Lemon Cake

bostonwendy

Cathlete
anyone have a good recipe?

my brother is turning 30 saturday and i've been designated the cake maker! he loves lemon so figure i'll stick with that and i think his preference would be a frosted cake as opposed to a pound cake or something. now i know i can search food network or recipes.com but what i'm looking for is a recipe you use and really like! i've had far too many recipes turn out to be just so-so... only the best for my little brother =)

wendy
 
I know this is cheating, but for Easter I bought a pillsbury lemon cake mix. I made the cake in 2 layer cake pans and I put vanilla frosting between the layers (DH says "too lemony" with lemon frosting in the middle!) Then I frosted whole thing with pillsbury lemon frosting. Yum!! It was all eaten up on Easter over all the other desserts.
 
Lemon Layer Cake - cook's illustrated

The filling can be made a day ahead and refrigerated, but it will become quite stiff; fold it with a rubber spatula to loosen it before spreading onto the cake. For neater slices, dip a knife into hot water before cutting the cake. Leftovers can be stored covered in the refrigerator, with the cut side of the cake covered tightly with plastic wrap, for up to 3 days.
Ingredients
Lemon Curd Filling
1 cup fresh lemon juice from about 6 lemons
1 teaspoon gelatin (powdered)
1 1/2 cups granulated sugar (10 1/2 ounces)
1/8 teaspoon table salt
4 large eggs
6 large egg yolks (reserve egg whites for cake)
8 tablespoons unsalted butter (1 stick), cut into 1/2-inch cubes and frozen

Cake
2 1/4 cups cake flour (9 ounces), plus extra for pans
1 cup whole milk , room temperature
6 large egg whites , room temperature
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1 3/4 cups granulated sugar (12 1/4 ounces)
4 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon table salt
12 tablespoons unsalted butter (1 1/2 sticks), cut into 12 pieces, softened but still cool

Fluffy White Icing
2 large egg whites
1 cup granulated sugar (7 ounces)
1/4 cup water
1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice (from 1 lemon)
1 tablespoon corn syrup


Instructions

1. FOR THE FILLING: Measure 1 tablespoon lemon juice into small bowl; sprinkle gelatin over top. Heat remaining lemon juice, sugar, and salt in medium nonreactive saucepan over medium-high heat, stirring occasionally, until sugar dissolves and mixture is hot but not boiling. Whisk eggs and yolks in large nonreactive bowl. Whisking constantly, slowly pour hot lemon-sugar mixture into eggs, then return mixture to saucepan. Cook over medium-low heat, stirring constantly with heatproof spatula, until mixture registers 170 degrees on instant-read thermometer and is thick enough to leave trail when spatula is scraped along pan bottom, 4 to 6 minutes. Immediately remove pan from heat and stir in gelatin mixture until dissolved. Stir in frozen butter until incorporated. Pour filling through fine-mesh strainer into nonreactive bowl (you should have 3 cups). Cover surface directly with plastic wrap; refrigerate until firm enough to spread, at least 4 hours.


2. FOR THE CAKE: Adjust oven rack to middle position and heat oven to 350 degrees. Grease and flour two 9-inch-wide by 2-inch-high round cake pans and line with parchment paper. In 2-cup liquid measure or medium bowl, whisk together milk, egg whites, and vanilla.


3. In bowl of standing mixer fitted with paddle attachment, mix flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt at low speed. With mixer running at low speed, add butter one piece at a time; continue beating until mixture resembles moist crumbs with no visible butter chunks. Add all but 1/2 cup milk mixture to crumbs and beat at medium speed until mixture is pale and fluffy, about 1 1/2 minutes. With mixer running at low speed, add remaining 1/2 cup milk mixture; increase speed to medium and beat 30 seconds more. Stop mixer and scrape sides of bowl. Return mixer to medium speed and beat 20 seconds longer. Divide batter evenly between cake pans; using rubber spatula, spread batter to pan walls and smooth tops.
.

4. Bake until toothpick inserted in center of cakes comes out clean, 23 to 25 minutes. Loosen cakes from sides of pans with small knife, cool in pan 10 minutes, then invert onto greased wire rack; peel off parchment. Invert cakes again; cool completely on rack, about 1 1/2 hours.


5. TO ASSEMBLE: Following illustrations below, use serrated knife to cut each cake into 2 even layers. Place bottom layer of 1 cake on cardboard round or cake plate. Using icing spatula, spread 1 cup lemon filling evenly on cake, leaving 1/2-inch border around edge; using cardboard round, gently replace top layer. Spread 1 cup filling on top. Using cardboard round, gently slide bottom half of second cake into place. Spread remaining cup filling on top. Using cardboard round, place top layer of second cake. Smooth out any filling that has leaked from sides of cake; cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate while making icing.


6. FOR THE ICING: Combine all ingredients in bowl of standing mixer or large heatproof bowl and set over medium saucepan filled with 1 inch of barely simmering water (do not let bowl touch water). Cook, stirring constantly, until mixture registers 160 degrees on instant-read thermometer, 5 to 10 minutes. Remove bowl from heat and transfer mixture to standing mixer fitted with whisk attachment. Beat on medium speed until soft peaks form, about 5 minutes. Increase speed to medium-high and continue to beat until mixture has cooled to room temperature and stiff peaks form, 5 minutes longer. Using icing spatula, spread frosting on cake. Serve. (Cake can be refrigerated for up to 1 day before serving.)

Step-by-Step

Assembling a Four-Layer Cake To create an elegant, four-tiered cake, you must split two cake layers in half horizontally. If you cut the layers a bit unevenly (which is bound to happen), the cake can lean to one side. Here's how to compensate for less-than-perfect cutting.

1. Place cooled cake layers on top of each other and make 1/8-inch-deep cut into side of each cake layer.

2. With long, serrated knife, use sawing motion to cut cakes in half horizontally so that each cake forms 2 layers.

3. Assemble cake, aligning cuts in each layer. Stacking layers in their original orientation conceals uneven cutting.
 
Google Martha Stewarts lemon curd cake. OMG!!!!! It is fantabulous. I made it for Easter. It clocks it at something like 800 cals/slice. 2 layer cake cut into 16 slices, but it is sooooooo good. I'm at work, and don't have the recipe with me, its a long one, too. But very easy, if you're in to juicing lemons. Its in the Martha Stewart baking book.

Nan
 
another cooks country cake

Lemon Lover's Cake
A lemon layer cake is an elegant way to greet spring. Like the season, lemon cake can resemble either a lion or a lamb. With potent citrus punches in the cake, frosting, lemon curd topping, and candied lemon garnish, our cake positively roars.

1 recipe yellow cake batter (enough to make two 9-inch layer cakes) (see related recipe)
2 tablespoons grated zest plus 1/4 cup juice from 2 lemons
3 cups vanilla buttercream frosting (see related recipe)
1 (4-ounce) chunk white chocolate
2 cups lemon curd , jarred or homemade (see related recipe)
Sugared lemon slices (optional)
For the cake: Prepare the cake batter, then stir 1 tablespoon lemon zest into batter. Divide batter between 2 greased and floured 9-inch cake pans and bake as directed. Cool cakes in pans 10 minutes, then turn out onto rack to cool completely.

For the frosting: Stir 1 tablespoon lemon zest and juice into buttercream.

For the chocolate curls: Heat chocolate in microwave on lowest power until exterior just begins to feel sticky, 10 to 20 seconds. Run vegetable peeler along one side of chocolate to create curls. (Don't worry if some curls break—they'll still look attractive piled on the cake.)

To assemble the cake: Slice cake layers in half, creating 4 layers. Place 1 cake round on serving platter. Spread 1/2 cup frosting over cake. Repeat twice more with 2 cake rounds and 1/2 cup frosting per layer. Top with final cake round. Spread 1 1/4 cups frosting on sides of cake, then spread remaining frosting in 2-inch band on top of cake, leaving center of cake bare. Spread lemon curd on center of cake, using spoon to bring curd to edge of frosting. Arrange chocolate curls in frosting on top of cake and press lemon slices around bottom edge of cake.
 
thanks ladies!

ive just finished the lemon curd... my first time making and the spoon was delish! and i went with a simple yellow cake recipe for the layers. ill be making buttercream frosting in the am... so ive sort of mish-moshed (*winks at a-jock*) all of your ideas and im super excited for tomorrow. i think my punk-rock lemon-lovin' bro will love his cake!

wendy
 
thanks ladies!

ive just finished the lemon curd... my first time making and the spoon was delish! and i went with a simple yellow cake recipe for the layers. ill be making buttercream frosting in the am... so ive sort of mish-moshed (*winks at a-jock*) all of your ideas and im super excited for tomorrow. i think my punk-rock lemon-lovin' bro will love his cake!

wendy

Wendy, I managed to NOT open up this thread until today; you have absolutely no idea how crazy I am for lemon cake! Now I'm obsessed; will have to tell DH that we have to go to our favorite bakery today!

A lemon-cake mish-mosh . . . hmmmmmm . . .

A-Jock
 

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