Tender crumb, tart rhubarb, and a cinnamon sugar top make this breakfast cake the kind of pan you’ll cut into once and then keep sneaking back to all morning. It bakes up like a simple coffee cake, but the rhubarb keeps it from tasting flat or overly sweet. Every bite has that soft, buttery middle with little pockets of bright fruit that wake the whole thing up.
The method matters here more than the ingredient list suggests. Melted butter gives you a moist, close crumb without the fuss of creaming, and the rhubarb goes in at the end so it stays in distinct pieces instead of melting into the batter. The topping is just sugar and cinnamon, but it does the job of giving the top a light crackle that contrasts with the tender cake underneath.
Below you’ll find the small details that keep this cake from turning dense or gummy, plus a few swaps that help if your rhubarb is especially tart or you need to bake it ahead for breakfast.
The cake stayed moist for two days and the rhubarb held its shape instead of disappearing. I loved the cinnamon sugar on top because it gave the edges a little crunch without making it feel like dessert for breakfast.
Save this rhubarb breakfast cake for mornings when you want a tender crumb, tart fruit, and cinnamon sugar in one easy pan.
The Trick to Keeping Rhubarb Pieces Bright Instead of Melting Into the Cake
Rhubarb has a habit of disappearing into quick breads when the batter is too thin or the fruit is cut too small. Here, the batter is just thick enough to suspend the pieces, so you get tart bites all through the cake instead of a pink streak at the bottom. Cutting the rhubarb into small, even dice helps it soften without turning mushy before the crumb sets.
The other thing that matters is not overmixing once the wet and dry ingredients come together. Overworked batter turns this from a tender breakfast cake into something bready and tight. Stir until the flour disappears, fold in the rhubarb, and stop there. The oven does the rest.
What the Butter, Milk, and Cinnamon Sugar Are Each Doing Here

- Fresh rhubarb — Fresh is the right choice here because frozen rhubarb can leak extra liquid and soften the crumb too much. If frozen is all you have, use it straight from the freezer and don’t thaw it first, or the batter will get watery before it even hits the oven.
- Melted butter — Melted butter gives you that soft, almost coffee-cake texture without needing a mixer. You can use melted coconut oil in a pinch, but the cake loses some of the buttery flavor that makes it feel breakfast-worthy.
- Milk — Whole milk gives the best balance of tenderness and structure, though 2% works fine. Plant milk also works if it’s unsweetened; just know the cake may bake a touch lighter and less rich.
- Cinnamon sugar topping — This is more than a garnish. It dries into a thin crackly lid that keeps the top from feeling plain and adds a little contrast to the tart fruit below.
How to Mix the Batter So the Cake Stays Tender
Starting With the Dry Bowl
Whisk the flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt until the mixture looks even and airy. That quick whisk spreads the leavening through the flour, which helps the cake rise evenly instead of doming in one spot. If you see little clumps of baking powder, keep whisking; those pockets can leave bitter spots in the baked cake.
Bringing the Wet Ingredients Together
Stir the melted butter, egg, milk, and vanilla until the mixture looks smooth and fully combined. The butter should be melted, not hot, or it can start cooking the egg and leave little streaks. If the butter is warm to the touch, let it sit a minute before mixing.
Folding in the Rhubarb
Pour the wet mixture into the dry ingredients and stir just until the flour disappears. The batter will look thick, and that’s exactly what you want. Fold in the rhubarb gently so the pieces stay intact and don’t stain the whole bowl pink. Spread the batter into the pan, sprinkle the cinnamon sugar over the top, and bake until the center springs back and a toothpick comes out clean or with a few moist crumbs.
Make it with strawberries and rhubarb
Swap up to half of the rhubarb for chopped strawberries if you want a softer, sweeter cake. The strawberries add juiciness, so keep the pieces small and don’t overload the pan or the middle can bake up gummy.
Dairy-free version
Use melted coconut oil or a neutral dairy-free butter and replace the milk with an unsweetened plant milk. The cake still bakes up tender, though the flavor will be a little less rich and a little cleaner tasting.
Gluten-free swap
Use a 1:1 gluten-free baking blend that already includes xanthan gum. The texture will be a touch more delicate, but it still slices well if you let the cake cool for the full 10 minutes before serving.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 4 days. The crumb stays moist, though the cinnamon sugar top softens a bit after day one.
- Freezer: Freeze slices tightly wrapped for up to 2 months. Thaw at room temperature while still wrapped so the cake doesn’t dry out.
- Reheating: Warm individual slices in the microwave for 10 to 15 seconds or in a 300°F oven for a few minutes. Long reheating dries out the edges before the center gets warm.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Easy Rhubarb Breakfast Cake
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Preheat the oven to 375°F and grease an 8x8-inch baking pan so the cake releases cleanly.
- Whisk together all-purpose flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt in a large bowl until evenly combined and no dry pockets remain.
- In a separate bowl, mix butter, melted, egg, milk, and vanilla extract until combined and smooth.
- Pour the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients and stir until just combined, avoiding overmixing for a tender crumb.
- Fold in diced fresh rhubarb until the pieces are evenly distributed through the batter.
- Spread the batter into the prepared pan and sprinkle with cinnamon sugar topping for a golden, lightly sweet surface.
- Bake for 30-35 minutes at 375°F until golden and a toothpick comes out clean in the center.
- Cool the cake for 10 minutes before slicing so the crumb sets and the rhubarb stays intact.


