Del Frisco's Butter Cake is the one I make when I want a dependable batch without fussing over extra dishes. My usual timing is 10 minutes of prep, 16 minutes of cooking, and 4 servings. That lets me cook by the clock at first, then finish by what I can see and smell.
The first batch taught me where this recipe needs attention. It is not difficult, but it does reward patience: scraping the bowl, watching the heat, and letting the finished dessert settle before I serve it. Those little pauses make it taste deliberate instead of rushed.
I wrote the method below the way I actually use it, with the small signs I watch for along the way. I keep the measurements steady and focus on the small cues that make the batch come out the same way twice.
Preheat oven to 350°F. Grease and flour six 4" springform pans. Place the parchment paper circles in the pans and set aside. In a medium bowl, beat together the cream cheese, eggs, sugar, butter, and vanilla extract until light and fluffy.
Slowly incorporate the flour into the wet ingredients until well blended. Then stir in the sweetened condensed milk until fully incorporated.
Divide the batter evenly among the 6 prepared pans. Bake for 20 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center of each cake comes out clean. Allow to cool completely before removing from pans. I check a little early and trust the visual cues more than the timer, because my oven runs hot in the back corner.
I let the pan or loaf cool before covering it. Most sweet bakes keep 2-3 days at room temperature if the kitchen is cool, or about 1 week in the refrigerator. I wrap individual portions before freezing so I can thaw only what I need.
I keep the serving simple. For sweet recipes, I like coffee, milk, yogurt, fruit, or a not-too-sweet whipped cream. For savory recipes, I reach for something fresh or acidic on the side so the plate does not feel heavy. The goal is balance, not a crowded plate.
Yes. I usually make it ahead when I can because the flavor settles after resting. Keep it covered, and if it is baked, cool it fully before storing so condensation does not soften the edges.
I give it at least a short rest. Hot sugar, starch, or sauce can seem loose at first, and a few minutes makes the serving cleaner.
I start checking near the listed 16-minute cook time. The center should look set for baked dishes, and a tester should come out clean or with only a few moist crumbs.
I try not to unless I have to. A wider pan cooks faster and a deeper pan needs more time, so I watch the center and edges rather than trusting the timer alone.
Usually a small reduction works, but I avoid cutting it too much because sugar affects moisture and browning, not just sweetness.
Most batches keep 3-5 days covered in the refrigerator, though cookies and some cakes can stay at room temperature if the kitchen is cool. I freeze extras when I know I will not finish them quickly.
If you make this Del Frisco's Butter Cake, leave a comment with what you changed. I always want to know which little swaps work in another kitchen.
For Del Frisco's Butter Cake, I pay attention to smell, thickness, and how the mixture moves when I stir. Those signs tell me more than the clock by itself. If it smells sharp, I give it another minute. If it looks loose, I let it reduce gently. If it looks tight, I loosen it one spoonful at a time. I learned to make those changes slowly because big corrections at the end are harder to fix.
With Del Frisco's Butter Cake, I do not wait for one dramatic sign that everything is finished. I watch a few small things at the same time: the smell, the way the mixture moves, and whether the edges look more set than the center. That habit has saved me from both undercooking and overcooking more times than I can count.
I also taste or check texture before the final serving step whenever the recipe allows it. If it needs salt, sweetness, acid, or another minute of heat, I would rather find out while I can still fix it. That is the kind of practical note I wish more recipe cards included.
Del Frisco's Butter Cake is the version I make when I want a dependable homemade batch. It uses all-purpose flour, cream cheese, eggs, granulated sugar, keeps the timing straightforward, and gives me clear cues for mixing, cooking, and resting.
Cool before cutting. I give the pan time to settle so the crumb does not tear.
Watch the edges. The middle can still look a touch soft when the edges are set.
Grease the pan well. Sweet batters cling fast, especially around the corners.
Use room-temperature dairy. It blends smoother and keeps the batter from looking split.