Life Force Lemon Drizzle Vintage Cake Recipe (2024)

Bouncing the pots here for the Life Force Lemon Drizzle Cake — a moist vintage lemon cake from scratch soaked in a sweet lemony sauce and served with a dollop of LemonChantilly(hint-of-lemon whipped cream). Score one for vintage cake lovers!

The theme of this cake: vibrant sun, full of life, celebration!

So let’s celebrate with a homemade celebration cake! whoo hoo!

We used fresh Meyer lemons from our tree! And it is blooming with lemons, lemons and more lemons! Oh yeah! I’d say it’s time to pick a basket of fruit and bake a cake that travels easily to become your next Auction Cake (at the upcoming fundraiser) or to become your next Potluck Cake (for meetings or church — what my family calls “a church cake”). 🙂

Kumkwat tree springs to life!

Fruited yard: In celebration of this celebration cake, I’m going to plant another tree. Bring on the life force! Eight fruit trees are not enough when you use and share all thelovely (did I say free?) fruit that a fruit tree keeps bringin-on-home year after year! So far, we have: 2 apple trees, an Asian pear, a way-old fig tree, a nice big apricot tree (that the squirrels adore!), the tiniest little peach, a massive old grapefruit tree and a lemon tree. If I had my way, I would have every stick of green on the property bearing fruit or veggie. Like, why would I want a maple tree when I could be taking jam or baskets of fruit to my friends and neighbors? I say put those trees to work! :Oh, and time-saving? Yeah, hello! Forget the traffic and stroll out back to snag a grapefruit for your Vodka Greyhound. Ho!

Hidden vegetable garden: I do have a starter plan, oh yes! And it includes a money-saving idea of dotting little veggie plants among theflowering or green plants in the yard.

Now. If I can just get the gardener to stop hoeing up my starter plants, we’ll have a bountiful hidden vegetable garden coming soon. 🙂

Cake Creations: Don’t you love selecting and creating a cake that will be the perfect match for an important event? This Life Force Lemon Drizzle Cake was re-created from vintage recipes on the occasion of the delivery of the printer’s proof of Mumsie’s new book, “WhileWandering: A Photo-Poetic Journey Through California Landscapes”. Here’s the daughter book pitch: Written by my amazing 90-year-old Mum, this glossy book is filled with stunning nature poetry. Each poem stands side-by-side with a dramatic full-page photograph of breathtaking California-scapes (from the mountains to the sea)! The best part — this book is a generational family collaboration — Mother writer, Daughter Photographer. Check it out HERE!🙂

Slow Cooking Warning: I KNOW you’re busy. Yes, I hear you. But everyone needs a little baking therapy from time to time, eh? Plan on a fun 3-hour kitchen project or, best — overnight prep time. Why? Because this cake bakes NICE AND SLOW (for 90 minutes!) in that old-fashioned tradition with sweet soaker sauce time required to get it just poy-fect!

Kitchen Buddies: There areno fancy tricks or high-end tools needed for this little hearth craft (though you could throw in a few kitchen gadgets) so please…Bring your kids right on into your sweet kitchen! Deputize your toddler for stirring, middlers for lemon juicing and teens for grating lemons and you’ll have a family cake on your hands in no time with your kids as Baker Assistants. Or gather your college dorm buddies all together for a little homemade cake party — vintage style!

P.S. Kids and girlfriends LOVE aprons too!

Give everyone a chef’s hat to encourage that home baker’s pride!

Chef’s hat my daughter stitched for me.

P.S. Boys love aprons too.

And don’t go thinkin they’re sissy.

Throw a dish towel around your boy or, better yet, craft up an apron with a cotton cafe curtain. No sewing required! Just thread a cord through the curtain where the curtain rod normally runs and PRESTO!

Cool and cute apron for up-cycle style in about, oh, 10 seconds. 🙂

Tip: While you’re happily grating lemons, check outmy Pandora Radio Stationand listen to some cool baking music — or “prep & watch” — like catch a recorded TV show with a basket of lemons on your lap…maybeLast Cake Standing. 🙂

And, remember also that you’re about to FILL your home with the incredible aroma of fresh lemons! It is bound to rock your world in heavenly scent!

OKAY, LET’S MAKE LIKE WORKER BEES AND DO THIS LIFE FORCE THING! 😀

Life Force Lemon Drizzle Cake:

Cake Tools:
Tube Pan aka Angel Food Cake Pan (or bundt pan)
Cooking spray
Lemon juicer tool (optional)
Small grater (for lemon peel)
Medium soup-sized bowl (for 5 fork-beaten eggs)
Large mixing bowl
Electric mixer
Spatula
Measuring cups and spoons
Parchment or wax paper (for counter work and storage)
Small sharp knife (for de-crusting baked cake and slicing optional lemon slices for decoration)
Pastry brush (optional, for dusting cake free of crumbs)
Covered cake holder (or large bowl, for storing the cake while it soaks)
Cake thermometer (optional)

Cake Ingredients:
5 large fresh eggs
2 Tablespoons of fresh grated lemon peel*(from 2 large lemons)
1 fresh lemon, sliced for decoration (optional)
3 cups general all-purpose flour
3 cups granulated sugar
1 cup (2 cubes or sticks) unsalted butter
1 cup milk (2% is fine)
1/4 cup corn oil (I’m told vegetable oil works fine too)
1 Tablespoon honey (we used Clover)

*Reserve the skinned lemons for the Lemon Drizzle recipe below

CakePrep:

Set out on the counter to come to room temperature (about 20 to 30 minutes):
5 large fresh eggs
Tip: You can shorten the time to about 5 minutes for bringing eggs to room temperature by soaking the cold eggs in a bowl of warm water.
Double Tip: Bringing the eggs to room temperature will help reduce bubbles in the baked cake. 🙂

Grate the peel of:
2 large fresh lemons to make 2 Tablespoons loosely packed

Bald lemons. Ha!

Spray the tube pan with cooking spray.

Set the oven rack at center position and pre-heat the oven to 300 degrees.
Tip: That’s not a typo — this be SLOW bakin, the old-fashioned way! 🙂

Soften in the microwave for a few seconds to just room temperature:
1 cup (2 cubes) of unsalted butter

Beat at high-speed until fluffy (about 3 minutes):
the softened prepared butter

Beat into the creamed butter on medium- to high-speed until fluffy (about 2 minutes):
3 cups granulated sugar

Beat into batter on medium- to high-speed until fluffy (about 1 to 2 minutes):
1/4 cups corn oil (substitute vegetable oil)
Tip: Creamed butter mixture at this stage should be very light in color and very fluffy.

Crack into a medium soup-sized bowl and blend with a fork:
the room temperature eggs

With the mixer on low, slowly dribble into the batter:
the fork-beaten eggs

Beat the eggs into the batter on medium-high speed for about 2 minutes.

Using a spatula (instead of the mixer), gently fold into the batter in3 batches:
3 cups of all-purpose flour
1 cup of milk (2% is fine)
Tip: Add a third of the flour with a third of the milk into the batter, then fold with a spatula in a nice large overhand circular motion and repeat for two more additions.

Fold in until fully incorporated:
1 Tablespoon of honey (we used Clover honey)
the prepared grated lemon peel

Using a spatula, slide the thick batter into the prepared tube pan.

Smooth the top of the batter with a spatula.

Bake on the center rack at 300 degrees for about 90 minutes until the cake is golden and the center tests clean (internal temperature 208 to 210 degrees). If you get a few little cracks along the top of the cake, that is fine since we will be scraping the golden crust away and flipping the cake upside down — so don’t let that rent space in your head. 🙂

Cool the cake in the pan for about 20 minutes before removing it.

Cut around the edges of the pan and turn the cake upside down onto parchment or waxed paper on the counter.

The top of the cake is now what used to be the “real” bottom of the cake (when it was in the oven) — but we’ve flipped it over and will present it this way — so keep track here. Ha!

With small sharp knife gently scrape away all golden soft cake crust from the outer edges of the cake so that only light, tender cake is showing for the most part on top, sides and bottom (leaving center circle in a natural crusted state).
Tip: This de-crusting will ensure a good soak with the lemon baste…plus — the removed moist cake crust makes a nice snack, or reserve it for a crumble topping in a different recipe.
Double Tip: If you have a dry pastry brush, lightly brush away any remaining crumbs so that the cake is fairly crumb free.

Cover the top of the cake with parchment or wax paper and place the cake (with bottom and top covered with paper) in a covered cake holder (or under large bowl) to thoroughly cool on counter (at least 1 hour).
Tip: We’re not covering the sides of the cake or wrapping it entirely in plastic wrap because it seems better to let the sides of the cake “breathe” a little. 🙂

Lemon Drizzle: This is a sweet and tart lemon baste for the cake that will soak in that lovely lemon flavor and will enhance the moisture of the cake.



Lemon Drizzle Tools:
Small sauce pot
Small bowl or cup (for 1 beaten egg)
Whisk
Pastry brush (or spoon, for basting cake with sauce)
Thermometer (optional)

Lemon Drizzle Ingredients:
Grated peel of 1 lemon (about 1 T loose lemon peels)
Juice of 3 lemons (using 2 lemons left over from the cake recipe above plus 1 lemon for a total of 3 lemons) to make about 1/3cup of fresh lemon juice
1/4 cup water
1 cup powdered sugar

Lemon Drizzle Prep:

Grate the peel of:
1 fresh medium lemon to make about 1 Tablespoon of peels softly packed

Using a lemon-squeezing tool (or your hands), squeeze from 3 fresh lemons:
1/3 cup fresh lemon juice

Be sure to strain any lemon seeds from the juice.

In a small sauce pan, bring to a gentle boil for 10 minutes:
prepared lemon peel
1 cup of powdered sugar
prepared lemon juice
1/4 cup of water
Tip: You will see some reduction in the sauce as it cooks but keep it at the minimum boiling point to prevent too much reduction.

Remove the pot from the stove and stir for 1 minute to reduce the temperature slightly.
Tip: We want this sauce hot to cook the egg (this egg will cook at 160 degrees) but If you don’t reduce the temperature just a tad before adding the egg, you may have scrambled eggs on your hands. Just sayin. 🙂

In a small bowl or cup, beat well with a fork to fully blend:
1 large egg

Using a whisk, very slowly dribble the well-beaten egg into the pot of Lemon Drizzle while you very quickly whisk to prevent lumping.
Tip: If you happen to lump your sauce, just strain it, no worries, and continue forward. 🙂

Stir for 10 minutes every few minutes until drizzle becomes room temperature (about 10 minutes all total).
Tip: Mixture will thicken slightly to a smooth and slightly tacky consistency as it is stirred to room temperature and it will show a nice golden color.

Reserve 1/4 cup of this Lemon Drizzle and refrigerate it covered for use in the Lemon Chantilly Cream Dollop.

Basting the Cake:

Theme here: Dip and pat, dip and pat. A little Lemon Drizzle brushed all over the top and sides of cake will make it nice and shiny and a little sticky. Yum!

Use the Lemon Drizzle for the cake at room temperature because the cold sauce will thicken and become difficult to apply to the cake (although the chilled sauce reserved in a small quantity is perfect for adding to the whipped cream recipe below).

Leaving the bottom parchment or wax paper in place under your baked and cooled cake, lightly brush or pat various coats of Lemon Drizzle on the top, sides and center of the cake until the Lemon Drizzle is all used up.

Decorate the top of the cake with 10 small, very-very thin lemon peel slices, pressing them into the tacky drizzle on top of cake near center circle to form an ode to sun-ray pattern.

Tip: We’ll put up a candied lemon peel recipe soon that you can use for topping pretties on the cake, but these lemon slices are just for simple decoration (not for eating). 🙂

Refrigerate the basted cake in a covered cake holder (or cover the basted cake with a large bowl that doesn’t touch the cake) for at least 1 hour to set or, better yet, overnight. (Good things come to thems that wait for it.) Ha!

Lemon Chantilly (Cream Dollop): This is a lightly sweet and lemony whipped cream that is perfect for enhancing each special slice. This recipe makes about 2 cups of whipped goodness. You can prepare this just before serving (or up to 3 hours ahead, refrigerated).

Lemon Chantilly Ingredients:
1 cup heavy whipping cream
1/4 cup cold prepared Lemon Drizzle (reserved from the Lemon Drizzle recipe above)
1/4 teaspoon pure vanilla extract, fine quality
4 Tablespoon powdered sugar

Lemon Chantilly Tools:
Deep medium mixing bowl (for whipping cream)
Electric mixer
Spatula
Measuring cups and spoons

Beat on high-speed until soft peaks form (about 1 minute):
1 cup of heavy whipping cream

Beat into the softly whipped cream:
the chilled prepared (1/4 cup) Lemon Drizzle (reserved from recipe above)
1/4 teaspoon fine quality pure vanilla extract
4 Tablespoons powdered sugar

Serve each cake slice with a dollop of Lemon Chantilly.

Well, there you have it, ladies and gents. I do hope you will be able to enjoy this little kitchen project some time in the near future…maybe this week-end?? (That’s not a nag — ha!)

Thank you for stopping by!

Wishing you happy vintage cake baking!

Send me photos of your own version of this cake and I’ll post em!

Leslie

Mom won the Valentine of the week contest at MomItForward.com! Congrats to my adorable Mom (and sorry about the age typo — I didn’t mean to add 4 years to ya!)

Kid chefs making olive oil crustinis at NutrItaly event in Westwood

Celebrating new red tennies.

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Life Force Lemon Drizzle Vintage Cake Recipe (2024)
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