Lemon brownies with lemon glaze are the dessert you make when you want the dense, chewy bite of a brownie but the sharp, sunny lift of fresh lemon. They bake into a tight crumb that holds a glossy citrus topping without turning soggy. This recipe gives you a reliable method and exact cues so the bars come out right the first time.
The base is closer to a blondie than a chocolate brownie: no cocoa, just butter, sugar, eggs, flour, and a generous amount of lemon zest and juice. The glaze is a thin pourable mix of powdered sugar and lemon juice that sets into a soft shell. If you like lemon-forward baking, pair a tray with our creamy lemon pasta for a themed menu. Making this lemon brownies with lemon glaze at home is surprisingly straightforward once you know the key steps.
Why You'll Love These Lemon Brownies With Lemon Glaze
- They use one bowl for the batter and one for the glaze, so cleanup stays small.
- The crumb stays moist for three days thanks to the lemon juice and butter ratio.
- The glaze adds a sweet-tart layer that keeps each bite from tasting flat.
- You can cut them into 16 small bars that fit on a dessert platter with no fuss.
Ingredients You'll Need
- Unsalted butter – 115 g (1/2 cup), melted, forms the rich base and tender crumb.
- Granulated sugar – 200 g (1 cup), sweetens and helps the edges set firm.
- Large eggs – 2, bind the batter and add lift.
- Fresh lemon juice – 60 ml (1/4 cup) for batter, plus 30 ml (2 tbsp) for glaze, provides acid and flavor.
- Lemon zest – from 2 lemons, about 2 tbsp, carries the oils that taste like peel.
- All-purpose flour – 130 g (1 cup), gives structure without heaviness.
- Salt – 1/4 tsp, balances the sweet and sour.
- Baking powder – 1/2 tsp, slight rise so bars aren't flat.
- Powdered sugar – 120 g (1 cup), for the glaze body.
Ingredient Substitutions
Unsalted butter: Replace with an equal weight of coconut oil for a dairy-free version. Coconut oil stays softer at room temperature, so the baked bars will feel a bit more yielding and the glaze may take longer to set. Expect a faint coconut note that sits behind the lemon rather than competing with it. The lemon brownies with lemon glaze works well for weeknight cooking when time is limited.
All-purpose flour: Use an equal weight of a 1-to-1 gluten-free blend if you need to skip wheat. Most blends include xanthan gum, which keeps the crumb from crumbling, but the texture turns slightly more fragile near the edges. Bake at the same temperature and check doneness with a toothpick at the minimum time. Storing leftover lemon brownies with lemon glaze correctly keeps it tasting good for days.
Fresh lemon juice: Swap with bottled lemon juice at a 1:1 ratio if you're out of fruit. Bottled juice is more consistent in acid but lacks the slight bitterness of fresh zest, so add an extra 1 tsp of zest if you have it. The flavor will be cleaner but a little less complex.
Granulated sugar: Replace with an equal weight of caster sugar for a finer crumb. Caster sugar dissolves faster into the butter, reducing any grainy feel on the tongue. The bars brown a touch quicker, so watch the top at the 20-minute mark. If you enjoyed this, our no bake lemon is worth trying next.
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Heat the oven to 180°C / 350°F and line an 8x8 inch pan with parchment that hangs over two sides for easy lift-out.
- Whisk the melted butter and granulated sugar in a bowl until smooth, then add the eggs and beat for 1 minute until slightly thickened.
- Stir in 60 ml lemon juice, lemon zest, salt, and baking powder until the batter looks uniform and pale yellow.
- Fold in the flour with a spatula and stop when no dry streaks remain; do not overmix or the bars turn tough.
- Pour into the pan and bake 25–30 minutes until the top is matte and a toothpick comes out with a few moist crumbs.
- Cool in the pan on a rack for 20 minutes, then lift out and cool fully before glazing so the top doesn't melt the sugar.
- Whisk powdered sugar with 30 ml lemon juice until pourable, spread over the cooled bars, and let sit 30 minutes until the glaze firms.
Pro Tips
Zest the lemons before you juice them; once a lemon is cut, the peel is harder to grip and you lose oils to the cutting board.
Use a metal pan if you have one because glass holds heat and can push the edges past just set edges before the center finishes.
For a thicker glaze, add powdered sugar 1 tbsp at a time until it coats the back of a spoon but still levels out within seconds.
Read about pan cooling techniques if you bake on a dark sheet, since color transfer changes bake time.
Chill the cut bars up to 3 days in the fridge and they slice cleaner than at room temperature.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Glazing while warm is the main error; the heat turns the sugar into a syrup that soaks in instead of sitting on top. Wait until the base is room temperature.
Overbaking is easy because the top stays light; pull the pan when a toothpick shows moist crumbs, not dry, or the crumb turns chalky.
Skipping the parchment makes removal a guess; the bars stick and break, so always leave an overhang to lift the whole slab. For another easy option, check out our lemon pasta pasta.
Serving Suggestions
Cut into 16 squares and plate with a dusting of extra zest for a brunch board. A cup of black tea cuts the sweet glaze well.
For a lemon dessert spread, set the tray next to our lemon eclair cake so guests get a baked and a no-bake option.
These bars also follow lemon shrimp pasta as a light close to a seafood dinner.
Storage and Reheating
Keep the bars in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 days; the glaze weeps if left in heat above 24°C.
You can freeze the unglazed base for freeze for up to 2 months, then thaw and glaze fresh for better texture.
Reheat a single bar 5 seconds in the microwave only if you want it soft; most people eat them cold from the fridge. You might also like our lemon chicken.
Recipe Variations
Berry Swirl
Drop 2 tbsp of raspberry puree onto the batter before baking and swirl with a knife. The berries add a tart fruit pocket and a pink marbled top under the glaze.
Thyme Lemon
Add 1 tsp chopped fresh thyme to the zest step for a savory herbal note. The green flecks look good and the flavor reads as garden lemon rather than candy.
Double Glaze
After the first glaze sets, brush a second thinner coat for a thicker shell that survives packing in a lunch box. Use 1 tbsp lemon juice with 3 tbsp sugar.
White Chocolate Top
Swap the glaze for 80 g melted white chocolate mixed with 1 tsp lemon juice. The result is sweeter and less sharp but still lemon-scented.
Lemon brownies with lemon glaze freeze best before the topping goes on, and they stay safe on a counter for only 2 hours in summer. Yes, the unglazed base holds in the freezer for up to 2 months without texture loss.