Gooey Crack Cake Recipe
I am not a neat baker. I throw butter at things, I taste-test batter with shame, and somehow I ended up with this ridiculously ooey-gooey crack cake that people fight over. It’s basically a soft cake base with molten, sweet pockets that collapse into more deliciousness the second you poke it — sticky, buttery, dangerously simple. If you like desserts that are messy, comforting, and require no precision, this one is for you.
My husband calls it “the reason we need extra Tupperwares.” The kids have learned that the loudest child gets to lick the spatula, and he always pretends he doesn’t want a second slice but eats half the pan anyway. We serve it for birthdays, for “sorry we forgot your thing” moments, and on Mondays when we need sugar and forgiveness. Once I brought it to a potluck and people queued like it was movie tickets; I still dream about the woman who balanced three plates at once. It’s become our family’s unofficial celebration cake and the fastest way to fix a sad week.
Why You’ll Love This Gooey Crack Cake Recipe
– It’s outrageously gooey in the middle and slightly crisp on top — all texture, no pretension.
– Made from stuff you probably already have, but it tastes like you got out a pastry chef.
– Perfect for feeding a crowd or hoarding a pan in your room like some dessert hoarder.
– Absolutely forgiving: underbake a touch for extra goo, or let it set and get a cleaner slice.

Kitchen Talk
This cake is where my chaos wins. I once forgot to preheat the oven and told everyone the delay was “for texture,” which somehow worked. I also swapped out half the butter for browned butter one week out of curiosity and ruined nothing — the nuttiness was a revelation. Expect crumbs, sticky hands, and the likely scenario of sneaking bites straight from the pan while pretending you’re saving a slice for later.
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Shopping Tips
– Baking Basics (Flour/Sugar/Leaveners): Use all-purpose flour and good granulated sugar — no need for specialty flours here, just make sure your baking powder/soda aren’t ancient.
– Fats & Oils: Real butter makes this sing; margarine will work in a pinch but you’ll lose some flavor and that caramelized edge.
– Chocolate: If the recipe calls for chips or chunks, buy a bag of semi-sweet chips — they melt just right without overwhelming the sweetness.
– Eggs: Fresh eggs give structure and richness; if they’re on the older side, the cake might be a touch denser.
– Dairy: Use full-fat dairy when the recipe asks; it contributes to the gooey center and better mouthfeel.
Prep Ahead Ideas
– Mix the dry ingredients and store them in an airtight container the day before to speed assembly.
– You can soften butter and whisk any wet mix the night before; keep it refrigerated and bring to room temp before combining.
– Par-bake (partially bake) ahead if you want to finish under the broiler right before serving; cool and wrap tightly in the fridge until you’re ready.

Time-Saving Tricks
– Use a mixer for the wet ingredients if you’re in a hurry — hand whisking works but takes longer.
– Line the pan with parchment for easy release and faster cleaning; less scrubbing = more time to eat.
– Don’t mess with fancy layers: a single-pan bake is what keeps this doable on weeknights.
Common Mistakes
– Leaving it in too long will kill the goo; I left one in while making coffee and ended up with a drier cake — still tasty, just not crack-level.
– Overmixing the batter can make it tough. Mix until combined, and then stop. I learned this after one elbow-deep incident.
– Using low-fat dairy means a less gooey center; it’ll still be cake, just less sinful.
What to Serve It With
– A scoop of vanilla ice cream or a dollop of whipped cream for contrast.
– Fresh berries or a quick macerated fruit to cut through the sweetness.
– Strong coffee or a milky latte — this cake loves bold drinks.
Tips & Mistakes
– Let the cake cool a little before cutting, or it will ooze everywhere and you’ll be sticky but happy.
– Don’t peek obsessively while it’s baking; every oven is different and you’ll learn yours the more you make it.
– If the top browns too fast, tent loosely with foil.
Storage Tips
Leftovers keep in the fridge in an airtight container; it firms up and becomes sliceable, which is perfect for breakfast with coffee (no shame). Reheat gently — the microwave for a few seconds brings back the goo, but it’s also lovely cold if you’re into that fudgy texture. If you freeze slices, wrap tight and thaw overnight in the fridge before warming.

Variations and Substitutions
– Add chopped nuts for a toasty crunch (pecans or walnuts play nicely).
– Swap half the vanilla for almond extract for a slightly different, cozy note — I’ve done this when guests bring weird snacks and it works.
– If you’re dairy-free, a good plant-based butter and full-fat coconut milk can deliver similar results, though the flavor will shift.
– Skip the chocolate and stir in citrus zest for a bright twist; not exactly the same vibe, but still a winner.
Frequently Asked Questions

Gooey Crack Cake Recipe
Ingredients
Main Ingredients
- 15.25 oz yellow cake mix
- 0.5 cup unsalted butter, melted for the crust
- 3 eggs divided use
- 8 oz cream cheese, softened
- 3.5 cup powdered sugar sift if lumpy
- 1.5 tsp vanilla extract
- 0.13 tsp fine salt a pinch balances sweetness
- 2 tbsp powdered sugar for dusting, optional
Instructions
Preparation Steps
- Heat oven to 350°F. Grease a 9×13-inch pan or line with parchment.
- Stir cake mix, melted butter, and 1 egg in a bowl until a soft dough forms.
- Press the dough evenly into the prepared pan to make the crust.
- Beat cream cheese until smooth. Add remaining 2 eggs, vanilla, and salt; mix until silky.
- Gradually beat in powdered sugar until glossy and thick, scraping the bowl as needed.
- Pour filling over the crust and spread to the edges.
- Bake 32–38 minutes until edges are set and the center still jiggles slightly.
- Cool in pan until lukewarm, then dust with powdered sugar. Slice into squares to serve.
Notes
Featured Comments
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