A good lemon poppy seed cake recipe should give you a tender crumb, a clear lemon note, and those tiny seeds that add a gentle crunch. This version is built around buttermilk and fresh lemon juice so the crumb stays moist for days. You’ll get a loaf that slices cleanly and works for breakfast, dessert, or an afternoon snack.
The method here avoids overmixing, which is the usual reason a loaf turns out tight. We cream the butter and sugar long enough to trap air, then fold the dry ingredients in just until combined. The result is a bakery-style texture without any special equipment. Making this lemon poppy seed cake at home is surprisingly straightforward once you know the key steps.
If you like lemon desserts but want something less sweet than frosted layer cakes, this is a solid choice. The glaze adds a thin citrus shell that contrasts the soft interior. It also freezes well, which makes it practical for make-ahead baking. If you enjoyed this, our no bake lemon is worth trying next. The lemon poppy seed cake works well for weeknight cooking when time is limited.
Why You’ll Love These Lemon Poppy Seed Cake
- Moist crumb from buttermilk and butter, not just oil
- Bright lemon flavor from zest and juice, not extract alone
- Simple one-bowl-plus-loaf-pan method with no mixer required beyond a hand beater
- Freezes cleanly for up to two months without losing texture
- Small seeds give a mild crunch that contrasts the soft cake
Ingredients You’ll Need
- 1 ¾ cups all-purpose flour (210 g) — gives structure without heaviness
- 1 cup granulated sugar (200 g) — sweetens and helps the crust brown
- ½ cup unsalted butter, room temperature (113 g) — creams for lift and flavor
- 2 large eggs, room temperature — bind and add richness
- ¾ cup buttermilk, room temperature (180 ml) — keeps crumb tender
- 2 tbsp lemon zest, from about 2 lemons — carries the citrus aroma
- ¼ cup fresh lemon juice (60 ml) — adds acid and brightness
- 1 tbsp poppy seeds — tiny crunch and visual specks
- 2 tsp baking powder — primary lift
- ½ tsp baking soda — reacts with buttermilk for extra rise
- ½ tsp salt — balances sweetness
- 1 cup powdered sugar (120 g) for glaze
- 2 tbsp fresh lemon juice (30 ml) for glaze
Ingredient Substitutions
Buttermilk: Replace with ¾ cup whole milk mixed with 1 tbsp lemon juice or white vinegar, rested 5 minutes. The acid still reacts with baking soda, but the crumb will be slightly less rich and a touch denser. You may notice a milder tang, so add an extra 1 tsp lemon zest if you want the same brightness. Storing leftover lemon poppy seed cake correctly keeps it tasting good for days.
All-purpose flour: Swap with an equal weight of white whole wheat flour for more fiber and a softer wheat taste. This flour absorbs more liquid, so add 1–2 tbsp milk if the batter looks stiff. Expect a slightly tan crumb and a firmer bite, which still works for a loaf. For the best results with this lemon poppy seed cake, read through all the steps before starting.
Unsalted butter: Use the same weight of coconut oil, melted and cooled, for a dairy-free version. Coconut oil firms when cold, so the batter should be at room temperature before baking. The crumb will be a bit more closed and the flavor mildly sweet-nutty rather than buttery.
Poppy seeds: Replace with an equal amount of chia seeds for a similar speckle and slight gel crunch. Chia holds more water, so the batter may thicken faster; let it sit 5 minutes then loosen with 1 tbsp milk. The look is close, though the flavor is more neutral than poppy. For another easy option, check out our no bake lemon.
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Heat the oven to 180°C / 350°F and grease a 9×5 inch loaf pan. Line the base with parchment so the cake releases without tearing.
- Beat the butter and sugar on medium speed for 3 minutes until pale and fluffy. This step builds the air pockets that keep the crumb light.
- Add the eggs one at a time on low speed, beating 30 seconds after each. Scrape the bowl so no butter lump stays at the bottom.
- Whisk flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, and poppy seeds in a separate bowl. Stir in the lemon zest so it coats the flour and distributes evenly.
- Add the dry mix and buttermilk in three alternating additions, starting and ending with dry. Mix on low speed just until no streaks remain, about 40 seconds total.
- Fold in the lemon juice by hand, then scrape into the pan. Smooth the top and tap once to remove large air gaps.
- Bake 45–50 minutes until the top is golden and a toothpick comes out clean. Cool in the pan 10 minutes before lifting out.
- Whisk powdered sugar with lemon juice for the glaze. Pour over the cooled cake so it drips down the sides, then let it set 20 minutes before slicing.
Pro Tips
Room-temperature eggs and buttermilk blend faster and trap more air than cold ones, so pull them out 30 minutes early. A cold liquid can make the butter seize into small clumps that never smooth out.
Zest the lemons before juicing; a microplane gives fine strands that release oil without bitter pith. If you zest after cutting, the fruit collapses and you scrape too deep.
For a sharper top, double the glaze and apply half warm, then a second coat after 10 minutes. The oven temperature matters less here than letting the first layer firm.
Rest the batter 5 minutes if your kitchen is cool, which lets the flour hydrate and the baking soda start working. This small pause reduces tunnels in the baked crumb.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Overmixing after adding flour develops gluten and gives a rubbery loaf. Stop as soon as the streaks disappear, even if the batter looks slightly uneven.
Cutting the cake while warm breaks the crumb because the starch hasn’t set. Wait until it reaches room temperature, or the glaze will also slide off.
Using bottled lemon juice instead of fresh makes the flavor flat and slightly metallic. Fresh juice carries the volatile oils from the zest and keeps the acidity bright. You might also like our magnesium spray.
Serving Suggestions
Slice the loaf thick and serve with plain cucumber salad for a light brunch contrast. The cool vegetables balance the sweet citrus without competing.
For dessert, add a spoon of whipped cream and a few fresh berries on the plate. The seeds and lemon cut through the cream, so it doesn’t feel heavy.
Pair a square with fruit drink at an afternoon table when you want something low-effort but polished. The mint and strawberry echo the citrus nicely.
Storage and Reheating
Keep the unglazed or glazed cake in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 3 days if your kitchen is cool. In humid heat, refrigerate and eat within up to 5 days.
Freeze whole or sliced for freeze for up to 2 months wrapped in foil then plastic. Thaw at room temperature 1 hour before serving to restore the soft crumb.
To warm a slice, microwave 15 seconds on medium or toast lightly in a medium-low heat pan. Don’t overheat or the glaze melts into syrup and the edge dries.
Recipe Variations
Orange Twist
Replace the lemon juice with fresh orange juice and use orange zest instead of lemon. The crumb turns softer and sweeter with a rounder citrus note. Bake time stays the same, but check at 42 minutes since orange batter browns slower.
Almond Version
Swap ¼ cup flour for almond flour and add ½ tsp almond extract with the eggs. The cake gets a moist, slightly dense bite and a nutty background. Glaze with lemon still to keep the contrast sharp.
Mini Muffins
Spoon batter into a 12-cup muffin tin and bake 18–20 minutes until just set edges. You get portioned cakes that freeze individually and thaw in 20 minutes. Reduce glaze by half since the surface area is smaller.
Lemon Layer
Split the batter into two pans, bake as thinner cakes, and fill with lemon sauce before glazing the top. The middle stays moist and the serving looks like a small celebration cake. Watch the oven at 22 minutes because thin layers cook fast.
Lemon Poppy Seed Cake
Description
A moist lemon poppy seed loaf built on buttermilk and fresh lemon for a bright, bakery-style crumb that slices cleanly. A thin citrus glaze adds a gentle sweet shell, and it freezes well for make-ahead baking.
Ingredients
Instructions
-
Heat and prepare pan
Heat the oven to 180°C / 350°F and grease a 9x5 inch loaf pan. Line the base with parchment so the cake releases without tearing when cooled.
-
Cream butter and sugar
Beat the butter and sugar on medium speed for 3 minutes until pale and fluffy. This step builds the air pockets that keep the crumb light.
-
Add eggs one at a time
Add the eggs one at a time on low speed, beating 30 seconds after each. Scrape the bowl so no butter lump stays at the bottom.
-
Mix dry ingredients
Whisk flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, and poppy seeds in a separate bowl. Stir in the lemon zest so it coats the flour and distributes evenly.
-
Combine wet and dry
Add the dry mix and buttermilk in three alternating additions, starting and ending with dry. Mix on low speed just until no streaks remain, about 40 seconds total.
-
Fold juice and fill pan
Fold in the lemon juice by hand, then scrape into the pan. Smooth the top and tap once to remove large air gaps.
-
Bake the loaf
Bake 45–50 minutes until the top is golden and a toothpick comes out clean. Cool in the pan 10 minutes before lifting out.
-
Glaze and set
Whisk powdered sugar with lemon juice for the glaze. Pour over the cooled cake so it drips down the sides, then let it set 20 minutes before slicing.
Nutrition Facts
Servings 10
- Amount Per Serving
- Calories 320kcal
- % Daily Value *
- Total Fat 12g19%
- Saturated Fat 7g35%
- Cholesterol 55mg19%
- Sodium 280mg12%
- Total Carbohydrate 48g16%
- Dietary Fiber 1g4%
- Sugars 32g
- Protein 5g10%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Note
- Storage: Keep the cake in an airtight container at room temperature up to 3 days in a cool kitchen, or refrigerate up to 5 days in humid heat.
- Make ahead: Rest the batter 5 minutes in a cool kitchen so the flour hydrates and baking soda starts working, reducing tunnels in the crumb.
- Pro tip: For another easy citrus bake, see our lemon blueberry bread for a similar loaf style.
- Reheating: Warm a slice in the microwave 15 seconds on medium or toast lightly in a medium-low pan; do not overheat or the glaze melts into syrup.
