The Best "Healthy" Boxed Cake Mixes

We tried six boxed cake mixes that claim to be healthier than the average store-bought options. Here are our favorites.

By Joe Sevier. Photo by: Chelsea Kyle, Food Styling by Kat Boytsova.

In an ideal world, we'd always celebrate our kids' and loved ones' birthdays and special occasions with elaborate, many-tiered, jaw-dropping cakes made from scratch. But in real life, we sometimes have weeks when, try as we might, there's just no way we're getting a dozen pink cupcakes out for Stella's school bake sale, or making a Captain Underpants cake for Max's big day without a little help.

If you're one of those foresight types, you probably have a batch of homemade cake mix lying around in wait for weeks like this. But for the rest of us, there's boxed cake mix. Fortunately, the boxed cake mix options have gotten way more enticing in recent years. There are organic cake mixes, gluten-free cake mixes, non-GMO cake mixes, cake mixes made without allergens, even cake mixes made with "ancient grains."

Which is all well in good, but we wanted to know how each shrewdly marketed healthy cake mix tastes. With that in mind, we gathered a few white and yellow boxed cake mixes that advertise "healthier," all-natural ingredients and tested them with one parameter in mind: does it actually taste good? Here are the results of our healthy cake mix taste test:

1. Miss Jones Baking Co. Ultimate Vanilla Cake Mix

Health claims: Organic, GMO-free, no trans-fats, no hydrogenated oils

But did it taste good? We found this cake to be a little bit dry, but that's nothing that taking it out of the oven a few seconds earlier, or adding a surefire cake moist-maker couldn't fix. As far as taste, this one would be a great backdrop to whatever other flavors you're planning to add—and we do suggest adding flavor via a fruity filling or a chocolatey icing. It's solid boxed cake fare.

2. Foodstirs Simply Sweet Vanilla Cake Mix

Health claims: Made with only six ingredients, organic, GMO-free, made with "wholesome" biodynamic sugar, direct sourcing, Sarah Michelle Gellar

But did it taste good? Despite the staffs' collective love for Sarah Michelle, this cake wasn't one of our favorites. First, we would have preferred it a bit fluffier in texture. Second, it was too sweet for our tastes—and we were tasting without any icing or glaze. After adding either of those sugary toppings, we have to imagine it would be overpoweringly sweet. If you're an icing-free person, however, I have two things to say: I do not understand you at all, and this cake is perfectly suited to your weird food preferences.

3. Arrowhead Mills Vanilla Cake Mix

Health claims: Organic, no trans-fats

But did it taste good? This cake was fine. Once frosted and prettied up, we certainly wouldn't turn it down. But there was something about it that was just...well, strange. We couldn't figure it out until our resident pastry guru, Kat Sacks, noted that "it has the texture of store-bought corn muffins." Indeed.

4. Madhava MMM...Super Yummy Yellow Cake Mix

Health claims: Organic, GMO-free, made with ancient grains (including spelt and kamut), partially sweetened with coconut sugar

But did it taste good?: Coconut sugar and ancient-grain flours give this cake a distinctive taste. Kat found the baked cake bit oily, but on the whole it was the clear staff favorite. That said, none of us would choose it for a "classic birthday cake" experience. It has a nutty flavor and a grainy sort of look that's not what you'd expect from the standard yellow cake. It's also the most expensive of the lot. That said, if you're prepared to let go of your preconceived birthday cake notions and just want a delicious and easy cake (with some potentially nutritional beneficial attributes), go for it.

5. Cherrybrook Farms Yellow Cake Mix

Health claims: Allergen-free (i.e. peanut, tree-nut, egg, and dairy). This brand also offers a gluten-free version, but we did not test that one.

Disclaimer: This cake calls for margarine, but when performing our cake trials we could not find margarine. We looked in three different stores—not a comprehensive search, sure, but more than enough effort exerted for margarine. We made the cake with butter instead. If you need to keep it dairy-free, we suggest using coconut or another vegetable oil in place of the margarine.

But did it taste good? This cake was the top pick for "what a yellow cake should taste like." Since it's made with unbleached flour, the crumb of the cake is a bit more brown than you might be used to, but that doesn't affect the cake's tenderness or its sweet, simple, vanilla flavor. If it's a classic yellow birthday cake experience you're after, this is our top choice.

6. Pillsbury Purely Simple White Cake and Cupcake Mix

Health claims: No colors, preservatives, or artificial flavors

But did it taste good? This cake has the dense texture of freezer-aisle pound cake. It also has a hard-to-determine flavor that—while not entirely unpleasant—was something that we just didn't want in a white cake.

Get this recipe: Homemade Yellow Cake Mix

This story originally appeared on Epicurious.

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