Glazed lemon loaf is what you make when you’re after something not too sweet that’s fuss-free to make. Lovely bright lemon flavour with buttery undertones, it’s a quick bread which means no yeast and easy to make. Excellent shelf life of 5 days!
Glazed lemon loaf
Quick breads are a great option for those times when you have the urge or need to bake, but don’t have the time for more involved recipes. They’re also convenient – easy to transport and easy to serve. Slice like bread and eat on a napkin!
As for today’s lemon glazed loaf, it’s here after I responded to a question on Facebook for how to convert my simple Lemon Yogurt Cake into a loaf. “Use the recipe as is but I’d switch half the oil with melted butter to get buttery flavour into it, because it’ll be taller than the cake so there’s less frosting-to-cake ratio so you’ll want the cake to have more flavour. I’d probably dial up the lemon flavour for the same reason. And it will take longer to bake – just keep testing with a skewer!”
By the time I got to the end of the response, the “just do this” suddenly seemed a little less simple. So I decided to create and properly test it, write it up and publish it! 😂
Ingredients in Glazed Lemon Loaf
Here’s what you need to make this. Note: Lemon extract is recommended for really good lemon flavour, but you can get away with doubling the zest instead!
Yogurt – A “secret ingredient” in baking to make batters that bake up into lovely moist cakes, muffins etc. Any plain, unsweetened yogurt is fine here. I typically use Greek Yogurt. Substitute with sour cream (full fat).
Flour – Just plain / all purpose flour. Self-rising flour can be used in place of flour and baking powder, however, the loaf won’t be quite as soft or rise as well. Baking powder + flour is just more effective. 🙂
Baking powder – This makes this loaf rise.
Butter AND oil – Butter adds lovely buttery flavour into baked goods while oil makes the crumb moist. In this particular loaf, I wanted to the best of both worlds so we’re using both! In most recipes, I use one or the other – or I use butter plus another technique to keep the crumb moist (like the more involved technique for the reader-favourite plush Vanilla Cake).
Oil types – Vegetable or canola oil, or any other plain flavoured oil (such as sunflower, grapeseed oil) can be used. For the butter, use unsalted.
Fresh lemon – Fresh please! We need the zest and juice. Zest is where all the lemon flavour is! Juice provides mostly tang, not much lemon flavour.
Lemon extract (natural) – To make the lemon flavour in this un-missable! I really does enhance the lemon flavour in a way that you can’t achieve using just fresh lemons. But if you’ve got a stack of fresh lemons, feel free to skip this and double up on zest instead.
Vanilla – For flavour. I use vanilla extract here which is real vanilla flavour. Vanilla essence is artificial so the flavour is not as good. I typically only use pricier vanilla bean paste or vanilla beans for more refined dessert recipes, such as the recently published Flan Pâtissier (the world’s greatest Custard Tart!)
Sugar – Just 1 cup which makes this loaf on the less-sweet side.
Eggs – At room temperature, so they incorporate easily into the batter. I use large eggs which are ~55g / 2 oz each, an industry standard so the eggs will be labelled “large eggs” on the carton.
Salt – Just a touch, to bring out the flavours. This is good general practice for all (well, most!) sweet baking recipes.
Lemon glaze
For the glaze, you just need soft icing sugar / powdered sugar and lemon juice. Australia – be sure to use soft icing sugar, not pure icing sugar which will set into a hard icing, like royal icing.
How to make this lemon loaf
Mix dry ingredients. Mix wet ingredients. Mix wet into dry. Bake! How easy it that!
Whisk the dry ingredients in a large bowl.
Whisk the wet ingredients in a separate bowl until combined.
Pour the wet into the dry ingredients then whisk just until combined and lump free. Don’t keep whisking as this will cause your cake to come out hard!
Pour / scrape the batter into a lined pan. (Note – when I say “lined pan”, I use a single sheet of baking / parchment paper to line the long sides and base. I don’t bother with the short side – no sticking problems if you grease it).
Bake 45 minutes uncovered, then loosely cover with foil and bake for a further 20 minutes or until a skewer inserted into the centre comes out clean.
Rest 10 minutes – Let it rest in the pan for 10 minutes (all cakes are very fragile when fresh out of the oven) before transferring it onto a cooling rack.
Cool – Use the paper overhang to lift it out onto a cooling rack, then cool completely for 3+ hours before glazing!
Glaze – To make the glaze, just mix the icing sugar (powdered sugar) and lemon juice together. Then spoon / spread it onto the surface, coaxing drips down the side.
⚠️ GLAZE THICKNESS CAUTIONARY NOTE!
I find glazes will go from seemingly too thick to way too thin with just even the barest smidge of extra liquid. So take care and be patient when mixing the glaze! I only use 3 1/2 teaspoons of lemon juice for 1 cup of icing sugar. At first it will seem like there’s nowhere near enough liquid, but be patient, keep mixing! It will turn into a thick glaze that will drape over your lemon loaf rather than spreading into a thin, transparent (unsatisfying) glaze.
The no-glaze option
“Everybody” loves the glaze but actually, there’s a good case for a no-glaze version too. No glaze means you can toast it like bread – literally, in a toaster. Then slather with butter and for a really great finishing touch, drizzle with honey.
You can just imagine the flavour combo here, right?? Not-too-sweet lemony cake soaked with lightly salted melted butter and sweet honey. It’s so good I almost published this recipe without the glaze!!
Whichever way you go, glaze or no glaze, you can’t go wrong with this lemon loaf. It’s also one of those recipes that’s quite forgiving, so it’s a good one for those new to baking or if you have little helpers keen to get involved.
Stays fresh 5 days
And finally – this lemon loaf has an excellent shelf life. Regular readers know that I am notorious for extending the shelf life of baked goods! It used to drive me mad that people would just accept that homemade muffins would go stale overnight, and that cakes are best made on the day of serving as they lose freshness within 24 hours. Who has the time to bake fresh on the day, not to mention the disappointment of not being able to enjoy cakes for days afterwards? The reader-favourite Vanilla Cake and Cupcakes are probably the most famous example around here – they stay fresh for 4 to 5 days which is unheard of!
As for this lemon loaf – it’s perfect for 3 days, still great 5 days later. Keep it in the fridge if it’s warm where you are, but if not, the pantry is fine.
Enjoy! – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
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Glazed lemon loaf
Ingredients
Dry ingredients:
- 2 cups plain flour / all-purpose flour (Note 1)
- 4 tsp baking powder (make sure yours is alive!)
- 1/8 tsp salt
Wet ingredients (Note 2 – room temp):
- 1 cup plain yogurt , at room temperature
- 2 large eggs (~55g/2oz each), at room temperature
- 75g / 5 tbsp unsalted butter , melted and cooled
- 1/4 cup vegetable or canola oil (or other neutral flavoured oil)
- 2 tbsp lemon zest (~2 large lemons)
- 1/4 cup lemon juice
- 1 1/4 cups caster sugar / superfine sugar (sub normal/granulated sugar)
- 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
- 1 1/2 tsp lemon extract – sub 1 tbsp extra zest (Note 3)
Glaze (optional):
- 1 cup soft icing sugar/powdered sugar , sifted
- 3 – 3 1/2 tsp+ lemon juice
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 180°C/350°F (160°C fan-forced). Grease then line a 21 x 11 x 7 cm (8.5 x 4.5 x 2.75") with baking / parchment paper. (Note 4)
- Batter – Whisk Dry ingredients in a large bowl. Whisk Wet ingredients in a separate bowl. Pour Wet ingredients into the Dry ingredients. Whisk just until lump free. Pour into the prepared loaf pan then smooth the surface.
- Bake 45 minutes uncovered. Loosely cover with foil then bake a further 20 minutes or until a skewer inserted comes out clean.
- Cool & glaze – Stand 10 min in pan then turn out onto a cooling rack. Fully cool before glazing (~3 hours). Use a spoon to spread and coax lovely glaze drips down the side! Cut thick slices and serve.
- Glaze – Whisk ingredients until combined and smooth, a thick smooth frosting that will drip thickly, not be transparent. Start with 3 1/2 teaspoons lemon juice, and add 1/2 tsp extra, as needed. (Note 5 on thickness)
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
Life of Dozer
Dunno why I look so happy when Dozer looks so tortured, waiting to taste that bit of lemon cake!
Alex says
Another delicious recipe, Nagi! Thank you!
You promised, and as always, delivered! The lemon flavour was pronounced and the crumb was delicate yet sturdy.
I also found the loaf buttery and had a perfect level sweetness. I actually used 1-1/4 cups of sugar as written in the recipe although upon re-reading the summary content, I noted you stated 1 cup of sugar. I am very happy with the results using the 1-1/4 cups of sugar and the loaf was not overly sweet at all!
We are on day 2 and the loaf is still buttery and moist, unlike many lemon loaf recipes I have experienced!
I hope you and Dozer are settling into your new ‘nest’ very well, Nagi, and I wish you both many happy years ahead together in it.
“Cheers” from the very hot Canadian Prairies!
Annalise says
I know you said it’s ok if you don’t have lemon essence but I made the trip especially to get it (I had everything else!) and I’m so glad I did!! I saw you use it in the buttercream frosting in your cookbook too so now I have an excuse to try that 🥰
Maggie says
I’m dairy free and made this with Kite Hill plain yogurt and Smart Balance vegan butter sticks. It was delicious. (I’m in the USA). I didn’t have lemon extract or extra zest so I used 1/4 tsp Lemon oil I purchased from King Arthur Flour online. It was fantastic.
DianeY says
Taste is great, but size of pan is way off: 8.5 inch loaf pan spilled over a LOT and burned/made mess of oven. I will gladly make this again, but I’ll divide it between two loaf pans.
Angie says
Can’t ingest gluten, so would this come out the same with a GF flour instead? Any further suggestions would be appreciated! Thanks for an awesome recipe!
Michelle says
I have this in the oven, smells amazing. I used 2 large lemons and 2 small for the Zest but just was over a tblspn. That’s all I had so hope will be ok. I wasn’t able to find lemon extract. Hope it works out, can’t wait to try it.
Nagi says
Hi Michelle! It will still be lovely, I use extract for extra lemon oomph! Hope you loved it! N x
Rae says
Nagi, the recipe calls for combining all of the dry ingredients however the caster sugar is not listed as a dry ingredient. Could you please confirm when it gets included?
Nagi says
Hi Rae! Sugar is actually considered a wet ingredient in baking 🙂 When you mix it into other wet ingredients, it actually “liquifies” the mixture rather than thickening it! N x
Mama RecipeTin says
Thanks for delivering the glazed lemon loaf to me the other day, Nagi. It was delicious. I don’t usually enjoy cakes as they are too sweet for me. But this is an exception!
Coral says
Made this yesterday and it is everything you said it would be. I didn’t have lemons but an abundance of limes so used them instead. Perfect, thanks Nagi, also made the Garlic butter prawns from your book and they were delicious, winner all round.
Tracey Khan says
I love the simplicity of this loaf. An impressive morning or afternoon tea sweet. Didn’t need to bake it as long though, it was done in 45min. Got the icing thick & drippy just as Nagi suggested & it looks just like the pictures 🤩
GIGI says
Can I sub applesauce or coconut oil for butter? Try not to eat it anymore.
Mike says
My wife made this the day you sent the email – no icing – we’ve been having it toasted for morning tea all weekend. Delightful. Honey and butter is perfect with it. Thank you Nagi!
Dave says
A bit confused here. Is this a bread or a cake?
Nagi says
Hi Dave! It’s a cake in the form of a bread. 🙂 They are called “loafs” or “quick breads”. They are sliced like bread but eaten like cake! You often see them at cafes. N x
Dave says
Your the best. So busy and you still take time to answer questions. Thanks. I think the pic of you and Dozer is the best one yet. You are teasing him and he looks so serious, like he is saying “ really? “ haha
Barry W Markus says
I made this recipe. Batter was very thick, so thick I could barely whisk it and had to fold instead. I used 1 c sugar but the cake was just the right sweetness without the glaze. Delicious!
Lorna Kolbe says
I usually bake 2 loaves at a time and freeze one. Saves on electricity and handy in emergencies.
Pauline Joan mcguinness says
I have made the lemon glazed cake. Taste beautiful but always sinks in the middle. Any suggestions.
Nagi says
Hi Pauline! Sounds like your oven runs a little weak, have you checked the temp? 🙂 That is usually the cause if it is always happening – if there is not enough heat in the oven then it won’t give the baking powder that kick start to get the cake rising. N x
Eddie says
Made it this morning and it turned out perfect! I couldn’t find lemon essence at Coles so I used the extra tblsp of zest as suggested, and the flavour was fantastic. Thanks Nagi!!!
Nagi says
So glad you enjoyed it Eddie!! You must’ve been the first to make this 🙂 N x
Joann says
Hi Nagi: I baked the lemon loaf this morning, no frosting just butter and honey like you suggested. I’m in heaven! I only used 1cup of sugar but followed every step and measurements. Thank you! I just purchased the cookbook from amazon and will keep on cooking! 😋
Nagi says
WHOOT! So glad you enjoyed it Joann! N x
Elena says
This morning a 5 am I started and the cake is almost ready.
I made the cake because I am sure we will like it.
Thank you very much!
Gail says
Hi Nagi and hugs to you and Dozer. Can I use salted butter instead if I don’t add the salt to the dry mix?