A true classic, my Pound Cake recipe is simple (only six ingredients) and satisfying! This cake is heavy and dense (as it ought to be!) while simultaneously being soft, buttery, and absolutely melt-in-your-mouth! It’s incredible served alone or pairs beautifully with whipped cream and fresh fruit. Recipe includes a how-to video!
Traditional Pound Cake (Made Better!)
I’m not sure where pound cake rates in terms of your favorite cake recipes, but I’ll admit it had never been a top contender for in my household. Humble and frosting-less, sure I would have a slice, but nobody in my house ever really got excited about pound cake, often overlooking it for light and fluffy angel food cake or prettily iced layer cakes.
If your experience with pound cakes of the past is anything like mine, you’re in for a real treat today. I set about developing this recipe with a mission, determined to perfect a pound cake that was simple and not overly complicated, one that didn’t stray too far from the traditional version (no fancy or unusual ingredients) but at the same time put all of its predecessors to shame.
Here you have it. Perfectly balanced, rich and sweet, my pound cake is so buttery and soft that melts in your mouth, and it’s anything but boring. It’s a heavy cake (as pound cakes should be!) with a dense, velvety crumb, but there’s nothing dry or crumbly about it.
While this cake can hold it’s own, it’s even better when served with homemade whipped cream and fresh fruit. It would also pair well with a spoonful or two of lemon curd (a great way to use up some leftover egg yolks!).
Break out your bowls–you’re going to need a big one–and let’s talk about what it is that makes this cake so perfectly special and irresistible.
What You Need (and What You DON’T)
Pound cake has traditionally been made with a pound each of butter, sugar, eggs, and flour. When developing my recipe, I wanted to stay as true as I could to the traditional version, but some small adjustments were in order for the absolute best flavor (I mean, hello, vanilla extract!). The result is a soft, buttery crumb that’s perfectly dense without being at all dry or crumbly.
- Butter. Unsalted butter works best for this cake. It should be softened, but not so soft that it’s greasy, melty, or oily.
- Sugar. We stick with tradition and use regular granulated sugar only in this cake. Make sure to whip your butter and sugar until fully incorporated and fluffy before you move to the next step.
- Eggs. You will need six whole eggs and six additional egg yolks. It might seem like a lot, and it is, but trust me! The extra yolks help to keep the cake crumb moist with almost custardy undertones/flavors. We omit extra whites because they would make the cake crumb too light (remember, this is a dense cake!) and could even make it dry. This cake is perfect for using up extra yolks from another recipe! Save your extra egg whites to make meringue, pavlova, or Eton mess!
- Vanilla. You’re going to add a whole tablespoon of vanilla to this cake batter. This may seem like a lot, but I promise it’s just the right amount! PS. If you have a batch of homemade vanilla extract sitting in your cabinet, this is the time to bring it out!
- Salt. For flavor, I add a little salt.
- Flour. I specificaly developed this recipe to be perfectly soft and tender using plain ol’ all-purpose flour, but include notes in the recipe in case you’d like to substitute cake flour. Make sure you know how to measure your flour properly, or may end up with a dry cake. One more thing that I cannot stress highly enough: do not, under any circumstances, use self-rising flour. Your cake will almost absolutely overflow.
You may notice that my pound cake recipeย does not use baking powder. This is intentional! Pound cake ought to have a dense crumb, and baking powder serves to lighten a cake’s crumb and help it rise. The eggs in our recipe work all of the rising-magic that we need, and not only would adding baking powder make the cake crumb too light (best-case-scenario), you’re also bound to find it’s overflowed all over your oven when the baking time has elapsed.
SAM’S TIP FOR LEMON POUND CAKE: I’ve received lots of requests for how to make a lemon version of this pound cake recipe. While you could just swap out the vanilla extract for lemon, it’s not going to taste as bright and sunny as you’re used to. I have a separate lemon pound cake recipe that packs lots of lemon flavor and is draped in a stunning white glaze. I highly recommend you try it!
As always, this is just an overview of the ingredients I used and why. For the full recipe please scroll down to the bottom of the post!
How to Make Pound Cake
- Grease and flour your baking pan. Shake out any excess flour and set aside.
- Beat the butter until smooth, then add sugar. Cream until light and fluffy.
- In a separate bowl, combine eggs, egg yolks, vanilla, and salt. Slowly drizzle egg mixture into your butter mixture with mixer on low speed. Pause to scrape sides and bottom of the bowl, then increase speed and beat for another 1-2 minutes.
- Reduce speed to low and gradually add flour. Scrape and stir again on medium speed until well-combined, then beat for another minute. You should have a completely smooth, uniform batter. Pour batter into prepared pan, smoothing the top.
- Bake in 350F oven for an hour and ten to an hour and fifteen minutes. Test with a wooden skewer for doneness.
- Cool for 20 minutes, then run a knife around the sides and center of the pan before carefully inverting onto a cooling rack. Allow to cool completely before serving.
SAM’S TIP: To test if your cake is finished, the best method is to use a long wooden skewer (like the kind used for shish-kebabs) as this batter is so thick that a toothpick just wonโt cut it. Insert the skewer into your cake and check it for moist crumbs. If you have wet batter on your skewer, your cake needs to bake longer, but if there are a few moist crumbs then itโs time to pull that cake out of the oven! The cake is going to continue to bake while it cools, so if you pull out a completely clean skewer from your cake, itโs already at risk of being over-baked and dry, so you want to retrieve your cake from the oven before it hits that point.
Frequently Asked Questions
While this recipe was very deliberately developed to be moist, the most important thing when baking your pound cake is to make sure that you do NOT over-bake it. I recommend making sure your oven is not running hot (I keep two oven thermometers in my oven at all times just to make sure my oven display is telling me the truth) and then checking your cake earlier rather than later. Because of its thick batter and the sheer volume of batter, itโs going to take quite a while in the oven, probably an hour and ten to an hour and fifteen minutes. I check my cake at one hour and then return it to the oven in about 5-minute increments until itโs finished baking.
This cake was originally made with a pound each of butter, sugar, eggs, and flour, and so the nameย poundย cake was born. Crazy stuff, huh? ๐
This pound cake should not overflow if prepared as written and baked in the proper-sized pan (indicated in the recipe card). I have found that some people have had their cakes overflow, and in each instance this has happened because they had substituted self rising flour, used 12 whole eggs, or added baking powder to the recipe. Please do not make any of these alterations.
Enjoy!
More Classic Cakes to Try:
Letโs bake together! Iโll be walking you through all the steps in my written recipe and video below! If you try this recipe, be sure to tag me on Instagram, and you can also find me on YouTube and Facebook
The Perfect Pound Cake Recipe
Ingredients
- 2 cups (455 g) unsalted butter softened
- 3 ยฝ cups (700 g) granulated sugar
- 6 large whole eggsยน
- 6 large egg yolksยน (these 6 egg yolks are in addition to the 6 whole eggs listed above)
- 1 Tablespoon vanilla extract
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 3 ยฝ cups (438 g) all-purpose (plain) flourยฒ
Recommended Equipment
Instructions
- Preheat your oven to 350F (175C) and generously grease (with shortening) and flour a 10 inch tube pan or 12 cup bundt pan. Shake out excess flour and set aside.
- Place your butter in a large bowl (this recipe makes a lot of batter! I recommend using a stand mixer if you have one) and use an electric mixer to beat the butter until it is creamy and smooth.2 cups (455 g) unsalted butter
- Scrape down the sides of the bowl and add the sugar. Beat until the ingredients are well combined and light and fluffy (about 1-2 minutes).3 ยฝ cups (700 g) granulated sugar
- In a separate, medium-sized bowl, combine your eggs, additional egg yolks, vanilla extract, and salt.6 large whole eggsยน, 6 large egg yolksยน, 1 Tablespoon vanilla extract, 1 teaspoon salt
- Use a fork to lightly beat the eggs and yolks until all egg yolks are broken up and salt and vanilla are incorporated.
- With mixer on low speed, slowly pour egg mixture into your batter, allowing it to gradually become incorporated (don’t pour all the egg mixture in at once, if you can’t manage a steady stream then add the egg mixture in about 6 parts, allowing each part to become well incorporated before adding more). Once all of the egg mixture is incorporated, pause to scrape down the sides and bottom of the bowl, then increase speed to medium-high and beat for another 1-2 minutes.
- Reduce mixer speed to low and gradually, about ยผ cup at a time, add flour to the batter until all has been added.3 ยฝ cups (438 g) all-purpose (plain) flourยฒ
- Scrape down the sides and bottom of bowl and stir again on medium speed until well-combined and beat for another minute.
- Spread batter evenly into prepared tube pan, use a spatula to smooth the surface of the batter.
- Transfer to 350F (175C) oven and bake in the center rack of your oven for an hour and ten to an hour and fifteenย minutes or until a wooden skewer inserted in the center of the thickest part of the cake comes out clean or ideally with a few moist crumbs (do NOT over-bake this cake or it will be dry)
- Allow cake to cool for at least 20 minutes then run a knife around the sides of the tube pan and the center.
- Carefully invert pound cake onto a cooling rack and allow to cool completely before serving.
Notes
ยนEggs
A lot of people have had questions about how many eggs to use. You need a total of 12 eggs for this recipe BUT you are only going to be using 6 whole eggs and then another 6 egg yolks. Meaning you will be discarding 6 egg whites (or save them to make meringue cookies or my white cake).ยยฒCake Flour
If you’d like, you can substitute cake flour. If measuring your flour by weight (which you really should be!) you can do a straight 1:1 substitute for cake flour. This cake will turn out just as well; slightly softer, a smidge less dense, but still delicious. Just like with using all-purpose flour, you DO NOT need to add baking powder to this recipe if you use cake flour. Also worth noting: DO NOT UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES USE SELF-RISING FLOUR.Nutrition
Nutritional information is based on third-party calculations and should be considered an estimate only. Actual nutritional content will vary based upon brands used, measuring methods, cooking method, portion sizes, and more.
Chris
I’ve tried a few pound cakes recipes and I must say this is the best. I preheated my oven to 335 degrees ( my oven runs hot) and baked for an hour and half. Moist and delicious, no gooey wet spots. I will use this recipe from now on and hope all my future cakes turn out like my fist one!
Sam
I am so happy to hear this, Chris! thank you so much for commenting, I appreciate it ๐
Elaine
Made this last night. Love it! Will be my go to recipe for pound cake!
Sam
So happy to hear this! Thanks for commenting Elaine! ๐
Susan Bond
I have a bag of of dried cherries. Could I add these to the recipe?
Sam
Hi Susan! That should work fine here. ๐
Francesca
So I havenโt made this yet, but I love how you go into detail with each and every step!
Sam
Thank you so much, Francesca! I hope you love it! ๐
Caroline Schmaelzle
I made this a second time and it overflowed and didn’t turn out well, I read another comment on here about theirs doing the same thing, I figured out my mistake. Definitely do not use self rising flour…
Sam
Oh no! Yes self-rising flour would do it, unfortunately. Thank you for sharing, Caroline, hopefully this will help others!
Michele
Hi. Can I use a similar sized Bundt pan? Thanks.
Sam
Hi Michele! Yes that will be totally fine. Enjoy!
Lynette
I left the salt out! What happens here
Sam
Hi Lynette! The cake will still turn out, just may not taste as good. ๐
Dee
I got through making the batter perfectly and was very proud lol, but for whatever reason it bubbled over during baking and after an hour and 15 minutes is still liquidy in the middle ๐ฉ not sure where I went wrong. I used the tube pan and all… maybe I needed a larger tube pan? I used 10โ. Ever had this issue of bubbling over?
Sam
Hi Dee! I am so sorry that happened! My only guess is that the pan was too small, but my tube pan is also 10 inches but 4 inches tall. Is yours that tall?
Dee
I think mine is about the same. Iโll have to double check! After another 10 minutes it was cooked through. The outside was a bit crispy, but it was a buttery crispy deliciousness I am in love with! I worried the middle would be dry with it being a crispy outside, but the middle was moist and just perfect! It turned out super yummy and is a hit with the kids of course! Thank you for the recipe!
Sam
I am so glad you were still able to enjoy it! ๐
Christine
terrible don’t waste your butter and eggs its like a brick
Sam
Hi Christine! Pound cake is dense and heavy but I don’t think I’d call it brick-like. Was it dry? Could you give me a little more info about what was wrong with it, I might be able help!
DBS
Brick? Thatโs being harsh… itโs certainly dense and if your looking for angel food cake this ainโt it. But the instructions are spot on including checking every 5 minutes after an hour. I nailed it the first time I made it, but Iโve over cooked this cake twice since then. Went back to strict tone checks and havenโt disappointed myself since. Also tried it in loaf pans, but I dried that out too lol.
Try it again. Itโs really good and worth it!
MARLA GOLDBERG
I just bought a pan off RueLaLa which consists of 6 baby bunnies to make miniature cakes. I wanted to use this to make mini pound cakes for Easter. Any idea how long I should cook and what temperature for these?
Sam
Hi Marla! I am not sure. I am not familiar with these pans so I cannot recommend a baking time. Sorry. ๐
Baker for Life
The recipe calls for 6 eggs + egg yolks. Is that referring to 12 eggs?
Sam
Yes. You need 6 whole eggs and 6 additional egg yolks. ๐
Becky
Omg!! I have this cake in the oven as we speak and I just remembered after
Reading this that I did not out in the 6 egg yokes. I put in the 6 eggs but not the additional yokes. I guess this is a wasted cake. ๐
Sam
O no! I think you are right here. ๐
Ana
Hi! Just made this. Batter looks just right. No baking soda or baking powder?
Sam
Hi Ana! You do not need baking soda or powder here. ๐
Lily
I have a teeny 6 inch cake pan I’m dying to use (it’s so wee and cute!). If I halved the recipe and baking time, would it be okay in my 6 inch cake pan?
Or should I do a third of the recipe?
Sam
Hi Lily! I am not sure as I haven’t tried making it in anything but a tube pan. I am also not sure on the baking time because the pan is completely different.
Eileen shapiro
This cake was soooo delicious. I served it with homemade vanilla whipprd cream and fresh berries.
Can I use white whole wheat flour nest time>
Sam
I’m so happy to hear you enjoyed the pound cake, Eileen! I’m not so sure about baking it with whole wheat flour, I’d worry the cake might be a little tougher and a little more dry. I might recommend trying it with 1 cup white whole wheat flour and using all purpose for the other 2 1/2 cups and then seeing how that turns out, then increasing the amount of whole wheat flour from there. I hope that helps!
Nancy Wagle
Just a question before I try this….Do I sift the flour? I’ve seen several recipes and none of them mention sifting the flour. So, sifted or unsifted? Thanks.
Sam
Unsifted ๐ Enjoy!
Tamara Brown
This pound cake was so simple to make. I did use salted butter however I reduced the salt to 1/2 tsp. I did go ahead a do eggs as directed however next time I will add the whole egg into cake batter, I thought it could use a tad bit more moisture. It was so good topped with mixed berries and cool whip.
I will make it again for sure.
Sam
Hi Tamara! If it was a little on the dry side, the cake was probably over-baked. I would not recommend adding the additional egg whites it will not make it more moist.
Kevin Metzger
If it gets too thick. I normally add a little milk.