When your recipe calls for self-rising, bread, or cake flour and your pantry just stares back with plain ol’ all-purpose, don’t fret, sugar. You don’t need a last-minute grocery run — just a mixing bowl and a few pantry basics. All-purpose flour is the chameleon of baking, and with a couple of tweaks, it can moonlight as almost anything you need.
1. Turning All-Purpose Flour into Self-Rising Flour
Self-rising flour is nothing fancy — it’s just all-purpose flour with the leavening and salt already mixed in. It’s a Southern kitchen staple for biscuits, cornbread, and old-fashioned cakes, but you can whip it up in seconds.
To make 1 cup of self-rising flour:
- 1 cup all-purpose flour
- 1½ teaspoons baking powder
- ¼ teaspoon salt
Whisk it together thoroughly before using so the baking powder disperses evenly. That’s it — no magic, no mystery.
How to use it:
Use this blend cup-for-cup in recipes that call for self-rising flour, like biscuits, quick breads, or pancakes. Skip any additional salt or leavening the recipe calls for — you’ve already got it handled.
💡 This Old Baker Tip: Make a jar of this blend ahead of time. Label it “DIY Self-Rising Flour” and keep it sealed tight for up to six months. Perfect for those spontaneous biscuit mornings.
2. Making All-Purpose Flour Work Like Bread Flour
Bread flour’s secret weapon is its higher protein content — about 12–13% versus 10–11% in all-purpose. That extra gluten gives yeast doughs their chew and structure. If you’re out of bread flour, all-purpose will still rise beautifully with a little protein boost.
To make a bread flour substitute:
For every 1 cup of bread flour, use:
- 1 cup all-purpose flour
- 1 teaspoon vital wheat gluten (if you have it)
If you don’t have gluten on hand, just use straight all-purpose flour. Your bread may be slightly softer and less chewy, but still delicious — especially for dinner rolls or sandwich loaves.
How to use it:
Use this blend in yeast breads, pizza dough, or cinnamon rolls. Mix as usual, but watch your hydration — all-purpose absorbs slightly less water, so your dough may feel a touch stickier.
💡 This Old Baker Tip:
If you’re kneading by hand, do one or two extra stretch-and-folds. That little bit of extra handling helps develop the gluten naturally, giving your bread that chewy, bakery-style bite without special flour.
3. Softening All-Purpose Flour into Cake Flour
Cake flour gives baked goods that tender, velvety texture — think angel food cake or fluffy cupcakes. It’s lower in protein (about 8%) and finer in texture, which makes the crumb soft instead of bready. You can fake that lightness in your own kitchen with a quick trick.
To make 1 cup of cake flour:
- Measure 1 cup all-purpose flour
- Remove 2 tablespoons of the flour
- Add 2 tablespoons cornstarch (or arrowroot powder)
Sift the blend 2–3 times to aerate it and mimic that super-fine cake flour texture.
How to use it:
Swap cup-for-cup in recipes calling for cake flour — cupcakes, sponge cakes, pound cakes, and even soft sugar cookies. You’ll get that delicate crumb and lighter mouthfeel without stocking a separate bag of flour.
💡 This Old Baker Tip:
If you’re baking something like a chiffon or angel food cake, sift your dry mix again with the sugar. The added air makes it cloud-like and helps the cake rise beautifully.
Bonus: How to Store and Label Your DIY Flour Blends
All these quick mixes can be prepped ahead. Store them in airtight jars labeled with the type, ingredients, and date — because nobody wants to second-guess whether that was bread flour mix or self-rising powder when the biscuits are halfway mixed.
Storage life:
- Self-rising: up to 6 months (watch for baking powder freshness)
- Bread flour mix: 1 year (airtight)
- Cake flour mix: 1 year (keep dry)
💡 This Old Baker Tip:
Stick a small silica packet or bay leaf inside your jar to deter moisture and pantry pests — just like Grandma used to do.
The Bottom Line
All-purpose flour is the ultimate understudy — ready to fill in no matter what your recipe calls for. Whether you’re flipping Sunday pancakes, kneading bread, or baking a birthday cake, it’s your pantry’s best multitasker.
So next time you realize you’re fresh out of a “special” flour, skip the store and grab your canister. You’ve already got everything you need to whip up something wonderful — just a pinch of know-how and that signature from-scratch magic that keeps your kitchen smelling like home.

Three Ways to Use All-Purpose Flour in Place of Specialty Flours
Ingredients
- all-purpose flour
- vital wheat gluten
- cornstarch or arrowroot
Instructions
To make 1 cup of self-rising flour:
- 1 cup all-purpose flour1½ teaspoons baking powder¼ teaspoon saltWhisk it together thoroughly before using so the baking powder disperses evenly. That’s it — no magic, no mystery.How to use it:Use this blend cup-for-cup in recipes that call for self-rising flour, like biscuits, quick breads, or pancakes. Skip any additional salt or leavening the recipe calls for — you’ve already got it handled.
To make a bread flour substitute:
- For every 1 cup of bread flour, use:1 cup all-purpose flour1 teaspoon vital wheat gluten (if you have it)If you don’t have gluten on hand, just use straight all-purpose flour. Your bread may be slightly softer and less chewy, but still delicious — especially for dinner rolls or sandwich loaves.
To make 1 cup of cake flour:
- Measure 1 cup all-purpose flourRemove 2 tablespoons of the flourAdd 2 tablespoons cornstarch (or arrowroot powder)Sift the blend 2–3 times to aerate it and mimic that super-fine cake flour texture.How to use it:Swap cup-for-cup in recipes calling for cake flour — cupcakes, sponge cakes, pound cakes, and even soft sugar cookies. You’ll get that delicate crumb and lighter mouthfeel without stocking a separate bag of flour.







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