How to Prevent Cakes and Loaves from Sinking (2024)

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There’s nothing more frustrating than spending time, energy, and money on a recipe only to have it not turn out correctly. This is especially demoralizing when you bake a layer cake or a loaf and it sinks in the center!

Sometimes it just slumps in the middle and you can salvage the results.

How to Prevent Cakes and Loaves from Sinking (1)

Other times it looks like a crater and is uncooked in the center and you have to throw it away.

How to Prevent Cakes and Loaves from Sinking (2)

Believe me, I know how frustrating it can be! These are questions we see from HTH bakers all the time:

  • Why does my banana bread sink in the center?
  • Why does my lemon loaf collapse?
  • Why did my cake sink after cooling?

This article will give you a quick list of how to prevent cakes and loaves from sinking, like in the pictures of sunken loaves from readers Kati and Mari above.

Why did my cake or loaf sink in the middle? #1 Reason: Your cake or quick bread loaf is underbaked.

This could be due to several factors, which are all outlined below!

How to Prevent Cakes and Loaves from Sinking

TIME

Be sure to bake for long enough! Instead of only relying on the baking time listed by the recipe, follow the sensory indicators written first and foremost. How long a loaf of banana bread or a yellow cake layer takes to bake in my kitchen, with my ingredients, in my oven, at my elevation, in my climate will likely be different than yours!

How to tell when a cake or loaf is done baking?

Use the sensory indicators given in the recipe and perform a toothpick or cake tester test. For most recipes, you want a small amount of moist crumbs or none at all. If your tester comes out with wetness or raw batter still clinging on, it’s not baked through and will likely sink.

The key to using a toothpick or cake tester is to insert into the center most point from the edges of the pan, probing directly into the middle. You don’t want it too deep that it’s touching the pan and not too shallow that it’s barely inserted.

If your cake or loaf has a very well developed exterior crust, that crust could actually scrape some of the crumbs off, giving you an inaccurate sense of doneness.

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So what’s even better and more accurate than a cake tester or toothpick? An instant read thermometer! Quick breads like Banana Bread or Lemon Loaf are done when they reach an internal temperature of 200 to 205°F. Cakes are done when they reach an internal temperature of 205 to 210°F.

OVEN PROBLEMS

Accuracy

Some ovens run colder than others. If your oven isn’t up to temperature consistently during the baking time, you may experience sunken cakes or loaves. Use an oven thermometer to gauge the accuracy of your oven. At the very least, try waiting 10 minutes after the oven has beeped to signify it has preheated before actually baking anything. Most home ovens need more time to fully come to temperature. More on this in my Oven 101 article.

Opening & closing

If you open and close your oven door too many times during the baking process, you’ll lose the heat of the oven. Your product won’t be able to bake through completely. Only open your oven when testing for doneness when about to remove the product.

Slamming door

Slamming the oven door can collapse your cake or loaf. So can slamming down your pans after baking. Remove your cake or loaf from the oven carefully and gently place on the counter while cooling.

USING THE WRONG PAN

This tip applies to loaves specifically. For recipes like banana bread, lemon loaf, or pound cake, your best bet is to bake in a metal loaf pan. Metal is a quick and efficient conductor of heat. This helps to ensure your recipe will cook through the center and not collapse. Avoid using dark-colored pans as they brown way more quickly and aggressively.

Glass and ceramic are slower conductors of heat. In fact, I did an experiment baking a double batch of the same recipe of banana bread at the same time. The only difference? One loaf was baked in a metal pan and the other in a glass pan.

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The glass loaf was on average 10°F cooler in the center than the banana bread baked in the metal loaf.

So if you use a glass pan, you’ll need to decrease your baking temperature to 325°F and increase your baking time by about 10 minutes. This will allow your loaves to bake through completely before the edges have dried out.

Lastly, it’s also important to use the same size pan as called for in the recipe. Using the wrong size pan can disrupt the product’s ability to rise and develop properly. This goes for width, height, and depth. Even an inch difference in diameter adds up. For example, an 8-inch cake pan holds 4 cups of batter and a 9-inch cake pan holds 5 cups of batter.

LEAVENING AGENT

There are three things that can cause your cakes or loaves to sink in relation to your leavening agent(s). These include baking soda and baking powder.

  1. Expired: If your baking soda or powder is expired it will not leaven your loaf or cake, causing it to sink in the center. It can expire or lose its effectiveness even before the expiration date. Learn how to test your baking soda and powder for freshness here.
  2. Too much: If you accidentally overmeasure your baking soda or powder it can also cause your cake or loaf to sink in the middle.
  3. High altitude: If you’re baking at a higher altitude you’ll need less leavening to achieve the same result as sea level. Without proper altitude adjustments, your products may sink.

OVERBEATING

For layer cakes, the key is to incorporate enough air during the butter + sugar creaming process to achieve a light and fluffy cake. This can be a fine balance. Incorporate too little air, and your cake won’t rise much. Incorporate too much, and your cake will collapse because it simply can’t hold onto all that air.

You don’t want to beat gradually at medium to medium-high speed. Avoid the temptation of cranking your mixer to the highest speed because the air needs to be incorporated somewhat gradually. The key? Find your mixer’s perfect speed (each brand, model, and machine is unique) and beat for about 4 to 7 minutes.

If you beat too much once the wet and dry ingredients combine, this can add too much additional air or collapse the air bubbles inside the batter. This can also lead to more gluten development than intended for the recipe, yielding a rubbery texture.

For quick breads and loaves, you want to stir very lightly once the wet and dry ingredients are combined. You don’t want to activate the webs of gluten more than the recipe is equipped to handle.

What to Do If Your Cake Sunk

If your cake layers have already sunk or slightly collapsed in the center, here are some ideas for fixing them.

Minor Sinking:

To salvage a small amount of sinking, you’ll just use your buttercream to level out the cake. Place one layer sunken side up. Use a generous amount of frosting for the filling. Place the second layer flat side up.

Moderate Sinking:

If your cake is noticeably sunken in the center but is still cooked through, use a cake leveler to even it out. A cake leveler makes quick and easy work of creating a perfectly even cake layer. If you don’t have one, you can also use a serrated knife.

Major Sinking:

If your cake has completely collapsed in the center and is raw or underdone in the center, there are still a few options to salvage it. You could always cut the cooked sections of the cake up into cubes and make a trifle. Or even make cake pops.

Another alternative is to use a paring knife or cookie cutter to remove the centermost part of the cake which is sunken. Fill that part with fruit, candies, or buttercream for a ‘surprise inside’ cake.

What To Do If Your Quick Bread Loaf Sunk

Unfortunately, there are a few less options to fix an already sunken loaf of quick bread and still maintain a beautiful-looking result. A few ideas on how to rescue a collapsed loaf are below.

Minor sinking:

If your loaf is just slightly sunken in the center instead of domed, you can opt to distract with a glaze or frosting.

Moderate to major sinking:

If your loaf is noticeably sunken in the center and undercooked, you can slice and toast the center pieces to firm up any gooeyness. Smear with butter or even peanut butter or nutella… or ice cream! You could also make French toast with these slices.

If you don’t want the texture of toasted banana bread, you can also take a center undercooked slice, wrap in a wet paper towel, and microwave until cooked through.

Another idea is to cube up the banana bread to make a rich bread pudding.

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Photos by Ashley McLaughlin (the non-sunken ones ;)).

More Science of Baking Articles:

  • How to Prevent Cupcake Liners from Sticking
  • How to Prevent Bundt Cake from Sticking
  • How to Convert Cake into Cupcakes (and Cupcakes into Cake!)
  • Everything You Need to Know About Sugar in Baking
How to Prevent Cakes and Loaves from Sinking (2024)

FAQs

How to Prevent Cakes and Loaves from Sinking? ›

Cake sinking after baking can be prevented by ensuring the oven is preheated correctly, using the right size of baking tin, avoiding opening the oven door too early, checking for doneness with a toothpick, and allowing the cake to cool gradually in the oven before removing it.

How do I stop my loaf cake from sinking? ›

Wait until the cake has set to minimize the chance of collapsing as you rotate. Utilize your oven's light to avoid opening the door when checking on your cake. Be super careful not to slam the oven door! Slamming the door can cause the cake to collapse – as can slamming your cake pans down when removing from the oven.

Why did my loaf cake collapse? ›

The most common reasons a cake sinks in the middle include the following: The pan is too small. There's too much liquid. Opening the oven or moving pans during baking.

Why did my loaf of bread sink in the middle? ›

If the oven is too hot the loaf will be brown and crispy on the outside but doughy in the middle and may collapse as it cools. When bread is baked at too low a temperature it will not rise enough in the oven resulting in a dense and sunken loaf.

Why do cakes sink in the middle after baking? ›

What Causes A Cake To Sink In The Middle? Using too-small tins, not mixing your wet batter right, or being too rough with the oven door often leads to a huge baking flop.

How to stop a 3 tier cake from sinking? ›

Cut 4 plastic dowels as tall as your bottom tier.

Then, use PVC cutters to snip the excess length off of each dowel so that they fit the height of your cake. You can find plastic dowels at most home goods stores. They are thicker and more sturdy than wooden dowels.

What makes a cake dense and heavy? ›

There's a big chance your butter and sugar will over-cream, meaning the butter will trap more air than it should. As the batter bakes, that extra air will deflate and leave you with an overly dense cake. It's all science! For best results, cream butter and sugar together for about 1-2 minutes.

How to fix sunken cupcakes? ›

If you add too much batter to the cupcake cavities, the batter will rise too much and will consequently fall and deflate, which will leave the middle of the cupcakes looking sad and sunken. How to fix: fill up each cavity with up to 2/3 of the way with batter.

Why did my Duncan Hines cake fall? ›

Too Little or Too Much Moisture. If your cake isn't moist enough, it can sink in the center. But too much moisture can also ruin a cake. This happens most often in humid climates, where extra moisture can collect naturally in ingredients like flour.

Why do my cakes shrink when I take them out of the oven? ›

A cake that puffs up as it bakes and deflates as it cools has usually had air beaten into the batter too quickly or vigorously. Here are a few tips to prevent sinking cakes: When you beat the eggs and butter together, do so on a moderate speed instead of high speed. The air bubbles you form will be more stable.

Why does my loaf deflate? ›

The slightest knock and the carbon dioxide pockets in the loaf will push against the pushed to the limit gluten structure and the whole thing will collapse. If the dough is over proofed oven spring can't happen and the dough's structure collapses rather than springs.

What is the solution for a collapsed loaf? ›

Bread that Falls or Collapses Can Be Caused By:

Too much liquid – Try decreasing water or milk by one to two tablespoons. Remember to look at your dough after a few minutes of kneading and see if it's a smooth, round ball. If the dough is too dry add liquid a teaspoon at a time until the dough balls up.

How do you make a loaf cake rise evenly? ›

In order to bake cake evenly, you have to insulate its edges. Preventing the temperature of batter at the edge from increasing quickly allows the cake to rise longer before it sets. A cake whose edges rise at nearly the same rate as its center will remain flat across the top — no dome, perfect for stacking and icing.

Why does my cake sink at the bottom? ›

Your oven temperature was too low. Cake requires precise temperatures to cook properly to allow the batter to rise slowly, then set fairly quickly once it reaches maximum volume. If the temperature is too low, the batter rises, but won't set so the structure of the batter collapses before it does set.

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