East 62nd Street Lemon Cake
Updated March 19, 2018
- Total Time
- About 2 hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
FOR THE CAKE
Fine dry bread crumbs or flour for dusting the pan
3 cups flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
½ teaspoon salt
1 cup unsalted butter (2 sticks), at room temperature
2 cups sugar
4 eggs
1 cup milk
2 tablespoons lemon zest
FOR THE GLAZE
⅓ cup lemon juice
¾ cup sugar
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat oven to 325 degrees. Butter a 9‐inch tube pan. Coat it with the bread crumbs.
- Step 2
Sift together the flour, baking powder and salt and set aside.
- Step 3
Cream the butter and sugar together. Beat in the eggs one at a time.
- Step 4
Fold in the dry ingredients alternately with the milk. Stir in the lemon zest. Pour the batter into the pan and smooth the top of the batter. Bake 1¼ hours, or until the cake tests done.
- Step 5
While the cake bakes, make the glaze. Warm the juice and sugar in a small saucepan over medium-low heat until all of the sugar is dissolved. Cover and remove from heat.
- Step 6
When the cake is done, immediately unmold the cake onto a cake rack and apply the glaze with a pastry brush to the top and sides of the cake until it is all absorbed.
Private Notes
Comments
Instead of bread crumbs I have always used ground pecans to dust the pan. Looks beautiful out of the pan and adds a nice crunch and flavor to the cake. My mother always did this with her lemon cake. I am looking forward to making this recipe.
Your recipe calls for 325 degree oven. This should be 350 degree oven. I have her recipe in her cookbook. Please let bakers know or it will not be done in time.
Personally I would use 325 due to the density of a tube-style cake. Tube cakes can take 15-20 minutes, or longer, than a standard round cake to completely bake through. When I convert a 350 temp layer cake recipe to tube-style pan, I lower temp to 325 and check it after about 45 minutes or when I see the cake has stopped rising. The lower temp allows the outside to set slower and keeps it from over-baking and drying out as the deeper inner batter catches up, allowing entire cake to bake evenly.
Nice cake- a classic bundt, so closer to a fine poundcake texture. I took the time to brush the glaze on as directed, slowly. Nearly all absorbed, and the sweet/tangy add is much appreciated. I did rub the zest into the sugar when making the cake. It does boost the flavor. Also added 1/4 tsp orange oil (wanted a little more citrus, and didn't have lemon oil). Served with whipped cream and raspberries - the berries were a good addition.
For a more sumptuous icing, squeeze half a lemon with its zest into a mixing cup. Mix constantly and slowly add as much confectionary sugar as it will absorb until it's thickened and just barely pourable.
Followed recipe exactly. Shocked how dry it turned out. Very disappointing.

