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An easy lemon drizzle loaf cake – lemon sponge, lemon drizzle, lemon icing… what more could you want?! Another post in my back to basics series!

Lemon drizzle loaf cake

So, say hello to your new lemon addiction. I have always been a fan of lemon flavours, and this new post, another instalment in my back to basics series, is my lemon drizzle loaf cake. It’s easy, it’s delicious, and I love it. 

In the past, I have uploaded my lemon lime drizzle cake – which is fairly similar. It’s an old post, with different quantities, and is obviously lemon and lime combined! As you all adore loaf cakes even more now though, I thought I would do an in-depth post into this beauty.

Tin

So… when you are starting with a loaf cake, you need the right tin. Loaf tins can vary greatly in size, even if they are described as being the same tin. For example, I have three different 2lb loaf tins, but they are all slightly different in how much water they can hold. Usually, this is okay as long as they are similar enough! For reference, this is the 2lb loaf tin that I use! If it helps, the exact measurements are – 24.4 x 14.4 x 6.9 cm. This may help you if your’s varies slightly! 

Some loaf tins are still 2lb, but they are slightly wider and shallower, which means the bake time can vary – but baking a loaf cake is quite similar to baking a Bundt Cake. They can vary dependent on tin, just like a Bundt Cake, but usually they work out the same! 

When I line the tin, I usually grease it slightly and then add parchment paper on top. I don’t then grease on top of the paper. I don’t feel the need, and if you use the correct type of baking parchment, then you definitely don’t need to do it! 

Cake mix

Now when it comes to the cake mix, it really is just a basic cake mix. Even weight quantities of butter, sugar, eggs and flour – with lemon added in. Because it’s just the basic cake mix, you need to make sure the quantities are correct.

You can help this by weighing your eggs, in their shells, but generally I find 5 medium eggs = 250g of mix. It’s much easier this way. If you use large eggs, they can often be 60g, so I would only use 4 eggs, and only 240g each of the rest of the ingredients. I hope this makes sense.

When it comes to the lemon, you have two choices. Fresh lemon zest grated finely, or lemon extract! Either work well, and they both work the same! I swap between both each time, and they both work well. If you want to use the zest, you can then use the same lemons for the drizzles later.

Bake

When baking a loaf cake, it can vary a bit just like bundt cakes, as mentioned earlier! The usual timings is 55-65 minutes, because it’s quite a lot of mix, in a smaller sized tin (compared to a round tin!). 

Sometimes, the baking can take longer though. My oven is a fan oven, so I put it on the fan setting at 160C – I set the timer for 55 minutes, and then check it. If when I open the door and touch the tin the cake wobbles, it’s definitely not done! However, if it’s not wobbling it’s worth checking. 

Checking a cake is a fine balance though. When opening the oven door, you really don’t want to take too long. For every second an oven door is open, you will lose LOTS of heat. If your cake isn’t finished baking, it can sometimes also sink if taken out too early. 

Lemon drizzle

For the lemon drizzle, you want to mix together the lemon juice and caster sugar – it makes a sort of cloudy drizzly paste – spoon this over the cake once it’s come out of the oven and it will soak in. Leave the cake to cool fully before moving from the tin!

The wonderful thing about this sort of cake is that it’s simple, but it’s so delicious. The lemon drizzle keeps the cake lovely and moist – and it won’t dry out. I use my stand mixer to mix the cake ingredients together, and it’s amazing. Although, this isn’t essential. 

Decoration

Once cooled, you can optionally decorate it – I use the icing sugar, ‘watered’ down with some more lemon juice – and just drizzle it over with a small spoon! I then sprinkle on some lemon zest to make it look pretty, but both the icing drizzle and zest are optional. They just look nice!.

You can of course leave it completely plain, top it with a buttercream or even a fresh cream topping – that’s the charm of a bake like this, you can do whatever you want. 

Top tips

A handy method to check if your cake is ready, is to (carefully!!) listen to the cake – if it’s making a bubbling/crackling sound, then it’s not actually finished baking either. You’ll want to continue baking till the skewer is clean, and also not making a sound. 

I classically use caster sugar for the sponge and main drizzle, but this can be switched with golden caster sugar, light brown sugar, or even dark brown – but the changes can change the flavour! 

I use medium eggs as I have said, and I use self-raising flour. If you can’t access self-raising, you will want to use plain flour with baking powder added in. You whisk in 2 level tsps of baking powder per 150g of flour, before using it in a recipe! It’s often easier to make a larger batch though, and then just store the flour for later use! Easy and delicious.

I hope you love this recipe, any questions leave them below! x

Lemon Drizzle Loaf Cake!

An easy lemon drizzle loaf cake - lemon sponge, lemon drizzle, lemon icing... what more could you want?!
Print Pin Rate
Category: Cake
Type: Loaf Cake
Keyword: Lemon
Prep Time: 15 minutes
Cook Time: 1 hour
Decorating Time: 10 minutes
Total Time: 1 hour 25 minutes
Servings: 12 Slices
Author: Jane's Patisserie

Ingredients

For the Cake

  • 250 g unsalted butter
  • 250 g caster sugar
  • 250 g self raising flour
  • 5 medium eggs
  • Zest of 2 lemons (2tsp lemon extract)

Drizzle

  • 75 ml lemon juice
  • 75 g caster sugar

Decoration

  • 50 g icing sugar
  • 1-2 tsps lemon juice
  • Lemon zest

Instructions

  • Preheat your oven to 180C/160C Fan - grease and line your 2lb loaf tin!
  • Beat together your butter and sugar together until light and creamy!
  • Add in your flour, eggs and lemon and beat again until combined. It'll be a smooth cake mixture!
  • Add the mix into the cake tin and bake. This can take 55-65 minutes - but check from 50 minutes onwards.
  • Towards the end of baking - in a bowl, mix together your 75ml lemon juice and 75g caster sugar together.
  • Once the cake is baked, drizzle this over the cake, whilst still in the tin. Let the cake cool fully.
  • Once the cake is cooled, remove from the tin.
  • If you want to decorate, mix in lemon juice to your icing sugar until you reach the desired consistency.
  • Drizzle this over the cake, and sprinkle on some lemon zest for decoration! Enjoy!

Notes

  • I use this loaf tin
  • If it helps, I also use this baking parchment in my bakes! 
  • As mentioned in the post, if you are using large eggs - use four large eggs, and 240g flour, sugar, butter. 
  • If your cake sinks, it hasn't finished baking! Loaf tin baking times can vary so check on the cake from 50 minutes onwards. 
  • This cake will last for 4-5 days at room temp! I store it in a cake storage tin. 
  • You can easily water down the icing for the drizzle with water instead, but the lemon juice is more zingy!
  • If you want to make a smaller cake you can - reduce it down by one medium egg, and use 200g of ingredients. Or even reduce by two eggs, and use 150g of ingredients. The fewer the ingredients the quicker the bake time!

ENJOY!

Find my other Recipes on my Recipes Page!

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J x

© Jane’s Patisserie. All images & content are copyright protected. Do not use my images without prior permission. If you want to republish this recipe, please re-write the recipe in your own words and credit me, or link back to this post for the recipe.

312 Comments

  1. Vee on January 16, 2026 at 10:18 pm

    5 stars
    Didn’t have any self rising flour so I just added 11g of baking powder to all-purpous flour and it turned out amazing! It just hits the spot with the perfect sweet lemon taste!

  2. Lisa on December 13, 2025 at 7:45 am

    Hey! Could these be made int cupcakes instead? I loves loaf cake but want to try something a bit different. If so, would the 150g eggs, sugar, flour recipe work?

  3. Jane Ranger on December 8, 2025 at 7:56 am

    5 stars
    Hello Jane, .I have made this recipe several times with great success. I have frozen a lemon cake please could you advise me how to complete the recipe – adding the lemon and sugar drizzle? Should I defrost the cake and warm it in the oven before adding the drizzle?
    Thank you

  4. Vanessa on August 27, 2025 at 7:48 pm

    5 stars
    DELICICIOUS….. gorgeous cake, easy make and will definitely be making again .

  5. Nanajee Travels on August 22, 2024 at 8:54 am

    5 stars
    Very nice and easy
    Thanks for the effort!!!!

  6. Inge on June 16, 2024 at 10:05 pm

    5 stars
    Hi Jane,
    Thanks for the recipe, I tried 2 times and it turned out very delicious, everyone loves it.
    Can I add blueberry, if yes…how many cup should I use?
    The other recipes with Blueberry are not for loaf, I don’t dare to use loaf instead of bundt or round cake as on your other recipes.
    Can you advise? Thanks

  7. Lola on February 17, 2024 at 6:51 pm

    Hello Jane. Please what’s the conversion ratio for half butter and half oil for this recipe? The recipe says 250g of butter, but I want to use half oil and half butter. Please are you able to help? Thank you so much

  8. Helen on November 14, 2023 at 9:24 pm

    Hi,
    Do you need to add xanthan gum to this cake if you are replacing the self raising flour with Gluten free flour?

    Thank you

    • Jane's Patisserie on November 24, 2023 at 11:16 am

      If the flour doesn’t already contain it, yes that would be good! x



    • Ana on April 27, 2025 at 7:14 pm

      Hey Helen, how did this go? What quantities did you use of GF SRF and XG?
      Cheers,
      Ana 🙂



  9. niki on October 17, 2023 at 3:20 pm

    hi can this be frozen?

    • Toni on September 4, 2025 at 9:49 am

      5 stars
      Thankfully, it is a great cake to freeze. Once cooled, I cut the cake into portions and individually wrap in greaseproof paper and cling film to pop in the freezer. Otherwise I would eat the whole cake to myself within a day!



  10. Petra on October 6, 2023 at 11:23 pm

    5 stars
    THANK YOU! My 15 year old daughter is trying to raise some funds for a community project abroad by doing cake sales and your lemon drizzle is the first cake she tried to make, it was a huge success! She now plants to try all the other loaf cake flavours as well.

  11. Jill on July 18, 2023 at 1:18 pm

    5 stars
    This is a fab easy lemon drizzle recipe, had so many compliments when I made it, you are my go to recipe site now, I love lots of your other cake recipes too

  12. Jordan on June 14, 2023 at 2:03 pm

    I only have large eggs so to make this how many eggs do I use ?

    • steve field on July 17, 2023 at 9:11 am

      My daughter made this and when finished with the decorating icing this is head & shoulders above any other recipe absolutely delicious.



    • Jeannette on August 29, 2023 at 9:02 pm

      I have had many compliment s .
      This is a wonderfully moist loaf.



    • Chris on October 8, 2023 at 3:23 pm

      5 stars
      4 large works perfect every time



    • Robyn on March 7, 2025 at 4:50 pm

      5 stars
      Did you get an answer, or did you try freezing it?



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