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Trader Joe's is known for products that offer exceptional baking shortcuts — ones that never require you to sacrifice your standards of quality or flavor. These options (like the proof-and-bake croissant that is a chocolate lover's dream come true, for example) come through in a pinch for the busy shopper who just can't get around to baking from scratch. But even the most time-strapped home cook can appreciate a creative twist, like when a simple hack yields a surprise finished product (like the clever way to turn Trader Joe's crescent rolls into beignets ).

Trader Joe's Vanilla Cake & Baking Mix is one of those store favorites that fans swear by for their cake-baking needs. But someone, somewhere along the line, realized that if you simply leave out the milk, you'll wind up with something else entirely — a treat that's closer to a vanilla brownie (or what you might call a blondie). By getting a closer look at the label, one can see how this magic can happen, and from there take inspiration to customize the store's creation even further.



Baking beyond the Trader Joe's package Like many of Trader Joe's products, the ingredient list for this baking mix doesn't feature mystifying, impossible-to-decipher elements. Instead, you can find a streamlined selection of easy-to-understand, familiar staples you likely have in your own kitchen — among them sugar, flour, salt, and leavening. From there, the box calls for the user to add eggs, melted butter, and milk to create a cake.

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