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This simple glazed Orange Pound Cake has orange flavor in every bite: zest and juice in the cake, an orange glaze, and orange icing! It’s the perfect homemade pound cake recipe with a tender moist crumb – you’re going to love it!
Easy Orange Pound Cake Recipe
Our neighbors often bring us oranges from their tree and I get super excited to make orange desserts with them. I’m an orange dessert superfan and love all citrus recipes, especially once I discovered lemon desserts like lemon bars and lemon pie and orange frosting.
Why you’ll love this recipe
- Orange Pound Cake is a homemade cake using triple the orange flavor. There’s citrus flavor in every bite of this from scratch bundt cake!
- This is a pound cake, which means it’s dense and thick (not fluffy and light). It’s super moist from a glaze soak and icing.
- The cake is filled with orange zest and juice.
- The cake is drenched with an orange syrup before the frosting goes on.
- The frosting is an orange powdered sugar glaze.
Ingredients Needed
- Fresh Orange Juice – I don’t recommend store-bought orange juice. Fresh orange juice has tons of flavor!
- Orange zest – this is where a ton of that orange flavor comes from. Don’t skip it! (Learn how to zest citrus)
- Unsalted Butter – pound cakes need lots of butter – make sure it’s softened.
- Buttermilk – I love the flavor that buttermilk gives the cake.
- Eggs – You need 5 large eggs – these helps the pound cake rise as well as lend structure and moisture to the cake.
How to make Orange Pound Cake
- Whisk together flour, salt, and baking powder in a medium bowl.
- With an electric mixer, cream butter and granulated sugar until light and fluffy. Add eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition. Be sure to scrape the sides of the bowl.
- Combine buttermilk with orange zest, orange juice, and vanilla extract in a measuring cup.
- Add the flour mixture alternately with the buttermilk mixture, beginning and ending with flour. Beat just until it comes together. Do not overmix!
- Pour batter into prepared pan. Bake until a toothpick inserted in centers comes out clean, 45-55 minutes.
- Make the orange glaze by simmering orange juice and sugar until the sugar dissolves. Set aside.
- Once done, cool cake 10 minutes in pan, then turn out cake onto a wire rack. Use a pastry brush to spread the glaze evenly over the tops and sides of the cake. Let dry and cool completely before drizzling with frosting.
- Make the frosting by whisking powdered sugar with orange juice and drizzle the icing over the cooled cake.
Expert Tips
- Be sure to cream the butter and sugar long enough. It should be light and fluffy.
- If you want even more orange flavor, add some orange extract.
- Use just the orange part of the zest, not the white. The white is bitter.
- I used mandarin oranges but you can use naval oranges or any kind you like.
- You can also bake this as two loaves in two 8.5×4-inch loaf pans.
- Be sure to remove the cake while it’s still warm – it will come out of the pan easier.
- Store the cake loosely covered with plastic wrap at room temperature for up to 3 days or in the freezer for up to 3 months. Thaw at room temperature.
FAQs
No – they’re baked in the same pan (a round fluted pan) but a bundt cake is often light and fluffy whereas a poundcake is dense and heavy.
When there is not enough moisture in the cake it will turn out dry. That’s why we use 5 eggs, buttermilk, and make sure not to pack our flour or over bake the cake.
All-purpose flour is the best to use for a pound cake – be sure to measure it correctly by weighing it or spooning it into the measuring cup then leveling it off, never packing it.
Orange Pound Cake
Ingredients
For the pound cake:
- 3 cups (372g) all-purpose flour
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 cup (226g) unsalted butter softened
- 2 cups (400g) granulated sugar
- 5 large eggs
- ¾ cup (177ml) buttermilk
- ⅓ cup (79ml) fresh orange juice
- 2 tablespoons orange zest (1-2 oranges)
- 1 teaspoon vanilla
- ½ teaspoon orange extract optional
For the glaze:
- ¼ cup (50g) granulated sugar
- ¼ cup (60ml) fresh orange juice
For the frosting:
- 1 cup (113g) powdered sugar
- 1-2 tablespoons (15-30ml) orange juice
- 1 tablespoon orange zest
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350°F. Spray a bundt pan with nonstick cooking spray (use the kind with flour for best results).
- Whisk together flour, salt, and baking powder in a medium bowl. With an electric mixer, cream butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Add eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition.
- Combine buttermilk with orange zest, orange juice, vanilla extract and orange extract (if using) in a measuring cup.
- Add the flour mixture (with the mixer on low) in three parts alternately with the buttermilk mixture, beginning and ending with flour. Beat just until it comes together. Do not overmix!
- Pour batter into prepared pan. Bake until a toothpick inserted in centers comes out clean, 45-55 minutes.
- While the cake is baking, make the glaze by heating granulated sugar and orange juice in a small pan over low heat. Bring to a simmer and stir. Once sugar is dissolved, remove from heat and let sit until cake is done. It will thicken as it cools.
- Once done, cool cake 10 minutes in pan, then turn out cake onto a rack. Use a pastry brush to spread the glaze evenly over the tops and sides of the cake. Let dry and cool completely before drizzling with frosting.
- Make the drizzle by whisking powdered sugar with juice and zest. Use 1-2 tablespoons of juice for desired consistency. Leave the cake on a rack. Drizzle over cake and let dry, about 30 minutes. Carefully transfer cake to a serving plate.
- Store loosely covered for up to 3 days.
Recipe Video
Recipe Notes
- Be sure to cream the butter and sugar long enough. It should be light and fluffy.
- If you want even more orange flavor, add some orange extract.
- Use just the orange part of the zest, not the white. The white is bitter.
- I used mandarin oranges but you can use naval oranges or any kind you like.
- You can also bake this in two 8.5×4-inch or two 9×5-inch loaf pans. Baking time will be between 35-50 minutes.Be sure to remove the cake while it’s still warm – it will come out of the pan easier.
- Store the cake loosely covered at room temperature for up to 3 days or freeze it for up to 3 months.
It’s gonna be awesome, fun, & exciting to make @ ma new ๐ก
Like the author, I give most of my baked goods away. In consideration for one of my recipients, I have to bake dairy-free, so I substituted vegetable oil for the butter. For the buttermilk, I attempted to use flax milk mixed with lemon juice which would have worked with cow milk. However, I could tell it did not sour. I finished the recipe with my un-soured milk in loaf pans rather than a bundt pan. The cake didn’t rise as it should have, but boy-o-boy was it tasty. It was so tasty in fact I had 3 pieces before I gave it away. This is an excellent recipe that I will use often. Everyone who ate it loved it!
This cake was incredible. My family loved it!!! I added more orange juice because I didn’t have any orange extract (I love orange cakes that are super orangey!!!). I also substituted 4 tbsp of flour with cornstarch, I read somewhere this makes cakes less dense, I had some and wanted to try it and it made the cake so soft and fluffy. Thanks for this receipe!!!!
Can I use orange juice than buttermilk to have more orange flavour?๐
You can use orangeย juice to make the buttermilk if you don’t have it, or use a combination of milk and orange juice, I believe, but you need the milk component (and the buttermilk has the acid needed to activate the other ingredients for rising.)
This cake came out SO good!! My friend sent me a vegan orange cake recipe but I wanted to use eggs so came across this recipe. The vegan recipe recommended orange candied peels so my friend gave me some since the ones I made at home came out really bad. I was excited to try this recipe out after reviewing so many online. I have to say, my cake came out SO good, and I have never baked anything that is not ready out of a packet! The cake itself was quite big, much bigger than in the picture above, but I used a regular pan instead of Bundt. I also didn’t have orange extract so used more orange juice and zest. I love that this recipe adds a glaze because it really makes the cake super soft and moist. And I love the frosting, while it would have tasted too sweet, the zest gives it a “zing” and keeps it from being too sweet. I added candied peels and I love it! It doesn’t make it too sweet and adds a bit of chewiness with the bits in-between. Overall, the cake was amazing, with just the right flavor and nothing that overpowers, even the orange is not overpowering. I followed the measurements to a T and it came out quite well. My previous try using another recipe went bad, this one was perfect. It does take a lot of prep work since you use the juice and zest in all the parts, but overall still doable. It took me a good 2-3 hours at least, since my oven took much longer than 45-55 minutes recommended here, it took almost 1.5 hours. The bottom tasted a bit burnt and the sides at the top were getting a bit burnt while the middle stayed fine, but that could just be my small countertop oven. The cake rose up so much that it almost touch the top. I still highly recommend making this cake.
recipe is straight forward and easy to follow! cake came out so amazing!
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