Peanut Butter
Peanut Butter Swirl Mug Cake
Eggless vanilla cake with a salty peanut butter ribbon through the middle.
Steps
-
Mix flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt in the mug.
-
Add milk, oil, and vanilla. Stir until the batter is smooth enough that no flour clings to the bottom.
-
Stir peanut butter with brown sugar in a small spoon, drop it on top, and swirl twice through the batter.
-
Microwave 70-80 seconds. Peanut butter holds heat, so a slightly soft top is better than an overcooked cake.
-
Rest one minute and eat from the edge inward so the center cools first.
Tips from the test kitchen
Natural peanut butter can split in the microwave. Use a no-stir creamy jar for the cleanest ribbon.
Success guide
Make it work the first time
Expected texture
Expect a rich, slightly dense crumb with a warm peanut butter ribbon. Stop before the top looks dry because nut butter holds heat after cooking.
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 avoids a whole egg, which helps prevent the bouncy texture people often dislike in small mug cakes.
Substitutions
- Milk
- Whole milk gives the softest crumb. Unsweetened oat or almond milk can work, but the cake may taste a little lighter.
- Fat
- Neutral oil keeps mug cakes moist. Melted butter works in some chocolate or vanilla cakes, but it can make the crumb firmer as it cools.
- Flour
- Do not assume a direct gluten-free flour swap unless the blend is labeled cup-for-cup; the texture may turn gummy.
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
- Add a small jam spoonful after cooking for a peanut-butter-and-jam finish.
- Sprinkle chocolate chips on top before microwaving for a warmer dessert cup.


