This White Cake recipe is the perfect cake for so many celebrations! This Best White Cake is simple to make and is a moist, tender cake everyone loves.

White Cake Recipe | ©addapinch.com

I got so many emails and comments asking for “The Best White Cake Recipe” after I shared my The Best Chocolate Cake Recipe {Ever}.

I began creating this white cake recipe by taking some ideas from the best of some of my favorite family cake recipes. The final cake recipe is decidedly white and perfect for a birthday cake, anniversaries, and even weddings. 

It quickly became a family favorite cake recipe. My son declared it as “perfect,”  and my brother-in-law says this has to be his birthday cake every year!

It’s definitely the Best White Cake I’ve ever tasted!

I think you’ll agree when you try it, too!

Why This Is The Best White Cake Recipe Ever!

This easy homemade white cake recipe is the perfect combination of fluffy, soft, moist, and flavorful!

  • Amazing flavor. Full of buttery, vanilla flavor.
  • Sturdy yet tender cake. It is so moist, with a tender stick to your fork crumb. It holds together beautifully, making slicing and serving a breeze.
  • Versatile recipe. This cake recipe works well as a layer cake, cupcakes, sheet cake, or even as a bundt cake.
  • Favorite cake. Always a favorite recipe! This recipe makes the best cake for special occasions and is easy enough for a weeknight dessert. It is loved for so many special celebrations such as birthdays and anniversaries, and it even makes a delicious wedding cake.

Best White Cake Recipe

Ingredients and Substitutions

To bake this cake, you’ll need these ingredients:

  • butter – it is important to make sure that your butter is softened before you begin making this cake. You can use unsalted or salted butter in this recipe based on your preference.
  • vegetable shortening – adds to the moisture and texture of this incredible cake.
  • sugar – You’ll use granulated sugar
  • eggs – While many white cake recipes use only egg whites, I decided after numerous rounds of testing that I preferred the flavor that the whole egg, including the egg yolks, lends to the cake. While the cake isn’t stark white, it is still white. Make sure to use large, room-temperature eggs before you begin.
  • all-purpose flour – I use soft-winter-wheat-based all-purpose flour. In this instance, you can substitute with cake flour (or make your own cake flour with my easy tips!)
  • baking powder
  • salt – I use Diamond Crystal Kosher Salt. If you substitute with Morton’s Kosher salt, fine sea salt, or table salt, you will only need half the amount of the salt called for in the recipe. 
  • whole milk – make sure the milk is at room temperature
  • buttermilk – room temperature
  • vanilla extract – I prefer the flavor of vanilla in my cake and use 2 teaspoons of vanilla extract. If you like the flavor of almonds in your white cake, you can use 1 teaspoon of vanilla extract and 1 teaspoon of almond extract. This will reduce the vanilla flavor in the cake, but it is a good balance between the two. Additionally, if you want as white of a cake as possible, use a clear vanilla extract.
White Cake Recipe | ©addapinch.com

Step-By-Step Instructions

Preheat the oven. Begin by preheating the oven to 350º Fahrenheit.

Prepare cake pans. Prepare three 9-inch round cake pans with nonstick baking spray or coat well with shortening or butter and flour the pans, taking care to remove all excess flour.

Cream together the butter mixture. In a large mixing bowl (or the bowl of your stand mixer), cream together the butter and shortening until light and fluffy with an electric mixer. Slowly add sugar (one cup at a time) making sure to fully incorporate each cup before adding another. Mix together until light, fluffy, and white, about 4 minutes.

Next, add eggs (one at a time), making sure to fully incorporate each egg before adding another.

Whisk together the flour mixture. In another large mixing bowl, whisk together your add your dry ingredients (flour, baking powder, and salt).

Combine the milk mixture. Stir together the milk, buttermilk, and vanilla extract in a liquid measuring cup or mixing bowl.

Make the cake batter. Add a small amount of the dry ingredients (flour mixture) to the butter and shortening mixture, gently stirring after each addition. Then add a small amount of the milk mixture to the butter mixture and gently stir until just combined. Repeat alternating between adding small amounts of the dry mixture and the milk mixture to the butter mixture, just gently stirring until combined after the addition of each. Begin and end with the addition of the dry ingredients.

Final Stir and Scrape the Bowl. Gently stir all ingredients until well combined. Then, stop the mixer and scrape down the sides and bottom of the bowl, making sure that all ingredients are mixed well.

Distribute Cake Batter into Pans. Evenly distribute the cake batter between the three 9-inch cake pans and place the pans into the oven.

Bake the Cake. Bake for 25-30 minutes, or until a toothpick or cake tester inserted in the center comes out clean. Please don’t open and close the oven door a lot while the cake is baking, as the oven temperature drops each time the door is opened. You can follow my tips for how to tell when your cake is done.

Remove from Oven and Cool. Remove the cakes from the oven when done and allow them to cool slightly in cake pans for about 5 minutes. Then gently place the cake layers on a wire rack to finish cooling completely. This is important because cakes left in the cake pans for too long to cool may sweat, making it possible for them to stick to the pans.

Frost the Cake. Frost your cake with your preferred frosting.

White Cake Frosting Options

I used my fluffy white Vanilla Buttercream Frosting, which I doubled when I frosted the cake. It’s perfect on this cake, but you can use any favorite frosting.

Other Delicious Frostings

Strawberry Buttercream Frosting,

Cream Cheese Frosting,

Perfect Chocolate Buttercream Frosting

Best White Cake Success Tips!

1. Follow the recipe. Follow my recipe instructions exactly for mixing the cake to ensure success and make it as white as possible.

2. Use room temperature ingredients. Butter, eggs, milk, and buttermilk all should be at room temperature to ensure the best mixing into the cake batter. This makes for the best texture and soft crumb of the finished cake. 

3. Prepare the cake pans. Prepare your cake pans with nonstick baking spray or coat well with shortening or butter and flour, taking care to remove all excess flour. 

4. Mix the cake batter well but not too much. Cream the butter, shortening, and sugar until light and fluffy, about 3 to 5 minutes. Don’t overbeat when adding eggs and other ingredients. Just mix gently until incorporated well into the batter.

5. Cool the cake layers. Make sure you let the cake layers cool slightly for 5 minutes before removing the cake layers to a wire rack to cool completely. Set a timer!

Close photo of layers of white cake with white frosting.

How to Store and Freeze this Cake

To store. Store leftover cake at room temperature under a cake dome or covered with wrap for up to 3 days. Storing in the refrigerator tends to result in a dry cake.

To freeze. Let the cake layers cool completely. Wrap them well with plastic wrap and then with foil. Put each layer into a freezer bag and freeze for up to 2 months.

To serve from frozen. Allow the cake layers to thaw in the refrigerator overnight. The next day, the layers are ready to fill and frost as desired.

The next time you need a white cake recipe, give this one a try. I think you’ll love it!

Here’s my White Cake Recipe. My family calls it the best ever.

The Best White Cake Recipe {ever}

4.90 from 646 votes
This White Cake Recipe will quickly become your favorite for so many celebrations and events. This simple white cake recipe is easy to follow and yields a moist, tender white cake you’ll love.
Prep Time: 15 minutes
Cook Time: 25 minutes
Total Time: 40 minutes
Servings: 24

Ingredients 

  • 1 cup (226 g) butter , softened
  • 1/2 cup (92 g) shortening
  • 3 cups (594 g) granulated sugar
  • 5 large (250 g) eggs, room temperature
  • 3 cups (360 g) all-purpose flour
  • 2 teaspoons (8 g) baking powder
  • 1/4 teaspoon (0.7 g) kosher salt
  • 1/2 cup (113.5 g) whole milk, room temperature
  • 1/2 cup (113.5 g) buttermilk, room temperature
  • 2 teaspoons (9.4 g) vanilla extract

Instructions 

  • Prep. Preheat oven to 350º F. Prepare three 9-inch round cake pans with nonstick baking spray or coated well with shortening or butter and floured, taking care to remove all excess flour.
  • Cream together butter mixture. Cream together butter, shortening and sugar until light and fluffy with an electric mixer. Mix together for 4 minutes until light, fluffy and white. Add eggs one at a time, making sure to fully incorporate each egg before adding another.
  • Whisk together the flour mixture. Whisk together the flour, baking powder, and salt in a mixing bowl.
  • Combine the milk mixture. Stir together the milk, buttermilk, and vanilla extract in a liquid measuring cup or bowl.
  • Make the cake batter. Alternately add the flour mixture and the milk mixture to the butter mixture, beginning and ending with the flour mixture. Make sure to mix just until combined to prevent overmixing. Stop the mixer and scrape down the sides and the bottom of the bowl, making sure to have all ingredietns mixed well into the cake batter.
  • Bake and cool the cake. Evenly distribute cake batter between cake pans and place pans into oven. Bake for 25-30 minutes, or until a toothpick or cake tester inserted in the center comes out clean. Remove and allow to cool slightly in cake pans for about 5 minutes, then cool completely on a wire rack.
  • Frost and serve. Frost the cake as desired.

Notes

Best White Cake Recipe Success Tips!

1. Follow the recipe. Follow my recipe instructions exactly for mixing the cake to ensure success and make it as white as possible.
2. Use room temperature ingredients. Butter, eggs, milk, and buttermilk all should be at room temperature to ensure the best mixing into the cake batter. This makes for the best texture and soft crumb of the finished cake. 
3. Prepare the cake pans. Prepare your cake pans with nonstick baking spray or coat well with shortening or butter and flour, taking care to remove all excess flour. 
4. Mix the cake batter well but not too much. Cream the butter, shortening, and sugar until light and fluffy, about 3 to 5 minutes. Don’t overbeat when adding eggs and other ingredients. Just mix gently until incorporated well into the batter.
5. Cool the cake layers. Make sure you let the cake layers cool slightly for 5 minutes before removing the cake layers to a wire rack to cool completely. Set a timer!

How to Store and Freeze this Cake

Make Ahead. This cake can easily be made ahead of serving. Bake and frost as desired and store at room temperature (or in the refrigerator based on the frosting used) under a cake dome or covered with wrap for up to 3 days. 
To store. Store leftover cake at room temperature (or in the refrigerator based on the frosting used) under a cake dome or covered with wrap for up to 3 days. 
To freeze. Let the cake layers cool completely. Wrap them well with plastic wrap and then with foil. Put each layer into a freezer bag and freeze for up to 2 months.
Allow the cake layers to thaw in the refrigerator overnight. The next day, the layers are ready to fill and frost as desired.

General Recipe Notes:

  • Cupcakes. This recipe makes approximately 24 cupcakes when the cupcake tin is filled more than 3/4 full. When filled 1/2 full, this recipe makes approximately 36 cupcakes. Bake for approximately 18 minutes.
  • Original recipe. If you preferred the original white cake recipe (published in 2013), it used 1/2 teaspoon baking powder and 1 cup buttermilk with no whole milk.
  • High Altitude. If you live in a high-altitude environment, you’ll need to make sure to follow recommended baking adjustments for your altitude.

Nutrition

Calories: 282kcal | Carbohydrates: 38g | Protein: 3g | Fat: 13g | Saturated Fat: 6g | Cholesterol: 60mg | Sodium: 115mg | Potassium: 80mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 26g | Vitamin A: 309IU | Calcium: 36mg | Iron: 1mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Comment from a Pastry Chef 

I shared this comment from The Pastry Life, comment #1062 to this area of the post as it might be helpful to you as you bake this cake.

“Hi there, I am a pastry chef and have lots of knowledge of cakes, and why they do the funny things that they do. Let me start of by saying this cake is delicious, moist and fluffy! This is thanks to the seemingly large amount of sugar and fats, so do not reduce the amounts or make substitutions! If you’re that concerned about the healthiness of this cake, you should probably just avoid it.

This cake does not rise much, but that does not negatively affect its fluffiness. I followed the directions exactly, except for one very important step which I believe is why my cake is so fluffy inside and did not sink. Cream your butter, shortening and sugar altogether until very white and fluffy (about 4 minutes). After that, follow the instructions to a T. If you over beat after adding the eggs, they will produce a tougher cake. Take extra care while rotating pans as to not deflate the cakes, and resist the urge to open your oven door to peek except when you need to rotate.

This cake does form a bit of a crust on top from the high egg and sugar content, which makes it more difficult to tell when it is done. Your best hint is your nose. If you can smell cake, then check it! If its not jiggly, take it out and scoop a little bit out of the middle to see if it’s done (you’re gonna cover it with frosting anyway). Don’t trust the toothpick-test!

Sorry for writing a novel, I just know how hard it is to make a great white cake and this recipe is probably the best I’ve had yet, so it made me sad to see how many people were disappointed by it due to their lack of pastry knowledge and proper method.”

Thanks for your detailed comment, The Pastry Life!

Here’s to good cake! Enjoy!
Robyn xo

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About Robyn

Robyn Stone is a cookbook author, wife, mom, and passionate home cook. Her tested and trusted recipes give readers the confidence to cook recipes the whole family will love. Robyn has been featured on Food Network, People, Southern Living, and more.

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Recipe Review




3,242 Comments

  1. 5 stars
    Yet another fanatastic recipe! The sponge was so fluffy and light, I paired it up with raspberry conserve and white chocolate buttercream. A huge hit with the crowd!

  2. 5 stars
    I can count on one hand the number of comments I have ever left on the web and still have many fingers left over. That said, I loved this white cake recipe sooooo much that I have to thank the creator and encourage others to try this. I used almond milk and yogurt; other than that, I made it exactly as posted. I thought it might be incredibly sweet with all that sugar, but I was very pleasantly surprised. It is not. I’ve had cornbread sweeter than this cake. It was moist, tender, Perfect.

    It makes a lot of batter. It very generously filled my 9×11 and took nearly an hour to bake. It was not over baked. My niece and I KNEW this cake was going to be great before we even put it in the oven. My friend who doesn’t do sweets also commented on how good it smelled baking. Robyn is right. This cake WILL be my go-to white cake recipe, hands down. Thank you for sharing!

  3. Have not try this recipe yet. But I wonder if this is stable or firm to cover with fondant icing? Please advise. Thank you.

    1. I used this cake recipe all the time for my stackable, fondant covered cakes. It’s holds up nicely and tastes great!!

  4. Can I use almond extract instead of vanilla to make an almond white cake? Do you think the amount would be the same?

    Thanks,
    Ashley

  5. 5 stars
    So… I LOVE this cake recipe! Best white cake recipe I have ever made! But I agreed to make a Gluten Free cake for a friends graduation, was wondering if anyone has tried substituting gluten free flour for AP flour? And if not, any input??
    Thanks in advance!

  6. 5 stars
    Hello! I have made this and the chocolate cakes for my son’s Minecraft b’day cupcakes, but now need this white cake as a half sheet cake for my husband’s promotion party. Will this just make a half sheet cake or do I make adjustments?? Thank you. I would like to bake and freeze this soon, as the party is on June 1.

  7. Hi Robyn!
    Looking to serve this as my son’s birthday cake? Can I make it in 10″ pans in order to make it shorter and wider to stretch the servings a little bit?
    Thanks!

  8. 5 stars
    I love this recipe so much! Quick question, I saw the note regarding subbing in 1 full cup of buttermilk but was curious if could I use 1 cup of whole milk and no buttermilk at all? Would I need to make any other adjustments?

  9. 5 stars
    Hello Robyn, I am re-posting this with corrections to my typos — syntax and punctuation.

    I absolutely love your Best Chocolate Cake {Ever} recipe!!! It definitely has been the best chocolate cake I have ever made. I just had to put that out there, first and foremost. Secondly, I love this white cake recipe!! I first made it in 2015, for my daughter’s wedding.

    My daughter does NOT like sugary cake and sugary frostings. I made a stabilized whip-cream frosting with only maple syrup for sweetening – a recipe I found on The Prairie Homestead .com – and used less sugar than your recipe calls for, with this white cake. She LOVED the cake! It is the only cake she ever wants – for her anniversaries and birthdays. It was too dry, for me, but she did not think so. I realize the reduction of sugar is what made it somewhat dry.

    I just made it again, yesterday. This time, it was too moist and definitely too sugary. I forgot to reduce the sugar and used too much heavy cream. *** Next time, I will definitely reduce the sugar, but still use too much heavy cream. That way, I can still have the moist cake. ****

    Here is what happened:

    I never use vegetable shortening. It is not a staple in my kitchen. So, I used butter in its stead. I did not have buttermilk, but did have milk and whole-fat, plain, Greek yogurt. On The Pioneer Woman .com, I found out I could use the last two items for a substitute to the buttermilk. Of the amount of buttermilk you need, use whole or 2%-fat, Greek yogurt for 2/3 the amount and milk for the other 1/3 amount – basically, a 2:1 ratio. I actually used heavy cream, instead of milk, with the yogurt. Unfortunately, I used too much heavy cream, because I did NOT pay attention to that ratio and thought the cake would be too dry. So, my cake layers turned out too moist in the top center.

    I think I did not make her this cake last year, for her birthday or anniversary, because, yesterday, I forgot all about reducing the sugar amount, like I did for her wedding cake. Thus, yesterday’s cake came out too sweet. At least the whipped-cream frosting is not sweet at all.

    I really do appreciate that you put the pastry chef’s comment right underneath your recipe. I now see that perhaps the cake for my daughter’s wedding was dry, because I reduced the sugar, as the pastry chef mentions to NOT do, because the sugar and fat are what make the cake so moist. Also, I followed his advice about taking out a spot of the top center, to check for doneness. (Is doneness a word? ;-))

    Thank you, again, for your recipes!! I will never use another white or chocolate cake recipe, ever again!! Oh!!! I just remembered — I even used your white cake recipe for my younger daughter’s birthday cake!! She wanted different-colored layers and flavors. I can’t believe I forgot all about that cake. I do remember, now, that I did NOT reduce the sugar and the cake was too sugary, but my younger daughter likes the sugar.

    Anyway, I love your website, other recipes, and stories!! Keep them coming!! You have made a HUGE difference in my life!! Thank you!

    P.S. I will be presenting yesterday’s cake to my daughter, today. I will not mention that it is too sugary. We will see what she says.

    Also, I used 2 small, round cake pans (6″ rounds). The cake recipe made a total of 4 small cake layers. So, I made a 2-layer cake with the whipped-cream frosting, for my daughter, and a 2-layer cake with a cream-cheese frosting. I am sure she will be able to tell which one is which, by just looking.

  10. 5 stars
    My daughter (9 years old) and I have made this cake together many times and it turns out fabulous. We substitute Almond milk for the whole milk and buttermilk due to my cow’s milk allergy. It still comes out great. It is a request for all our special occasions!

    1. So happy to know that those substitutions work for you and that you enjoy it! Thanks so much! xo