Moist Applesauce Bundt Cake
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With its perfectly moist texture and soft crumb, this applesauce bundt cake is a serious crowd-pleaser. Made with 1 1/4 cups yogurt and 1 3/4 cups applesauce, it will be one of the moistest bundt cakes you ever make. Super simple, it bakes beautifully and evenly every time.

Are you expecting company anytime soon? This applesauce bundt cake might be a good little thing to have on hand. It takes no time to throw together, and it’s the kind of thing, like this one-bowl orange ricotta pound cake and this lemon-ricotta pound cake, that can be enjoyed at any point in the day, early in the morning with coffee, later in the afternoon with tea.
I learned the recipe from my old neighbor, Geri, from Virginia, who always seemed to have this cake on hand anytime she was entertaining. My children and I (and the neighborhood!) couldn’t get enough of it when we found ourselves at her house for one of her legendary gatherings.
Geri started making this cake years ago when her father, who loved sweets, was advised to watch his diet. She found the recipe in some sort of low-fat, heart-healthy cookbook/website and has been making it ever since — for her father, for her own family, for her friends, for nearly every fall gathering and holiday.
Made with 1 1/4 cups yogurt and 1 3/4 cups applesauce, this cake is one of the moistest cakes I have ever made, and I can assure you it does not taste like diet food in any shape or form. And unlike some cakes that get moister the day after they are baked, this one is moist immediately, no doubt a result of the quantity of applesauce and yogurt. Moreover, it bakes beautifully and evenly every time — I don’t know why I don’t use my Bundt pan more often — and it looks pretty to boot.

Best Bundt Cake Pan
I love the shape of a classic, scalloped Bundt pan. I’ve had the 12-cup, Nordic Ware Original Bundt Pan
for years, and I absolutely love it — cakes bake super evenly every time.
How to Get Cake Out of Bundt Pan
There is nothing more crushing than turning out a cake, from a Bundt pan or other vessel, only to find a huge chunk of it stuck to the interior. Four tips:
- Be sure to grease your pan really, really well. I use a generous amount of butter, and I take my time as I grease. If you prefer nonstick spray, that works well, too.
- Let the cake cool in the pan sufficiently before turning it out. I let this cake cool for 45 minutes before turning it out.
- Buy a good Bundt pan. I have never had issues with cake sticking in the (well greased) Bundt pan I mentioned above.
- Set a plate or a cooling rack over the top of the Bundt cake; then flip it over together … video coming soon.

What makes a cake moist?
Often fat, either in the form of oil or butter, is what makes a cake moist, but in this cake the moisture comes primarily from two other sources: yogurt and applesauce. Applesauce is frequently used as a lower-calorie substitute for butter and oil — it miraculously goes a great job providing richness without all the fat. As noted above, there are large amounts of both yogurt and applesauce in this cake as well as a small amount of oil, all of which makes for an incredibly moist cake.
Note: Because sugar is hygroscopic, meaning it attracts and holds onto water molecules, it helps make and keep baked goods moist. There is a fair amount of sugar in this cake, though not an inordinate amount given its size. Many commenters have had success cutting the sugar back considerably, so read those if you are interested in cutting back.
A Few Other Apple Recipes To Make This Fall
- Teddie’s Apple Cake
- Balzano Apple Cake
- Big Apple Pancake
- Apple-Frangipan Galette
- Easy French Apple Tart
- Apple Cobbler with Hot Sugar Crust

How to Make Applesauce Cake
First, gather your ingredients. Whisk together the dry ingredients. Stir together the wet ingredients.

Then combine the two.

Grease a Bundt pan well with butter or nonstick spray.

Pour batter into pan. Transfer to oven and bake at 325ºF for about an hour.




If you wish, you can dust with powdered sugar:


How to Make Applesauce
You absolutely do not need to make homemade applesauce to make this cake, but should you feel inclined, know this: it’s super easy! To make really, really good applesauce, you need nothing more than apples and water — no extra sugar, no extra spice. Here’s what you do: Gather some apples.

Cut straight down around the core of the apple; discard the core; place apple pieces in a pot with a little water — for these five apples, I used 1/3 cup water:

Bring to a boil; then turn the heat down to low. Cover the pot and let the apples cook until tender, 15 to 20 minutes (or longer if you are using more apples). Watch closely at the end — as all of the water evaporates, the juices concentrate and can burn quickly:

Using a slotted spoon (or not if there is very little water left in the pot), transfer the apples to a food mill and crank away:


Can you believe the color of this applesauce? It doesn’t always turn out quite this brilliantly, but the key to getting a beautiful pinkish hue in your applesauce is to 1. Leave the skin on the apples when you make the sauce and 2. Use the right kind of apples. I’ve been using Empires, which consistently produce a beautifully colored, not-so-sweet sauce. The skin on the Empires I used for this batch were particularly deep red in hue. Macintosh apples will also create a nice pink sauce.

Moist Applesauce Bundt Cake
- Total Time: 1 hours 15 minutes
- Yield: 12 servings 1x
- Diet: Low Fat
Description
With its perfectly moist texture and soft crumb, this applesauce cake is a serious crowd-pleaser. Made with 1 1/4 cups yogurt and 1 3/4 cups applesauce, it will be one of the moistest bundt cakes you ever make. It’s super simple, and it bakes beautifully and evenly every time.
Notes:
Sugar: Over the years many of you have asked if you can cut the sugar back in this recipe, and many of you have reported back with successful results. Some of you have used 1 cup, others have used 1.5 cups. Encouraged by you, I recently made the cake with 1.5 cups (330 g) of sugar, and it was a great success. That said, I promise you this cake is not too sweet with 2 cups of sugar. Teddie’s apple cake, which is about the same size, also calls for 2 cups of sugar.
Cinnamon: I like it this cake both with cinnamon and without. It all depends on your preferences. If you’re in the mood for those warming fall spices, use cinnamon. If you’re not in the mood for the spiced flavor, use vanilla. The texture of the cake will be divine no matter what spices you use.
Yogurt: Geri, the woman who shared this recipe with me, uses Dannon plain nonfat yogurt, and her cake always came out incredibly deliciously. I get nervous about these things sometimes and can’t keep myself from buying the full-fat tubs. I used Stonyfield whole milk plain.
To freeze: Let the cake cool completely — this may take several hours from when you turn it out onto a cooling rack. Then wrap the cake in plastic wrap and tuck it into a jumbo Ziplock bag. Freeze for up to 3 months; thaw overnight on the counter before serving.
Ingredients
- 2.75 cups (350 g) flour
- 2 cups (418 g) sugar
- 2 1/2 teaspoons (13 g) baking soda
- 1 1/4 teaspoons (5 g) baking powder
- 1 teaspoon ( 7 g) kosher salt
- 1 teaspoon cinnamon (optional, see notes)
- 1 3/4 cups (465 g) applesauce
- 1 1/4 cups yogurt (323 g) (see notes regarding fat percentage)
- 1 egg
- 1/3 cup (83 g) grapeseed oil, avocado oil, vegetable oil or other neutral oil
- 1 1/2 teaspoons (5 g) vanilla extract
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 325ºF. Grease a 12-cup Bundt pan.
- In large bowl, whisk flour, sugar, baking soda, baking powder, cinnamon (if using) and salt.
- In a separate bowl, mix applesauce, yogurt, egg, oil and vanilla. Add to dry ingredients and stir until just combined.
- Pour into prepared pan.
- Bake for 50-60 minutes, or until toothpick inserted in center comes out clean. Mine have consistently been done at 55 to 60 minutes.
- Cool 15 to 30 minutes or longer — I let mine sit for 45 minutes before turning it out onto a cooling rack. Before turning it out, run a paring knife around the center circle to loosen it a bit. See notes above if you wish to freeze the cake for a future date.
- Prep Time: 10 minutes
- Cook Time: 50 minutes
- Category: Dessert/Cake
- Method: Oven
- Cuisine: American
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.




186 Comments on “Moist Applesauce Bundt Cake”
Very good cake! I don’t eat regular sugar, so used Allulose (3/4 cup) and added sweet blueberries. Came out great.
Great to hear, Sabrina! Thanks for writing 🙂
Loved this cake! Super moist and delicious. Will definitely make again and highly recommend.
Great to hear, Kristine!
I made this today. I used 1/2 the sugar and used almond flour for 1/2 of the flout. It was great.
Yum! Love the sound of these swaps. Thanks for writing 🙂
So delish! I had some old homemade applesauce in my freezer, so I thawed it out to use in this recipe. Also had some older sour cream tucked away in my fridge, so I used all sour cream instead of yogurt. Used apple pie spice. So easy to mix up, so moist and soft too. Thanks for the recipe!
Do I need to store it in refrigerator or can I leave it out in a cake box?
Out in a cake box is perfect!
Happy New year,
I am making this cake today but If I do two layers can you tell me if it would be 8 or 9 inch?
I made a brown butter cream cheese and I thought it would be nice to use as a middle filling. Perhaps I can cut the Bundt cake in half. LOL. ANYWAY, no need to post just a question?
Going to make with soft milled wheat berries. Crossing my fingers. Everyone loves your peasant bread with my fresh milked hard white wheat. It is so delicious.
Hi! I think either 8 or 9 inch would be fine! I’m likely too late here. What did you end up doing?
I am leaving with the Bundt cake in hand with brown butter cream cheese on top and extra for anyone who wants to put an extra dollop on top. I don’t know how it will taste but it looks beautiful. They are all grateful friends so even if it was dry they would love it. I will continue playing around with fresh milled flour. The breads I have down. Working on desserts. Refuse to buy flour and excited about Bobby Kennedy promoting health.
Thank you for your response! 👍
Forgive me Alex if I’m out of line – Tish is Saturday morning a beautiful fall morning in AZ and it was finally 58 at 6:30!! The last thing I want to read on Alex’s blog are political comments. Please keep politics out of her blog. This isn’t the place, I welcome your comments regardIng her wonderful recipes.
Definitely, no politics.
Now I can rate this cake! Absolutely delicious! I did cut back to 1 1/2 cup of sugar and instead of cinnamon I used my homemade apple pie spice with cardamom.
Everyone raved about it. I did use freshly milled soft white wheat berries and followed your perfect gm measurements. Really only thing different was make a browned butter cream cheese that I squeezed on the lines of the Bundt and served a little extra dollop. Yum.
Thank you.
Great to hear! Thanks for reporting back with your results 🙂
I’ve made this cake at least a dozen times and it’s always perfect. Note though that oven times vary and so it’s possible to easily over bake if you don’t keep your eye on it at the end. I also substitute Granny Smith apples for half of the red ones for a bit of sour with the sweet.
Hi Susan! So nice to hear this. Hope all is well 💕💕💕
Happily retired near San Clemente and living the good life!
That is the dream! So happy to hear this, Susan 💕💕💕
I’ve made this many times and it’s always a huge hit with adults and kids alike, which I love because it’s one of the easiest things to make. This last time I added cardamom instead of cinnamon and it was DELICIOUS. That might be my new go-to (I tend to make with cinnamon and with no cinnamon, equally).
So nice to hear, Michelle! I love cardamom in baked goods… will try that here next time 🙂
This is delicious! I cut back on the sugar and it still tasted great. with the price of eggs these days, I have been trying baking recipes without them. Since this recipe one only uses one, I am thinking about skipping it to see what happens. I think that this would also be great with some kind of drizzled glaze over the top. Thinking maybe a lemon and confectioners sugar or for lower calories use Erythritol or Allulose. Maybe add chopped nuts or blueberries. So many possibilities with this recipe.
Great to hear, Deb! Please report back if you make the recipe with only one egg… would love to know how it turns out.
I tried making this again with no egg and a little more applesauce and it still turned out excellent! It is important to not stir the batter too much though to get the right texture when baked.
Great to hear, Deb! Thanks for writing and sharing this… so good to know 🙂
This recipe is so delicious and versatile.
I divided recipe in half and made one half with no sugar and blueberries, and the other half with only 1/2 cup sugar, with chocolate chips.
I also used some whole wheat flour. Cake was extremely moist and fluffy! And the chocolate chip one (bittersweet chips) was sweet (and very addicting) enough for me.
So nice to read this, Marianne 🙂 Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes. I love how versatile this one is, too.
This is excellent- easy, flavorful- made for guests who loved it. Definitely a keeper.
Great to hear, Helen! Thanks for writing and sharing 🙂
This looks delicious. Do you think you could sub buttermilk for the yogurt. I just happen to have some extra buttermilk in the frig. Thank you.
Hi! Yes, I think you could! Go for it 🙂
Hey nice recipe, I don’t usually like my cakes to turn out dark brown when baking because of the biocarb! so I will have to replace all with baking powder only. I also don’t eat sugar but I will use Nativia or Swerve. I love the ideas of low fat yogurt and unsweetened apple sauce. Please reply to me about the swap of the bicarb
Great recipe – cake was perfect! I used caramel frosting and sprinkled some chopped pecans on top. It was a hit with grown ups and kids alike!
Yum! Thanks so much for writing and sharing this, Mary. ALL sounds delicious 🙂
Can you make the cake with nondairy yogurt, Bob’s Red Mill Egg Replacer & gluten free flour?
Not sure as I’ve never tied … worth a shot, especially if you use a gluten-free mix like KAF’s or Bob’s red mill. I worry a little about the cake being dense, but again, hard to know until you’ve tried.
For years I have tried Apple cake recipes and non-satisfied me. On this one I made my apple sauce., the Cake was very eas y to make and bake. Came out of the pan perfect. I sprinkled powdered sugar over the top, and it was a very good-looking cake. the house had a fall apple cinnamon smell. But when we took a bite, I knew this was the cake. Moist, light and delicious., (am not sure how canned applesauce would taste but I give this cake 5 stars.
Great to hear, Betty! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes. I have no doubt homemade applesauce makes this all the more delicious 🙂
Hi. I was wondering if I could make this cake with home made apple butter instead of applesauce? Thanks.
Hmm…. not sure. I think apple butter is much sweeter than applesauce and I think the water content is different as well — it’s more concentrated. I think you could try it, just keeping in mind the sweetness and texture may be affected… maybe consider reducing the sugar slightly?
You really were not kidding about the texture of this cake… what a combo the applesauce with the yogurt – SO MOIST!!!!!!! Fantastic recipe, I replaced the sugar with date paste mixed with a bit of prune puree – came out incredible. Thank you for sharing this recipe, it became the go-to for an applesauce cake.
A tip for any fellow bakers: if you mix equal parts butter (melted and cooled), olive oil, and flour, absolutely nothing, and I mean nothing, will ever ever stick on any baking dish.
Great tip, Eleni! Thanks so much for writing and sharing this. I’m so glad the cake was a success. Love the sound of your date-prune puree.
Hi Alexandra, I made this cake for the first time today replacing all purpose flour with 1-1 Gf and just 1/2 cup sugar. Great tea cake but a bit dense. I will use all purpose flour next time just to compare texture. Another keeper for sure:)
Thank you!
I think i am going to make this for Thanksgiving morning, thank you! Could i use greek yogurt?
Hi! I think Greek should work. Ideally measure by weight… I think Greek yogurt is a little heavier, so you’ll likely need less by volume. If you are able to measure by weight, I say go for it. Otherwise, I would get regular plain yogurt.
I made this with homemade apple sauce and melted butter. We love it! I’ve made it three times so far. I don’t have a Bundt pan, so I make it in a 12” cast iron skillet and it’s just beautiful. Thank you for a great recipe!
Great to hear, Amy! Thanks so much for writing 🙂
I have made this before and loved it. Can I use plain greek yogurt in place of regular yogurt.
That should work! Ideally you are measuring with a scale for best results.
I made this cake for Thanksgiving. I used low fat yogurt and topped the cake off with homemade caramel sauce (condensed milk cooked in an Instant Pot plus vanilla). I should have made two as everyone wanted to take a piece home. Will be making many more.
I’m so happy to read this, Dennis! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes, too. I’m intrigued by the IP sweetened condensed milk caramel sauce… yum!
I’ve made this cake a few times, always delicious! It is an ideal cake to use in molds. I’ve used it in little and large gingerbread houses molds during the holidays and it never sticks and comes out perfect! Dust with Confectioners for snow and cute and delish! Ty.
So nice to read this, Crystal! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes. All sounds so cute and pretty. Happy holidays to you!