Strawberry Lemonade Cake
Published June 20, 2024
- Total Time
- 90 minutes, plus 50 minutes cooling and chilling
- Prep Time
- 15 minutes
- Cook Time
- 1 hour 15 minutes, plus 50 minutes cooling and chilling
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
FOR THE LEMON CAKE
¾ cup/170 grams unsalted butter (1 ½ sticks), softened, plus more for greasing the pans
3 cups/385 grams all-purpose flour, plus more for preparing the pan
8 large lemons
1 ½ cups/360 milliliters whole milk, at room temperature
2 cups/400 grams granulated sugar
1 ½ teaspoons baking powder
½ teaspoon baking soda
1 ½ teaspoons kosher salt (such as Diamond Crystal)
¼ cup/60 milliliters neutral oil (such as canola, vegetable or grapeseed)
4 large eggs, at room temperature
FOR THE STRAWBERRY-LEMON BUTTERCREAM AND ASSEMBLY
1 ½ cups/340 grams unsalted butter (3 sticks), softened
1 pound/450 grams powdered sugar, sifted if lumpy
6 tablespoons finely crushed freeze-dried strawberries (from a 1-ounce package)
½ teaspoon kosher salt (such as Diamond crystal), plus more as needed
3 cups thinly sliced fresh strawberries, for decorating
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat oven to 325 degrees. Butter 2 (9-inch) cake pans, and line each with parchment paper. Butter the parchment, then dust the pan with flour, tapping out the excess.
- Step 2
Use a microplane or similar fine grater to finely grate the zest of the lemons, setting aside 3 tablespoons of zest for the cake and 1 tablespoon for the buttercream. Juice the zested lemons and set aside ½ cup/120 milliliters of the juice to split between the cake and the buttercream. (Don’t refrigerate the lemon juice.)
- Step 3
In a large measuring cup with a spout, combine the milk and ¼ cup of the lemon juice. Set aside while you prepare the rest of the batter.
- Step 4
To the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle, add the sugar and 3 tablespoons of the lemon zest. Use your fingertips to rub the zest into the sugar until the sugar looks damp and smells fragrant.
- Step 5
Add the flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt to the bowl and mix on low to combine. Cut the butter into tablespoon-size pieces and add them to the bowl all at once. Mix on low until the butter is evenly distributed and the mixture looks sandy. (A few larger lumps of butter is OK.)
- Step 6
Add the oil and eggs to the measuring cup with the milk and whisk with a fork to combine. With the mixer on low, slowly stream in the milk mixture. When moistened, stop the mixer and scrape the bottom and sides of the bowl to ensure there aren’t any dry pockets. Increase the mixer speed to medium and mix for 1 minute. Divide the batter between the prepared pans, spreading evenly and tapping the pans on a countertop to release any large air bubbles.
- Step 7
Bake the cakes until slightly risen and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean, 30 to 40 minutes. The cakes will have a bit of color around the edges, but the tops will still be quite pale. Set the pans on a wire rack and let the cakes cool for about 20 minutes. Then, run a thin knife around the edges of the pan and carefully turn the cakes out onto the rack to cool completely. (You may have to tap the pans gently on the rack to release each cake.)
- Step 8
While the cakes bake and cool, clean the mixing bowl and make the buttercream: Add the butter to the bowl and mix on medium-high until smooth. Add the remaining 1 tablespoon zest, 2 tablespoons of the remaining lemon juice, the powdered sugar, freeze-dried strawberries and salt. Mix on low until the sugar is moistened, then increase speed to medium-high and whip until smooth and fluffy, about 5 minutes. If necessary, add a bit more of the remaining lemon juice a teaspoon at a time to make a smooth and light buttercream. Scrape the bowl occasionally to ensure that the buttercream is evenly mixed. Taste and season with more salt if desired. (The buttercream can be kept at room temperature while the cake finishes baking and cooling.)
- Step 9
Assemble the cake: Just before frosting the cake, stir the buttercream vigorously with a flexible spatula to knock out any large air bubbles. (This will help to make the final buttercream smooth without any large holes.) Add a small spoonful of buttercream to a serving plate or cardboard cake round. Place one layer of cake onto the buttercream, dome side up. Spread 1 heaping cup of buttercream evenly over the top of the cake. Arrange 1 cup of the sliced strawberries in a single layer over the buttercream, leaving ½ inch of frosting around the edges uncovered. Place the second layer on top of the buttercream, dome side down, and press gently. Cover the top and sides of the cake with a thin layer of buttercream (be careful not to transfer crumbs back into the bowl of frosting), leaving about 1 ½ cups buttercream in the bowl. Refrigerate the cake until the buttercream is firm, about 30 minutes. Spread the remaining buttercream over the top and sides of the cake. Top with the remaining 1 cup sliced strawberries.
- Step 10
Store the cake at room temperature for a day, loosely covered. If there is any cake left after a day, store in the refrigerator. Use a hot, clean and dry knife for the tidiest slices.
Private Notes
Comments
This is lovely, dense like a pound cake and moist. I got my 8 medium-sized lemons washed for zesting but after zesting 4 of them, I realized that I had more zest than the 4Tbsp required for both the cake and the icing. Likewise for the juice. You only need 1/4c for the cake and 2 Tbsp for the buttercream. Not sure why these amounts weren't simplyincluded in the ingredient lists rather than buried in the recipe.
A truly delicious cake and a hit at the cookout! I made it as written, bashing the freeze dried strawberries in their own bag. The little chunks I missed melted into the buttercream after a few hours, leaving it smoother than when I first made it. Don't bother getting the food processor out unless that brings you joy.
If you juiced the 8 lemons and have left over juice and zest, I suggest you make some Lemon drop martinis with it. Rub some sugar and the zest together (like in the recipe) to use around the rim of your glass. So yummy and refreshing. I’d there a better way to use freshly juiced lemons :)
This is a fabulous cake. Bright, fresh flavors, and beautiful to look at, too. It’s the height of strawberry season, so I opted to make a fresh strawberry buttercream (instead of using freeze-dried berries) and my husband and all others raved about it. The cake is moist and much like a pound cake, with loads of bright lemon flavor, and the crown of red berries on top is an absolute showstopper. This would be lovely with raspberries or blueberries, too (and I’m surely going to try that). The cakes did take longer to bake than the recipe called for (about an hour vs. 30–40 minutes) and i only needed about half the lemon zest (4 lemons worth rather than 8). But otherwise a perfect cake.
I think cakes always look better if you put them together first layer dome side DOWN and the second layer dome side UP. The bottom sides of the cake fit together perfectly, and any unevenness in the tops of the layers can be adjusted when you put the cake together. If you're making a three-layer cake, put them together first layer dome side down, second layer dome side down, third layer dome side up. I've been baking cakes since 1952 and was taught this way by my grandmother.
1000/10. No notes-- I made this exactly as written and it was perfect. I got so many compliments. I think I'll be making it again for many, many future birthday parties.

