Lemon Pound Cake

$4.85 recipe / $0.40 serving
by Monti Carlo
4.47 from 15 votes
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This Lemon Pound Cake will make you swoon! It’s moist, tender, tart, and tangy. The light fluffy crumb is the perfect texture for soaking up the sweet and sour lemon glaze. Even better- it’s the absolute easiest cake to make. I bet you have everything you need in your pantry right now! 

Overhead view of lemon pound cake sliced on a wire cooling rack.

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What is Lemon Pound Cake?

This classic dessert is baked in a loaf pan and is bursting with refreshing citrus notes that cut through the buttery sweetness of the cake. This easy recipe for Lemon Pound Cake is also one of my favorite ways to use up extra lemons, as the batter and glaze are loaded with lemon juice and zest.

Ingredients for Lemon Pound Cake

This cake is gorgeous and the flavors are zippy and balanced. It’s the perfect easy dessert recipe for a casual dinner or a fancy get-together (or if you’re in the mood for cake that isn’t too sweet.) Here’s what you need to make Lemon Poundcake:

  • Butter:  creates a light, tender texture and helps the cake rise.
  • Granulated Sugar and Powdered Sugar: these sugars do more than sweeten the cake and the icing. Granulated sugar softens the cake crumb, adds moisture, and balances the tartness of the lemon juice in the batter. Powdered sugar creates structure in icing and helps mellow out the sourness of lemon juice.
  • Eggs: create structure that helps the cake rise and keeps the crumb airy.
  • Flour: the base of our batter, it creates the structure of the crumb. While we have not tested this recipe with gluten-free flour, a 1-to-1 gluten-free baking flour should be a great substitute.
  • Lemons: are the heart of this recipe. If lemons are out of your budget, you can try bottled lemon juice, and though it won’t taste quite as tart and refreshing, it will still be a good cake. If lemons are too tart for you, leave them out and just make plain, buttery, pound cake!

How To Serve Lemon Pound Cake

This cake is fantastic still warm from the oven or served at room temperature. It pairs beautifully with No-Churn Strawberry Ice Cream. Or served with a fresh dollop of Homemade Whipped Cream. Double down on the lemon flavor and try it with Homemade Lemon Curd

How To Store Lemon Pound Cake

Place leftovers in an air-tight container and store at room temperature for up to 3 days. You can also wrap leftovers tightly in a layer of parchment paper and a second layer of aluminum foil, then freeze for up to 3 months. While you can refrigerate pound cake, it does dull the flavors and changes the texture of the cake. If you choose to refrigerate or freeze it, try warming it in a 350°F with a touch of butter brushed on each slice. I don’t know if you’ve ever tried frozen cake, but it’s delightful straight out of the freezer as well. The crumb stays soft and it’s a perfect treat for a hot summer day.

Side view of a sliced loaf of lemon pound cake.
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Lemon Pound Cake

4.47 from 15 votes
This delicious, moist and easy lemon pound cake recipe is made with fresh lemon juice and zest, and perfect for dessert or paired with coffee or tea.
Author: Monti Carlo
Side view of a sliced loaf of lemon pound cake.
Servings 12 (1 slice each)
Prep 20 minutes
Cook 1 hour
Cool Time 10 minutes
Total 1 hour 30 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1 cup room temperature salted butter (plus more for greasing) ($2.01)
  • 1.5 cups all-purpose flour (plus more for dusting) ($0.22)
  • 1/2 tsp baking powder ($0.03)
  • 1/4 tsp baking soda ($0.01)
  • 1/4 tsp salt ($0.02)
  • 1 cup granulated sugar ($0.39)
  • 4 large eggs, beaten ($0.36)
  • 1/4 cup buttermilk ($0.16)
  • 3 lemons, juiced and zested, divided ($1.32)
  • 1 cup powdered sugar ($0.33)
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Instructions 

  • Place an oven rack in the center of your oven and preheat the oven to 350°F. Grease an 8.5×4.5-inch (1.5 qt) loaf pan with butter. Line the pan with parchment. Butter the parchment and dust with flour, shaking off excess flour.
  • Mix the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt in a medium bowl.
  • Mix the butter and sugar in a large bowl until light and fluffy. Add the beaten eggs, buttermilk, 1/4 cup lemon juice, and 1 tablespoon zest. Mix until incorporated.
  • Add the flour mixture to the butter and egg mixture in thirds, mixing after each addition and scraping down the sides before the next addition.
  • Add batter to the prepared pan. Bake for 50 to 60 minutes in the preheated 350°F oven until the cake springs back when you press the center and a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean.
  • Remove the pound cake from the oven and cool for ten minutes before removing it from the pan and placing it on a cooling rack.
  • To make the glaze, mix the powdered sugar with 2 tablespoons lemon juice and 1 1/2 teaspoons lemon zest.
  • Drizzle the glaze on the cooled pound cake and serve!

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Equipment

  • Measuring Cups Spoons
  • Hand Mixer

Nutrition

Serving: 1sliceCalories: 330kcalCarbohydrates: 41gProtein: 4gFat: 17gSodium: 241mgFiber: 1g
Read our full nutrition disclaimer here.
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Icing being drizzled over a loaf of lemon pound cake.

How to Make Lemon Pound Cake – Step by Step Photos

Loaf pan being buttered and dusted with flour.

Place an oven rack in the center of your oven and preheat the oven to 350°F. Grease an 8.5×4.5-inch (1.5 qt) loaf pan with butter. Line the pan with parchment. Butter the parchment and dust with flour, shaking off excess flour.

Dry ingredients for lemon pound cake being whisked together in a bowl.

Mix 1.5 cups of all-purpose flour, 1/2 tsp baking powder, 1/4 tsp baking soda, and 1/4 tsp salt in a medium bowl. 

Wet ingredients for lemon pound cake in a bowl.

Mix 1 cup of room-temperature salted butter and 1 cup of granulated sugar in a large bowl until light and fluffy. Add 4 beaten large eggs, 1/4 cup of buttermilk,  1/4 cup lemon juice, and 1 tablespoon zest. Mix until incorporated.

Wet and dry ingredients for lemon pound cake being mixed together.

Add the flour mixture to the butter and egg mixture in thirds, mixing after each addition and scraping down the sides before the next addition. 

Lemon pound cake batter in the loaf pan ready to be baked.

Add batter to the prepared pan. Bake for 50 to 60 minutes in the preheated 350°F oven until the cake springs back when you press the center and a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean.

Baked lemon pound cake in the baking pan.

Remove the poundcake from the oven and cool for ten minutes before removing it from the pan and placing it on a cooling rack.

Ingredients for the icing in a bowl.

To make the glaze, mix 1 cup powdered sugar with 2 tablespoons lemon juice and 1 1/2 teaspoons lemon zest. 

Glaze being poured over the pound cake.

Drizzle the glaze on the cooled pound cake and serve!

Front view of a loaf of lemon pound cake sliced on a cooling rack.
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Comments

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  1. Awesome, keep putting different recipes out there, I love cooking as well. Keep posted.

  2. This is a fairly dense, moist, and very zingy cake! And not too finicky, which is what I look for in all baking recipes. 😁 I brought this in to work to say thank-you to a coworker who’s been sharing their lemon tree’s largesse, and it DISAPPEARED in a few hours. A hit all around!

  3. My first time baking a Lemon pound cake! The taste is lemony, the firmness was on point. Above all it is delicious. Would make it again.

  4. delicious and easy to make! didn’t put on lemon glaze as we had fresh strawberries, thawed cool whip then used your recipe for pound cake. lemon juice definitely gave more flavor. thank you bb :)

  5. I’m a pretty experienced baker and have no issue with much more finicky recipes, but this one came out with an awful texture and very little flavor.

    If I adjusted this, I’d suggest softening the butter just past room temp (such as under a warm glass) and adding additional flour (1tbsp at a time) if needed until you get the consistency in the photos.

    I’d agree that an 8×4 pan would not hold this much batter. I ended up using a standard 9×5 and still having some leftover.

    1. you can just melt the butter in the microwave for about 25 secs. i always use melted butter

  6. I wonder if anyone has tried this recipe in a Bundt pan and if it came out easily. I received the Nordicware quartet Bundt pan for Christmas and would love to use it with this recipe

    1. Hey! I have not made this specific recipe but I was looking at its ratio and it’s pretty close to the 1:1:1:1 ratio of the very original pound cake, which is a denser, delicious kind of cake, and it is actually perfect for bund pans because they come out perfectly, so I’d say just go for it!
      Hope this helps!

  7. This recipe is perfect! I have a pic of it, too, but I don’t know if I can post it here. So simple and delicious. The larger portions of butter in this recipe make it heavenly!

  8. I was looking for a simple but summery baking project, and I’m so glad I tried this one! It was simple, but delicious. The lemon was really bright, and the cake itself was rich and buttery. Can’t wait for leftovers toasted with a bit of butter (my absolute favorite way to eat pound cake! glad to see it mentioned here).

  9. Delicious! I found I got enough juice and zest with two lemons but now I have one extra. :) The batter and finished product smelled so good!

  10. No issues here! Turned out delicious! I had some leftover lemon juice so I poured it on before the glaze at the end for some extra lemon flavor.

  11. I made this to take to a cookout today. I sampled a slice before I packed it up. Delicious!!! I’m sure I’ll be asked to share the recipe.🙂

  12. This looks so yummy! Can I please have the measurements in metrics please? Googling it always doesn’t give the accurate figures

  13. Your recipes are always spot on but until you answer the comment about the overflowing batter and a possible incorrect pan size pan, I have to give you a 1 and I can’t try this amazing recipe.

    1. That’s really not fair to Budget Bytes. There must’ve been some sort of measuring accident. I had no problem at all.

    2. You shouldn’t review a recipe you have never tried, especially based off one comment which was likely a user error

    1. You probably could, although I can’t recommend a specific cook time without testing it first. :)

  14. Do you need a substitution b/c you don’t have buttermilk? You can make your own. Add a couple tablespoons on vinegar to the milk, let stand for 5-10 min. Now you have “buttermilk”.

  15. I’m not sure that an 8×4 pan was the right size for this? I just made it and it was filled to the brim. I was dumb and thought everything would turn out okay in the oven but it just oozed over the sides of the pan and into the oven. I dumped the rest of the batter into a bigger bread pan and I’m hoping I can salvage it when the oven cools off to let me clean it out and try again. Can you confirm that 8×4 was the right sized pan? Not sure why mine would end up so much more full than yours if that’s the case.

    1. Hmm, that’s unusual! We used a standard loaf pan, which is about 8″x4″ and holds about 6 cups (1.5 qts). Looking at the ingredients, the total batter volume should only be about four cups. Do you think it’s possible one of your ingredients was mis-measured?

      1. Maybe! I’m not entirely sure what happened but I did manage to salvage the loaf by quickly dumping it into a 9×5 pan. It was my fault because I shouldn’t have even bothered trying to bake it in the other pan knowing it was so full. Maybe it was 8×4 but not the same depth as your pan.

        Once it was in the bigger pan, it still came out perfectly! Knowing now which of my pans to use, I’ll definitely be making this again because it was delicious! Lesson learned on my part 🙂 don’t attempt to bake in an overfull pan! Thank you for the response and also for the awesome recipe!

      2. Oh good!! I’m so glad it still turned out well. :) Thanks for the update!

      3. I would like to bake this cake, but without lemon can it be possible?

      4. The lemon juice is an essential ingredient to this particular cake to retain moisture and of course, add flavor. I’m afraid too many adjustments would be necessary to omit the lemon entirely!

    1. I am vegan so came here looking to see if I could alter the recipe to fit my needs. I have made non-dairy buttermilk before. You add 1 tbsp lemon juice (or distilled / apple cider vinegar) to 1 cup non-dairy milk. The best non-dairy milk to use is soy but apparently almond works, too. I’ve read that coconut milk will not curdle, so that is not a good option.