Lemon Layer Cake With Cream Cheese Frosting
Updated April 24, 2025
- Total Time
- About 2 hours
- Prep Time
- 15 minutes
- Cook Time
- 1 hour 10 minutes, plus 30 minutes’ cooling and chilling
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
FOR THE CAKE AND LEMON SYRUP
¾ cup/170 grams unsalted butter, cut into tablespoon-size pieces and softened, plus more for greasing the pans
3 cups/385 grams all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting the pans
2 cups/400 grams granulated sugar
3 medium lemons
1 ½ cups/360 milliliters whole milk
2 teaspoons baking powder
½ teaspoon baking soda
1 ½ teaspoons kosher salt (such as Diamond Crystal)
¼ cup/60 milliliters neutral oil (such as canola, vegetable or grapeseed)
4 large eggs, at room temperature
1 tablespoon lemon extract (optional)
FOR THE FROSTING
2 cups/240 grams powdered sugar, sifted
1 cup/226 grams unsalted butter, softened but cool
16 ounces/450 grams cream cheese, softened but cool
Zest of 1 lemon, plus 1 thinly sliced lemon for decorating (optional)
1 tablespoon freshly squeezed lemon juice, as needed
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat oven to 325 degrees. Butter three (8-inch) cake pans and line each with parchment paper. Butter the parchment, then dust with flour, tapping out the excess.
- Step 2
Make the cake: Add 1 ¾ cups/350 grams of the granulated sugar to the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle, then zest the lemons directly into the sugar. Use your fingers to rub the zest into the sugar until it looks moist and sandy.
- Step 3
Juice the zested lemons into a small bowl. Transfer ¼ cup of juice to a large measuring cup and stir in the milk. Let it sit while you prepare the rest of the cake, reserving the remaining juice for the lemon syrup. (The lemon juice will thicken and curdle the milk as it sits.)
- Step 4
To the bowl with the lemon sugar, add the flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt, and mix on low to combine. Add the softened butter to the bowl all at once. Mix on low until the butter is evenly distributed and the mixture looks sandy. (A few larger lumps of butter are OK.)
- Step 5
Add the oil, eggs and lemon extract (if using) to the measuring cup with the milk mixture and mix with a fork to combine. With the mixer on low, slowly stream in the milk mixture. When the batter is moistened, stop the mixer and scrape the bottom and sides of the bowl to ensure there aren’t any dry pockets. Adjust mixer speed to medium and mix for 1 minute more.
- Step 6
Divide the batter among the prepared pans (about 2 heaping cups/520 grams per pan), spread evenly and tap the pans on a countertop to release any large air bubbles.
- Step 7
Bake the cakes until slightly risen and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean, 20 to 25 minutes. The cakes will have a bit of color along the edges, but the tops will still be quite pale.
- Step 8
Set the pans on a wire rack and let the cakes cool for about 15 minutes. Then, run a thin knife along the edges of the pan and carefully turn the cakes out onto the rack to cool completely. (You may have to tap the pans gently on the rack to release each cake.)
- Step 9
While the cakes cool, make the syrup: Measure ¼ cup lemon juice from the remaining reserved juice. Combine the juice and the remaining ¼ cup/50 grams sugar in a small saucepan and bring to a boil over medium-high, stirring occasionally. Cook until the sugar has dissolved, then pour into a heat-safe container to cool.
- Step 10
While the syrup cools, make the frosting: Add the powdered sugar and the 1 cup/226 grams butter to the bowl of the stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment and mix on medium until well combined. Add the cream cheese and mix until just combined and fluffy. Stream in a bit of the remaining lemon juice if necessary to make a fluffy, spreadable frosting.
- Step 11
Assemble the cake: Place one cake layer onto a serving plate, top side up. Brush the cake with lemon syrup. Spread about ¾ cup frosting evenly over the top of the cake. Place the second cake layer on top of the frosting, top side down, and press gently. Brush the cake with syrup, then spread about ¾ cup frosting over the top. Brush the top side of the final cake layer with syrup, then carefully place it top side down on top of the frosting. Cover the top and sides of the cake with a thin layer of frosting (be careful not to transfer crumbs back into the bowl of frosting), leaving about 1 ½ cups frosting in the bowl. (If at any point the frosting softens and the cake layers feel like they’re sliding around, gently push them back into place and set the cake in the refrigerator to firm up.) Refrigerate the cake until the frosting is firm, about 20 minutes.
- Step 12
Spread the remaining frosting over the top and sides of the cake. (If desired, save some frosting to pipe a decorative border around the edges of the cake.) Decorate the cake with lemon slices, if using. Use a clean, hot and dry knife for the tidiest slices. (The cake can be stored at room temperature, loosely covered, for up to 4 days.)
Private Notes
Comments
This was a big hit for Easter dinner. Cake was dense and delicious. Layered it with lemon curd. I edited the frosting by adding 2 Tbsp lemon juice, 2 Tbsp sour cream, 1 tsp vanilla paste, dash of salt. Took out half cup and dyed it green which I used to pipe 6 small bird nests around the edge and added pastel Jelly Belly eggs to the nests.
I made the cakes two days before serving. I let them cool completely on a rack and then put them each in a gallon ziplock overnight, keeping the parchment on the bottom and putting a parchment layer on top. Next day, I made the syrup and the icing and assembled the cake, kept it at cool room temperature loosely covered overnight and I served it the next day. The cakes stayed moist - especially with the syrup. Overall fabulous! Five Stars!
I believe that NYTimes cooking may want to check Step 11 in assembling the cake. There are only two layers referenced. I am sure your cooks are logical and did the last layer on top…thanks for the recipe. Happy Easter,
I'm assuming the 15 minutes prep time is in dog minutes? There's no way I can even frost this thing in that amount of time, much less make the batter and the frosting.
Has anyone baked the cake one layer at a time? I have a single 8-inch pan. Thanks!
Has anyone tried making this with lemoncello?

