Vanilla

Vanilla Bean Mug Cake

Soft, buttery, with real vanilla flecks. The blank canvas of mug cakes.

  • Prep 2 min
  • Cook 1m 20s
  • Total 4 min
  • Difficulty Easy
Vanilla bean mug cake in a white ceramic mug on a linen napkin

Steps

  1. In a 10-12 oz mug, fork-whisk the flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt until the sugar disappears into the flour.

  2. Add the melted butter, milk, egg yolk, and vanilla. Stir slowly — fast mixing develops gluten and the crumb turns rubbery.

  3. Microwave on high for 70-80 seconds. Stop early; vanilla cake dries out faster than chocolate.

  4. Rest 60 seconds. The center finishes setting and the vanilla aroma sharpens.

Tips from the test kitchen

Save the leftover egg white in a jar; two of them plus a splash of milk make a tiny microwave omelet for breakfast tomorrow.

Success guide

Make it work the first time

Expected texture

Expect a pale, tender cake with a clean vanilla crumb. Vanilla dries faster than chocolate, so stop as soon as the top looks set.

Success tips

  • Use a microwave-safe mug with visible headroom. If the batter fills more than about half the mug, move it to a larger mug before cooking.
  • Start with the lower end of the microwave time in the steps. Add time in short bursts only if the center still looks wet.
  • Let the cake rest before eating. The crumb keeps setting after the microwave stops, and the mug will be very hot.
  • This recipe uses yolk for richness. Stir gently after it goes in so the cake stays tender instead of springy.

Substitutions

Milk
Whole milk gives the softest crumb. Unsweetened oat or almond milk can work, but the cake may taste a little lighter.
Fat
Melted butter gives flavor. Neutral oil can make the crumb softer, but the cake will taste less buttery.
Flour
Do not assume a direct gluten-free flour swap unless the blend is labeled cup-for-cup; the texture may turn gummy.
Egg
Use the yolk only when the recipe asks for it. A whole egg adds too much protein for one mug and can make the cake rubbery.

Troubleshooting

Rubbery texture
Usually caused by overmixing, overcooking, or too much egg for one mug. Mix only until no dry flour remains and stop at the first set-top cue.
Dry crumb
The cake likely cooked too long. Next time start at the low end of the time range and let rest instead of microwaving until fully dry.
Overflow
The mug was too small or too full. Use more headroom and set the mug on a paper towel if your microwave runs hot.
Wet center
Microwave in one short burst, then rest again. A slightly glossy center is fine; a puddle of batter needs more time.

Variations

  • Fold in sprinkles after mixing for a birthday-cake version.
  • Top the warm cake with berries or jam after microwaving.