Mom's Best Recipes
Recipe

Hearty Texas Sheet Cake

A classic chocolate Texas sheet cake with crisp edges, a glossy fudge icing, and a crunchy pecan finish. Big-pan comfort dessert, party-ready and weeknight doable.

Author By Matt Campbell
4.8
A fresh chocolate Texas sheet cake in a metal sheet pan with glossy fudge icing and chopped pecans, with one corner slice removed to show the moist crumb

Texas sheet cake is the dessert equivalent of showing up with a good attitude and a bigger pan than anyone asked for. It is chocolatey, ultra-moist, and unapologetically shareable. But today we are taking it one tiny step further: crispy and crunchy where it counts.

The trick is simple: bake it in a true sheet pan for more edge-to-center ratio, and finish with a warm, pourable fudge frosting that sets into that classic, slightly crackly top. Add toasted pecans and you get the kind of bite that makes you pause mid-chew like, okay wow, who brought this.

A close-up of a slice of chocolate sheet cake showing a moist crumb and shiny icing with pecans

Why It Works

  • Crisp edges, tender middle: a shallow bake gives you those snacky corner pieces everyone fights over.
  • Fudge icing that sets right: you pour it on warm so it melts into the top, then firms up into a glossy, sliceable layer.
  • Real crunch: toasted pecans add texture and keep the sweetness from feeling one-note.
  • Easy ingredients: pantry cocoa, butter, flour, and buttermilk. No fancy chocolate required.

Pairs Well With

Storage Tips

Room temperature: Cover the pan tightly or transfer slices to an airtight container. Keep on the counter for up to 2 days.

Refrigerator: For longer storage, refrigerate up to 5 days. The icing gets firmer when cold. Let slices sit at room temp 20 to 30 minutes for the best texture.

Freezer: Freeze individual slices (my favorite move) wrapped in plastic wrap and placed in a freezer bag for up to 2 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge or for 1 to 2 hours on the counter.

Crunch note: If you want maximum pecan crunch, store slices with parchment between layers so the topping does not get compressed.

Common Questions

What makes this sheet cake “crispy and crunchy”?

Two things: the shallow bake in a sheet pan gives you more crisp edges, and toasted pecans add crunch on top. The icing also sets into a thin, slightly crackly layer as it cools.

Do I have to use buttermilk?

Buttermilk gives Texas sheet cake its classic tang and tenderness. If you do not have it, mix 1/2 cup milk with 1 1/2 teaspoons white vinegar or lemon juice, let sit 5 minutes, then use.

Can I use a 9x13-inch pan instead of a sheet pan?

Yes. Your cake will be thicker and the edges will be less crisp. Bake at 350°F and start checking around 28 to 30 minutes. It will often land in the 30 to 40 minute range depending on your pan and oven. You are looking for a center that springs back lightly and a toothpick that comes out with a few moist crumbs, not wet batter.

Why pour the frosting on while it is warm?

Warm frosting spreads itself. It melts slightly into the cake surface, creating that signature Texas sheet cake finish: glossy, fudgy, and sliceable once set.

Can I skip the pecans?

Absolutely. You can leave them out or swap in toasted walnuts. If you still want crunch without nuts, try toasted coconut or a sprinkle of cacao nibs after frosting.

I love this cake because it is the opposite of precious. You do not need layers, you do not need a stand mixer, and nobody is piping rosettes at midnight. You just make a warm chocolate batter, bake it flat, then you pour on that hot fudge frosting like you mean it.

The first time I really nailed the texture, it was by accident. I used a real half-sheet pan instead of a deeper casserole, and suddenly there were more edges. More edges means more crispy corners, and crispy corners means people hovering in your kitchen pretending they are “just grabbing a small piece.” That is the energy I want in my house.