Results from my taste-test between three cake recipes: a box white mix, a doctored up white cake mix, and a scratch white cake recipe.

Some of you may or may not have heard that “I’m not a TRUE BAKER.”

…at least according to some of my first cookbook’s Amazon reviews. ๐Ÿ˜‰

It used to bother me when I would see that kind of feedback on the internet. People from all over the world jump into a comment section against me to declare that “cake mixes” are “not part of a real recipe,” or “a method real bakers would entertain,” or my personal favorite: “Baking from a cake mix is an excuse for those who don’t know how to bake from scratch. Scratch is ALWAYS better.”

Fun stuff for an author to see, eh? Or even for a new baker searching for a recipe that they can depend on.

But now I smile when I see these reviews (even though overall we’re still at 4.5/5 starts – thanks to those who believe in me and my cookbook).

Why?

I know they must have never personally tried to bake my doctored up cake mix recipes.

They shred me to bits because I do something that they haven’t discovered could completely change their baking game! They put me down, even though my recipes have completely transformed bakers’ businesses from all around the world. (Yes, foreign bakers, there are cake mixes available to you! I’ve had bakers from India, Europe, and Australia tell me that they use my recipes all the time).

I wish I could give each of them a hug and ask them if they actually tried the recipes before leaving their review. Most of the time, I guarantee they haven’t. If they don’t like it, that’s totally fine, but at least they gave it a chance before getting out the flamethrower.

This has left me boggled, really, about the foundation of their arguments. What could be so bad about a cake mix that there’s a group of people who still look down on others who use one?

I personally feel like a cake mix by itself isn’t anything to write home about, but hey, it’s a cake, and that’s what most people are looking for when they need to make a birthday cake for their 6 year old who wants dinosaurs and bright blue frosting. Isn’t that what it’s ultimately all about? Making a cake for those you love? Does it make you less of a baker if you use a cake mix? No. Is it a more simple way to get the job done? Yes. Are there other ways that taste much better? Absolutely. But I will never shame another baker, mother, friend, neighbor, aunt, brother, anyone, for baking with a cake mix. Hey, they made a cake, and I’m proud of them.

My test isn’t about who is the winner. It’s about a caker with over half a million social media followers (over IG and FB combined) getting attacked constantly for using a cake mix in her recipes, and her testing three cakes in her kitchen to gain a bit of perspective on the matter.

While I’m still on my soapbox, let me tell you a story that has always stuck with me: I was sitting in my car one morning outside my local grocery store. I had picked up a few ingredients I needed for a cake I was doing some recipe testing for, and I noticed two figures coming out of the store into the snowstorm that swirled around my windows.

There was a mother and a young girl walking together, hand in hand. The little girl had a birthday crown, a birthday sash, and what looked like a new glittery dress. She was skipping along next to her mom and talking nonstop. The mom looked like she was pretty beat, but was still trying to engage with the little girl (pjs, mom bun, no makeup) – I recognize that look all too well (its my favorite at my house). In the sack she carried from the store was clearly a cake mix, eggs, and a container of frosting. They obviously were going to be making a birthday cake.

Did that little girl care if her mom made the cake from scratch or not? Did that mom need to be told that she was lesser than because she didn’t “bake her kid’s birthday cake from scratch?” Not a chance. That little girl and her mom were probably on their way to making a memory together; a treasured memory around a special day, involving a special cake. It made me smile. It helped me remember what I’m all about: cake enriching an already beautiful moment in our lives.

No matter how anyone bakes their cake, I hope everyone knows I would never disregard someone’s love for baking or talents based off their method of baking. I’m not doing these tests to bash other bakers. I’m not doing these tests to put anyone down or lift myself up. I’m doing them because I’ve always been curious how they’d hold up in a blind taste test. I’m doing them to see if there’s any merit to the hateful comments I receive from purely-scratch bakers on Amazon. It’s cake for science, as it were. Tasty science! ๐Ÿ™‚

That said, I’ve always wondered if there was some merit to the argument that “one is better than the other.” After all, I’ve created doctored cake mix recipes enough to fill my website and cookbook (with more to come!), I’d better put my money where my mouth is if I’m going to be telling people that my doctored cake mix recipes taste up to par, if not better, than scratch cake recipes or plain box mixes.

I’m not sharing my perspective to set up an opinion piece, but to merely share where I’m coming from in this whole debate that seems to rage on, and on, and on.

What are we using?

For those who may not know, Cake Mixes are found at your local supermarket in the baking section. There are several different brands, and each contains a pre-measured amount of dry ingredients for your cake. The back of the box has a recipe for eggs, water, and oil to be added to the dry ingredient mix. For today’s test, I used Duncan Hines. I have another post coming shortly about which cake mix tasted best, according to my research and taste testing efforts.

For Doctored Cake Mix Recipes, the baker ignores the ingredients on the back of the cake mix box and substitutes in their own measurements of sour cream, buttermilk, oil, vanilla, and egg whites (also, emulsions and other fresh flavorings to enhance their desired flavors). The wet ingredients are all similar to scratch recipes, the baker just uses the pre-measured ingredients, instead of having to measure out the dry ingredients for themselves.

For Scratch Recipes, the bakers draws only from their fundamental ingredients, not using any pre-measured ingredients in their cakes. Everything is fresh from their kitchen without the preservatives that ca be found in cake mixes.

Now, that said, let’s dive into my little taste-test, shall we?

Three cakes:

I tested with three cake recipes – box cake, doctored box cake, and a cake from scratch I found from another local baker. I followed the directions exactly as intended, baked them up exactly as the baker designed, and came out with three different results for three different white cakes. But I knew they’d be different, they’re fundamentally different, after all! I was more interested in how they tasted, after all. I wouldn’t obviously be able to bake them blindly, so the taste-testing would be where the true test would be.

I baked up three cake rounds for each cake (four for the scratch cake because that’s what the recipe called for – I just left out one round when I was photographing them for this test for continuity), sliced them in half, and cut off the crust (because they could be determined based on their exterior), and tasted them. I then had my husband and boys taste them, and then send out samples to my neighbors to blindly taste-test as well. I wanted to know which was the best tasting, and believed that this would be the best way to show that.

Disclaimer: Obviously, different box mixes, different doctored mixes, and different scratch cakes could produce different results (maybe – I’m betting they’re similar). So keep that in mind as you read through my results. Hundreds of tests for scratch vs scratch, box vs box, doctored vs doctored could be done. For my test this week, I went with one of each.

Cake #1: Duncan Hines Box Cake

I have an entirely different post about which box cake I feel like is best from my personal taste-testing, but this post isn’t about that. For this test, I baked a Duncan Hines box cake mix according to the directions and temperatures listed on the back of the box. I’m going to be using the same box mix for my doctored cake below, so I figured if I keep that constant, we’d be off to a good start. Egg whites, water, and oil were all that was needed, and of course, the boxed cake mix. I whisked the ingredients together and split the batter evenly between the three 6″ greased cake pans. I baked them for the time listed on the back of the box.

The batter was loose, it tasted sweet, it came together alright, the color was perfect, but was somewhat lacking in depth of flavor (just in the batter for starters). It baked up well enough in the time it spent in the oven. The exterior was darker than the scratch cake and doctored cake, and the height was certainly the shortest.

When I taste tested this one, it was the most airy. It was sweet, but had a strange artificial taste to it that I can’t quite put my finger on. The crumb was super fluffy. The white cake taste was definitely at the forefront, but I could immediately tell it was the box cake recipe I was tasting.

Pros:

  • Easiest to make
  • Least expensive ingredients
  • Most consistent results (I imagine)

Cons:

  • tastes like a box mix
  • preservatives
  • it’s super fluffy, so I can’t imagine stacking them for wedding cakes being a good idea.
  • the exterior color seems over-baked, even when the recipe is followed.
  • dry, the taste is lacking, too airy

Cake #2: Doctored Box Mix Cake

We all know this is the recipe I use the most, so the making of the cake is similar to what I’m used to (if not exactly what I’m used to). So the real test with this one would be if I could pick it out in a blind taste test. Here is the recipe I used.

The batter is thick, and uses buttermilk, sour cream, pure vanilla, egg whites, vegetable oil, and of course, the cake mix. I hand whisked up the wet ingredients, then sifted in the dry. I then split the thick batter evenly between the three 6″ cake rounds and baked them in the oven for 325 for 25 minutes. They came out of the oven flat, and came out of their pans really well. The exterior color wasn’t as white as the scratch cake mix, but wasn’t as dark as the plain cake mix cakes. It rose up pretty well, and the inside crumb was visually similar to the box cake mix, too. It was uniform, and didn’t have any notable air pockets.

When we taste-tested this one (with the ends cut off so all we could see was white cake crumb), I knew it was mine right away by taste alone. It was fluffy, flavorful, light (but not too light), and ridiculously moist. It was thick, but not dense.

Pros:

  • Easy to make
  • Uses more ingredients to make have better flavor & texture
  • Most consistent results.
  • Thick, but not dense. Moist, and not crumbly.

Cons:

  • Still tastes like a box mix. You can’t get around that.
  • Preservatives, again.
  • You will get flack for baking with it, even if it is doctored up.
  • It’s not “from scratch”

Cake #3: Scratch Cake

Out of respect for other bakers in the baking community, I will not be releasing the name this recipe belongs to. However, for the sake of sharing the ingredient list, this cake included egg whites, vanilla, sour cream, buttermilk, butter, sugar, cake flour, baking powder, and salt. So if you took out the dry ingredients, you basically have what I add to my doctored cake mix, then add in the pre-measured dry ingredients, right? See what I’m getting at? ๐Ÿ˜‰ Anyway, I’m getting off track. Let’s dive into this one…

This recipe baked up 4 cake rounds, but I dismissed one of them from the photos to compare the three cakes more evenly. I whipped up the batter (which uses a mixer instead of just a whisk and bowl like the others), measured all my ingredients correctly, and minded every instruction to prevent a dry or dense cake, and split the thick batter between the four 6″ cake rounds. I baked them up, making sure to not overbake them, and let them cool to room temperature just as I did the others.

The cake rounds for the scratch cake mounded more than the other two recipes, so I imagine the amount needed to cut off to make them “flat” would take away from some of the cake that actually makes it onto the cake. Cake scraps aren’t a problem, though, right? But I want to use all my cake in my cake, if you know what I mean. The crumb wasn’t as uniform as the other two, and had a few notable air pockets.

Next, the taste test. This is what I was most curious about. I’ve made so many cakes from scratch, and I’ve made so many doctored cake mixes. I’ve been told by thousands of my followers that when they’ve gotten to this taste-test in their baking journey, that they’d always choose mine. How would I know for sure unless I did this for myself, and that they weren’t just being kind because they’re my followers? (love you guys!). I cut off the outside of the cake rounds so they would look just like the others. Then… I tasted them.

I’m sure this doesn’t speak for all scratch cakes, but this particular one was super dry, dense, and tasted like a dry flour muffin. The overall taste and texture was lacking. I was really disappointed, because I really wanted the scratch cake to be as great as I thought it should have been. Alas, I didn’t enjoy it. Maybe with an obscene amount of my buttercream would it be up to par. I was so surprised. Very surprised.

That was MY opinion, and these are MY results, but what about everyone else? My husband was up first. I had him close his eyes and one by one placed a cube of cake into his mouth. He immediately recognized mine, and immediately knew which was the scratch one. He thought it was a joke. It was no joke, man.

Next up was my neighbors. I gave 17 of them three individual unmarked cubes of cake and had them tell me their favorite 1-3. Yeah, almost, if not all, were 1. Doctored Mix, 2. Box Mix, and then 3. Scratch.

But how could this be? Scratch is supposed to be better than anything and everything, right? This is the reason why I get attacked in the comment section? This is the reason why so many bakers make sure “Scratch” is listed on their baking businesses? REAL bakers bake from scratch? How could it even be possible for the scratch cake to come out on bottom, to the point of people asking me if they were being punked, haha. Again, it could just be the recipe, and I don’t think I made any mistakes while baking it up, so this test left me with these results. Not just regular results, but screaming results that I can move forward me encouraging bakers from all over the world to continue baking from a doctored box mix recipe as a choice in their baking arsenal.

Pros:

  • no preservatives
  • more sturdy for wedding cakes, etc.
  • you most likely always have the ingredients on hand
  • it uses butter, which I love using in anything I bake
  • the color and height are great
  • you can tell people you made it from scratch ๐Ÿ˜‰

Cons:

  • taste is unpleasant compared to the other two, in my opinion.
  • more margin for error. There’s so much that can go wrong. So it’s less fool proof.
  • uses butter instead of oil, so it tends to be more dry and dense. Oil cakes tend to be more fluffy. This cake was dry. I didn’t overbake or overmix it.
  • texture was more like a dense muffin with too much flour in it (and yes, I measured the flour correctly).

Conclusion:

I was nervous to do this taste test. I don’t know why – I should have just trusted my followers when they told me what would happen. And it did. I was open-minded to the possibility of the scratch cake being better, I really was. I would have made an entire cookbook with scratch recipes to “redeem” myself. But I confirmed what I already knew: there’s more than one way to make a cake, and there’s a couple ways that taste better than others. Are they always easier? Not particularly. But there most definitely was a taste/texture difference. I wish I could have passed it out to more than 15-20 people in my neighborhood. For the ones I received, it was 92% preferred the doctored cake mix. The others preferred the box mix, and there was one that liked scratch mix.

Again, like I said at the beginning, everyone is allowed and encouraged to bake according to what they love most, without any discrimination or feeling “less than.” I’m just grateful I felt justified this week in continuing to build confidence all across the globe with a box mix and a little magic to make it taste “better than scratch.”

If you haven’t tried a scratch cake, box mix, or a doctored mix, I encourage you to try them all and decide for yourself based on taste which one you love most. Whichever that is, go for it! Bake on, bakers! ๐Ÿ™‚ I’m here for you either way, and can’t wait to do more tests with other flavors, too. Who knows what will happen next? I’m here for it!

In conclusion, I think it would be great for all bakers to try each method and find out for themselves which works best for them. Some people prefer the taste of scratch, some just the plain box mix. It’s up to you! I challenge you to test all three in your kitchen and tell me how it goes! I’d love to hear about it. Make sure to tag me on IG @bakingwithblondie. ๐Ÿ™‚

xo,

Mandy