This Blood Orange Pound Cake is a moist, tender orange loaf cake with a gorgeous pink glaze, all thanks to fresh-squeezed blood orange juice.

This gorgeous blood orange pound cake is almost too pretty to eat but please do. It’s bursting with citrusy flavor and there’s a delicious story behind that rosy pink glaze!

What are blood oranges?
Blood oranges are a Mediterranean variety with deep blush-colored flesh, thanks to pigments called anthocyanins ~ these antioxidant compounds turn my blood orange pound cake glaze a stunning pink.
What do blood oranges taste like? They have a unique, almost berry-like flavor, and the ruby red blood orange juice is amazing to drink on its own. That juice is great in salad dressings and cocktails, too.
And I make these Blood Orange Crumble Bars with my own homemade Blood Orange Jam!
From the outside they look just like regular oranges, so check the labels and keep an eye out for them in your produce section.

I use my special method for infusing citrus zest into sugar for this and many of my orange and lemon based recipes. It doubles the intensity of orange flavor.
You can also use orange extract in this recipe. It’s optional but it bumps up the citrus flavor in baking and comes in handy when you can’t add enough fresh juice to create strong flavor without upsetting the delicate liquid to flour ratio in a recipe. Make sure to get pure orange extract, not artificial flavoring. I have Nielsen–Massey in my pantry.

Don’t skip the glaze, it gives the perfect acidic pop to every bite. I like to make it fairly thick so it stays (mostly) put. It’s too delicious to lose a single drop!


blood orange juice + powdered sugar = gorgeous glaze
- 1 cup powdered sugar (no need to sift)
- 2 Tbsp strained blood orange juice, or more to get your desired consistency.

faqs and baking tips for blood orange pound cake
There are a few different types of blood orange, Tarocco, Moro and Sanguinello. Slice open a blood orange and the flesh can be anything from rosy to almost black, depending on where they’re grown and the specific growing conditions.
Yes, it would make a delicious orange pound cake. No changes needed.
1. Yogurt
Use whole milk yogurt thinned with milk:
3/8 cup yogurt + 2 Tbsp milk
2. Sour cream
3/8 cup sour cream + 2 Tbsp milk
Yes, use a good 1:1 gf baking mix like King Arthur or Bob’s Red Mill.
This cake keeps at room temperature for 2 days, and up to 5 days refrigerated.
To freeze:
~ Let the glaze set completely (no tackiness)
~ Freeze the cake uncovered for about an hour until the glaze is firm
~ Then wrap tightly in plastic, followed by foil
~ Freeze up to 1–2 months

Blood Orange Pound Cake
Equipment
- standard 9×5 loaf pan
- parchment paper optional
Ingredients
dry ingredients
- 1 1/2 cups flour
- 1/4 tsp baking soda
- 1/2 tsp baking powder
- 1/2 tsp salt
wet ingredients
- 1 cup white sugar
- zest of 1 orange, peeled with a vegetable peeler (orange part, not the bitter white pith)
- 1/2 cup butter, at room temperature
- 2 large eggs
- 1/8 cup blood orange juice
- 3/8 cup buttermilk
- 2 Tbsp neutral vegetable oil
- 1/2 tsp orange extract, optional
- 1/2 tsp vanilla paste, or extract
glaze
- 1 cup confectioner’s sugar
- 2 Tbsp blood orange juice, or more to thin
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350F and butter your loaf pan. Line with a sling of parchment paper if desired.
- Mix the dry ingredients together in a bowl and set aside.
- Put the sugar and peeled orange zest into the bowl of a food processor and pulse/process until all the zest has been incorporated and you're left with a moist frangrant orange sugar.
- In a stand mixer or with electric beaters cream the butter and orange sugar you've just made together until light and fluffy. Scrape down the sides of the bowl as needed. Beat in the eggs, one at a time. Scrape again!
- Measure the orange juice in a glass measuring cup and then fill to the 1/2 cup mark with buttermilk. Add the oil, extract and vanilla paste.
- Alternately add the dry ingredients along with the wet, to the creamed butter mixture, beginning and ending with the dry. Don't over mix, but be sure to scrape the sides and bottom of the bowl so everything is evenly incorporated.
- Turn batter into your prepared loaf pan and spread out evenly.
- Bake for about 50 minutes or until a toothpick comes out clean. Be careful not to over bake this loaf cake.
- Cool for 10 minutes in the pan, then turn out to a rack. Let cool completely before glazing.
- To make the glaze, mix the sugar with enough of the juice to create a nice glaze consistency. Spread or drizzle on the cooled cake. If your glaze is too thin, you will lose a lot of it to 'run off'. I like to make it on the thick side and spread it with a knife or spreader.
Notes
Nutrition
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Hello! I made this cake yesterday and everybody loved it! Where I live we don’t have blood oranges so I used the regular navel ones. The cake was tender, fragant and had a great flavor. Since this recipe calls only for 1/4 tsp of baking soda and baking powder I was kind of worried because other similar recipes call for much more, but it turned out perfectly. I will definitely prepare it again.
I’m glad you love it, Maria! I absolutely love this cake too, and I think it would be great with any kind of citrus.
Hi Sue
How do you measure 3/8 cup of buttermilk.
Just eyeball a scant 1/2 cup Jackie!
I think this would be delicious even without the frosting! It looks so moist!
to answer your question, and i believe this sums up my thoughts, no; this could NOT be any more gorgeous. i can smell this right now in my head, and it is delightful. pound cake is SO GOOD, but with citrus? even better.
Nothing better than a pound cake. Love the pinky icing too!
I haven’t made a pound cake in ages, and I’m glad I went back to it, this one was easy.
Oh my, this sounds wonderful Sue. And yes you’re right, everything changes when your children are hone, no matter what their age is! I love preparing meals and culinary surprises for my grown children! ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, oh, and it gets even more fun when the grandchildren start arriving!
I can imagine that it does, Chris!
oh just the name stopped me in my tracks. this looks so yummmy!
It was hard to get the camera to pick up that pretty pink, but the nice crumb of the cake came through pretty well, I think. I know you’re vegan Janet, I should try to come up with a vegan version…don’t know if it’s possible!
The pretty pink of this glaze is due only to the juice of the orange, no coloring was added. = WOW! It’s stunning!!
And I am so glad you’re baking for your daughter and she’s home, the renewed sense of purpose thing 🙂
And I have soooooo many citrus extracts Ive been given and a little goes a long way and am always needing recipes to use them in. Perfect!
I really do mean it when I say I love the extracts. I have orange and lemon, do you have any different ones? I’d love a lime extract!
Wow. Wow. Wow. I would LOVE to have a slice of this to wake up to in the morning!
The glass of blood orange juice was almost as good as the cake, but together they made a really nice welcome home breakfast for daughter #2 🙂
you (and this) are awesome!
I don’t know about me, but the cake is tasty!