Otis Lee’s Detroit Famous Poundcake
Updated Feb. 12, 2025

- Total Time
- 1½ hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1½cups/340 grams unsalted butter (3 sticks), softened at room temperature, plus more for greasing the pan
- 3cups/385 grams cake flour, plus more for the pan
- 8ounces/225 grams cream cheese, softened
- 3⅓cups plus 1 tablespoon/680 grams granulated sugar
- 6eggs, at room temperature
- 1teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1teaspoon lemon extract
- 1tablespoon cornstarch
- 2teaspoons baking powder
- ½teaspoon fine salt
- 2tablespoons cream cheese, softened
- 1tablespoon unsalted butter, softened
- 1tablespoon confectioners’ sugar
- Lemon juice, to taste
For the Cake
For the Glaze
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat oven to 350 degrees. Grease and flour a 10-inch/12-cup Bundt pan.
- Step 2
Make the cake: In a large bowl, combine softened butter, cream cheese and granulated sugar. Using a hand mixer, beat on high speed until creamy, 3 to 4 minutes. Rinse the beaters and in a separate large bowl, add eggs and beat until light in color and fluffy, about 5 minutes. (The fluffier the eggs, the fluffier the cake.) Add the beaten eggs, vanilla and lemon extracts to the butter and cream cheese mixture and beat on low speed until just combined. Scrape down the sides of the bowl.
- Step 3
In another large bowl, add cake flour, cornstarch, baking powder and salt; whisk to combine. With the mixer on low speed, gradually add the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients. Increase the speed to high and beat until fluffy, about 5 minutes. Transfer to the prepared pan.
- Step 4
Bake for 45 minutes to 1 hour, until golden brown and a cake tester comes out clean. (Do not open the oven door before 20 minutes have passed, as the temperature shift can flatten the cake.)
- Step 5
While the cake bakes, make the glaze: In a small saucepan over low heat, combine cream cheese, butter and confectioners’ sugar and whisk until smooth. Bring to a simmer. Remove from heat, and add lemon juice to taste and to adjust consistency. (Icing should be thin enough to drizzle, but still retain some body.)
- Step 6
When the cake is done, remove from the oven, and unmold immediately to a plate or serving platter. Pour the glaze over the top. (Doing this when the cake is warm helps the glaze soak in.) Serve warm or at room temperature. To store, wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate for up to a week or freeze for several months.
Private Notes
Comments
Can you please clarify; does the "do not open oven door for 20 minutes" instruction refer to during the baking time, or after it is done - like, leave it in the oven after turning off heat? Thanks!
I love this story. Times cooking ought to go around America finding recipes like this
I grew up on Mr. Fofo's. That food was DELICIOUS. I remember stopping in just to pick up some cobbler or a piece of cake. The restaurant and Mr. Lee are greatly missed in Detroit. Thanks so much for the recipe!
Outrageously delicious - especially when still warm out of the oven. Mine baked for longer than an hour. Also needed more lemon juice than expected for the glaze. This one is a keeper!
I made this exactly as written except doubled the glaze and my family still complained it needed more. Seemed like the glaze couldn’t decide if it wanted to be a syrup that soaks into the warm cake, or an icing that stays on top. Anyway the cake was great. It does call for a lot of sugar, but it’s a large cake and also the sugar is needed for the wonderful texture. I didn’t find the cake overly sweet at all. Less sweet than say the lemon pound cake at Starbucks, although I’d need to taste them side by side to be sure. Going to go do that now…
I made it exactly as directed it was a huge hit! My husband said ‘I don’t like cake but I LOVE this cake!’ The only change I will make next time is doubling the topping! So good!