Bake mini carrot cakes from scratch with adult supervision, measuring ingredients, mixing batter, adding grated carrots and spices, then decorating with cream cheese frosting.



Step-by-step guide to bake mini carrot cakes
Step 1
Ask an adult to preheat the oven to 350°F (175°C).
Step 2
Place cupcake liners into each cup of the muffin tin.
Step 3
Measure the flour sugar baking powder baking soda cinnamon and salt into a large mixing bowl.
Step 4
Whisk the dry ingredients until they are evenly mixed.
Step 5
Measure the eggs vegetable oil and vanilla into a second bowl.
Step 6
Beat the wet ingredients until the mixture looks smooth.
Step 7
Wash and peel the carrots and grate them into a small bowl.
Step 8
Pour the wet mixture into the dry ingredients and stir until just combined.
Step 9
Fold the grated carrots into the batter until evenly mixed.
Step 10
Spoon the batter into the cupcake liners filling each about two-thirds full.
Step 11
Ask an adult to bake the mini cakes at 350°F (175°C) for 18 to 22 minutes.
Step 12
Ask an adult to remove the muffin tin from the oven and transfer the mini cakes to a cooling rack to cool completely.
Step 13
Beat the cream cheese and butter until creamy then add powdered sugar and vanilla and beat until smooth to make the frosting.
Step 14
Spread or pipe the cream cheese frosting onto the cooled mini carrot cakes and add any extra decorations you like.
Step 15
Take a photo of your mini carrot cakes and share your finished creation on DIY.org.
Final steps
You're almost there! Complete all the steps, bring your creation to life, post it, and conquer the challenge!


Help!?
What can we use instead of hard-to-find ingredients like vegetable oil, cupcake liners, or cream cheese?
If you don't have vegetable oil, use equal parts melted butter or applesauce in the wet bowl with the eggs and vanilla; if you lack cupcake liners, lightly grease the muffin tin before spooning batter; and if you can't get cream cheese for the frosting, substitute mascarpone or extra butter with powdered sugar and vanilla.
My mini carrot cakes turned out dense or sunk in the middle—what step likely caused this and how do I fix it?
Dense or sunken mini cakes usually happen from overmixing after you pour the wet mixture into the dry ingredients or from expired baking powder/baking soda, so stir only until just combined, check your leavening dates, and ask an adult to test with a toothpick at 18 minutes and extend baking time if needed.
How can I adjust the activity for younger or older kids?
Younger kids (3–6) can help press cupcake liners into the muffin tin and wash carrots with supervision, 7–10-year-olds can measure and whisk dry ingredients and grate carrots with a safe grater, and older kids (11+) can beat the wet ingredients and make or pipe the cream cheese frosting while an adult handles preheating and removing the tin from the oven.
What are some ways to personalize or extend the carrot cake activity?
Fold in chopped nuts or raisins with the grated carrots, add extra cinnamon or orange zest to the batter, color and pipe the cream cheese frosting for designs, and take a photo of your finished mini carrot cakes to share on DIY.org.
Watch videos on how to bake mini carrot cakes
Facts about baking for kids
🌿 A small pinch of warm spices like cinnamon and nutmeg gives carrot cake its cozy, famous flavor.
🥕 Carrot cake has roots in medieval Europe when sweet vegetables were used to make desserts before sugar was cheap.
🧀 Cream cheese frosting became a beloved topping in the 20th century and pairs perfectly with spicy carrot cake.
🥄 Measuring correctly (spooning and leveling flour) can make a big difference in how moist or dense your cake turns out.
🧁 Mini cakes bake much faster than a full-size cake—often taking around half the time!


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