Lemon Cake

This light, 10-ingredient lemon cake recipe is lightly sweet and bright - the perfect treat to enjoy with an afternoon tea or coffee.

Lemon Cake

“This not-too-sweet, very simple cake is perfect for that ‘it’s four o’clock and I need a little something with a cup of coffee’ moment,” says Julia Turshen about this lemon cake recipe, and I completely agree. I’ve had a little slice of this lemon olive oil cake every day this week, and it’s been delightful.

This easy lemon cake recipe comes from the book Small Victories by Julia Turshen. If you think you’re not familiar with her work, you probably actually are, as she’s co-authored books with Gweneth Paltrow and Mario Batali, to name a few.

I am head-over-heels for her easy lemon cake recipe. It’s made with just 10 simple ingredients, it’s light and fluffy, and the citrus flavor makes it incredibly fresh. I think you’ll love it too.

Easy Lemon Cake Recipe

Lemon Olive Oil Cake Recipe Ingredients

I couldn’t believe that this moist, flavorful cake had only 10 ingredients! And even better, the ingredients are accessible – you likely already have all of them in your pantry. Here’s what’s in it:

  • All-purpose flour forms the base of the batter.
  • Finely ground almonds (or almond flour) give this cake a wonderful moist crumb. If you don’t have almonds, almost any ground nut will work instead!
  • Baking powder helps it rise.
  • Salt brings the bright, sweet flavors to the foreground.
  • Eggs add moisture and richness.
  • Olive oil gives it fruity notes that highlight the citrus flavor.
  • Granulated sugar sweetens it up.
  • Vanilla extract adds depth of flavor.
  • Lemon juice and zest make it vibrant & bright.
  • And a dusting of powdered sugar gives it a nice sweet finish.

Let’s bake!

Lemon Olive oil cake recipe

Lemon Cake Recipe Variations

What I love about the recipes in Small Victories is that Julia has spin-off ideas for each one. (I know how all of you love recipe options, and I do too!) Her original Afternoon Cake recipe calls for orange, but since she said any citrus would work, I made a lemon cake… for obvious reasons.

Here are the other spin offs she suggests:

  • Switch the citrus. Orange, lemon, clementine, tangerine, blood orange, and grapefruit zest all work very well.
  • Make a lemon poppyseed cake by using lemon zest and juice and adding 1 tablespoon poppy seeds to the batter.
  • Enhance the almond flavor. Julia’s recipe uses finely ground almonds, but she says you can substitute nearly any nut. If you do use ground almonds, add ½ teaspoon almond extract to the batter for a more intense almond flavor.
  • Add a swirl. Just before you put the cake in the oven, dot the top with ¼ cup raspberry jam and use a fork or the tip of a paring knife to swirl in the jam.
  • Make it nut-free. Omit the ground nuts and add an extra 1/2 cup flour to batter.

Let me know what variations you try! I’m dying to make the jam spin off next.

How to make lemon cake

Lemon Cake Recipe Tips

Each recipe also comes with a little tip (the titular small victory). Here’s a tip she shared for cutting parchment paper to fit in a round pan, which is much easier than the way I used to do it:

Rip off a piece of parchment that’s a bit bigger than your pan. Fold it into a square. Then, fold it in half to make a triangle and fold it in half again to make an even more narrow triangle. Next, place the tip of the triangle in the center of the pan. Use scissors to cut off the excess parchment that extends beyond the pan. Finally, unfold the parchment and, voila, you have a perfect circle that fits into your pan.

And a tip from me: Serve this lemon olive oil cake with dollops of coconut cream (or whipped cream) for an extra treat. It’s a lovely creamy contrast to the moist, bright cake.

Lemon cake recipe batter Lemon olive oil cake recipe batter

Click here to check out this sweet book 🙂

Small Victories by Julia Turshen

More Favorite Afternoon Treats

If you love this lemon cake recipe, make one of these sweet treats next:


4.9 from 49 reviews

Lemon Cake

 
Prep time
Cook time
Total time
 
Lemon Cake Recipe from Small Victories by Julia Turshen. Reprinted with permission.
Author:
Recipe type: Dessert
Serves: 8-12
Ingredients
  • 1 cup [120 g] all-purpose flour (I used spelt)
  • ½ cup [50 g] almond flour or finely ground almonds (see Note)
  • 1 ½ tsp baking powder
  • ½ tsp kosher salt
  • 2 eggs
  • ½ cup [120 ml] extra-virgin olive oil
  • ½ cup [100 g] granulated sugar
  • ½ tsp vanilla extract
  • Grated zest of 1 lemon, plus ¼ cup [60 ml] fresh lemon juice
  • Powdered sugar, for dusting
Instructions
  1. Preheat your oven to 350°F [180°C]. Use your hands to butter the bottom and sides of an 8-in [20-cm] cake pan, then line the bottom with a circle of parchment paper. For good measure, butter the parchment paper. Set the pan aside.
  2. In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, ground almonds, baking powder, and salt.
  3. In a large bowl, whisk the eggs until the whites and yolks are fully combined. Add the olive oil and granulated sugar and whisk until the sugar is dissolved (test by rubbing some of the mixture between two fingers). Whisk in the vanilla, lemon zest, and lemon juice. Whisk in the flour mixture.
  4. Pour the batter into the prepared pan, being sure to use a rubber spatula to get it all out of the bowl. Hold the pan just a little bit above the counter and then drop it on the counter to eliminate any air bubbles.
  5. Bake until the cake is beautifully golden brown and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean, 25 to 30 minutes. Transfer the cake, still in its pan, to a wire rack and let it cool completely. Once cool, use a dinner knife to loosen the edges of the cake from the pan and invert it onto your work surface (you might need to give the pan a little whack). Peel off and discard the parchment. Invert the cake one more time onto a serving platter so the flat side is down and the domed side is up.
  6. Just before serving, dust the cake with powdered sugar.
Notes
note: Any nut works well in this cake. To make ground nuts, just put whichever type of nut you’d like (I’ve made this cake successfully with walnuts, almonds, hazelnuts, and pistachios, and am sure pecans and pine nuts would also be great) in the food processor and blitz until they’re as fine as cornmeal. Or use a mortar and pestle. Or purchase ground nuts, which often go by the name “meal” or “flour” as in “almond meal” or “almond flour.” For a nut-free cake, simply omit the ground nuts and add an additional ½ cup [60 g] flour.

SPIN-OFFS
Feel free to SUBSTITUTE ANY CITRUS in place of the orange. Clementine, tangerine, blood orange, and grapefruit zest all work very well.

FOR A LEMON–POPPY SEED CAKE, use lemon zest and juice instead of orange and add 1 Tbsp poppy seeds to the batter.

If you’re using ground almonds, add ½ tsp ALMOND EXTRACT to the batter for a more intense almond flavor.

Just before you put the cake in the oven, dot the top with ¼ cup [80 g] RASPBERRY JAM and use a fork or the tip of a paring knife to swirl in the jam.

 

95 comments

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Rate this recipe (after making it):  

  1. Tatiana
    01.19.2017

    Ohh, thank you for sharing! its delightfull!

  2. Heather
    01.05.2017

    Fantastic. Made it for a light dessert and it is oh so good. Easy to make too.

  3. Hi the lemon cake was a great addition to my moms tea.i had to use pecans.no almonds.it came out great thanks.

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      11.28.2016

      I’m so glad you enjoyed!

  4. Hemal Shah
    11.27.2016

    Hi…!! Wont to try without eggs..any idea how it’s works and what’s the substitute for eggs ..
    Photography is so clear and perfect you use perfect light great

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      11.28.2016

      Hi Hemal, I’m not sure this one will work without eggs.

  5. Cordula
    11.13.2016

    This sounds absolutely delicious and I would love to bake it for tomorrows tea :). However I have a quick question: I would like to make a 9″ springform cake. What should the measurements be? I think the 8″ might be too little for us! Thank you, much appreciated.

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      11.13.2016

      Hi Cordula, the cake will be more flat in a 9″ pan, I’d use an 8-inch regular (non-springform) baking pan if you have one. If you want more cake, I’d recommend just making 2 🙂

  6. Aleksandra
    11.07.2016

    That’s probably the best cake I’ve made (and eaten) in a decade or so! The substitutes I used:
    – tigernut flour instead of almond flour (it’s cheaper where I live)
    – an orange instead of a lemon
    – 1 tsp of orange blossom water instead of vanilla extract
    – almond flakes instead of powdered sugar for topping
    Additionally: 1 tsp of ground cinammon & ca. 50 g chopped dark chocolate added to the dry ingredients.

    Now I’m planning to experiment changing the proportions of tigernut flour vs spelt flour and using lemons instead of oranges. In the lemon variant, chopped rosemary should work amazingly (maybe instead of dark chocolate).

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      11.07.2016

      I’m so glad you loved it! Ooh, chopped rosemary sounds delicious 🙂

  7. Addison S
    11.07.2016

    I didn’t have a round cake pan so I made these in a muffin tin. I used 9 out of 12 and got quite a bit of rise out of them but not a lot of color on the top. So I would either cut back on the baking soda or make them in the same tin but spread them out into all twelve muffins. Kept at the same baking temp. Checked every minute after 11 minutes of baking for a total of about 14, rotating half way through. Any thoughts on if this would work with a loaf pan or other tips if not baking in a round cake pan?

    The flavor is great and well suited in a muffin format for the presentation and bite sized nature.

  8. Maria from almostproperly.com
    11.05.2016

    I love the awareness you are raising with No Kid Hungry. Hunger and the fear of hunger is reality for many – even in our country. Its so visible in impoverished international communities but much less visible here. I love Julia Turshen’s recipes and this one looks wonderful, but I really just want to thank you for raising and bringing awareness to the reality of so many kids and families.

  9. Oh, oh, oh, lemon cake!!
    Looks like I can get all the ingredients here in Spain, where I live during winter time, as well, so this recipe will be used tomorrow for the Sunday tea:-)

  10. danielle
    11.04.2016

    Lovely! Wondering if flax eggs would be ok in this recipe to keep it vegan?

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      11.04.2016

      Hi Danielle, I haven’t tried but I’m thinking they might not work here – in the past I’ve had more trouble substituting recipes that call for 2 or more eggs. Of course, let me know if you give it a go 🙂

      • Julie
        12.23.2016

        You could try aquafaba (liquid in a can of chickpeas). One egg = about 3 Tbs of the liquid. I’ve had luck with other cakes.

  11. Sandra Lea
    11.04.2016

    I made this with orange and it is absolutely delicious.

  12. Pam
    11.04.2016

    I’m working from home today, so popped into my kitchen during my lunch break to make this for my afternoon tea. I love that this uses olive oil instead of butter, and otherwise doesn’t have any dairy. I made cashew flour, because that’s what I had. And, used the rest of my whole wheat pastry flour, filled-in with white + regular whole wheat flours for the remainder. Oh, and baked it in a 7″ springform pan, because that’s what I have.

    My arm survived the whisking, despite the organic (larger crystals) sugar I use. The cake baked-up beautifully in the smaller pan. I tasted a tiny fork-size wedge right out of the oven because the smell was driving me crazy, and, it was wonderful.

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      11.04.2016

      Hi Pam, I’m so glad you enjoyed it! Sounds like a lovely afternoon 🙂

  13. Natalie from workovereasy.com
    11.04.2016

    Lemon cake is one of my absolute favourites. This looks like such a good book, with a perfect title, every time I add a recipe to my favourites it truly does feel like a small victory

    – Natalie
    http://www.workovereasy.com

  14. Ruth
    11.04.2016

    I guess I have to ask about subbing gluten free flour 😉
    Grazie

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      11.04.2016

      Hi Ruth, I think an all-purpose GF flour will work in place of the regular flour here.

      • Ruth
        11.04.2016

        Molte Grazie – yumm!

  15. Jan
    11.04.2016

    I can’t wait to try this. Question- do you have to use a springform pan?

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      11.04.2016

      nope! I just didn’t have a regular 8″ cake pan.

  16. Alexandra Cummings
    11.04.2016

    Thank you so much for raising awareness about No Kid Hungry! I’ve followed your blog for a while now, and seeing your support makes me an even bigger fan. This cake looks so nice. I always crave a little something sweet in the afternoon.

  17. A big yes to this cake and to Julia and her book. Love your lemon version and the option to add almond extract. Going on my list to make right after those pumpkin waffles. 😉

    Btw, your photo of the cracked egg is awesome!

  18. This looks delicious and as you say, just right for afternoon tea in my case. I also just got Small Victories and am making my way through this wonderful cookbook. Best of luck with your No Kid Hungry campaign.

A food blog with fresh, zesty recipes.
Photograph of Jeanine Donofrio and Jack Mathews in their kitchen

Hello, we're Jeanine and Jack.

We love to eat, travel, cook, and eat some more! We create & photograph vegetarian recipes from our home in Chicago, while our shiba pups eat the kale stems that fall on the kitchen floor.