Coconut turmeric mochi cake with a quarter cut out
Photo by Joseph De Leo, Food Styling by Anna Stockwell

How to Make Mochi Cake, Any Way You Want It

Meet your new favorite one-bowl cake formula. It works in a range of flavors and shapes, it's naturally gluten-free, and it's wonderfully bouncy and crispy at the same time.

I'm in it for the texture. Bouncy, chewy, gooey, dense, moist, and also crispy. How can one food be all of these delightful things? I don't ask questions. I just keep baking mochi cakes. And now, my friends, you should too.

I know it's beenhard to get all-purpose flourin some areas recently, as so many of us bake our way through quarantine. But if you can find some sweet rice flour (also labeled "glutinous rice flour" or "sticky rice flour"), you'll be able to bake my current favorite easy treat: mochi cake. I always have at least one box ofKoda Farms Mochiko Sweet Rice Flourin my pantry. Recently I've taken toordering it in sets of threeso I have backup. That flour, eggs, baking powder, and sugar are the only non-negotiable ingredients in my otherwise highly riffable mochi cake formula.

My formula for mochi cake is the result of much tinkering. Inspired by classic Hawaiianbutter mochi这个蛋糕是缓和了甜蜜和公式ted so that you only need to use one type of milk instead of the traditional mix of cans of coconut milk and evaporated milk. You can swap coconut oil for butter to make the whole thing dairy-free and/or more coconut-flavored. You boost the flavor with spice: I like cinnamon, cardamom, and turmeric. Or you can omit the spice entirely. And you can add even more flavor by replacing some of the rice flour with any kind of powder-like flavoring, such as cocoa powder, malted milk powder, bright greenpandan powder, matcha, or whatever you've got.

These cupcakes are made with coconut milk and butter, with cinnamon and matcha powder added and sesame seeds on top.

Photo by Joseph De Leo, Food Styling by Anna Stockwell

The shape is also up for negotiation. Traditional butter mochi is cut into squares, and mine works that way, too, if a brownie pan is what you've got on hand. A round cake pan also works really well, and that shape makes the cake feel more elegant and occasion-worthy. Muffin tins give you more fun chewy-crunchy exterior, which is a very good thing. They also make your mochi cake more easily portable. I refuse to pick teams, though. I see the benefits in every baking vessel.

Do put something on top of your cakebeforeyou bake it—this way the cake doesn't need any decoration after the fact. Coconut flakes or sesame seeds (of any color!) are my favorite options, and both add a nice element of crunch to the crackly top.

This version is made with butter and half and half with cardamom and cocoa powder added and sesame seeds on top.

Photo by Joseph De Leo, Food Styling by Anna Stockwell

Last week, before turning over the final recipe to my editors, I made more than six different versions of this cake, trying to see if I could break my formula. I paired butter with coconut milk and added cardamom and cocoa powder to the batter. I mixed coconut oil with half and half and added matcha. I went all in on the coconut with both coconut oil and coconut milk (plus coconut on top) and tinted it yellow with turmeric. I baked each batch in a different vessel. I even made blue cupcakes withblue butterfly pea powder(I am in love withSuncore Foodsand their crazy powders). Every attempt at breaking my formula worked so well that I couldn't choose a favorite (and I had to deliver mochi cakes to all my neighbors.) I'm not saying you shouldtryto break the recipe, though. Just assuring you that this crazy-riffable mochi cake recipe really will work, any way you want it.