A browned top or side is not always a problem, but a dry, dark crust can hide an underbaked center or make the cake taste bitter.
The fix depends on whether only the top is dark, the sides are dark, or the whole cake is dry.
Quick diagnosis
Top browning points to rack height and top heat. Side browning points to pan material or side heat. A dark cake with a wet center points to heat that is too strong on the outside and too weak in the middle.
- Dark top: Check upper heat and rack height.
- Dark sides: Check pan color and side heat.
- Dark outside, wet inside: Use lower heat or lower rack before shortening the bake too much.
Likely causes
Over-browning usually comes from heat placement, not just total bake time.
- Rack too high: The top sets and browns too early.
- Dark pan: Darker metal absorbs more heat.
- Sugar or dairy changes: Formula changes can brown faster.
Quick test
Bake one rack lower at the same temperature. If the color becomes more even without collapse, top heat was too strong.
Next-bake fixes
Protect texture while reducing harsh browning.
- Move the pan away from strong top heat.
- Verify the real oven temperature.
- Avoid reducing bake time until the center is fully set.
- Use the pan material the recipe expects.
Related troubleshooting
Use these related guides if the same cake also shows another visible symptom.
