Featured comment:
“Sooooo good! Used canned peaches (in fruit juice) and it turned out so great. The icing is amazing. What a yummy, easy summer treat! Thank you!” ~Katie

my brown sugar peach cake is packed with Southern charm
Since the highlights of this cake are the juicy fresh peaches and the Southern caramel icing, we’ll take a logical shortcut and use a good quality yellow cake mix as our base. Nobody wants to be stuck fiddling with measuring cups and spoons while everybody else is out having fun, so this just makes sense. My preferred brand? Duncan Hines.
Cake mixes are forgiving and doctoring them is easy ~ I used less liquid to account for the pound of fresh peaches we’ll be adding, and subbed peach nectar for water. No biggie.

what you’ll need for this peach cake
If you keep a yellow cake mix in the cupboard you can whip this thing up in no time. It fits in a standard 9×13 pan and it serves a crowd.
- 15-ounce yellow cake mix
- I think Duncan Hines is best.
- eggs
- vegetable oil
- any neutral flavored oil is fine.
- peach juice or nectar
- peaches
- butter
- cream
- brown sugar
- vanilla
- confectioner’s sugar

a cooked caramel frosting makes this peach cake extra special
The frosting is equally as easygoing, and I think you’ll be surprised to see how straightforward it is to make. I stir up some butter, brown sugar, and cream in a saucepan, just until it comes to a boil, then stir in some vanilla and powdered sugar. The whole lot gets poured right over the top of the cake.
You have to work quickly, the frosting sets up almost immediately. When you slice it into pieces you’ll get that crackled effect that signals yummy caramel. If you refrigerate the cake, the frosting will become deliciously fudge-like. Be sure to take a spoon to the pan and grab yourself a taste of the hot frosting. Nirvana!

This made a great little breakfast cake the next morning, too; the cake is not too sweet, the peaches are juicy, and the frosting, well, the frosting is amazing.

a few tweaks made this peach cake perfect!
I adapted this recipe from The Food Charlatan. The original uses 2 boxes of peach jello, which I omitted. I use fresh rather than frozen peaches, and I substitute peach nectar for the water, which gives a more natural peach flavor. The frosting I use here is the same one from one of my favorite cakes, my Pecan Praline Pumpkin Cake, it’s easy to make and delicious!

more summer sheet cakes
- Mint Chocolate Chip Sheet Cake
- Chocolate Sheet Cake
- Blueberry Zucchini Snack Cake with Lemon Buttercream
- Caramel Apple Sheet Cake
- Lemon Velvet Sheet Cake
- Classic Yellow Sheet Cake with Chocolate Fudge Frosting

Brown Sugar Peach Cake
Video
Equipment
- 9×12 baking pan
Ingredients
- 15 ounce yellow cake mix, (I like Duncan Hines)
- 3 large eggs, or the amount specified by your cake mix
- 1/3 cup vegetable oil, or the amount specified by your cake mix
- 1/2 cup peach nectar or peach juice
- 1 lb peeled and chopped peaches, (about 3-4)
- drop orange food coloring, optional
brown sugar frosting
- 1/2 cup unsalted butter, cut in pieces
- 1/2 cup heavy cream
- 1 cup packed brown sugar
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 2 1/2 cups confectioner's sugar, sifted
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350F
- Blend together the cake mix, eggs, oil, and nectar and food coloring, if using, until well combined. Fold in the peaches and turn the batter into a lightly sprayed 9×12 pan. Bake for about 28 minutes, or until done…you can check with a toothpick, it should come out without batter clinging to it, but moist crumbs are fine.
- Put the butter, cream, and brown sugar in a saucepan and bring to a boil, stirring constantly. Take off the heat at add the vanilla and the sifted sugar. Whisk until well blended and the little lumps of sugar have disappeared. Put it back on a low heat if necessary.
- Pour the frosting over the cake, trying to get it evenly coated on the first try, because it will set up quickly and you won’t be able to spread it without cracking the surface.
- Let the frosting harden at room temperature or in the refrigerator before cutting.


















My familys new favorite cake! I made the cake from scratch rather than using box mix and only used fresh peaches and my own blended peach juice. 10/10, the caramel topping texture is also superb.
My husband and 20 year old nephew went bonkers for this cake yesterday! Easy to make and such a wow factor. The icing is critical, easy to pull together. I added crushed hazelnuts on top for texture and crunch.
I’m going to have to try adding nuts to the frosting next time, so glad it was so well received!
OMG, this is a delicious cake. I threw some chopped pecans into the frosting which gave the cake an add texture. And the pecans made the icing like pralines. Maybe I put in too many peaches–I had to bake the cake about 10 minutes longer and the texture was really moist. Did I mention how delicious thus cake is?
The pecans in the icing was a genius idea, I’m stealing it 🙂
Do I let the cake cool before adding the hot frosting
The frosting goes on the warm cake, I usually take the cake out of the oven, then make the frosting and pour on right away.
Do you think frozen peaches (thawed) would work? I need to make this in 24 hrs and am worried peaches won’t be ripened enough?
Yes, i think that should work fine.
Oh my delicious!!! I absolutely hate peach cobbler so trying this was going out on a limb for me… And I will be forever grateful that I did! 🥰
I can’t wait to try this recipe! Could it work in a Bundt pan?
I haven’t tried, but I think it should work.
This is amazing! I made two smaller cakes with plans to freeze one. Can I freeze the frosting? On the cake or separate?
When I saw the amount of sugar required for this recipe, I almost didn’t make it. The brown sugar icing pairs perfectly and is worth every calorie, so get over it, if that’s your concern. We had a delicious harvest of peaches that the birds managed to pierce with their beaks that needed to be used promptly. We cut away the damage , peeled the skins, chopped them, and used them in this recipe, rather than another peach crumble. We did a gluten free version and it was amazing. It was so exceptional, we made it twice.
The cake itself is delicious, light and peachy, very summery. The icing is delicious, tastes like a praline, but it overpowers the cake. I’ll keep both recipes but wouldn’t put them together.
This cake is in my oven right now!! We are really looking forward to all the peachy deliciousness!!
One question…do I put the icing on the cake right as it comes out of the oven or wait until the cake cools?
I start making the frosting when i pull the cake out of the oven, so it goes on when the cake is still warm.
I made this and it was delicious but did not last at all. The cake became very moist and ended up going bad after two days on the counter. Other than that it was delicious!
When a dish has fresh fruit in it, you must refrigerate or freeze it.