Cloudy Kitchen

  • recipes
    • Breads
    • Brownies
    • Cakes
    • Choux
    • Cookies
    • Doughnuts
    • Ice Cream
    • Macarons
    • Pies
    • Quickbreads
    • Small Batch Baking
    • More →
  • about
  • contact
  • products
menu icon
go to homepage
  • recipes
  • about
  • contact
  • products
  • calculators
  • subscribe
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
    • TikTok
  • search icon
    Homepage link
    • recipes
    • about
    • contact
    • products
    • calculators
    • subscribe
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
    • TikTok
  • ×
    Home » Recipes » Loaf Cakes and Quickbreads

    The Lemon Pound Cake we can't stop eating

    By Erin Clarkson on Apr 14, 2025
    5 from 29 reviews
    57 community comments
    This post may contain affiliate links.

    Jump to Recipe

    Meet your new favourite loaf cake: a soft, buttery lemon pound cake that goes ALL IN on lemon. I'm talking lemon zest in the batter, a lemon soak that's brushed on after baking, and a glossy lemon glaze that adds a bright punch of flavor (plus that perfect crackle on top!). The addition of sour cream to the batter ensures this loaf-style cake is ultra-moist and tender, too!

    slice of lemon pound cake on paper

    Hi hi! I am just jumping in to share this lemon pound cake loaf recipe with you! I have been making and loving my vanilla sour cream pound cake recipe for a long time now, and this lemon one is just a wee variation on it.

    Like the original, the texture is lush, dense (in a good way) and has a super tender crumb. The lemon flavour comes from fresh lemon in three forms - zest rubbed into the sugar before you start mixing the pound cake batter, a lemon soak brushed on hot from the oven, and a deliciously tangy lemon glaze which goes onto the cooled cake.

    It's a triple lemon situation, and it's a triple lemon situation that I know you are going to love.

    lemon cake on wire rack
    Out of the oven ready for the lemon soak
    glazed lemon cake
    Freshly glazed and ready to set

    What makes my pound cake special: Lemon three ways - zest, soak, and glaze.

    Often you see a recipe for a lemon pound cake, and there is just a hint of lemon. Not here. This lemon cake has lemon in it three ways to ensure a really deep lemon flavour:

    • Zest. Instead of adding juice to the cake which could make it claggy (the nz word for kind of soggy!), I just added a ton of lemon zest to the batter of the cake. I found during testing using 10g of lemon zest (which is about 4 lemons worth), and rubbing it into the sugar that is used in the batter that it really releases the oils and gives amazing flavour.
    • Soak. This step feels like you're going to end up with a soggy cake because it feels counterintuitive to add that much liquid to a warm cake - I promise you I felt the same way at the start, but the cake absorbs it. You make a quick syrup while the cake is resting. I boil the sugar and water together first and then add the lemon juice to keep it nice and fresh.
    • Glaze. I use the lemon glaze I put on everything for glazing this lemon pound cake. It is super easy, made with only powdered sugar and lemon juice, and is super satisfying to paint on. It sets up with a perfect crusty finish that is just so so good.
    adding lemon zest to sugar for cake
    Rub in zest using your hands
    adding lemon soak to cake
    Brush on the soak using a pastry brush.
    creamed butter and sugar
    Creamed butter and sugar mix
    adding sour cream to batter
    Sour cream adds moisture and texture

    Pan Size Matters - the best pan to use.

    Don't be tempted to use the wrong sized pan - you will be so sad. Let me explain why. I talk about this in depth in my sour cream pound cake recipe (and there are some diagrams there for you too!)

    I made this in a 1 lb loaf pan (8.5" x 4.5" x 2.5" / 21.5 x 11.5 x 6.3cm), which is the same size that I use for my banana bread recipe. I used this size for the post as it is the most likely size that people will own.

    However, when I make this at home for myself, I always use a pullman pan. A pullman pan is much squarer in shape, and gives a taller, sharper cornered cake than the pound pan.

    Because the pullman is slightly larger than the 1 pound pan, I scale the recipe up slightly - there are quantities for this size in the notes section of the recipe.

    cake batter ready to go
    The batter should be fluffy and thick
    cake batter being added to pan
    Add to pan then smooth down with a spoon

    The perfect make ahead recipe.

    This recipe is great to make ahead of time as it stays super moist - I always test this as part of my recipe testing process. In fact, i've eaten it five days after i've made it and it was still amazing. If you are making a day or two before I would glaze it, otherwise if you are making a few days ahead I would add the soak, then wrap in plastic wrap and store in the fridge until you are ready to glaze and eat it - up to five days ahead of time.

    Pound cake can also be frozen - wrap the unglazed cake well in plastic wrap and store in the freezer. Defrost at room temperature before glazing and eating.

    cake batter in loaf pan
    Batter in pan - smooth down with a spoon.
    line of butter down middle of cake
    Optional butter line down the middle.

    ❤️ Made this recipe and love it? ❤️

    I would LOVE for you to leave me a review and star rating below to let me know how you liked it! Also, please make sure to tag me on Instagram!

    Answers to your baking questions

    Over the years, many of you have asked me questions about:

    • baking in grams
    • adjusting oven temperatures
    • what kind of salt to use
    • and many more!

    I've curated and answered them all for your easy reference in this frequently asked questions post!

    Print
    clock clock iconcutlery cutlery iconflag flag iconfolder folder iconinstagram instagram iconpinterest pinterest iconfacebook facebook iconprint print iconsquares squares iconheart heart iconheart solid heart solid icon
    slice of lemon pound cake on paper

    Lemon Pound Cake

    5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star 5 from 29 reviews
    • Author: Erin Clarkson
    • Prep Time: 20 minutes
    • Cook Time: 1 hour 10 minutes
    • Total Time: 2 hours
    • Yield: One Loaf Cake
    • Category: Cakes
    • Method: Baking
    • Cuisine: American
    Print Recipe
    Pin Recipe

    Description

    Meet your new favourite loaf cake: a soft, buttery lemon pound cake that goes ALL IN on lemon. I'm talking lemon zest in the batter, a lemon soak that's brushed on after baking, and a glossy lemon glaze that adds a bright punch of flavor (plus that perfect crackle on top!). The addition of sour cream to the batter ensures this loaf-style cake is ultra-moist and tender, too!


    Ingredients

    Scale

    Lemon Pound Cake

    • 300g caster sugar or granulated sugar 
    • 10g lemon zest (from about four lemons)
    • 115g unsalted butter, at room temperature
    • 1 tbsp vanilla extract or vanilla bean paste
    • 3 large eggs, at room temperature (about 160g, not including the shell) 
    • 170g sour cream, at room temperature
    • 185g all-purpose flour 
    • ½ tsp kosher salt (use less if you are using table salt or salted butter)
    • ¼ tsp baking soda 
    • Small amount of softened butter for piping down the middle of the cake (optional)

    Lemon Soak

    • 25g caster sugar or granulated sugar
    • 25g water 
    • 50g fresh lemon juice

    Lemon Glaze 

    • One batch of lemon glaze


    Instructions

    LEMON POUND CAKE

    1. Preheat the oven to 330°f / 165°c. Grease and line a 1 lb (8.5" x 4.5" x 2.5" (21.5 x 11.5 x 6.3cm) loaf pan with two pieces of parchment paper so that the entire of the inside of the pan is lined. Leave the edges overhanging to form a sling to allow for easy removal. Clip the edges down with binder clips if needed. 
    2. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment or in a large bowl if using an electric mixer, combine the sugar and lemon zest. Using your hands, rub the lemon zest into the sugar to help release the oils and enhance the lemon flavour. 
    3. Add the butter and vanilla, and then cream together until light and fluffy, and the mixture has lightened in colour. Scrape down the sides once or twice to ensure that all the mixture is evenly creamed. 
    4. Add in the eggs one at a time, mixing well after each addition and scraping down the sides as needed. 
    5. Add in the sour cream, and mix to combine. In a medium mixing bowl, combine the flour, salt, and baking soda. Add to the mixture and mix until just incorporated. Scrape the bowl to ensure there are no unmixed pockets of butter at the bottom of the bowl. 
    6. Transfer the mixture to the prepared loaf pan, and smooth out, making sure there are no large air bubbles. If using, pipe a small line of softened butter down the middle of the cake. 
    7. Bake the pound cake for about an hour and 10 minutes, checking after an hour. The outside will be deep golden brown and when a skewer or knife is inserted into the middle of the cake it should come out clean or with a few moist crumbs attached. 
    8. Remove the cake from the oven and leave to stand in the pan for about 15 minutes while you make the lemon soak.
    9. Remove the cake from the pan and place onto a wire rack. Using a pastry brush, brush the lemon soak over every surface of the cake - top, sides, bottom etc, carefully lifting up the cake to get it on the sides. It will seem like a lot of liquid, but brush all of it on - the cake can take it. 
    10. Once you have applied the soak, leave the cake to cool completely on the wire rack. Once cooled, glaze if desired using Lemon Glaze and leave to stand until dried. 
    11. Slice using a sharp knife. Store leftovers in an airtight container at room temperature for up to a week.
    12. While the cake rests in the pan, make the lemon soak. 

    LEMON SOAK

    1. In a small saucepan, combine the sugar and water. Place over medium heat, bring to the boil, then remove from the heat and leave to stand for a few minutes. Add the lemon juice and mix well to combine. 

    Notes

    Piping a line of butter down the middle of the cake means that you can control where the split ends up when it bakes - it gives you that nice middle divot which is classic on a pound cake. This is a totally optional step and you can absolutely leave it out.

    Quantities for making in a pullman pan: 

    400g sugar 
    12g lemon zest
    155g unsalted butter
    1 tablespoon vanilla
    4 eggs 
    225g sour cream 
    245g all-purpose flour
    1 teaspoon kosher salt (use half the amount if you are using table salt, and even less if you have used salted butter)
    ¼ teaspoon baking soda 

    For the lemon soak: 32g sugar, 32g water, 65g lemon juice.

    Follow the directions as written, but bake the cake in a lined pullman pan. Increase the baking time to about 1 hour 15 minutes. The baking soda quantity is the same as written in the recipe - this version comes out with a slightly tighter crumb.

    I have also made a passionfruit version - to make this I kept the lemon zest in the batter (you could leave it out too), then just subbed fresh passionfruit juice for the lemon juice in the soak and the glaze.

    Did you make this recipe?

    Tag @cloudykitchen on Instagram and use the hashtag #cloudykitchen

    Key Ingredients

    • Lemon
    « 2 Ingredient Lemon Glaze
    Grandma-Style Condensed Milk Cookies (Massive Batch) »

    Filed Under: Loaf Cakes and Quickbreads

      Leave a comment & rating, or ask a question Cancel reply

      If you made this recipe then I would love for you to leave me a review below to let me know how you liked it! If you have recipe questions please feel free to leave them below too!

      Recipe rating 5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star

      Share your photo!Inspire others by uploading an image of your creation along with your review The maximum upload file size: 5 MB. You can upload: image. Drop files here


      Comments

    1. Sha says

      April 14, 2025 at 11:41 pm

      My Southern grandmother always made me her lemon cake with lemon juice glaze every time my family took the yearly trek to NC. No one has her recipe. But I will say it was more like a pound cake made in a tube pan. So I made your recipe and first bite made me smile and think of my grandmother! Thanks!

      Reply
      • Erin Clarkson says

        April 15, 2025 at 4:40 pm

        Hi! Ahhhh yay I love this so, so much! Thank you so much for the lovely review x

        Reply
    2. Cecile says

      April 15, 2025 at 12:05 am

      Hi, I love pound cake
      Can I bake it in a bunte cake pan?
      Thanks

      Reply
      • Erin Clarkson says

        April 15, 2025 at 4:39 pm

        Hi! I haven't tried yet sorry but I want to!

        Reply
    3. Pamela Hyett says

      April 16, 2025 at 7:34 pm

      Hi, Erin
      I made this lemon cake yesterday. The taste is divine. But the cake didn't raise like it should have and was very dense. I baked it in the correct sized bread pan. What do you think I did wrong?

      Reply
      • Erin Clarkson says

        April 17, 2025 at 4:17 pm

        Hi, sounds like your baking soda might be out of date!

        Reply
    4. Sara says

      April 17, 2025 at 5:42 pm

      Made this as an Easter gift for my in laws and had to keep some for myself it was sooo good! Thanks for a great recipe, very quick to make with simple ingredients but so delicious!

      Reply
    5. Chessa says

      April 17, 2025 at 10:31 pm

      FUCK. This was so fucking delicious. I love that the recipe uses grams, because I hate using cups. I just wish I had the beautiful yellow butter from NZ to make it look lemony. USA needs to up our butter game for sure. Anyways... thanks for this cake, I'm going to go make it again because well... it's that good.

      Reply
      • Erin Clarkson says

        April 18, 2025 at 5:43 pm

        So happy you loved! You can get nz butter in the US now - I think the grass fed from costco is nz?

        Reply
    6. Melissa says

      April 18, 2025 at 8:50 am

      Hi, to bake in the tube pan did you use quantities for the regular loaf pan or the Pullman pan? Thanks!

      Reply
    7. Hanna L says

      April 19, 2025 at 11:43 am

      I made this and it is so good! For next baking time I wanted to ask what the fat content of the sour cream is? In Finland it varies from 6% to 15% and I want to follow your recipes as well as possible 🙂

      Reply
      • Erin Clarkson says

        May 05, 2025 at 6:35 pm

        Hi there! I think it's about 22% here 🙂

        Reply
    8. Jen S says

      April 21, 2025 at 6:34 am

      I was pre-heating my oven and making the batter, as per the recipe, when I realised my oven was not heating. So, I decided to try this pound cake in my air-fryer. Using the bake mode, at 160°C, I baked the cake for 50 minutes. I also replaced the lemons with oranges. And while Erin hasn't tested this herself, it worked beautifully for me. This cake tastes amazing, full of flavour and more-ish. Highly recommend making this!

      Reply
    9. Josh says

      April 21, 2025 at 12:19 pm

      This was a great cake. Perfectly done at 1:10. My glaze was a little thick for spreading, but I should’ve just thinned it out.

      This was my first recipe I’ve made from you since following on instagram, and it couldn’t have turned out better.

      I cut small slices of butter to place in the middle instead of piping it in. Worked great and the cake split perfectly in the middle.

      Reply
    10. Jessica Moore says

      April 23, 2025 at 9:53 am

      How could I make this recipe in a Bundt pan? Do I double, triple the recipe or? Thanks 😊

      Reply
      • Erin Clarkson says

        May 05, 2025 at 6:34 pm

        Hi! Someone else just did this, I think they scaled the recipe up to use 5 eggs and did it in a 10 cup bundt!

        Reply
    11. Madison says

      April 26, 2025 at 10:08 pm

      This recipe is SO good. Rich yet tart- such deep lemon flavor. Like all of Erin’s recipes it’s easy to follow, highly researched and delicious. I especially like it cold from the fridge.

      Reply
    12. Lori says

      May 05, 2025 at 6:07 am

      I tried the first time in a loaf 🍞 pan and it was fantastic but I didn’t get the nice edges as my pan was a bit lightweight.

      For the second time I’ve done it in a NordicWare 10 cup Bundt pan and it’s come out perfectly. I scaled the recipe by 1-2/3 (so 5 eggs) and it filled the 10 cup pan well. I buttered and lightly flour dusted the pan, let of cool for 15-20 minutes then flipped it out with no sticking.

      Reply
      • Erin Clarkson says

        May 05, 2025 at 5:31 pm

        Ohhhhhh this looks so good! I have to try it this way! Thank you so much for testing it!

        Reply
    13. Sarah says

      May 06, 2025 at 2:33 am

      Erin you have done it again! This has the BEST lemon flavour and amazing texture. We haven't even finished the loaf and I'm planning on making another. This will definitely be on my regular rotation.

      Reply
    14. Madison says

      May 08, 2025 at 8:57 am

      This recipe is incredible and our family absolutely loved it for Easter/anytime/always. It’s especially good cold out of the fridge 😉

      Reply
    15. Melissa says

      May 08, 2025 at 10:28 am

      I loved this recipe! Super delicious moist pound cake, and a lovely tart lemon soak and glaze!

      Reply
    16. Tascha says

      May 14, 2025 at 11:49 am

      I've been alternating between making this and the Super Lush Pound Cake. Both are outstanding. I have to try this with passion fruit, I know it will be amazing.

      Reply
    17. Julie Jones says

      May 15, 2025 at 2:58 am

      I made this for Mother's Day, and it came out absolutely beautifully! I used all the suggestions, including piping a line of butter on top to make it crack, and I can confidently say that I'll make this again. Even my husband, who normally turns his nose up at baked goods that aren't chocolate, thoroughly enjoyed this. I wanted to take a photo, but it disappeared too quickly!

      Reply
    18. Hannah says

      May 31, 2025 at 3:00 am

      Hi Erin!

      Been itching to make a lemon pound cake for ages, and your triple-lemon kick sounds BANGER, also THANK YOU for posting this in grams and NOT in cups (yuck).

      I wanted to add in some blueberries and wondered, as we don't have any 'fresh' here (I use frozen), so after tossing them in some flour, would your recommend increasing/decreasing any dry/wet ingredients for a more even-bake?

      Thanks!
      x

      Reply
      • Erin Clarkson says

        June 02, 2025 at 9:27 pm

        Hi! I haven't tried sorry but it shouuld be thick enough that they don't sink? Please let me know how it goes though if you do try it!

        Reply
    19. Lisa says

      June 07, 2025 at 1:41 am

      What a perfect cake for a winters day to use up the lemon haul from the garden. Easy to make and absolutely delicious. I couldn’t wait for the cake to cool before glazing and eating hot! Thanks Erin for another winner recipe.

      Reply
    20. Laura Viero says

      June 10, 2025 at 5:52 am

      A simple but delicious recipe with a great crumb and easy to make. The soak and then the glaze make it really lemon-y and the crumb is lovely.

      Reply
    21. Becca says

      June 26, 2025 at 7:44 pm

      I made the cake batter and baked the cake with no issues - it looks perfect. While I let it cool in the pan, I noticed there weren’t instructions for the soak - it just says to make the soak and apply it. I took this to mean, mix and apply. It took me until making the glaze to realize that the directions for the soak are at the very end… Hopefully my unboiled soak didn’t ruin the whole loaf! I knew it felt wrong to slather on the equivalent of cold lemonade! I suppose I will make a second batch and make it the correct way just to compare.

      Reply
      • Erin Clarkson says

        June 30, 2025 at 11:09 pm

        Hi, oh no! I always try to give the recipe just a quick skim read before I start to make sure I have an idea of the order of operations! I'm sure it would have ended up yum anyway, more of a lemon crystal cake? We used to have one as kids where you didn't dissolve the sugar on purpose so it was crunchy on the top!

        Reply
        • Becca says

          July 05, 2025 at 5:41 pm

          I should know better by now with how many times I have made a mistake like this by diving in without pre-reading! The first loaf quickly disappeared so I made a second the correct way, and I honestly preferred the cold glaze! It was slightly less sweet, but both versions were incredible.

          Reply
    22. Melody says

      June 29, 2025 at 6:13 pm

      Yum! This was super easy to make and also a hit with everyone for afternoon tea.

      Reply
    23. b says

      July 02, 2025 at 1:05 am

      this was meant to be FIVE STARS! i'd give it ten if i could **********

      Reply
    24. Sherryn says

      July 05, 2025 at 9:23 pm

      I made Cloudy Kitchen’s lemon pound cake and it was a total hit! I swapped the sour cream for Greek yogurt and it worked perfectly, no issues at all. We skipped the glaze because we were too impatient to let the cake cool before diving in, but honestly it didn’t need it. The lemon syrup alone makes the loaf incredibly moist. Highly recommend - as usual Erin never misses!

      Reply
    25. Leanne says

      July 10, 2025 at 6:40 pm

      This recipe is sooo good! Made it the other night but since my daughter is allergic to dairy I swapped the sour cream for raglan coconut yoghurt (same quantity) and the butter for nuttelex (same quantity). Turned out so well!

      Reply
    26. Claire says

      July 26, 2025 at 6:30 pm

      This recipe is spot on, so moist, tender, and lovely.
      I needed to altitude adjust it (baking at 6000 ft). I used 150g AP and 50 g bread flour (King Arthur). I also baked it at 360 for the first 20 minutes till it set.

      Reply
    27. Lou says

      August 05, 2025 at 10:43 am

      Hi Erin! Do you think I could use regular or greek yogurt instead of the sour cream? Where I live it's shockingly hard to find quality sour cream that isn't basically vegetable oil with thickeners

      Reply
      • Erin Clarkson says

        August 05, 2025 at 4:44 pm

        Hi, yes greek yoghurt should work! Regular will be too thin

        Reply
    28. Lisa says

      August 11, 2025 at 12:10 pm

      Oh my WORD this is delicious. I followed the recipe exactly but added some fresh sage (I have loads I need to use up from the garden). It turned out so perfect I couldn't believe it. I love that this author uses weights as I'm a terrible baker and typically my bakes don't turn out well when I just use cups as measurements. Also, she's right about the soak, this loaf can handle that much liquid. I thought it'd be a little soggy and it wasn't in the slightest, it was perfectly moist. I also added the lemon glaze she has linked and it's also delightful. I'll absolutely make this again!

      Reply
      • Erin Clarkson says

        August 11, 2025 at 3:37 pm

        Yummm it looks so good I bet it was so delicious with the sage!

        Reply
    29. James says

      September 27, 2025 at 12:17 am

      I’m perplexed by the total lack of leaving??? Just 1/4tsp baking soda? No baking powder or self raising flour?? No whipped egg whites or anything? I want to try this but no chance I’m not wasting good ingredients to make a brick?? Usually I trust your recipes so is this right?

      Reply
      • Erin Clarkson says

        September 28, 2025 at 5:22 pm

        Yes, it's correct! Often pound cake doesn't have any at all.

        Reply
    30. james says

      September 28, 2025 at 5:25 pm

      I was concerned that the cake wouldn't rise with only a small amount of bicarb as the leavener, but Erin you have never let me down before! Made the cake and it was stunning, one of the best I've ever eaten. Trust the process lol.

      I made mine in a 32cmx12cm loaf pan and scaled up 1.5x to accommodate. Subbed sour cream for 0% fat quark because its all I can get in my europoor ah village, it worked fine. I swapped lemon for orange 1-1 as its orange season here right now and again, it was flawless. I get amazing butter which comes from Azores, its the most incredible deep yellow colour and has the most pronounced 'butter' flavour I've ever had. I can actually get breton butter quite easily here too and the Azores is in my opinion even better.

      I really appreciate the smaller technical details that you put on your recipes that so many others don't even consider. I am so grateful for the egg weight in grams especially, like what even is a 'large egg' its not accurate. For mine 4 eggs got me within 10g of my target weight, luckily I had egg wash in the fridge so that helped me be exact. The butter line is beautiful I'm going to experiment with that in the future. I always love your icings too.

      My only minor flaw was that I took the cake out a little early to test and caused the crown to deflate a little. This cake rises slowly and needs trust and patience. My butter line ended up piping a little bit squiggly so for best effect get that straight, this was a new technique for me so I can't wait to try it again!

      The cake had the most beautiful crust with an incredible deep caramelized butter flavour, It's dense and heavy without being stodgy and it's very rich and sweet but not overbearing.

      i took mine to a village party today and everyone loved it, my Mrs's octogenarian grandmother did especially, she proclaimed that if she ever gets married, then she wants me to make the cake 🤣

      Thanks Erin.

      Reply
      • Erin Clarkson says

        September 28, 2025 at 5:27 pm

        So happy you loved! It looks great!

        Reply
    31. Belinda says

      November 19, 2025 at 8:30 pm

      Yum. Read the instructions for the glaze (I didn't notice that you add the lemon juice last). Great cake, and the glaze is a highlight and well worth it.

      Reply
    32. Mona Abd-El Aziz says

      January 13, 2026 at 6:16 am

      Hi Erin,
      I’m a huge fan of your recipes, they’re always flawless! I alternate between this and the super lush pound cake quite often and they are a hit! I’m wondering if I want to make an orange cake, can I substitute the lemon with Orange? Or it won’t be the same?

      Reply
      • Erin Clarkson says

        January 15, 2026 at 2:32 pm

        Hi, I haven't tried but I don't see why it wouldn't work!

        Reply
    33. Patty says

      February 05, 2026 at 9:45 am

      I based this today in an 8”x8” metal pan instead of a loaf pan and baked for 45 min and subbed Greek yogurt for the sour cream (I just didn’t have any), and it came out great. Especially the lemon glaze! Yum! Perfect lemon cake.

      Reply
    34. Lauren says

      February 15, 2026 at 8:04 pm

      So often I find lemon loaf to be vanilla loaf with a hint of lemon, but not this one!! It is so lemony and delicious. It's a fairly sturdy loaf but has such a soft, tender crumb at the same time. This is the only lemon loaf I will ever need to make again!! The only change I made was I added less lemon juice to the final glaze so it would have a thicker drip (that's my favorite), but everything else I kept exactly the same-no need to mess with the perfection of it!!

      Reply
    35. rambam says

      March 04, 2026 at 4:03 pm

      I have made this recipe so many times and each time it has been absolutely delicious - I’ve brought it to dinner parties and served it as pudding on new years. Perfect texture, stays moist for days, sweet and tart in flavour. Highly recommend!
      Looking forward to trying more of your recipes

      Reply
    36. Anna C. says

      March 04, 2026 at 7:48 pm

      Absolutely loved this recipe. I’ve never made a pound cake but the instructions & tips made it very easy. I’m a college student with very little baking experience and mine turned out great! Thank you for the recipes! I will be trying your other recipes!

      Reply
    37. Jess says

      March 05, 2026 at 6:01 pm

      Love this cake! I took a risk and made the pullman amount of batter but cooked it in a 23cm round pan. It was absolutely perfect - I made it for a birthday cake and everyone loved it. Served it with Greek yogurt and it was delicious. Thanks for the recipe, will definitely be making again.

      Reply
    38. Jean says

      March 23, 2026 at 5:44 pm

      Made this, and classic neuro spicy didnt have any parchment paper, so put it in mini muffin with their liners for 12 min. Mouthfuls of joy.

      Reply
    39. Amanda Lewellen says

      March 23, 2026 at 11:53 pm

      I have a 13” x 4” Pullman I’d like to use for this recipe. Do you have scaling instructions for the larger Pullman? Typically I do 1.5, but don’t want to overdo it.

      Reply
      • Erin Clarkson says

        March 25, 2026 at 4:41 pm

        Hi, I did a 1.5 of the pullman quantities and it worked great 🙂

        Reply
    40. . says

      March 24, 2026 at 1:29 am

      Delicious, five stars.
      I did back off the lemon zest to make it more vanilla flavoured and kid friendly.

      Reply
    41. Kristine says

      April 16, 2026 at 8:49 am

      Such a great cake and recipe! I made it for my birthday to bring to work. This was months ago, and people still ask for the link to the recipe. I almost didn't trust the amount of lemon soak, but the cake really could handle it! Thank you, Erin!

      Reply
    Erin Clarkson Cloudy Kitchen

    HI, I'M ERIN

    My recipes range from quick & easy all the way to complex & impressive. I love the science and process of recipe development almost as much as baking itself. I specialize in rigorously tested recipes that are fun, reliable, and accurate.

    More about me →

    • https://www.instagram.com/cloudykitchen/
    • Facebook
    • Pinterest
    • TikTok

    Popular

    • Christmas Macaron Box
    • close up of roll with cream cheese frosting
      10 Minute Cream Cheese Frosting for Cinnamon Rolls
    • cookie on sheet pan with parchment paper
      Brown Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies
    • burger bun on wire rack
      Homemade Burger Buns

    Footer

    Cloudy Kitchen Classics

    • Chocolate chip cookies
    • Brownie cookies
    • Chocolate cookies
    • Vanilla cookies
    • Cheesecake brownies
    • Focaccia bread
    • Ciabatta recipe

    Popular Cookie Recipes

    • Oatmeal raisin cookies
    • Peanut butter oatmeal cookies
    • White chocolate chip cookies
    • Gingersnap cookies
    • Shortbread cookies
    • Snickerdoodles cookies
    • Anzac biscuits

    Easy Breads & Buns

    • Hot cross buns
    • Sticky buns
    • Burger buns
    • Dinner rolls
    • Soft pretzels
    • Pretzel buns
    • Garlic knots

    Links

    • About
    • Contact
    • Web Stories

    Newsletter

    • Sign Up! for emails and updates

    Resources

    • FAQ
    • Policies
    • All recipes at once

    Copyright © 2026 Cloudy Kitchen

    Support by Foodie Digital