A dry chiffon cake is often overbaked or baked too hot, but formula changes can also remove moisture. Check bake conditions before adding more liquid.
The goal is a cake that is fully set but still soft. Shortening the bake too much may create collapse or a wet center.
Quick diagnosis
If the outside is dry but the center is fine, heat is probably too strong. If the whole cake is dry and crumbly, the recipe balance, pan size, or storage may need attention.
- Dry crust: Check oven heat and rack position.
- Dry crumb: Check overbaking and reduced oil or sugar.
- Dry next day: Check storage after full cooling.
Likely causes
Dryness usually comes from too much heat exposure, too little moisture retention, or storage that lets the crumb lose water.
- Overbaking: The cake stays in the oven after it is already set.
- Hot oven: Moisture leaves the crumb too quickly.
- Reduced sugar or oil: Both affect softness and moisture.
Quick test
Keep the recipe the same and remove the cake as soon as it passes springback and skewer checks. If it is softer, overbaking was likely.
Next-bake fixes
Reduce dryness without causing underbaking.
- Check doneness earlier in short intervals.
- Use the correct pan size and batter depth.
- Do not cut sugar or oil heavily while troubleshooting.
- Wrap only after the cake is completely cool.
Related troubleshooting
Use these related guides if the same cake also shows another visible symptom.
