This slow cooker 4-ingredient butterscotch pudding cake is pure Sunday-dinner nostalgia. My aunt used to plug in her old crockpot right after church, and by the time we’d finished our roast and potatoes, the whole house smelled like warm butterscotch. The magic of this recipe is how the cake bakes on top while a gooey, pudding-like sauce forms underneath—no extra bowls, no fancy steps.
It’s the kind of retro, church-basement dessert that tastes like childhood and uses ingredients you can keep in the pantry for last-minute company or a cozy family night.
Serve this butterscotch pudding cake warm, straight from the slow cooker, with big spoonfuls that scoop both the fluffy cake and the gooey sauce. A scoop of vanilla ice cream or a dollop of whipped cream melts into the warm butterscotch and makes it extra special. It’s rich, so small bowls go a long way, especially after a hearty Sunday dinner. Pair with coffee, hot tea, or a cold glass of milk, and let everyone scrape their bowls clean while you appreciate that cleanup is basically just one slow cooker insert.
Slow Cooker 4-Ingredient Butterscotch Pudding Cake
Servings: 6-8

For a slightly less sweet version, you can swap whole milk for 2% milk; the sauce will still be luscious but a touch lighter. If you like a stronger butterscotch flavor, add 1 teaspoon of vanilla extract or a pinch of salt to the pudding mixture before pouring it into the slow cooker.
You can also sprinkle a small handful of chopped pecans or walnuts over the cake mixture before cooking for a bit of crunch, or add a few butterscotch chips on top in the last 15 minutes of cooking so they soften but don’t fully melt away. To stretch this dessert for a crowd, serve smaller scoops over bowls of vanilla ice cream or alongside sliced bananas for a butterscotch-banana twist.
Food safety tips: Keep the cake covered while cooking to maintain a safe, even temperature. Use pasteurized milk and check that your slow cooker is functioning properly and heating on HIGH to a safe level (typically above 165°F inside the dessert). Once cooked, don’t leave the cake sitting on the warm setting for more than 2 hours; refrigerate leftovers in a shallow container after they’ve cooled to room temperature, and reheat individual portions gently in the microwave until just warm. Avoid reheating multiple times—only warm what you plan to eat.