Tessa’s Recipe Rundown
Taste: Bright and fresh with the perfect amount of sweet lemon flavor.
Texture: Moist and tender, but not too delicate.
Ease: Very easy! The glaze is an extra step, and it’s not completely necessary, but it adds more flavor and moisture to the cake.
Pros: Beautiful and vibrant cake.
Cons: None!
Would I make this again? I’ve already made it several times now!
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Sometimes there’s nothing I crave more than the bright, vibrant, and fresh taste and aroma of fresh lemon. Like a fresh slice of moist, buttery, Lemon Bundt Cake.
As a complete chocoholic, this tends to be a deviation from my usual sweet cravings.
While this cake is delicious year-round, it’s the perfect citrusy dessert to enjoy during spring and summer. Also, this lemon cake smells absolutely amazing while it bakes. Imagine the combination of the smells of a clean house, a bakery window, and the best candle ever. Guests won’t want to leave when they smell this baking!
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After the cake is done baking, it gets a drenching of lemon glaze. This amplifies the citrus flavor and boosts the moisture of the cake.
The icing on this best Lemon Bundt Cake recipe is just the way I like it: ultra thick and smooth! Feel free to add more or less cream or lemon juice to thicken or thin it out, but I think thick icing makes a bundt cake extra beautiful and gourmet. Just be sure to let the icing set completely before you serve or transport it.
Sprinkle of Science
How to Make Lemon Bundt Cake
What is the Difference Between Cake and Bundt Cake?
The main difference is the style of baking pan that’s used. A bundt pan is typically 10 to 12 cups in volume capacity, whereas a single 8-inch round cake pan has 6 cups volume capacity. Besides the shape and design, Bundt cakes are typically more dense, moist, and sturdy than some layer cakes. They need to hold up to the more intricate design of the Bundt cake pan without collapsing or breaking apart. Bundt cakes are also typically covered in an icing or glaze instead of being assembled with buttercream frosting.
How to Make MOIST Cake
- Don’t overmeasure your flour. Accidentally adding too much flour will yield a dense, dry, or crumbly cake. I highly recommend using a digital kitchen scale, but if you don’t have one, use the spoon and level method to measure your dry ingredients.
- 8 large eggs – Eggs are crucial to this bundt cake’s richness, moisture, and structure. I do not recommend using egg substitutes in this recipe. Use room-temperature eggs to ensure they blend smoothly into the batter.
- Don’t reduce the sugar – Sugar does so much more in baking beyond simply sweetening. Learn more about sugar’s role in baking here.
Can I Use Baking Soda Instead of Baking Powder in Cake?
Baking powder and baking soda are both chemical leaveners that work to create light textures in baked goods. Although baking powder actually contains baking soda, the two leaveners are very different. Baking powder and baking soda are NOT interchangeable, so make sure to use baking powder for this recipe.
Check out my Baking Soda vs. Baking Powder article to learn how to test your leaveners for freshness (very important!) and for more information, as well as more shocking baking experiment results like this one below:
Do I Have to Use Cake Flour in this Lemon Bundt Cake?
- This recipe uses half all-purpose flour and half cake flour for the best of both worlds.
- When using only all-purpose flour, the cake has more of a muffin texture.
- When using only cake flour, the cake is too delicate and crumbly.
- While you can use only all-purpose flour in the flour mixture, I’d highly recommend using real cake flour for the best results.
- Check out my Cake Flour 101 article here (and why I don’t use DIY substitutes) for more on the science of this ingredient.
Do You Glaze a Cake When it’s Hot?
Allow the bundt cake to cool completely before glazing; otherwise, the glaze will melt right off the hot cake.
How to Prevent Bundt Cake from Sticking
There’s absolutely nothing worse than spending a bunch of time, energy, and ingredients on a cake only to have it stick to the pan and fall apart like the cake on the right:
Here are my three top tips for preventing bundt cakes from sticking to the pan:
- Use a simple, quality nonstick bundt pan and take proper care of it (hand washing and drying instead of using the dishwasher). This is the best bundt pan I’ve found.
- Use the right type of grease. I use baker’s nonstick cooking spray for this recipe, specifically Baker’s Joy. I’ve also had success in the past using melted shortening to grease other bundt cake recipes.
- Grease every nook and cranny of the bundt pan just before baking. This prevents the grease from sliding down the sides of the pan and collecting in a pool at the bottom by the time you pour in the batter. Use a pastry brush to generously apply the grease, being careful to get every centimeter, including the middle column.
- In my How to Prevent Bundt Cakes From Sticking article, I detail even more of my best tips for bundt cake that glides out of the pan perfectly. I also share some tricks for releasing a cake that’s already stuck.
Should You Let a Bundt Cake Cool Before Flipping It?
After baking the cake, cool it in the pan for 15 to 20 minutes, then run a thin, flexible knife around the edges before inverting it onto a wire cooling rack.
Topping Ideas for Best Lemon Bundt Cake Recipe
- The Lemon Glaze included in the recipe below
- Fresh berries, such as strawberries or blueberries
- Whipped cream
- Cream cheese frosting (if using cream cheese frosting, serve the same day you frost – refrigerating this cake will dry it out)
- A dusting of powdered sugar
- Learn How to Make Ice cream with my simple, easy-to-follow recipe!
How to Store Lemon Bundt Cake
The glazed cake can be covered in foil or plastic wrap and stored at room temperature for up to 2 days. Don’t refrigerate this cake as that will just dry it out. Wrap sliced leftovers well in plastic wrap and store in a ziptop bag or an airtight container for up to 2 days.
More Lemon Recipes You’ll Love:
- Lemon Pound Cake Loaf
- Lemon Cupcakes
- Lemon Cheesecake
- Lemon Poppy Seed Muffins
- Glazed Lemon Cookies
- Lemon Yogurt Zucchini Bread
More Cake Recipes You’ll Love:
- Chocolate Bundt Cake
- Strawberry Bundt Cake
- Peppermint Mocha Bundt Cake
- Angel Food Cake
- Flourless Chocolate Cake
Lemon Bundt Cake
Ingredients
For the cake:
- 1 1/2 cups (191 grams) all-purpose flour
- 1 1/2 cups (170 grams) cake flour
- 2 teaspoons baking powder
- 1 teaspoon fine salt
- 2 1/2 cups (500 grams) granulated sugar
- 4 tablespoons fresh lemon zest (from about 6 lemons)
- 4 tablespoons fresh lemon juice (from about 2 lemons)
- 8 large eggs, at room temperature
- 1/2 cup (120 grams) sour cream*, at room temperature
- 4 sticks (452 grams) unsalted butter, melted and cooled
For the glaze:
- 2 1/2 cups (313 grams) powdered sugar
- 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
- 2 tablespoons milk or cream
Instructions
Make the cake:
- Preheat the oven to 350°F.
- In a large mixing bowl, sift together the all-purpose flour, cake flour, baking powder, and salt. Set aside.
- In the bowl of a food processor or high-speed blender, combine the sugar and lemon zest. Pulse a few times to evenly distribute the zest. Add the lemon juice, eggs, and sour cream and pulse until combined. On low speed, gradually drizzle in the melted and cooled butter in a slow steady stream until well combined.
- Make a well in the center of the dry ingredient mixture. Pour in the wet ingredients. Mix gently with a rubber spatula until just combined. Batter will be slightly thin.
- Grease a 10 or 12-cup bundt pan generously with baker’s nonstick cooking spray, such as Baker’s Joy, or melted shortening. Use a pastry brush to spread the spray into every nook and cranny of the pan. Immediately pour in the batter.
- Bake until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean or with just a few moist crumbs attached, about 50 to 60 minutes.
- Cool in pan for 15 to 20 minutes, then run a thin flexible knife around the edges before inverting onto a wire rack. Cool completely.
Make the glaze:
- In a small bowl, whisk together the glaze ingredients until thick but pourable. Add more juice or milk to thin out or more powdered sugar to thicken until your desired consistency. Spoon over the cake, letting it drip down the sides if desired. Let set for 15 minutes before slicing and serving.
- The glazed cake can be covered in foil or plastic wrap and stored at room temperature for up to 2 days.
Recipe Notes
This post was originally published in 2018 and has been updated with new photos and recipe improvements. Photos by Joanie Simon.
I’m anxious to try this! Do you think this would work for mini bundt cakes?
Hi Julie! Unfortunately, we have not tested making this recipe into mini cakes! I don’t see why it wouldn’t work, but having not tested it, I can’t tell you how long to bake them for! Make sure you read Tessa’s tips (in the pink box above the recipe), and watch carefully once they’re in the oven. Bake only until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean or with just a few moist crumbs attached. Let us know how you go, and good luck! 🙂
It looks amazing!!! What would be the best brand for a Bundt pan?
Hi Alicia! I’m so excited for you to try this recipe! This is one of Tessa’s favourite bundt pans. Happy baking! 🙂
Hi! I would like to make this recipe but i want to bake it in 6inch pan, can you tell me how do i convert the measurements?
I can’t say for sure, we haven’t tried that! Let us know how it goes if you give it a try 🙂
Thank you Tessa, I love this recipe! Robust lemon flavor, and wonderful texture, especially with the Buttermilk in the recipe!
I do have a question please: At about 55 minutes at 350F, the cake appeared done (with tester insert coming out clean). However, there was one “hot spot” in the cake that was not done, still had some semi-wet batter. So, I baked a little bit longer to try to finish the one spot (even rotated pan in oven). So, the rest of the cake got a little bit overdone to try to finish baking the one spot. I have never had this happen before – any ideas what would have made the one spot not bake evenly?
Thank you so much! Xx Mary
My son asked for a “lemon cake” for his 24th birthday. I tried this recipe, and it was AMAZING!!! It delivered great lemon flavor, and was a moist and tender cake. It released beautifully out of my bundt pan thanks to your tip of using a pastry brush to put melted shortening all over the inside of the pan, and then dust the entire pan inside with almond flour. Worked like a charm! Thank you!
Oh my God! This is the best white cake that I have ever made……EVER. The crumb, the flavor, everything.
There’s another white cake recipe that I used over the past years but this for sure will be replacing it.
I cut the ingredients in half to make it in a loaf pan and it worked perfectly. I wanted to really taste the lemon in the icing so mine didn’t come out as white but it was full of flavor. I use non stick spray al over the pan and lightly flour it to eliminate the risk of the cake sticking to the pan.
I see myself making this very often and next time it will be in a bundt pan 🙂
Btw….80% of the cake was gone in less than an hour. Where can I post pictures? Lol
I made this exactly as presented. It stuck terribly to the pan, even though I carefully greased it as suggested with the pastry brush and got every nook and cranny. I had to remake the whole thing. Very disappointing.
This time I followed my intuition and also floured the pan after I greased it (as I do with all my banana bread recipes.) Still waiting for it to come out of the oven.
I feel there should be more lemon in the cake itself rather than just zest. I would add some lemon juice and decrease the buttermilk. Just a suggestion.
I really want to make this for Passover. My only problems are these:
A) I use use Potato Flour instead of regular cake flour
B) I need to use Splenda instead of sugar
I would appreciate any advice you could give me as to how this might turn out? Does baking time stay the same? Will it rise high enough? Be too dense or dry. Should I make any adjustments to other ingredient levels? Add any other ingredients not already mentioned in your recipe? Should I try separating eggs for more lightness due to potato flour?
Thanks Tessa! I’m one nervous wreck to make this cake. I’m sooo sick & tired of same old boring coffee cake & marble cake!
XOXO
I often use a glaze comprised of 1 stick of butter, 1 cup sugar and 1 cup of liquid (water, juice or alcohol) which I put in small pan and cook until butter and sugar dissolved and slightly thickened. I then loosen the cake in the pan and pour it over the cake while in pan & let it sit for approx. 15 – 20 minutes. After cake has cooled completely turn pan over and remove on cake plate. You can use as is or add frosting.
nice recipe and video, good non-stick tip! Love bundt cakes for entertaining, they just seem like the right thing to serve, and don’t have a lemon recipe. so thank you!
Where did you buy your offset silicone spatula?
Hi Tessa
I have a problem with the top of my bundt cakes being hard, but the rest of the cake is soft. Can you tell me why that happens. Thanks.