This Lemon Bundt Cake is dense, moist, and bursting with sweet lemon flavor! Made from scratch, this dessert is perfect for a summer party, but is great year-round.
This is one of my Cake recipes I know youโll want to keep on hand!
My love affair with lemon desserts is well documented, and here I am with another one!
This lemon bundt cake uses the same base recipe as my lemon pound cake, so you know it’s extra rich and buttery.
I love this cake because it’s sweet, but not overly so. The glaze increases the sweetness, but if you’re a person who doesn’t love a sickly sweet dessert, then this is the one for you!
Bundt cakes are great to bring to a party, but I also love to have them for a brunch or afternoon gathering.
What do I need to make this recipe?
- Butter – for baking recipes like this one, I recommend using unsalted butter, so you can control the amount of salt.
- Granulated sugar – there are two kinds of sugar in this recipe; granulated for the cake, and powdered for the glaze.
- Eggs – this recipe was developed and tested with large eggs.
- Sour cream – I recommend full fat sour cream for this recipe; as it adds moisture.
- Vanilla – for this recipe, I prefer to use real vanilla extract, rather than imitation.
- Lemon juice – freshly squeezed lemon juice is recommended.
- Lemon zest – the zest is where much of the classic bright lemon flavor is found.
- Milk – I recommend using whole milk for this recipe, as that’s what it’s been tested with.
- Flour – nothing fancy here, just regular all-purpose flour.
- Baking powder – make sure you’re using baking powder, not baking soda, they’re not interchangeable in baking recipes.
- Salt – I use kosher salt. If using table salt or sea salt, you may want to use a bit less than what’s called for.
- Powdered sugar – powdered sugar is used to make the glaze, so it doesn’t have any grittiness.
How to make a lemon bundt cake?
This is just an overview; the full ingredients and directions are in the recipe card toward the bottom of this post.
- Beat butter and sugar. I like to beat the butter first, then add the sugar and beat again.
- Combine other wet ingredients. This is the eggs, sour cream, vanilla, lemon juice, lemon zest, and milk.
- Beat. Mix until well combined.
- Whisk dry ingredients. I like to combine the dry ingredients in a separate bowl, so they incorporate better into the batter.
- Stir in. When adding the dry ingredients, I like to use a rubber spatula to stir them in, so the batter doesn’t get over-mixed.
- Transfer to the baking pan. Make sure the cake pan is well greased first.
- Bake. Bundt cakes take a while to bake, so keep that in mind when planning your baking.
- Make glaze. No fancy tools required, just a whisk or fork and a small bowl.
- Glaze cake. Pour or spoon the glaze over the cooled cake.
Helpful Tip!
I highly recommend using freshly squeezed lemon juice for this recipe. You need the zest as well, so you’ll already have lemons on hand. Freshly squeezed juice gives you a more realistic and flavorful lemon profile.
Variations of this recipe
- Salted butter – if you’d prefer to use salted butter, you can, just omit the salt from the recipe.
- Greek yogurt – in place of the sour cream, you can use full-fat, plain, unflavored greek yogurt.
- Lemon juice – in a pinch, you can use bottled lemon juice (although I much prefer the flavor of fresh).
- Topping options – instead of sprinkling the top of the glaze with lemon zest, you could try dotting it with some fresh blueberries or raspberries.
- Lemon syrup – to increase the moistness of this cake, you can add 1/2 cup each of water and granulated sugar, and the peel of a lemon to a saucepan. Bring mixture to a boil, and boil for about 4-5 minutes, until the sugar has dissolved. Let the syrup cool, and remove the lemon peel from the syrup. Brush onto the warm cake once it’s been turned out on the cooling rack, then once cooled, glaze as desired.
- Alternate baking pans – if you don’t have a bundt cake pan and don’t want to pick one up, you can bake these in 2 (9×5″ each) loaf pans. Bake at 325ยฐF for 40-50 minutes, until a toothpick inserted comes out clean.
FAQ’s
We’ve all been there; you baked a beautiful and delicious cake, and as soon as you try to remove it from the pan, it breaks. Half of your cake is still stuck to the pan! I know how frustrating that is! I highly recommend my pan release recipe for bundt cakes. Using a paste allows you to get it all in those nooks and crannies of the bundt cake pan, and it releases like a dream with this cake recipe. You could also use a baking spray, but those nozzles tend to get all clogged and you end up with spray all over your counter and hands.
It all comes down to the pan it’s baked in. A traditional cake is baked in a round cake pan (usually about 8″ across), or a 9×13″ (quarter sheet cake) pan. Bundt cakes are baked in fluted, and sometimes intricately designed, round pans that hold a higher volume of cake batter. Most bundt cake pans hold about 10-12 cups of batter, which means the cakes tend to be sturdier and more dense, so they can hold up to those intricate designs and not fall apart.
Making a bundt cake ahead of time
I think cakes, like most baked goods, taste best when made fresh before serving, but this cake can be made a day or so ahead of time.
Just know that it may be a little less moist.
I do recommend waiting to glaze the cake though, until you’re ready to serve it.
Storage
Leftover cake should be stored in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 3 days.
You can also refrigerate the cake (also in an airtight container), but that can lead to the cake being dried out, so I don’t typically recommend it.
My Favorite Bundt Cake Pan!
Any bundt cake pan will work for this recipe, you just want a pan that’s at least a 10 cup capacity.
Did you make this? Be sure to leave a review below and tag me @the_chunky_chef on Facebook and Instagram!
Ingredients
Lemon cake
- 1 cup unsalted butter softened to room temperature
- 1 3/4 cup granulated sugar
- 3 large eggs room temperature is best
- 1/3 cup sour cream full-fat is recommended
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 1/4 cup lemon juice freshly squeezed is best
- 2 Tbsp lemon zest
- 2/3 cup whole milk
- 3 cups all purpose flour
- 2 tsp baking powder
- 1/4 tsp kosher salt
Lemon glaze
- 2 cups powdered sugar whisked to remove any lumps
- 1 Tbsp lemon juice freshly squeezed is best
- 1 Tbsp whole milk
- 2 tsp lemon zest plus additional for garnish
Instructions
Prepare
- Preheat oven to 325ยฐF.ย Set out a 10-12 cup bundt cake pan.
Mix batter
- Add butter to a large mixing bowl and beat on medium with a hand mixer until light and fluffy. Add sugar and beat again until fluffy and combined.
- Add eggs and beat until combined. Add sour cream, vanilla, lemon juice, lemon zest and milk, then beat until combined.
- In a separate mixing bowl, add flour, baking powder and salt, whisking until well mixed.
- Add flour mixture to batter and stir with a rubber spatula until JUST combined and no flour streaks remain.
Bake
- Brush bundt pan with pan release (or baking spray), then pour in the batter, using a spatula to smooth the batter into an even layer.
- Bake in preheated oven for 55-65 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out with just a few moist crumbs on it.
Cool
- Let cake cool in the pan for about 7-10 minutes, then add a wire cooling rack upside down on top of the pan. Carefully (and using oven mitts so you don't burn yourself), grab both the pan and cooling rack and turn them right-side up. Give the top of the cake pan a couple of taps, and you should be able to lift the cake pan right off of the cake.
- Let cake continue to cool on the rack, until completely cooled.
Glaze
- While cake is cooling, in a small mixing bowl, add all sweet lemon glaze ingredients (powdered sugar, lemon juice, milk and the optional lemon zest).
- Whisk well until smooth. Once cake has cooled, remove it from the pan and drizzle the glaze over the top of the cake.
- Sprinkle with additional lemon zest and serve.
Want to save this recipe for later? Click the heart in the bottom right corner to save to your own recipe box!
Chef Tips
- I’ve estimated this recipe serves 12, but you’re free to slice the bundt cake into as many slices as you’d like.
Nutrition Disclaimer
The Chunky Chef is not a dietician or nutritionist, and any nutritional information shared is an estimate. If calorie count and other nutritional values are important to you, we recommend running the ingredients through whichever online nutritional calculator you prefer. Calories can vary quite a bit depending on which brands were used.
Tisha says
This lemon bundt cake is absolutely amazing! So good
Sandra says
This is one of my favorite summer dessert to make! You can really taste the lemon! It’s so good!
Erin | Dinners, Dishes and Dessert says
Made this for a brunch and it was a total hit! Everyone was raving about how the cake was so moist with the perfect amount of lemon flavor!
Krystle Smith says
The texture is incredibly moist and dense, and the lemon flavor is so bright and refreshing.
Beth says
I love how moist this cake is, and the crumb is wonderful. The lemon flavor is exactly the right intensity, too!