Lemon Cake- A Doctored Cake Mix Recipe
If you've been searching for the BEST recipe for Lemon Cake from a doctored cake mix, we are happy to say that this is it!
This easy lemon cake has a lovely soft texture, is ultra moist, has fantastic lemon flavor, works for cupcakes as well as cake layers, and is sturdy enough to hold up to fondant! What's not to love?
We've frosted this lemon layer cake with a luscious Lemon Buttercream, which is a new recipe for our site also! We've fallen in love with its lemon flavor and it pipes like a dream.
We're so glad to have this lemon buttercream option for slathering and swirling onto all sorts of cakes from lemon cake to homemade vanilla buttermilk cake to classic yellow, coconut and even strawberry! Lemon buttercream pairs perfectly with so many cake flavors.
However, our Lemon Cream Cheese Buttercream Frosting as well as our homemade Lemon Curd Filling would both be great choices!
Table of Contents
How to Make a Lemon Cake- Doctored Cake Mix Recipe
You can find the full, printable cake recipe further down in this post, but here is a quick rundown of our steps!
First, you'll start with a simple white cake mix (look for recipes that do not contain pudding in the mix as we'll be adding a bit of lemon pudding to this recipe). We used Duncan Hines.
- Combine the sifted cake mix with the flour, sugar, and pudding and whisk to blend. *Just 4 tablespoons of pudding is all that we needed to really make a difference in the texture and flavor of this cake.
- We tried baking without the lemon pudding, and while it was good, the stand-out favorite among all of our family taste-testers was the version that contained pudding. The texture is more velvety and the lemony flavor is really nice. We also tried using Lemon Cake Mix instead of White, but didn't like the flavor as much.
- Add the remaining ingredients, including the eggs, water, sour cream, extracts, and lemon zest. The addition of pudding, sour cream, and flour give the cake a from-scratch feel, as it is a bit denser than a straight from the box cake mix cake...but I wouldn't describe this as a dense cake. It is light, has a soft texture, and did I mention an amazing lemon flavor? SO good!
This recipe makes about 7 ½ cups of batter which was just the right amount to divide between three 8 inch layers. I love cake recipes that have enough batter for three layers so that you can have an additional layer of filling! Mmmmm....bring on the lemon buttercream!
Looking for a Lemon Scratch Recipe Also?
I should also mention that while we LOVE this doctored Lemon Cake Mix recipe, we have a favorite Scratch Lemon Cake Recipe as well! If you enjoy baking scratch recipes also, this is a great one.
We hope to eventually have a doctored cake mix version and scratch version of all of our recipes!
Lemon Cake: A Doctored Cake Mix Recipe
Nobody would guess that this amazing lemon cake recipe all starts with a simple cake mix! So moist and lemony!
Ingredients
- 1 box (15.25 oz.) white cake mix, sifted (Any mix without pudding in the mix)
- 1 cup (114g) all purpose flour (plain in the UK)
- 1 cup (200g) sugar
- ½ box (4Tablespoons, (48g) instant lemon pudding (we used Jell-O brand) Do not make pudding, use the dry mix.
- 3 large eggs
- 1 ⅓ cups (322g) water
- 1 cup (242g) sour cream (we use full fat sour cream)
- 1 Tablespoon (12g) lemon extract
- ½ teaspoon (2g) vanilla extract
- zest of one lemon
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Grease and flour three 8x2 inch round cake pans.
- In the bowl of your mixer, add the dry ingredients and whisk at least 30 seconds to blend.
- Add the remaining ingredients to the bowl and mix on medium speed for 1 minute. Scrape the sides and bottom of the bowl and mix for 1 more minute. If you are using a hand mixer, mix for a bit longer.
- Pour into prepared pans and bake at 350 degrees for 25 to 30 minutes. Check at 25 minutes, if a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean or with just a few crumbs attached, it is done.
- Cool in the pans 5 to 10 minutes then turn out.
- Makes 7 ½ cups batter
- Works well for cupcakes
Hi Bunny, We think you should not use a cake mix with pudding in the mix because one of the ingredients in the recipe is 1/2 box (4 Tablespoons) of lemon pudding. Using a cake mix with pudding in the mix could make the cake too dense. Melissa gives her thoughts on this in the paragraphs before the recipe. Let us know what you think, if you give it a try.
How many cupcakes does this typically make? Also would it hold up if I made them a few days ahead of time? I'm worried they would dry out.
Hi Cat, A cake mix makes 24 standard size cupcakes so this may make 28 to 30 depending on how full you fill the liners. Cupcake do dry out quickly because they are so small. You could make the cupcakes in advance a freeze them. Double wrap in plastic wrap then aluminum foil. If kept airtight they will be fine. To thaw, remove from freezer keep wrapped, when condensation forms on the outside of the aluminum foil, unwrap. The cupcakes can be frosted before they thaw completely. If you cannot freeze them I would bake and frost the day before the event for best results. Hope all goes well.
Hi, is there a good time estimate for how long to bake in a 9x13 pan? And if my plan is to make two 9x13's put side by side to make a bigger sheet cake, would that be just two batches of batter?
I bake in 3" high sheet pans. For a quarter sheet, 9"X13", I make 2 1/2 batches of cake. I bake no higher than 300 degrees which allows the edges to bake higher before being set, and usually have flat cakes. When I can smell the cake, I know it's almost done. If it looks done, I press gently in the middle, and if the cake pops back, I test with an instant read thermometer for doneness. At 212 degrees, the liquids are boiling and evaporating, resulting in a dry overbaked cake. I pull my cakes at 208 degrees since they will continue to bake a few minutes out of the oven. Before a cake is cool, about 30 minutes out of the oven, I cover the cake with saran and a cookie sheet, flip all over, remove the pan, and wrap the cake tighly with the saran. If the middle of the cake is still exposed, I cover with another piece of saran. Put the cake back in the pan, upside down, and leave on the counter for a day to 'season'.
For a 2" high sheet pan, I'd use 2 batches of cake. If you put 2 quarter sheets together to make a half sheet, place extra cardboards under the cake.
Hi TXBunny, A 9x13 sheet pan needs 7 to 10 cups of cake batter. This recipe makes 7 1/2 cups batter. So you will be fine to make the recipe twice or double the recipe if your mixer will handle that much batter. Of course, if you add 10 cups of batter your cakes will be taller. Baking at 350 degrees the 9x13 pan with 7 cups of batter will bake for 35 - 40 minutes or until a tooth pick comes out clean -- 10 cups per pan will need 40 - 45 minutes. Below are two charts showing cake batter amounts and baking times ( they are guidelines you do not necessarily have to follow exactly). You may find them helpful in the future.
http://www.wilton.com/cake-serving-guide/cms-baking-serving-guide.html
Hi TXBunny, I answered your first post before seeing your second post. I think your methods sound good.
Bebe, thank you so much for replying! I get nervous making cakes for other people. Another commenter replied to me right after I posted. It looks like you have two Bunny's on your site. :)
I have a question about this lemon cake... I was wondering why there is no oil or butter in this recipe. Is this an accidental omission or is this correct? I don't think I've ever baked a cake without one or the other?
Hi Donna, yes, it is correct as written! Hope you enjoy it ;0)
Thank you so much for replying so quickly! Happy baking!
Can vodka be added as part of the water?