“I made this blueberry lemon cake for a very special person’s 60th birthday, and it was a hit all around! It’s a very lemony, truly delicious cake, and actually quite simple to make. Thank you for this stand-out recipe!” ~Kristin
blueberry lemon cake combines 2 of my favorite flavors
My Blueberry Lemon Cake is a vibrant layer cake recipe bursting with juicy berries and fresh lemon. It makes a wonderfully unique birthday cake, and I’ve yet to meet a soul who can resist this fabulous dessert. Lemon paired with berries is a natural for spring and summer desserts because the flavors are light and bright. The fruity combo has a cult following, something special happens when the two get together that drives us wild.
This fan favorite cake joins lots of other lemon/berry desserts on the site ~
what you’ll need
- cake flour ~ I love the tender texture that you get with cake flour, but you can substitute all purpose flour as well.
- sugar
- fresh lemon
- butter
- buttermilk
- eggs
- fresh blueberries
- confectioner’s sugar
- baking powder and salt
I make a simple lemon sugar for this recipe
I give the lemon and blueberries equal billing in this recipe; I’ve used almost an entire pint of berries in the cake batter, but that’s balanced by the use of a unique lemon infused sugar, as well as a super tangy lemon buttercream frosting to tie it all together.
- I make lemon sugar by processing granulated sugar with the zest of lemon, and the result is an aromatic, super lemony sugar that gives a vibrancy to cakes, and other baked goods like nothing else.
ideas for decorating this blueberry lemon cake
There are lots of ways to garnish this cake, all of them gorgeous. Of course you can leave it plain, but why?
- You might decorate the top with edible flowers ~ purple pansies would be perfect.
- You could simply mound fresh blueberries in the center, accented with fine strips of lemon zest. A shower of powdered sugar helps define the berries and make them pop.
- You could also do it like I did but substitute small mint leaves for the thyme. I think it would be really nice to slice some of the berries in half crosswise to show off their beautiful interiors. If you do this, slice them just before serving.
You can see the lovely fluffy crumb of the cake in the photos…I’m a stickler for that texture in cakes. This recipe gives you the light fluffy result of a boxed mix, with the flavor and character that only a homemade cake can give.
how to bake a fluffy blueberry lemon cake every time ~
- Preheat your oven, this is important! The oven has to be at temperature when you slide your cake in or it won’t rise properly. I use an inexpensive oven thermometer to double check the temperature. Did you know that the majority of ovens do not run true to temperature?? That can spell disaster for baking.
- Make sure you prep your pans with butter, flour, and a round of parchment paper at the bottom, and do this first, so you can bake your cake immediately after you’ve mixed it. Just trace the bottom of the pan on a piece of parchment to get the right size. You can also buy inexpensive packs of ready made parchment circles on Amazon, in any size, and they’re super handy.
- Follow the recipe. It sounds silly, but it makes a difference…baking is a complex chemical process and cake recipes are carefully composed. Changes are risky.
- A stand mixer or electric beater is important when making cakes because you’ll need it for creaming the butter and sugar together. Make sure to beat for the correct amount of time, don’t skip or skimp on this step. You’re insuring a light fluffy cake by beating in all that lovely air.
- Your ingredients should be at room temperature, especially the butter and eggs. That helps them to emulsify together and create a smooth batter.
- Don’t open the oven to check on your cakes during the first 2/3 of the baking time. If you need to check or rearrange your cake pans, do it quickly so you don’t lose precious oven heat.
- The cake is done when it springs back lightly when touched in the center, when it has just started pulling away from the sides of the pan, and when a toothpick inserted in the deepest part comes out without wet batter on it. Don’t over bake.
This simple blueberry lemon cake comes together quickly, and when I’m pressed for time I’ll make the cake layers ahead and frost it later that day, or even the next day. The cake can stay out on the counter for a day, but after that should be refrigerated, if you have any left, that is!
Blueberry Lemon Cake
Ingredients
- 3 cups cake flour (you can use regular flour)
- 1 Tbsp baking powder
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 1 3/4 cup granulated sugar
- zest of 1 lemon, peeled with a vegetable peeler (no white pith)
- 1 cup unsalted butter, at room temperature
- 3 jumbo or 4 large eggs, at room temperature
- 2 tsp lemon paste, optional
- 1 cup buttermilk
- 1/3 cup fresh lemon juice
- 1 pint blueberries
lemon buttercream
- 1 cup unsalted butter, at room temperature
- 6 cups confectioner's sugar
- 6-8 Tbsp fresh lemon juice
garnish
- blueberries
- thyme sprigs
- powdered sugar
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350F Grease and flour two 9-inch round cake pans, putting a round of parchment paper at the bottom of each one.
- Whisk together the flour, baking powder and salt and set aside.
- Put the sugar and lemon zest into a food processor and process until moist, pale yellow, and no large pieces of zest remain. This will take under a minute.
- Cream the butter and sugar together in a stand mixer for 3 minutes, scraping down the sides of the machine as necessary.
- Beat in the eggs, one at a time, scraping down the sides of the bowl in between each addition. Beat in the lemon paste, if you’re using it.
- Turn the mixer to low and add the flour mixture, and just before it’s completely mixed in, add the buttermilk and lemon juice. Blend until combined, but don’t over-mix. I like to finish by hand to get everything incorporated.
- Gently fold in the blueberries. Note: I didn’t use quite the whole pint. Then divide the batter equally between the two prepared pans. Spread out to an even layer.
- Bake the cakes in the center of the oven for about 35 minutes, or until just beginning to pull away from the sides of the pan, the top springs back when touched, and a toothpick comes out without any wet batter on it (moist crumbs are fine.)
- Let the cakes cool on a rack for 10 minutes, then remove them from the pans and continue to cool completely before frosting.
- To make the frosting, beat the soft butter and sugar together, gradually adding enough lemon juice to create a creamy spreadable frosting. If it is too thick, add more lemon juice, and if it is too thin, add a little more sifted sugar.
- Frost the cake and then decorate as you like.
Fabulous recipe! My kids liked it so much they asked it to be there wedding cake .
Haha, love that, this would make a beautiful wedding cake!
Can you also used lemon curd?
Would regular flour be plain or self-raising flour. Thank you for your recipe it looks lovely.
That’s plain flour Charlotte.
Love this recipe! However, my cake did not rise nearly as much as the one in the recipe picture. Also, the icing was more yellow with the 6 TSP of lemon juice. It was not white like in the picture.
Love this recipe! Iโve made it for an anniversary cake for my husband and me and for a birthday cake. My sister-in-law is a dairy-free, gluten-free vegan (she does do eggs, however) so I was wondering if I could sub the buttermilk for a soy milk + lemon juice โbuttermilkโ and sub almond, oat, flour or a combo of almond + oat flour for the cake flour in this recipe? Have any of you fellow bakers had success with this? Thanks!
You need to beat your butter on high for about 7 minutes until it becomes almost white. Your icing won’t be stark white, but it will be lighter.
In your hints to making a great cake, you state to coat pans with butter and flour. My question is about the parchment on the bottom of pan. I am assuming you put the parchment in the pan after coating is wiith butter and flour?
yes, that’s what I do.
Do you think this cake would hold up to 2 day shipping? If so, do you have any advice on packaging? Thanks.
Gosh, mailing a frosted layer cake is a pretty big undertaking, you’d need to package it tightly in a box, preferably insulated, and make sure to label the outside so postal workers know it’s perishable, fragile, and which side is up, etc.
This recipe was a hit! Such a nice refreshing taste. Thanks for making me look good with your wonderful recipe!
I love this cake – actually I love amost anything with lemon – and right now my lemon tree is loaded so my neighbors are all getting a version of this for Christmas. The first time I made this, I did not have buttermilk on hand but I did have a 5 ounce carton of low-fat lemon yogurt. I made the substitution and added enough milk to make a cup. It turned out wonderful – very moist and lemony and temder! Since then I have tried the recipes both ways and I love it both ways. I don’t use buttermilk a lot so I never have it on hand and if I do buy it, the remainder of the carton is wasted after making the cake. However. I always have a carton of yogurt – usually plain low-fat – in the fridge. Either way, thanks for sharing your recipe!
Brilliant!! Thank you for the yogurt tip. I never have buttermilk on hand either and would waste it.
I freeze my leftover buttermilk. Because the only way I like buttermilk is in bake goods!
I didn’t know you could freeze it!
This looks delicious and the reviews are great but Iโm curious why you used baking powder and not baking soda with so much acid in the recipe? Iโm worried it will be heavy and not rise much. Thank you!
There is baking soda in baking powder, so that does the trick for this cake.
I LOVE THIS CAKE! Made it into cupcakes and they were wonderful. Is there a way to adapt it into vanilla cake, Maybe substitute extra buttermilk for the lemon juice? or would you suggest the vanilla cake you have posted?
I made this cake for my momโs birthday. It came out so tender and delicious! I added cream cheese and salt to the icing recipe to tone down the sweetness. Thank you for the recipe!
You’re so welcome Emily ๐