How To Make The Great Depression Cake Called Crazy Cake (Recipe Uses N (2024)

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by Cassie 8 Comments

How To Make The Great Depression Cake Called Crazy Cake (Recipe Uses N (2)

Have you ever heard of The Great Depression Cake? You know the old classic saying, “necessity is the mother of invention”? Well, there’s no exception in the food world. You see, things like milk, eggs and butter became very costly and ridiculous during the great depression. We’ve got to give a huge hands off to our mother’s and grandmothers for living through this and surviving and surviving well!

They really knew how to pinch a penny and they really knew how to make the most of the little they had. Today, we are always finding ways to livea simpler and thriftier life that always seems to lend itself to a bit more contentment for everyone all around.

Well, this DELICIOUS, yet VERY frugal cake is one of those food recipes that makes the cut from The Great Depression to today! It is amazing with no eggs, milk or butter.

That also means a few other things for us in our day and age: less calories and allergy-friendly.

INGREDIENTS:

How To Make The Great Depression Cake Called Crazy Cake (Recipe Uses N (3)

  • 1 1/2 Cups flour (all-purpose)
  • 3 Tbsp. cocoa (unsweetened)
  • 1 Cup sugar (All purpose sugar – Granulated Pure Cane Sugar)
  • 1 tsp. baking soda
  • 1/2 tsp. salt
  • 1 tsp. white vinegar
  • 1 tsp. pure vanilla extract
  • 5 Tbsp. vegetable oil
  • 1 Cup water

Directions:

  • Mix first 5 dry ingredients in a greased 9×13 square baking pan (or any other size pan, as long as you have room to make divots).

How To Make The Great Depression Cake Called Crazy Cake (Recipe Uses N (4)

  • Make 3 depressions (divots) indry ingredients – two small, one larger. Pour vinegar in one depression, vanilla in theother and the vegetable oil in third larger depression.

How To Make The Great Depression Cake Called Crazy Cake (Recipe Uses N (5)

  • Pour water over all and mixwell until smooth.

How To Make The Great Depression Cake Called Crazy Cake (Recipe Uses N (6)

  • Bake on middle rack of oven for 35 minutes at 350 degrees. Check with toothpick to make sure itcomes out clean. Cool.
  • You can also divide the mixture into round baking pans for a round cake.

How To Make The Great Depression Cake Called Crazy Cake (Recipe Uses N (7)

  • Top with your favorite frosting.
  • Enjoy!

Now you can serve up this amazing cake and see if your guests can really notice the exclusion of those “expensive” ingredients – “betcha” they can’t. 🙂 They will dive right in and enjoy.

How To Make The Great Depression Cake Called Crazy Cake (Recipe Uses N (8)

Enjoy the video version to share on FB or other social channels so that you can remember it there too:

You can print this recipe to make it easier for you by clicking on the “print” button below.

How To Make The Great Depression Cake Called Crazy Cake (Recipe Uses No Milk, Eggs or Butter)

5.0 from 1 reviews

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Recipe type: Dessert

Cuisine: American from the Great Depression Era

Author: Cassie from The Thrifty Couple

Prep time:

Cook time:

Total time:

Serves: 12

Make this frugal, but fantastic cake that tastes amazing and made with no butter, eggs or milk!

Ingredients

  • 1½ Cups flour (all-purpose)
  • 3 Tbsp. cocoa (unsweetened)
  • 1 Cup sugar (All purpose sugar - Granulated Pure Cane Sugar)
  • 1 tsp. baking soda
  • ½ tsp. salt
  • 1 tsp. white vinegar
  • 1 tsp. pure vanilla extract
  • 5 Tbsp. vegetable oil
  • 1 Cup water

Instructions

  1. Mix first 5 dry ingredients in a greased 9x13 baking pan, or any pan that you have room to make the depressions for the wet ingredients.
  2. Make 3 depressions in dry ingredients - two small, one larger. Pour vinegar in one depression, vanilla in the other and the vegetable oil in third larger depression.
  3. Pour water over all and mix well until smooth. You can bake in this pan or transfer to any size you would like, including round.
  4. Bake on middle rack of oven for 35 minutes at 350 degrees. Check with toothpick to make sure it comes out clean. Cool.
  5. Top with your favorite frosting.
  6. Enjoy!

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Sheila H

    Please forgive me for being picky, but I am a very visual cook. The directions call for an 8″ x 8″ baking pan, the top pics appear to be a 9″ x 13″ pan, and the bottom pic is of two round pans. What adjustments do I need to bake as two rounds?

    Reply

    • Sharon

      It says you mix it in the 9×13 but you can decide it up for round pans or use whatever pan you want just divide evenly

      Reply

  2. Megan

    9×13″ or 8″ square pan? You say both. And at what temperature do you bake it? You never mention that.

    Reply

    • Sharon

      350 degrees and you can actually use any pan you want but if you use 2 round pans divide it up evenly

      Reply

  3. Jolene

    I have an egg allergic child so we’ve used this recipe for the past 3 yrs. I have seven children so that’s a lot of birthday cakes so that our littlest guy could have some cake, too. He can have baked-in egg now and we don’t often make this recipe, now, but its a great one in pinch or for food allergies.

    Reply

  4. Marina

    Thanks for this recipe. Do you think it’ll come out okay if I were to cut the sugar by half? My husband is diabetic, that’s why I ask. I’d like to make this cake for his birthday. Thanks, M

    Reply

    • Alex

      HI Marina – I think it would work, just be less sweet, but shouldn’t affect the outcome as far as the consistency and bouncy cake. I have also used the powdered baking Stevia as a replacement in many recipes. I recently made homemade peach jam and cut the sugar in half from the original recipe and then from there replaced half of the remaining half (if that makes sense) with stevia. It turned out great. I don’t even know if my family noticed.

      However, I do know that things can turn out differently when baking, but I am leaning towards it being fine.

      Reply

  5. Carolyn

    I’m confused. The top says it’s a “no flour, eggs or butter” cake but the first ingredient is flour.

    Reply

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How To Make The Great Depression Cake Called Crazy Cake (Recipe Uses N (2024)

FAQs

What was depression cake made of? ›

Depression cake
A modern chocolate depression-style cake.
Alternative namesMilkless Eggless Butterless Cake, Boiled Raisin Cake, War Cake
TypeCake
Place of originUnited States
Main ingredientsFlour, apples or pears, raisins or prunes, spices (cinnamon, allspice, cloves, nutmeg), nuts (walnuts, almonds, or pecans)

What is the history of the crazy cake? ›

Wacky cake may have been created as the result of rationing during World War II, when milk and eggs were scarce. Active ingredients in wacky cake include flour, sugar, cocoa powder, baking soda, vegetable oil, white vinegar, salt and vanilla extract.

Why does crazy cake work? ›

Yet, despite these 'wacky' differences, the cake is a delicious dessert. Why does wacky cake work? An eggless cake batter relies on the gluten structure of the flour and the lift provided by vinegar and baking soda.

Why is it called crazy cake? ›

It's called Crazy Cake (or Wacky Cake) because it doesn't need any eggs, milk or butter, which is kinda crazy for cake making!

What food did they eat during the Great Depression? ›

Top 10 Great Depression Foods That Are Actually Tasty
  • 3 Hoover Stew.
  • 4 Mystery Spice Cake. ...
  • 5 Prune Pudding. ...
  • 6 Mock Apple Pie. ...
  • 7 Spaghetti with Carrots and White Sauce. ...
  • 8 Egg Drop Soup. ...
  • 9 Bread and Butter Pickles. ...
  • 10 Potato Soup. Depression Era Potato Soup Recipe. ...
Oct 5, 2023

What is the oldest cake in the world? ›

The Egyptians gave us the world's oldest known cake–and also the world's oldest Tupperware as it happens. During the reign of Pepi II from BCE 2251 to 2157, bakers mixed up a wheat dough for flatbread and filled it with honey and milk. The dough was poured into two pre-heated copper molds that fit tightly together.

Why is it called Devil's cake? ›

Devil's Food Cake

There are a few theories as to how it got its name. One, it's the decadent counterpart to angel food cake. Two, it's sinfully delicious. Finally, devil's food cake came about during a time when food that was spicy, rich, or dark was described as deviled, like deviled ham and deviled eggs.

What is a goofy cake? ›

Rich chocolate cake coated in thick chocolate ganache.

What is an illusion cake? ›

illusion cake (plural illusion cakes) A cake designed to look like some other object.

What went wrong with cake? ›

Below we go in-depth about these cake mistakes:
  • Underbaked. The number one culprit of a sunken cake is underbaking. ...
  • Too Much or Too Soft of Butter. ...
  • Opened Oven Door Too Much. ...
  • Overmixed. ...
  • Too Much Liquid or Sugar. ...
  • Not Enough Leavening Agent. ...
  • Overbaked. ...
  • Undermixed.

Why do people put coins in cake? ›

In Greek tradition, the cutting of St. Basil's cake reveals what the new year has in store for the family, and the person who gets the slice containing the hidden coin is considered to be the luckiest one of all.

What is a Jake cake? ›

A favorite from many years ago, named after Amy's son Jake. It's a pillowy, heavenly angel food cake made with fresh egg whites, cane sugar, a little flour, and lots of vanilla extract and beans.

What is Navajo cake? ›

When you are a Diné asdzáán (Navajo Woman) this is one of the first cakes you learn how to make… Alkaan. 🌽🍰 A white corn cornmeal cake with raisins (but I used cranberries in this reel 😋) baked in a corn husks in the ground.

What is Dora cake made of? ›

A classic Japanese Dessert Dora Cake or traditionally called Dorayaki Cake, is a sweet treat made with two pancakes that are sandwiched using sweet red bean paste. I'm eagerly excited to teach you this delicious confection. Dora cake is a highly popular dessert originating from Japan.

What were medieval cakes made of? ›

Amongst the most common ingredients in medieval cake baking were honey, fruit, nuts, spices and cheese. These are all of course ingredients that we still love to see in our cake baking today. Nice to see that some things haven't really changed.

What was the usual filling for a soul cake? ›

The cakes are usually filled with allspice, nutmeg, cinnamon, ginger or other sweet spices, raisins or currants, and before baking are topped with the mark of a cross to signify that these were alms.

What was the witch cake in the 1600s? ›

In 17th century England and New England, it was believed that a "witch's cake" had the power to reveal whether witchcraft was afflicting a person with symptoms of illness. Such a cake or biscuit was made with rye flour and the urine of the afflicted person. The cake was then fed to a dog.

How was a witch cake made? ›

A bizarre form of counter-magic, the witch cake was a supernatural dessert used to identify suspected evildoers. In cases of mysterious illness or possession, witch-hunters would take a sample of the victim's urine, mix it with rye meal and ashes and bake it into a cake.

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