This gluten free iced lemon pound cake is a moist and tender, sweet pound cake is just like those thick slices in the glass coffee shop case.
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What makes this gluten free lemon pound cake recipe special
A simple loaf cake made in the traditional style, this pound cake gets its lift from eggs and eggs alone. No baking powder and no baking soda.
In the past, I've made this recipe with True Lemon crystals, which are truly delicious, but they can also be hard to find for some. This time, the bright lemon flavor comes exclusively from lemons themselves, both the juice and the zest.
I even added some lemon zest to the glaze, which is by far the sweetest part of the pound cakeโespecially since I reduced the sugar from 1 1/2 cups to 1 cup. The lemon flavor in this pound cake is intense.
What really sets this pound cake apart is the combination of butter and cream cheese in the batter. A traditional pound cake, delicious in its own right, has only butter, sugar, eggs and flour. In fact, it's so-named for beginning with one pound of each ingredient.
Do I need a stand mixer to make this gf lemon pound cake recipe?
No, you don't need a stand mixer. If you have one, it makes quick work of creaming together the butter and cream cheese, and then the granulated sugar.
If you don't have a stand mixer, you can use a hand mixer with the regular beater attachments. Use a large bowl, larger than you really need, so the ingredients don't escape during beating.
If you don't have a hand mixer, use elbow grease. You'll need to cream together the butter and cream cheese until it's light and fluffy. This is a dense recipe (like a true pound cake, unlike a gluten free lemon cake, which has a much more airy crumb, is meant to be), but you do need some air in the batter.
Try using a very large whisk, turn the bowl on its side, and lean against the counter heavily. Holding the bowl with your nondominant hand, whisk vigorously until the ingredients begin to get lighter in color. Proceed with the recipe.
Does Starbucks have gluten free desserts?
Generally, no. And it's a shame because, although their coffee โ๏ธ just tastes burnt to me, their pastries, cookies and cakes are simply spot-on.
When you're gluten free, you can't have their best treats, and that's just not right. Between their petite vanilla scones, asiago bagels, chocolate cinnamon pound cake, and vanilla almond biscotti, we're really missing out.
Over the years, they have introduced a few gluten free treats, only to pull them right off the menu. If I'm being generous, I'll admit that they probably just didn't sell well enough. But still.
Now all they seem to have are little egg bites. It's just a heartbreak when the other kids are getting a scone or bagel, and your gluten free kid is getting … an egg bite. At least there's something?
Gluten free lemon pound cake: Ingredients and substitutions
I'm going to discuss some other allergens in this recipe, but I want to say up front that the news isn't good. Here are the details.
Can you make this into a gluten free dairy free lemon pound cake?
You can replace the butter in pound cake with vegan butter (I love Miyoko's Kitchen and Melt brands). But I just don't know how you can effectively replace cream cheese with a nondairy alternative.
I have never tasted a nondairy cream cheese that has tasted anything like cream cheese. Some people love Kite Hill brand. So far, I am not one of those people.
Can you make this into a gluten free egg free lemon pound cake?
Since there is no baking powder or baking soda in this recipe, all the rise comes from eggs. In fact, there are 4 whole eggs in this recipe.
I do not suggest trying to make this recipe with any sort of egg replacer. There are just too many eggs, and they're too important.
I will continue to work on a recipe for vegan gluten free pound cake and vegan gluten free cheesecake. I will work until I can work no moreโor I develop a great recipe.
About the cornstarch in this gf lemon pound cake, and how to replace it
If you are using a higher starch blend, like Cup4Cup, just replace all the cornstarch in the recipe with more Cup4Cup.
If you can't have corn, you can easily replace the cornstarch in this recipe with arrowroot or potato starch.
Gluten free iced lemon pound cake recipe, step by step
Gluten Free Lemon Pound Cake Recipe
Ingredients
For the pound cake
- 1 ยผ cups (175 g) all purpose gluten free flour blend (I used Better Batter; please click through for details)
- ยพ teaspoon xanthan gum omit if your blend already contains it
- ยผ cup (36 g) cornstarch (or try arrowroot or potato starch)
- 1 teaspoon kosher salt
- Finely grated zest of 1 lemon
- 12 tablespoons (168 g) unsalted butter at room temperature
- 4 ounces cream cheese at room temperature
- 1 cup (200 g) granulated sugar
- 4 (200 g (weighed out of shell)) eggs at room temperature, beaten
- 2 tablespoons (1 fluid ounce) freshly squeezed lemon juice
For the glaze
- 1 ยฝ cups (173 g) 173 g confectionerโs sugar
- โ teaspoon kosher salt
- 1 tablespoon (ยฝ fluid ounce) freshly squeezed lemon juice plus more as necessary
Instructions
- Preheat your oven to 325ยฐF. Grease a loaf pan that is no more than 9-inches by 5-inches, and set it aside.
- In a small bowl, combine the flour, xanthan gum, cornstarch, salt and about 3/4 of the lemon zest, and whisk to combine well, working to break up any clumps of lemon zest. Set the bowl aside.
Make the pound cake batter.
- In the bowl of your stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment (or in a large bowl with a hand mixer), place the butter and cream cheese and beat on medium-high speed until light and fluffy (about 5 minutes).
- Add the granulated sugar and mix to combine. Add the eggs and lemon juice, mixing well after each addition until the mixture is smooth.
- Add the flour mixture in 3 parts, beating well to combine after each addition. The batter will be smooth and thick, but relatively light.
- Scrape the batter into the prepared loaf pan, and smooth the top with a wet spatula.
Bake the pound cake.
- Place the loaf pan in the center of the preheated oven and bake until a tester inserted in the center of the pound cake comes out clean (about 50 minutes).
- If the loaf begins to brown too much, cover it tightly with a piece of aluminum foil.
- Remove the pound cake from the oven and allow it to cool in the pan for 15 minutes before transferring it to a wire rack to cool completely.
Make the glaze & assemble the cake.
- Once the pound cake is nearly cool, make the glaze. In a small bowl, place the confectionerโs sugar, salt, and the remaining lemon zest, and whisk to combine and to break up any lumps in the confectionerโs sugar or the lemon zest.
- Add the lemon juice, 1 teaspoon at a time, and mix well. Continue to add lemon juice by the teaspoon, stirring in between additions, until the glaze is thickly pourable.
- Pour the glaze over the cooled pound cake, and allow to set at room temperature.
- Slice and serve.
Notes
Nutrition
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Hi, Iโm Nicole. I create gluten free recipes that really work and taste as good as you remember. No more making separate meals when someone is GF, or buying packaged foods that arenโt good enough to justify the price. At Gluten Free on a Shoestring, โgood, for gluten freeโ just isnโt good enough! Come visit my bio!
Micaela Moore says
Nicole?? Hi is is possible to add milk to the glaze because ours is not working.
Nicole Hunn says
You can always add more liquid to make a simple glaze like this (milk, water, lemon juice), but you want to be sure to add it a literal drop at a time, and mix it in thoroughly, since a glaze will become too thin and drippy quite quickly. Thickening a glaze with more sugar is much harder to calibrate properly. I think I’m going to have to film a video of me making one of these confectioners’ sugar glazes, since so many of you seem to be struggling with them!
Lorraine says
Hi Nicole. I believe the cake should be made with GF Self-raising flour otherwise the cake will not rise, hence Kristan’s problem with it being dense & flat. Am I right or am I wrong? Lorraine.
Nicole Hunn says
The recipe is correct as written, Lorraine. Pound cake is leavened only with eggs. I, and many others, have made it as written successfully many, many times.
Raquel LM Sukhu says
Thanks for this recipe Nicole. I am unable to use dairy or soy. Can I substitute anything else for the cream cheese?
Raquel
Kristan says
Thank you for this recipe. However, I followed it to a tee, with out substituting and it came out very dense and flat (almost uncooked). Is it possible to use Expandex for the 1/4 cup of cornstarch? Thank you Nicole
Nicole Hunn says
Hi, Kristan, that sounds frustrating. However, this is one of the best-tested recipes on the blog and it will work when made as written. There are so many variables than it is very hard for me to guess where you went wrong but I would always begin with your flour blend (you must use one of my recommended blends), be sure you are measuring by weight, not volume, and be sure you are using an oven thermometer as most ovens run hot. You definitely can’t use expandex!
Kristan says
Thank Nicole. Yes, I use Better Batter Flour as suggested….and use Arrowroot to replace the cornstarch.
Cindy says
I had the same problem. The cake was dense and almost gummy in the middle. I beat the batter a little extra to achieve the “lightness” described in the instructions. Is it possible the eggs were overbeaten causing the cake to rise too much and then fall as it cooled ? I checked the oven temp so it wasn’t that. Your thoughts, Nicole?
Nicole Hunn says
Without knowing more, Cindy, I’m afraid I really don’t know so I’ll just give you my standard tips! First, I always look to the flour blend. If you’re not using one of my recommended blends, the recipe simply isn’t going to work. Not all flour blends are created equal. Second, if you’re not measuring by weight, but rather by volume, your proportions are likely off. And finally, if you are making substitutions, I’d always look there.
Georgia says
Hi!!! I wanted to know when you put the cornstarch… Want to make this, it looks delicious and easy!!! Thanks Nicole!! ?
Nicole Hunn says
So sorry, Georgia! I added it to the instructions. You add it right after the flour and xanthan gum (if your blend already doesn’t contain it). :)
Georgia says
Thanks Nicole! I thought it would be like that! I made it yesterday… And it isn’t what I expected… I think I did something wrong as it’s a bit hard… ?
Nicole Hunn says
I’d always check your flour blend first, Georgia. They are not all created equal! For success, you must use one of my recommended blends and measure by weight, not volume. Check your oven temp, too, as most ovens run hot.
Maureen Flynn says
Hi Nicole. So far every recipe of yours I’ve tried has been incredibly successful. Thanks for making me feel less deprived. I use Bobs Red Mill 1 to 1 gf flour blend do I still need to use the cornstarch or potatoe flakes in this recipe?
Thanks again for your mastering gf baking.
Humbly
Maureen
Nicole Hunn says
So glad, Maureen! I really don’t care for Bob’s flour blends, especially the grittiness of the rice flour in their 1:1 blend. If you like it, you can try to see if it will work here, but yes, you’ll still need the cornstarch!
Anne Lairmore says
Can anyone help me with a paleo substitute for the refined and powdered sugar? I’m dying to make this for my husband but don’t know if 1:1 honey would work (he doesn’t eat coconut, so coconut sugar is not an option this time.). Thanks so much for giving us our pound cake back!
Nicole Hunn says
Hi, Anne, I’m afraid this simply isn’t a Paleo recipe. Even if you replaced the sugars, it must be made with a rice flour-based all purpose gluten free flour blend. I recommend you have a look through the Paleo recipes here on the blog.
Tonya says
This looks amazing and I am surely going to give it a try. I’m VERY lactose intolerant, I would like to know if there is a substitute for the cream cheese.
Nicole Hunn says
Hi, Tonya,
If you’re lactose intolerant, you will have an issue with both the butter and the cream cheese. I’m afraid that is a really dramatic substitution in a recipe like this, so I really couldn’t promise results!
I darefsky says
I cannot eat any cows milk products, grew up on goats milk. I found that yogurt from ewes milk (sheep), can be turned into wonderful cream cheese, by hanging in cheesecloth, for savory add a bit of salt before hanging. A couple of hours, when it has the right consistency, use.
I hope this is an option you can use.
Ghee (butter fat) has neither lactose nor protein, it is 99.9% fat, just has the butter taste. I use that along with some tasty marge when baking/cooking.
Mglazer1 says
Just made this for my non-gluten free family(only I follow gluten-free) and they were all ย coming back for seconds and thirds! ย We are all so impressed with everything you create! Thanks so much for taking the time to post this amazing recipe!!!
Melissa says
Yum! I want to lick the screen, but that would just be weird, not to mention disappointing, so I think I have to go to the store for the few ingredients I’m missing and make this when I return.
Gina Kelley says
This pound cake looks delicious!
Lavendergrey says
I used to work at Starbucks and I loved, loved, loved their lemon pound cake until the day I was diagnosed. ย Thank you so much for this recipe! ย Btw, I’m on a crazy tight budget but I’m saving my pennies to buy both of your cookbooks asap because I can’t bake from a computer screen.
Dana Schwartz says
OK, seriously Nicole, my husband is totally in your debt (in a purely baking sense). First of all, he asks me to make your apple pie on a daily basis. Second, he’s eaten about 7 of your banana coffee cake muffins in 24 hours. Third, during his gluten days, he loved an iced lemon loaf made not by Starbucks, but by a local cafe, and has been bemoaning his lack of lemon loaf ever since. So. You see. He owes you big time. Thanks for this recipe! Once I get my hands on that pure lemon business, I will be making these. Though I really have no excuse not to make the apple pie.ย
Caryn Talty says
I remember these at Starbucks. We loved them. The glaze is a nice touch. I’m going to bookmark this recipe and try it for Easter. I think the kids will love it.ย I’ve never baked it slow and low before. I’m curious, what’s the reason for doing that? Does it keep it from browning too fast?
hena tayeb says
wow.. this looks delicious.
thanks for sharing
Butterfly Bakery says
Nice Recipe! Butterfly Bakery is into Gluten Free & Sugar Free bakeries. It’s great to see newย recipesย for Gluten Free people. Cheers!!