Lemon Cake

There's no dessert more refreshing than a perfectly tart lemon cake. To add a bit of excitement to a relatively simple dessert, we like using chia seeds,shredded coconut, blueberries or pistachios. One of our all-time favorite recipes is for Joanne Chang's sophisticatedlemon-ricotta cupcakes. Refined sugar in both the batter and citrusy frosting is swapped with honey, which keeps the sweetness in check, while ricotta cheese, crème fraîche and plenty of fresh lemon zest make these cupcakes incredibly moist and fluffy. Find this recipe and others in Food & Wine's lemon cake guide.

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Mourning My Mother with Lemon Cake
Alexis McCowan's mother Yan wasn't the world's best baker, but she cooked with love and adventure.
Lemon Chiffon Cake with Blueberry-Coriander Buttercream
Rating: Unrated 13
Pastry chef Sasha Piligian channels summer vibes to create her showstopping baked goods, like this epic layer cake. She starts with two flavor-packed components—a tart-sweetMeyer lemon curdfor the filling, and acoriander-spiced blueberry jamto flavor and tint her fluffySwiss meringue buttercream frosting. (The lemon curd and jam can be made ahead of time and stashed in the refrigerator, or you can substitute store-bought jam and lemon curd for equally beautiful results.) The addition of beaten egg whites to the batter keeps the lemon chiffon cake layers light and airy, and, for a final flourish, Piligian embellishes the frosted cake with edible flower petals, mint leaves, pools of glistening jam, fresh berries, and sliced citrus.
Lemon Cake with Cream Cheese Frosting
Rating: Unrated 6
Layers of delicate flavors from lemon, honey, and extra-virgin olive oil—which helps keep the cake moist and imparts mild fruitiness—come together in this one-bowl batter. Stacked with a fluffy and rich lemon–cream cheese frosting, this easy layer cake is a keeper. Be sure the butter and cream cheese are softened for the smoothest frosting.
Selim Pepper, Candied Lemon, and Almond Teacake
尼日利亚南部地区,土壤是如此fertile, and the growing season so long, that the markets are bursting with fresh fruits and vegetables all year round. My dad has always joked, in his bookish yet playful tone, “Be careful where you discard your fruit; a tree might just sprout up from that spot!” Growing up in Lagos, Nigeria, meals in my home started and ended with cut-up chunks of fruit. Anything more formal was considered dessert and typically required a trip out. In classic Nigerian cuisine, sweets are served as street food or “small chops”—finger food that can be consumed in one to two bites, not often as a course on their own.Moving to the U.S. in my teens allowed me to broaden my understanding of dessert. Full dessert courses can be found nearly everywhere food is served in America. Even the places with the shortest menus—coffee shops, food trucks, kiosks—never fail to stock a sizable sugar rush. America’s fascination with dessert is real, and I got fully on board with it; my years as a pastry chef only furthered my surrender to its charm.These days, the dessert course is the part of the menu that comes most naturally to me at my dinner parties. I like to prepare a composed sweet “small chop,” something easy to prepare and that affords me ample opportunity to plate, serve, and mingle. This is crucial; for me, these dinners are as much about the conversation as they are about the food, so I can’t be confined in the kitchen when joy fills the dining room. A cake with only a brush of syrup might seem too simple to be a real dessert. But not this one.This teacake packs a punch, rooted in my homeland, from selim pepper. Also known as “grains of selim,” selim pepper is the seeds of a shrubby tree found across the African continent. These seeds are also known as Ethiopian pepper, Senegal pepper, and Kani pepper in Cote d’Ivoire. In Nigeria, the Igbo call them uda seeds. They can be purchased ground, or as whole seed pods; the pods are typically dried and smoked. A perfect selim pepper pod should emit a smoky aroma even before you get it out of the bag. (You canorder selim pepper pods fro m Kalustyans.)When heated, the seed pods infuse a dish—candied lemon peel syrup in this case—with their distinct musky flavor. I brush the syrup on the top of the just-out-of-the-oven almond teacake. After it’s cooled, I serve the cake by the slice with a side of soft whipped cream or ice cream. The candied lemon slices work great as a topping and are wonderful to bite into on their own.
Lemon Cakes
These cakes are perfect for the lemon dessert lover— tart, fluffy, with just the right amount of frosting. Whether you're looking for a beautiful Bundt cake or light and lemony cupcakes, these recipes are perfect for any time of year. Here, our best lemon cakes.
Lemon-Glazed Citrus-Yogurt Pound Cake
Rating: Unrated 3802
Grapefruit juice in the pound cake and lemon juice in the glaze give this sweet, tender cake an especiallycitrusytaste. Be sure to use cake flour rather than self-rising to ensure a feather-light texture.More Cake Recipes
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More Lemon Cake

Lemon Upside-Down Cake
Rating: Unrated 3
Cal Peternell likes teaching recipes that are extremely versatile, like this one. The cake is wonderful when it's made with almost any type of fruit, from figs and blood oranges to pineapple. Peternell usually uses sweet Meyer lemons from his neighbor's tree. Regular lemons are tasty too and add a bitter note that's a lovely contrast to the gooey brown-sugar topping.Plus:More Dessert Recipes and Tips
Lemon Pudding Cakes
Rating: Unrated 1006
The Good NewsThese pillowy, vitamin C-packed cakelets are adapted fromThe Greyston Bakery Cookbook. "When you overwhelm dry ingredients with wet ones, an amazing texture separation happens," Sara Kate Gillingham-Ryan says. "These cakes are rich without being too heavy."Beautiful Desserts