without a very real WASTEFUL OF INGREDIENTS WARNINGS IF YOU DONT USE YOUR OWN BRAND FLOURS.

    Reply

    • Elizabeth says

      Hi J,
      That’s why this note is included both with the recipe and in the blog post. I don’t put it in red because red is very hard for people to read on screens.
      “Gluten-Free Flour Blend
      This recipe was tested with Bob’s Red Mill 1:1 Gluten-Free Flour Blend. Replacing the flour with another brand might change the texture of the cake. Be sure to use a flour blend that contains xanthan gum. If it doesn’t, add 1 teaspoon of xanthan gum to the flour. Whisk to combine. Then use as directed.”

      What brand of flour did you use?

      I’m sorry the cake didn’t work for you.

      Reply

    • Shostyler says

      Yo dude
      Don’t blame the recipe-maker for your mistake in not reading the post or the full recipe. She says what kind of flour to use twice. I got that just from skimming. If you care so much about making a good cake, then maybe take it upon yourself to lower your ego and assume you need all the direction you can get… If your cake turned out gummy then experience would tell you your batter was too thick. You wasted the ingredients, not the artist. All u had to do was add milk or water… That’s what I did

      Reply

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Gluten-Free Yellow Cake Recipe - Gluten-Free Baking (2024)

FAQs

How do you adjust for gluten free baking? ›

Gluten-free flours often contain fine starches, so they absorb more liquid than conventional flour. To address this, gluten-free recipes usually call for more liquid and produce looser batters. They may also call for a larger quantity of leavening, like baking powder, to help add volume and lighten the texture.

Do gluten free cakes need to bake longer? ›

Gluten-free baked goods often benefit from extra liquid to hydrate the flour blends, eliminate grittiness, and achieve a less dense or dry texture. However, it's very important to drive off this extra moisture during baking, or you'll wind up with a gummy texture. The best way to do this? Longer baking times.

How do you keep gluten-free cake from falling apart? ›

This helps to reduce the risk of your cake crumbling and falling apart. If the flour you are using doesn't already contain xanthan gum, combining quarter of a teaspoon to every 200g/7oz of gluten-free flour will help to improve the crumb structure of your bake. You can also use guar gum or a combination of the two.

Which gluten-free flour is best for baking? ›

What's the best gluten-free flour for baking? Bob's Red Mill gluten-free 1-to-1 baking mix is my favorite gluten-free all-purpose flour blend for baking. It has a mild texture and plenty of "stick" thanks to a blend of sweet rice flour, brown rice flour, and sorghum flour, plus some starches and xanthan gum.

What is the secret to moist gluten free baking? ›

Add extra liquid: Gluten-free flours tend to absorb more liquid than regular flour, so you may need to add more liquid to your recipes to compensate. This can help to keep your baked goods moist and prevent them from becoming dry and crumbly.

What is the ratio for gluten free baking? ›

This can be tricky because gluten free flours react differently in pretty much every recipe. But in general, use in place of all purpose or whole wheat flour in a 1:1 ratio. For extra binding (since there is no gluten) you can add a pinch of xanthan gum depending on the recipe, but I don't find it necessary.

Should I let my gluten free cake batter rest before baking? ›

Let Your Batters & Doughs Rest

We recommend covering your batters and doughs and letting them rest for at least half an hour. Note: This will also help batters become thicker and doughs to firm up.

What to avoid for gluten free baking? ›

Some baking ingredients that contain gluten (and thus are not suitable for a gluten-free diet) include:
  • Wheat.
  • Semolina.
  • Spelt.
  • Durum.
  • Emmer.
  • Einkorn.
  • Rye, sometimes referred to as pumpernickel.
  • Barley.
Mar 29, 2021

Can I just replace flour with gluten-free flour? ›

If the original recipe calls for 260 grams of all-purpose flour, substitute with 260 grams of your blend. Beat the batter more. Because gluten-free flours provide less structure than all-purpose, the batter or dough you make with them may require more beating than that which you are accustomed.

How do you know when a gluten free cake is done? ›

Ultimately, the toothpick test is just one data source to rely upon: with the trio—toothpick, edges, & centre—you can reliably know your gluten-free baked goods are, well, baked! If your toothpick comes out with wet batter on it, your cake definitely needs more time.

What helps gluten-free cakes rise? ›

Gluten-free flour blends don't have the same elasticity as flour containing gluten so often the cakes don't rise as much or will sink after rising. To combat the flat cake problem, I add ½ tsp of bicarbonate of soda to the recipe even when using a self-raising gluten-free flour blend.

Why do gluten-free cakes not rise? ›

YOUR CAKE IS SINKING IN THE MIDDLE OR NOT RISING

You may not have used enough raising agents. I do recommend experimenting with double action baking powders. Otherwise try using 25 percent more chemical raising agents (baking soda or baking powder) if you're converting a recipe to gluten free.

What flour has the lowest gluten content used for baking cakes? ›

Cake flour has the lowest gluten content of any wheat flour and is made from soft wheat The flour is lighter allowing cakes to keep a risen and fluffy texture without collapsing.

Does oatmeal have gluten? ›

Yes, pure, uncontaminated oats are gluten-free. The U. S. Food and Drug Administration considers oats a gluten-free grain under its gluten-free labeling regulations and only requires that packaged products with oats as an ingredient contain less than 20 parts per million of gluten overall.

What is the best gluten-free flour with yeast? ›

If you want to buy just one gluten-free flour, we highly recommend the Pillsbury all-purpose gluten-free flour. Not only is it our favorite gluten-free flour, and easy to use in gluten-free recipes, but it's also one of the few gluten-free flours currently on the market that is recommended for baking with yeast.

How does gluten free flour affect baking time? ›

Gluten-free goods tend to brown faster and take longer to cook through. So they need to be baked at a slightly lower temperature, for a slightly longer time. Every recipe is different, but in general, try lowering the temperature by 25 degrees and baking the item for 15 minutes longer.

Does gluten free flour bake the same as regular flour? ›

These breads take longer to bake because the gums and fiber in Gluten-Free Bread Flour hold onto water more than gluten (which is typical of gluten-free flour), so they take longer to fully bake and “dry out.” If you have a digital thermometer, the internal temperature should be between 208°F to 212°F.

How do you compensate for gluten free flour? ›

If the original recipe calls for 260 grams of all-purpose flour, substitute with 260 grams of your blend. Beat the batter more. Because gluten-free flours provide less structure than all-purpose, the batter or dough you make with them may require more beating than that which you are accustomed.

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