• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Home Garden Joy
  • Home
  • How to Garden
    • Garden Pests
    • Plant Diseases
    • Plant Profiles
    • Raised Bed Gardening
    • Seed Starting
    • Tools & Equipment
  • Vegetables
  • Fruit
  • Herbs
  • About
    • Books & Classes
      • Herbalism Classes
      • Books for Christian Herbalists
      • Privacy Policy

Foodie Friday: Carrot Cake Recipe

March 28, 2014 by Jeanne

Sometimes I think I’m the most peculiar homemaker that ever lived. Take today’s carrot cake recipe. It all started because I had one lonely can of cake frosting in the pantry that I wanted to use up.  My husband does the food shopping each week, mostly because he hates the way I do the shopping and his mother, God rest her soul, was the epitome of the frugal housewife. She taught him well, and our pantry is usually full of good-to-eat things found at bargain prices. He likes to watch shows like Extreme Couponing, and he can figure out the price per ounce for rice and pasta in his head while I stand there and say things like, “That package is pretty; I think I’ll buy that.”
Anyway, back to the frosting and why a carrot cake emerged from my oven last Sunday. It started with my frenzy of cleaning the pantry a few weeks ago. I got sick of rooting around in flour-dusted shelves for the last bag of semi sweet chocolate morsels, or not finding any kidney beans on the night when I wanted to make chili. So I spent an entire Saturday morning cleaning out the pantry. I took everything off of the shelves, threw out questionable products, scrubbed the shelves and re-organized the foods. That’s when I realized that we had several boxes of yellow cake mix and one can of cream cheese frosting.

What the heck do you do with cream cheese frosting? “Carrot cake,” hubby told me.

Great, but we didn’t have a mix. He likes cakes from mixes. He does not like my ‘from scratch’ baked products. Now before you either think I’m a lousy cook or he has no taste, let me remind you that he grew up with a father who sold a commercial brand of cookies for a living; he dined on the finest name-brand products, and his mother didn’t like baking.  I, on the other hand, grew up with a mother who baked a lot from scratch while she was well and a sister who took over the cooking duties with a flourish when Mom became ill. Home-baked goods in my family of origin were praised; baking the cherished family recipe for bread pudding or Gunkelhopft, a buttery German pound cake, was a rite of passage.
You present me with a can of cream cheese frosting with an expiration date looming, and out comes the cook book and the carrots. Time to bake a carrot cake.

Hunting for the Perfect Carrot Cake Recipe

My cookbooks yielded recipes with oddball ingredients or promises of “dry, crumbling cake.” Who wants a dry cake? I wanted a recipe that would taste like the Betty Crocker mix my hubby likes.  Smart old me, I turned to, guess what? The Betty Crocker site. And yes, this is the recipe that I used!
Betty Crocker Carrot Cake Recipe
baking a cake
I mad the recipe using two 8″ round cake pans. The cake came out easily from the pans, but didn’t rise much, which worried me a bit. Not to worry….
slice of cake
I used my food processor to shred the carrots. Five medium carrots was too much, but I think I used five large ones instead. That’s how I ended up with the Carrot Coleslaw recipe I shared on Wednesday – too many extra shredded carrots! Well, both recipes were good, so my over enthusiastic carrot shredding just ended up being “two” tasty!
carrot cake

The result of my experiment, above. A two-layer carrot cake, baked from scratch, with canned Betty Crocker cream cheese frosting. The cake was moist, tasty and a classic carrot cake recipe that I recommend to you with enthusiasm.
post signature

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Previous Post: « Stink Bugs or What Is That Smell
Next Post: April Gardening Tips Are Ready »

Reader Interactions

Trackbacks

  1. Carrots in the Home Garden - Home and Garden Joy says:
    January 12, 2016 at

    […] Carrot Cake […]

Primary Sidebar

Let’s Connect!

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • YouTube

As Seen in Porch

 As Seen in Porch

We were featured in Porch.com and answered reader's questions about indoor plants.

Explore All Gardening Articles

Latest Articles

  • Sunscald on Tomatoes: What It Is and How to Prevent It
  • Herbal Profile: Growing Calendula
  • Battling Anthracnose: A Cucumber Grower’s Guide to a Sneaky Fungal Foe

Herbalism Classes & Supplies

Goods Shop by Herbal Academy – botanically inspired products

Disclosure

Home Garden Joy participates in two affiliate programs: Amazon and The Herbal Academy. Home Garden Joy earns a commission from qualifying purchases as an Amazon Associate. As an Herbal Academy Associate, HGJ also earns a commission when you sign up for classes or purchase herbs or supplies from The Herbal Academy. Herbal information and recipes on this site are provided for educational purposes only.

Footer

a close up of a cucumber leaf with anthracnose

Battling Anthracnose: A Cucumber Grower’s Guide to a Sneaky Fungal Foe

If you’ve ever stepped into your garden and noticed strange brown spots or sunken blemishes on your cucumbers, you might be facing a common but troublesome fungal disease known as anthracnose. Caused by Colletotrichum orbiculare, anthracnose thrives in warm, humid conditions and can quickly spread across your crop if not addressed early. This year in…

Read More

cucumbers and tomatoes in harvest basket

How to Grow Cucumbers: A Complete Guide

Learn how to grow cucumbers in this complete guide. I’ve grown cucumbers my entire life, and I still marvel at the prices of them at the supermarket. I can only imagine that we’re all paying for the transportation, for cucumbers are some of the easiest vegetables to grow. In fact, you may find yourself muttering,…

Read More

small round eggplant

Growing Eggplant: A Guide for Gardeners

Growing eggplant (a small garden devoted to fresh, seasonal edibles) is relatively easy in zone 7, where I garden, but combating the bugs is another story. Growing epplant in pots, containers, raised beds, or garden soil is all possible if you are willing to go the extra mile to control its nemesis, the Colorado potato…

Read More

cherry tomatoes in various stages of ripeness

Volunteer Plants – Nature’s Unexpected Gifts

Volunteer plants are one of nature’s most delightful surprises. They spring up unbidden, often in places we didn’t expect—cracks in sidewalks, corners of compost piles, or nestled beside a stone foundation, like the vibrant coleus seedlings growing near my deck shown in these pictures. These botanical freeloaders aren’t weeds; they’re plants that have reseeded themselves…

Read More

  • Privacy Policy
  • About
  • Awards

Copyright © 2025 Home Garden Joy on the Foodie Pro Theme