Plant City, Florida calls itself the Winter Strawberry Capital of the World, and if you’ve ever been to the Florida Strawberry Festival in late February, you know they’re not exaggerating. The festival draws close to 500,000 people over eleven days — and if you live within an hour of it like I did for years, you leave with strawberries. A lot of them. Not because you planned to, but because it’s impossible not to. Flat after flat piled onto folding tables, priced so low you’d feel foolish leaving empty-handed.
The question was never whether to buy them. The question was always what to make with strawberries before they turned, because a flat of festival strawberries has about a 48-hour window before they start going soft at the bottom of the container. That urgency — the kind that comes from knowing you’ve got $6 worth of berries that will be mush by Thursday — taught me more about baking with strawberries than any cookbook ever did.
Cake turned out to be the answer more often than I expected. Not because I’m a baker by nature, but because cake is forgiving with fruit that’s past its visual prime, it feeds more people than a cobbler, and — depending on how you approach it — it costs almost nothing per slice. I kept coming back to it.
→ Not sure which one? Start here to help make the decision easier!Fresh vs. Frozen Strawberries: What Actually Works in Cake
The honest answer is: it depends entirely on what the cake is doing with them.
For no-bake cakes where the strawberries are a visible, textural part of the finished dessert — icebox cakes, Charlotte cakes, anything with a pretty fruit layer on top — fresh is the only option. Frozen strawberries collapse when thawed, releasing so much liquid that they’ll turn a carefully layered icebox cake into a soggy mess within hours. The visual is gone, and so is the structure.
For baked cakes where the strawberries get cooked into the batter or reduced into a filling, frozen works beautifully and often costs half as much. A 16-ounce bag of frozen strawberries runs about $2.50–$3.00 at most grocery stores year-round. A pint of fresh strawberries in the off-season — meaning anything outside of April through June in most of the South — can easily run $4–$5 for less fruit. When you’re making a strawberry reduction for a layer cake or cooking down berries for a tres leches soak, frozen is the smarter buy. The flavor concentrates the same way; the texture becomes irrelevant once they’re cooked.
One caveat worth knowing: frozen strawberries release more liquid than fresh as they cook, so reduction times can run 5–10 minutes longer than the recipe estimates. Plan for it, and you won’t be caught off guard.
Why Strawberry Cake Is Tricky (And How to Fix It)
Most strawberry cakes lie. They look pink, they smell like summer, and then you take a bite and wonder why you bothered with the strawberries at all. Raw strawberries are about 91% water. The moment they go into cake batter, they start releasing that liquid, which throws off the texture and dilutes whatever flavor they brought to the party. The result is usually a dense, slightly wet crumb and a taste that’s more “fruit-adjacent” than actually strawberry.
The fix is concentration. Every recipe worth making in this list handles strawberry flavor one of three ways:
Reduction. You simmer fresh or frozen strawberries down until about half the liquid evaporates, which concentrates both the flavor and the color into something that can actually survive an oven. This is what Sally’s Baking Addiction, Preppy Kitchen, and the from-scratch recipes in this roundup use. It takes 20–40 minutes but produces real strawberry flavor in the finished cake.
Freeze-dried strawberry powder. Ground freeze-dried strawberries have had all their moisture removed, so they add intense flavor and color without any added liquid. This is the trick for frostings and buttercreams especially, where even a small amount of extra moisture can make a frosting break or weep. A small bag runs about $4–$5 and goes a long way.
Strawberry jam. A shortcut that actually works — particularly in a baked cake where you’re replacing homemade strawberry puree. Preppy Kitchen specifically tested this: swap the strawberry reduction for ⅓ cup of good strawberry jam, reduce the sugar in the recipe by ⅓ cup since jam is already sweetened, and the flavor holds up. This is the move when fresh berries are expensive or you need to save 40 minutes.
What doesn’t work: folding raw chopped strawberries directly into batter without any treatment. You’ll get fruit chunks in a vanilla cake, and the pockets of raw berry will steam during baking, leaving wet spots throughout. Skip it.
Money-Saving Tips for Baking with Strawberries
Buy fresh during peak season and freeze the rest. Where I am now in South Carolina, strawberry season runs roughly late March through May. That’s the window when a flat from a farm stand or Aldi will cost the cheapest, maybe $6–$8. Wash them, hull them, lay them on a sheet pan to freeze individually, then transfer to a zip-close bag. Frozen this way, they’ll hold for up to a year and cost a fraction of what you’d pay in the off-season. .
Strawberry jam is your off-season backup. A 18-ounce jar of Smucker’s strawberry jam costs about $3.50 and contains enough for multiple batches of cake. When berries are $4–$5 a pint and the recipe calls for a cooked-down filling, jam closes the gap for a fraction of the cost. The flavor isn’t going to be identical, but it’s reliable as a backup.
Box mix is not cheating. A box of strawberry cake mix costs $1.50–$2.00 on sale and produces a 9×13 pan that serves 12. The strawberry cheesecake poke cake and tres leches in this roundup both start with a box mix and end up tasting nothing like one. The mix is the vehicle; what you soak it in or top it with is where the flavor comes from. Cost per slice on those recipes runs under a dollar.
The cheapest cakes in this list by cost per slice:
- Strawberry Dump Cake: ~$0.60–$0.80
- Strawberry Cheesecake Poke Cake: ~$0.75–$1.00
- Strawberry Jello Angel Food Cake: ~$0.75–$1.00
- Strawberry Tres Leches (A Latin Flair): ~$0.75–$1.00
If budget is the primary driver, start at the top of that list. All four are genuinely good.
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No-Bake Strawberry Cakes

Why It’s Worth Making
- The ladyfinger border and fresh strawberry crown make it genuinely impressive making it perfect for everything from a Friday night dinner party to Mother’s Day brunch, with zero baking required.
- What kind of cake is this? No-bake Charlotte — ladyfingers, whipped cream, and fresh strawberries set in a springform pan. No oven, no eggs, no gelatin.
- How hard is this to make, really? Easy. Arrange ladyfingers around the pan, layer the filling, refrigerate. That’s it.
- How long does it take from start to finish? 20–25 minutes hands-on, plus 4 hours to chill.
- Can I make it ahead of time? Yes — actually better made the night before. The ladyfingers soften into a cake-like layer overnight.
- Can I use frozen strawberries instead of fresh? No. Thawed frozen strawberries release too much liquid and will prevent the filling from setting.
- What can I swap if I don’t have a specific ingredient? No ladyfingers? Use thin shortbread cookies or sponge cake strips. Full-fat whipping cream only — low-fat won’t hold.
- How many does it serve and what’s the approximate cost per slice? Serves 8–10. Approximately $1.50–$2.00 per slice.

Why It’s Worth Making
- The ginger and strawberry combination gives it a flavor that’s unexpected and more interesting than the classic graham cracker version.
- What kind of cake is this? No-bake icebox cake — layers of gingersnap cookies, strawberry jam, and a whipped cream cheese filling, chilled until set.
- How hard is this to make, really? Very easy. Layer, chill, done. No special equipment needed.
- How long does it take from start to finish? About 15 minutes hands-on, plus a minimum of 4 hours to chill. Overnight is even better.
- Can I make it ahead of time? Yes — ideal made the day before. Can also be frozen and sliced straight from the freezer.
- Can I use frozen strawberries instead of fresh? The filling uses strawberry jam rather than fresh berries, so this is a non-issue — no fresh strawberries required at all.
- What can I swap if I don’t have a specific ingredient? No gingersnaps? Graham crackers or Biscoff cookies work. The jam can be swapped for any berry preserve you have on hand.
- How many does it serve and what’s the approximate cost per slice? Serves 8–10. Approximately $1.00–$1.50 per slice — gingersnaps and jam make this one of the most affordable in the roundup.

Why It’s Worth Making
- This one is perfect for a potluck. Take it straight from the freezer when you leave — the drive over does the thawing for you.
- What kind of cake is this? No-bake icebox cake — fresh strawberries, vanilla whipped cream, and graham crackers layered in a loaf pan, then frozen until firm.
- How hard is this to make, really? About as easy as it gets. Layer everything in a loaf pan, freeze, slice, and serve.
- How long does it take from start to finish? 20 minutes hands-on, plus 3–4 hours in the freezer to firm up.
- Can I make it ahead of time? Yes — keep it covered in the freezer and pull it out 10–15 minutes before serving so it slices cleanly.
- Can I use frozen strawberries instead of fresh? Not recommended — frozen strawberries get icy in the freezer and watery when thawed, which affects both texture and presentation.
- What can I swap if I don’t have a specific ingredient? Swap graham crackers for Nilla Wafers or ladyfingers. Store-bought whipped topping works in place of homemade whipped cream.
- How many does it serve and what’s the approximate cost per slice? Serves 8–10. Approximately $1.00–$1.50 per slice — one of the most budget-friendly options in the no-bake section.

Why It’s Worth Making
- The elderflower adds a delicate, garden-party quality that makes it a natural fit for a Mother’s Day tea party.
- What kind of cake is this? No-bake, no-cook layered cake — sponge fingers soaked in elderflower cordial, layered with fresh strawberries and whipped cream. Fully vegan.
- How hard is this to make, really? Easy. The most involved step is soaking the sponge fingers — everything else is just layering and chilling.
- How long does it take from start to finish? About 20 minutes hands-on, plus at least 2 hours to chill in the fridge.
- Can I make it ahead of time? Yes — assemble the night before and refrigerate. Add the fresh strawberry topping just before serving.
- Can I use frozen strawberries instead of fresh? Not ideal. The fresh strawberries are a key visual and textural element here — frozen and thawed will be too soft and watery for the top layer.
- What can I swap if I don’t have a specific ingredient? No elderflower cordial? St-Germain liqueur works for adults, or substitute with a light lemon syrup for a non-alcoholic option. Any plant-based whipping cream works for the vegan version.
- How many does it serve and what’s the approximate cost per slice? Serves 6–8. Approximately $1.50–$2.00 per slice, depending on elderflower cordial availability in your area.
Quick & Easy Strawberry Cakes

Why It’s Worth Making
- The pudding filling soaks into every hole and turns a basic box mix into something that tastes like a $8 slice of cake from a bakery.
- What kind of cake is this? Baked poke cake — a strawberry box mix base poked with holes, filled with cheesecake pudding, and topped with Cool Whip and fresh strawberries.
- How hard is this to make, really? Very easy. Bake the cake, poke holes, pour in the pudding, top and chill. No mixer needed for assembly.
- How long does it take from start to finish? About 45 minutes bake time, plus 2+ hours to chill before serving.
- Can I make it ahead of time? Yes — this is genuinely better made the day before. The pudding filling needs time to fully set into the cake.
- Can I use frozen strawberries instead of fresh? Yes for the cake base (it uses a box mix, so no fresh strawberries in the batter). Fresh strawberries are recommended for the topping — add them just before serving so they don’t weep.
- What can I swap if I don’t have a specific ingredient? No eggs? Substitute yogurt and a little flour — the recipe specifically accounts for this. Vanilla pudding works in place of cheesecake pudding if that’s what you have.
- How many does it serve and what’s the approximate cost per slice? Serves 12–15 from a 9×13 pan. Approximately $0.75–$1.00 per slice — one of the most affordable options in this entire roundup.

Why It’s Worth Making
- The pudding filling soaks into every hole and turns a basic box mix into something that tastes like a $8 slice of cake from a bakery.
- What kind of cake is this? Baked dump cake — strawberry pie filling topped with dry cake mix and melted butter, baked until golden and bubbly. No mixing, no bowl, no fuss.
- How hard is this to make, really? This is the easiest baked recipe in the entire roundup. Three ingredients, one pan, zero mixing.
- How long does it take from start to finish? About 5 minutes to assemble, 45–50 minutes in the oven.
- Can I make it ahead of time? Yes — store covered in the fridge for up to 3 days. Reheat individual slices in the microwave for 10–15 seconds.
- Can I use frozen strawberries instead of fresh? No fresh strawberries needed — this recipe uses canned strawberry pie filling, so it’s completely season-proof.
- What can I swap if I don’t have a specific ingredient? White or yellow cake mix both work. Use real butter only — margarine makes the topping greasy. Add chopped walnuts or slivered almonds on top before baking if you want crunch.
- How many does it serve and what’s the approximate cost per slice? Serves 12–15 from a 9×13 pan. Approximately $0.60–$0.80 per slice — the most budget-friendly baked cake in this roundup.

Why It’s Worth Making
- The air fryer method makes it a perfect option to make during the summer when you want to use the oven less so it doesn’t heat up the house.
- What kind of cake is this? A light, butter-free genoise sponge baked entirely in an air fryer — no oven needed. Served topped with fresh strawberries and whipped cream.
- How hard is this to make, really? Moderate. The genoise requires whipping eggs and sugar to the right volume, but the air fryer handles the baking without babysitting.
- How long does it take from start to finish? About 15 minutes prep plus 25–30 minutes in the air fryer. No decorating required — just top with cream and fruit.
- Can I make it ahead of time? Yes — bake the sponge ahead and store unfilled. Add the cream and strawberries just before serving.
- Can I use frozen strawberries instead of fresh? Fresh works best for topping — frozen will be too soft and watery once thawed. The sponge itself contains no strawberries.
- What can I swap if I don’t have a specific ingredient? No butter needed at all — that’s the whole point of this recipe. Any neutral oil can replace the small amount of oil called for if needed.
- How many does it serve and what’s the approximate cost per slice? Serves 6–8. Approximately $1.00–$1.50 per slice — eggs, flour, and fresh fruit keep the cost low.

Why It’s Worth Making
- A vintage recipe like the kind your grandmother made.
- What kind of cake is this? No-bake retro dessert — store-bought angel food cake torn into pieces, layered with a strawberry Jello and whipped cream mixture, and chilled overnight until set.
- How hard is this to make, really? Very easy. Tear, mix, layer, refrigerate. No baking, no equipment beyond a mixing bowl.
- How long does it take from start to finish? About 20 minutes hands-on, but plan ahead — it needs 24 hours in the fridge to set properly.
- Can I make it ahead of time? Yes — it must be made the day before. That’s not optional; the Jello needs a full 24 hours to fully set into the cake.
- Can I use frozen strawberries instead of fresh? Both, actually — frozen strawberries go into the Jello mixture and help it set faster; fresh strawberries are used for the topping just before serving.
- What can I swap if I don’t have a specific ingredient? Cool Whip works in place of homemade whipped cream. A boxed angel food cake mix or scratch cake can replace the store-bought cake if preferred.
- How many does it serve and what’s the approximate cost per slice? Serves 10–12. Approximately $0.75–$1.00 per slice — store-bought angel food cake and Jello make this one of the most affordable in the roundup.
From-Scratch Strawberry Cakes

Why It’s Worth Making
- An easy bundt cake that uses an air fryer, takes half the usual time, and the strawberry mango glaze that drips down the sides make decorating a breeze.
- What kind of cake is this? A baked mango strawberry bundt cake made entirely in an air fryer, finished with a pink strawberry glaze and fresh fruit.
- How hard is this to make, really? Moderate. Standard cake batter method, but requires a bundt pan that fits your air fryer basket — worth checking before you start.
- How long does it take from start to finish? About 15–20 minutes prep plus 30–35 minutes in the air fryer, plus cooling time before glazing.
- Can I make it ahead of time? Yes — bake and cool the cake a day ahead. Add the glaze and fresh fruit the day of serving for the best presentation.
- Can I use frozen strawberries instead of fresh? Frozen strawberries can work in the batter if thawed and drained well. Fresh strawberries are strongly recommended for the glaze and topping where texture matters visually.
- What can I swap if I don’t have a specific ingredient? No mango? Peach or pineapple makes a close substitute for the tropical element. The strawberry glaze can be made with jam thinned with a little warm water if fresh berries aren’t available.
- How many does it serve and what’s the approximate cost per slice? Serves 8–10. Approximately $1.25–$1.75 per slice depending on mango and strawberry prices.

Why It’s Worth Making
- The crumble topping and high protein content per slice make it feel more like a morning treat than a dessert.
- What kind of cake is this? A baked gluten-free strawberry coffee cake — vanilla cake base loaded with fresh strawberries and topped with a buttery crumble, baked in a square pan.
- How hard is this to make, really? Easy. One bowl for the batter, one for the crumble, and a square pan. About the same effort as a muffin recipe.
- How long does it take from start to finish? About 15 minutes prep plus 30–35 minutes in the oven.
- Can I make it ahead of time? Yes — it actually tastes better the next day once the flavors have settled. Store wrapped at room temperature or refrigerate for up to 4 days. Freezes well for up to 4 months.
- Can I use frozen strawberries instead of fresh? Yes — thaw and drain well first. Strawberries release moisture when baking, so check the center before pulling it from the oven.
- What can I swap if I don’t have a specific ingredient? Regular all-purpose flour works in place of oat flour if gluten-free isn’t a concern. Avocado oil, olive oil, or melted butter all swap in for the oil. Blueberries or raspberries can replace the strawberries.
- How many does it serve and what’s the approximate cost per slice? Serves 9 from a square pan. Approximately $1.00–$1.50 per slice.

Why It’s Worth Making
- The clean, European-style presentation and homemade jam filling make it look far more refined and classy, ideal for a holiday dessert table.
- What kind of cake is this? A baked from-scratch rectangular layer cake — light vanilla sponge filled with homemade strawberry jam and a whipped cream cheese frosting, sliced into 10 neat pieces.
- How hard is this to make, really? Moderate. The sponge requires separating eggs and folding whipped egg whites into the batter — a technique worth reading through before you start, but very achievable.
- How long does it take from start to finish? About 45–60 minutes active time, plus 4–6 hours chilling before slicing. Plan to make the jam first so it can cool.
- Can I make it ahead of time? Yes — best assembled the night before. The layers firm up beautifully overnight and slice cleanly when cold.
- Can I use frozen strawberries instead of fresh? Yes for the jam — frozen strawberries cook down just as well. The recipe notes that good store-bought jam is also a fine shortcut.
- What can I swap if I don’t have a specific ingredient? All-purpose flour works in place of cake flour for a slightly denser crumb. Short on time? Skip homemade jam and use a quality store-bought strawberry jam instead.
- How many does it serve and what’s the approximate cost per slice? Serves 10. Approximately $1.25–$1.75 per slice.

Why It’s Worth Making
- The upside-down style of cake produces a stunning caramelized strawberry pattern that requires zero decorating, making it ideal for anyone who wants a stunning cake with very little effort.
- What kind of cake is this? A baked dairy-free upside-down cake — fresh strawberries caramelized on the bottom of a springform pan.
- How hard is this to make, really? Moderate. The cake itself is straightforward, but the lavender coconut cream needs to be made the night before so it has time to infuse and chill properly.
- How long does it take from start to finish? About 1 hour 15 minutes bake time, plus overnight prep for the coconut cream and cooling time before flipping.
- Can I make it ahead of time? Yes — the coconut cream must be started the night before. The baked cake can also rest at room temperature before serving.
- Can I use frozen strawberries instead of fresh? No — frozen strawberries release too much liquid and will make the caramelized bottom layer watery instead of jammy.
- What can I swap if I don’t have a specific ingredient? Regular butter and Greek yogurt work in place of vegan butter and vegan yogurt. Don’t like lavender or can’t find it? Store-bought whipped topping is a perfectly good substitute for the coconut cream.
- How many does it serve and what’s the approximate cost per slice? Serves 8. Approximately $1.50–$2.00 per slice — coconut cream is the most variable cost depending on your store.

Why It’s Worth Making
- Provides the same nostalgic flavors of biscuit, berries, and cream, but in a proper sliceable cake that feeds a crowd without the fuss of individual assembly.
- What kind of cake is this? A baked single-layer from-scratch yellow cake topped with lightly sweetened fresh strawberries and homemade whipped cream — all the flavors of strawberry shortcake in a sliceable cake format.
- How hard is this to make, really? Easy to moderate. Standard creaming method with buttermilk and a dry pudding mix for extra moisture — nothing technical.
- How long does it take from start to finish? About 15 minutes prep, 30–35 minutes baking, plus cooling time before adding the strawberries and whipped cream.
- Can I make it ahead of time? Bake the cake a day ahead and store covered. Add the macerated strawberries and whipped cream the day of serving — the strawberries release juice as they sit and will make the top soggy if added too early.
- Can I use frozen strawberries instead of fresh? Fresh only for the topping — frozen strawberries won’t hold their shape or release the right kind of syrupy juice when macerated.
- What can I swap if I don’t have a specific ingredient? No buttermilk? Mix 1 tablespoon of white vinegar or lemon juice into 1 cup of regular milk and let it sit for 5 minutes. No instant pudding mix? The cake still works without it, just slightly less moist.
- How many does it serve and what’s the approximate cost per slice? Serves 10–12 from a single layer. Approximately $1.00–$1.50 per slice.

Why It’s Worth Making
- It feeds up to 20 people and the strawberry milk soak does more flavor work than most people expect from three pantry ingredients.
- What kind of cake is this? A baked from-scratch sponge cake soaked in a three-milk strawberry mixture — evaporated milk, sweetened condensed milk, and heavy cream infused with strawberry — then topped with whipped cream and fresh strawberries. Served cold.
- How hard is this to make, really? Moderate. The sponge requires careful mixing to keep it light enough to absorb the milk soak. The payoff is a cake that feeds a crowd with minimal decorating.
- How long does it take from start to finish? About 30–40 minutes active time, plus at least 4 hours chilling — overnight is strongly recommended for best results.
- Can I make it ahead of time? Yes — this is one of the few cakes that genuinely gets better the longer it chills. Make it the day before and it will be at peak flavor and texture by the time you serve it.
- Can I use frozen strawberries instead of fresh? Frozen strawberries work well blended into the milk soak. Use fresh strawberries for the topping — add them just before serving so they stay firm and bright.
- What can I swap if I don’t have a specific ingredient? No evaporated milk? Substitute with regular whole milk in the same quantity. Whipped topping like Cool Whip works in place of homemade whipped cream if you’re short on time.
- How many does it serve and what’s the approximate cost per slice? Serves 18–20 from a 9×13 pan. Approximately $0.75–$1.00 per slice — the best value per serving of any from-scratch cake in this roundup.
Which Strawberry Cake Is Right for You?
Strawberry cake comparison table — find the right recipe for your situation
Use the buttons below to filter by your situation — tap any option to narrow the list.
| Recipe | Type | Difficulty | Time | Serves | Cost/slice | Make ahead |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Strawberry Charlotte cake Pastry Wishes | No-bake | Easy | 20 min + 4 hr chill | 8–10 | $1.50–2.00 | Yes |
Strawberry gingersnap icebox cake Liv’s Little Muffins | No-bake | Very easy | 15 min + 4 hr chill | 8–10 | $1.00–1.50 | Yes |
Strawberry icebox cake The Slow Roasted Italian | No-bake | Very easy | 20 min + 3 hr freeze | 8–10 | $1.00–1.50 | Yes |
Elderflower & strawberry cake Kitchen and Other Stories | No-bake | Easy | 20 min + 2 hr chill | 6–8 | $1.50–2.00 | Yes |
Strawberry cheesecake poke cake The Benson Street | Quick & easy | Very easy | 45 min + 2 hr chill | 12–15 | $0.75–1.00 | Yes |
Strawberry dump cake The Chaotic Table | Quick & easy | Very easy | 5 min + 50 min bake | 12–15 | $0.60–0.80 | Yes |
Strawberry Jello angel food cake Food Meanderings | Quick & easy | Very easy | 20 min + 24 hr chill | 10–12 | $0.75–1.00 | Yes — must |
Air fryer genoise cake Easy Online Baking Lessons | Quick & easy | Moderate | 15 min + 30 min air fry | 6–8 | $1.00–1.50 | Partial |
Mango strawberry bundt cake Easy Online Baking Lessons | Quick & easy | Moderate | 20 min + 35 min air fry | 8–10 | $1.25–1.75 | Partial |
Strawberry coffee cake Fit Mama Real Food | From scratch | Easy | 15 min + 35 min bake | 9 | $1.00–1.50 | Yes |
Vanilla strawberry cake Sugar Pursuit | From scratch | Moderate | 60 min + 6 hr chill | 10 | $1.25–1.75 | Yes |
Strawberry upside down cake Sweet Miscellany | From scratch | Moderate | 75 min + overnight prep | 8 | $1.50–2.00 | Partial |
Strawberry shortcake cake Modern Honey | From scratch | Easy–moderate | 15 min + 35 min bake | 10–12 | $1.00–1.50 | Partial |
Strawberry tres leches A Latin Flair | From scratch | Moderate | 40 min + overnight chill | 18–20 | $0.75–1.00 | Yes — must |
Final Thoughts
One more thing worth knowing before you start: the most expensive part of any strawberry cake is usually the strawberries themselves — not the flour, butter, or box mix. Timing your bake around what’s in season in your area will do more for your grocery bill than any other single swap. In the Southeast, that window is late March through May. Buy more than you need right now, freeze the rest flat on a sheet pan, and you’ll have strawberries for baking at February prices all the way through fall.
If you’re new to baking with strawberries and not sure where to start, the dump cake costs the least, takes the least effort, and still manages to disappear at every potluck it shows up to. That’s a reasonable first step.
From there, ideas are endless.









