This is my favorite cake I’ve baked to date. Say that 5 times fast. The inspiration for this Lemon Elderflower Cake comes from across the pond. When KP (aka Kensington Palace) announced the cake for the Royal Wedding was going to be a Lemon Elderflower Cake, my mind went straight to a boozy, St. Germain cake.
But then I remembered we already made St. Germain cupcakes! However, this cake needed to be booze-less so the wife could eat some. But what do you substitute St. Germain with?
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Did you know about this Elderflower Cordial? It’s like a syrup. Life changing. Bake with it, make drinks with it, do almost anything with it. A little lemon zest, and whatever you’re making is spring ready.
Lemon Elderflower Cake hits the spot
Fatima and I shared a slice the day I made this. YUM, YUM, YUM. It was light, moist, and the lemon and elderflower flavors added a wonderful brightness to the cake. The basic buttercream frosting I whipped up was a touch too sweet, but worked really well with the cake. To be honest, I lost count on the number of cups of sugar I was adding to the frosting. I used 4 or 5 cups of confectioners sugar, so I’m going to go with 5 because it was a firm frosting.
A 1-2-3-4 cake recipe is always a great starting point when trying to make a cake. It’s a basic recipe to help you figure out how to layer everything else in. My main concern was trying to figure out how to balance the lemon and elderflower. So I used that recipe and the St. Germain cupcakes to figure out how to blend the flavors. The St. Germain cupcakes were really good, but they were a little tart. If I used lemon zest instead of lemon juice, I knew that would help to brighten up the cake and cut down on the bite.
I used this cake as an excuse to buy two things: a zester and a 5 inch cake pan. When we make cakes, I can’t make a large cake. I’m usually the only one eating it after the first day. This time around, I made the difficult decision to bring it into work. I knew it wouldn’t be coming back.
Cake Cake Cake Cake
My cake decorating skills continue to surprise me. We attempted a red velvet naked cake a few years ago. It was a little too naked for my liking. I remember that I had so many issues frosting between the layers. After watching a few spring baking championships, I realized I needed to pipe in the layer. I started with one line on the edge and then filled in the rest in a swirl motion working towards the middle. It held my layers up and prevented them from sliding off.
I scraped frosting around the cake for a naked look. But I needed a little more dimension and pizzaz. I dropped Hershey Kiss shaped frosting along the perimeter on top. Fatima topped it off with purple wax flowers and voilà! The cutest lemon elderflower cake ever!
[recipe title=”Lemon Elderflower Cake” servings=”3 Layer, 5 inch Cake + 4 cupcakes” time=”1 hour 30 minutes” difficulty=”Medium” image=”https://liliesandloafers.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/IMG_6599.jpg”] [recipe-ingredients]For the cake:
- 1 cup butter at room temperature
- 1 cup sugar
- 4 eggs
- 1 1/2 cups + 2 tsp. all-purpose flour
- 2 tsp. baking powder
- 1/2 tsp. salt
- Zest of 1 lemon
- 4 tbsp. elderflower cordial
For the frosting:
- 1 stick (1/2 cup) salted butter at room temperature
- 4-5 cups confectioners sugar
- 2 tsp. vanilla
- 1/4 cup whole milk
- Using a kitchen aid or hand mixer, whisk the butter until light and fluffy.
- Add sugar to the butter and whisk together.
- In a medium bowl, combine flour, baking powder, salt and lemon zest.
- Mixing on low, alternate adding the eggs and flour. You do this in cakes from scratch to prevent separation and help with absorption.
- Add elderflower cordial and lightly mix until combined.
- Preheat your oven to 350 degrees (F).
- Grease, flour and layer the bottom of 3, 5” cake pans with parchment paper.
- Add batter to your cake pans filling only about half way. You’ll end up with some batter leftover, so make a few cupcakes!
- Bake for about 25 minutes, or until a toothpick comes out clean.
- Remove from the oven and let cool for a few minutes before removing from the pan. Cool on wire racks.
- Once completely cooled, wrap in plastic wrap and place in the fridge. This will help when frosting.
To make the frosting:
- Beat butter until light and fluffy.
- Reduce speed to medium and gradually add confectioners sugar. The frosting will look crumbly or like Dippin’ Dots.
- Add vanilla and milk and whisk until you see something that looks like frosting!
Pair this with our Elderflower Margarita!
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Light and Bright Elderflower Margarita | Lilies and Loafers
May 2, 2018 at 8:00 am[…] While St. Germain is the obvious choice, I used elderflower cordial. We had a bottle from the lemon elderflower cake, and I wanted to experiment with […]