Lemon Feather Cake for Easter (gluten free)

April 8, 2012

This light-as-a-feather gluten-free lemony sponge cake is a perfect finish to a big meal. The addition of creamy lemon curd elevates this dessert to a luscious  indulgence.

close up of gluten-free lemon sponge cake with lemon filling on a glass cake stand

Easter is good times in our family. Our first big gathering since Christmas, the return of the spring sunshine, and the weekend feels all about fresh air and smiles rather than food.

close up of daffodils in various colours

We always make something lemony for Easter dessert. Lemon seems to suit the budding fresh springtime energy of the day. Or maybe we are just sick of chocolate after stuffing our faces all day with mini-eggs and Lindt bunny pieces snuck from the children. Not that I am admitting to nicking chocolate from my kids, no way.

close up of dyed quail eggs in various colours on a white & green placemat

On the big day, sometime between picking daffodils, eating chocolate, and dying eggs with the grandchildren, my Mom will make her sky-high lemon meringue pie for Easter dessert.

But occasionally I take over and make Lemon Feather Cake instead.

gluten free lemon cake, covered in icing sugar with daffodils in the background

Lemon Feather Cake is one of those recipes – I rarely make it, but let’s just say that it never loses its place in the Top 100 of my most treasured recipes. It combines a light-as-a-feather (gluten-free!) lemony sponge cake with my Granny’s buttery lemon curd filling. It’s light enough to eat at the end of a big meal, but tastes luscious enough to feel like an indulgence.

Just to demonstrate how good Lemon Feather Cake is: I used to, before gluten-free baking became all the rage (and relatively easy to find), make this cake for gluten-intolerant friends just so I could watch them weep with joy. 

I had hoped to post about this earlier in the week but I have been too busy with regular life to make this cake twice in one week. (True that, double true.) At any rate, I’m giving you the recipe for this fabulous light and lemony cake, if not in time for you to make it this Easter, at least in time for you to make it this spring sometime – and for sure in time for next Easter… if Snooki’s baby doesn’t bring on the Apocalypse first :)

GLUTEN-FREE LEMON FEATHER CAKE

Makes one 10-inch cake, serving 12 people.
This recipe is adapted from one I found years ago in the pages of the Canadian Living 20th Anniversary Cookbook. Gluten-free, light, luscious, lemony – a keeper for sure.
NOTE: for a dairy-free version, use the Earth Balance shortening and coconut milk, as directed in the recipe, to substitute for the butter and whipping cream.

ingredients
cake
6 eggs, separated
15 ml (1 Tb) finely grated lemon zest
263 g (1¼ cup) berry sugar or superfine sugar
135 g (¾ cup) potato flour (potato starch), sifted
60 ml (¼ cup) freshly-squeezed lemon juice
icing sugar, for decorating the cake

lemon cream filling
114 g (½ cup) unsalted butter, OR Earth Balance buttery shortening
200 g (1 cup) sugar
15 ml (1 Tb) finely grated lemon zest
80 ml (1/3 cup) freshly squeezed lemon juice
2 eggs
250 ml (1 cup) whipping cream OR thick spoonable coconut milk

instructions
Preheat oven to 350 F / 175 C. Line a 10-inch springform cake pan with parchment paper.

Cake:
In a large bowl, beat egg yolks with the lemon zest and half of the sugar for at least five minutes, or until pale and thickened. Set aside.

In a separate bowl using clean beaters (otherwise the eggs whites won’t whip up), beat egg whites until soft peaks form. Gradually beat in sugar and beat until stiff peaks form.
NOTE: It is very important that the egg whites are not beaten too stiffly. “Stiff but not dry” is the phrase written in many baking books. If egg whites are over-beaten, they will lose their ability to hold air when folded into a batter. I find it is better to slightly under-beat the egg whites, like so: 

Sift one-third of the flour over yolk mixture and gently mix it in (it is very important to sift the starchy flour or it will have lumps). Fold in half the eggs whites. Repeat steps once. Sift over and fold in remaining flour. Transfer ¼ cup of batter to a small bowl. Add the lemon juice and mix well. Fold this back into the remaining batter.

Pour batter into the prepared pan. Place in the oven and bake for 35 to 40 minutes, until cake tester comes out clean. Let cool on rack. 

Filling:
Fill a medium pot about 1/3 of the way with water.  Bring to a boil, reduce heat to a bare simmer and place a medium bowl directly over the pot.  This is a make-shift double boiler.

Put the butter in this bowl and melt.  Add the sugar, lemon zest, and lemon juice.  Stir until sugar dissolves.

In a separate bowl, beat the eggs until frothy.  Slowly pour in about ¼ cup of the lemon mixture, whisking all the while.  This helps temper the eggs and keep the eggs from curdling when they are added to the whole mixture.

Slowly pour in the egg mixture into the bowl with the remaining lemon mixture, whisking the whole time.  (The bowl should still be over the hot water).  Cook, stirring constantly, about 5 to 8 minutes, until mixture is thick enough to coat the back of a spoon.

Remove the bowl from heat and let the mixture cool completely. Refrigerate until cold. In a separate bowl, whip cream until medium-stiff peaks form. Gently fold the whipped cream into the lemon mixture. (If using coconut milk, please use only the solid stuff at the top of the can. Do not whip it, but simply mix it gently into the lemon mixture.)  Refrigerate filling until cold and thickened. It should be as cold as possible when serving the cake. 

To assemble cake (scroll to the end for an alternate assembly option):

Slice cake in half horizontally with a serrated knife.

Place bottom layer on a cake platter. The edges of the cake platter should be lined with 4 strips of parchment paper. Spread filling over the cake layer.

Cover with top layer of cake. Sift icing sugar over the top and decorate with berries, if desired. The filling is not very stiff, so when serving the cake, make sure to use a very sharp thin knife (serrated would work) to make the cuts and cut with very very gentle downward pressure (more like sawing). The filling will still ooze out a bit, but not too much.

Alternate assembly option: Given that the lemon cream filling is quite soft, it can be easier to *not* fill the cake with it, but to serve slices of the plain cake with the filling dolloped on top of each slice. Garnish with a few berries and boom! Easy peasy.

Comments (22)

  1. This looks so yummy, I KNOW it will be a huge hit with my in-laws who are gluten-intolerant. Thank you for sharing!

  2. Well here I am sweetheart, a day late and usually a dollar, and change…. short. But always so glad to connect with you. This cake looks delish… I had a meal yesterday that was originally intended as an informal, come on over deal, but I am my own worst enemy. As the sun was shining on the garden and all the seedlings wanting transplantation yet once more. I rallied on in the kitchen. Last year I froze a bunch of big beauty bings and so I thought I’d best start using them up. Instead of strawberries I made my crumble with rhubarb from the garden and frozen cherries. Good choice, although like your lemon feather cake it was not a light finish. I made garlic and chive smashed potatoes that turned out just a bit too loose, roasted veges and then we grilled bacon wrapped sirloin. It was wonderful to spend the whole evening in the dining room chatting with our old friends and planning our next holiday.
    You really must come next visit and see the new kitchen. It cries out for Heidi’s stamp of approval.
    Love you Auntie Jody

  3. Hi Heidi!

    I tried this recipe and it turned out amazing!! The instructions were very easy to follow! Thank you for posting this!!

  4. Hi Heidi,

    Just made this recipe this weekend, it was pretty good but I had some challenges – in the recipe you specify Potato Flour and then in brackets Potato Starch – realizing that the two are very different I chose to use Starch as you indicate they are interchangeable in the recipe. What I found is that potato starch when blended into the recipe produces lumps unless it is sifted – I am thinking that the Potato Flour would not do this??
    Also with the curd / cream combination – despite the finished curd being very thick and the cream whipped quite stiffly the amount of filling caused the cake to slide around on the base until it oozed all out the sides – I was not expecting this….
    Again great recipe but you can please specify which in terms of flour or starch and also if using starch it probably needs to be sifted…
    Cheers and thanks for the recipe – I will make it again now that I am familiar with it….

    1. Hi Paul – potato flour and potato starch are actually the same thing, as far as I can tell and as far as I have experienced. Over the years of buying, variously, items labeled potato starch and potato flour I found no change in the product at all – same look, feel, baking properties, etc. I have even noticed the same brand available in the same place was called potato flour for years and then, when switching to new packaging, changed their name to potato starch, again with no change in the product. I would say that, unlike with grains, the “dry” floury part of the potato is just the starch.

      Re: sifting – I should definitely have made that more clear. I always sift the starch/flour over the egg yolks (in fact, there is even a picture of that sifting process in the post) but I neglected to mention sifting in the directions. My bad! I will fix that right now. Thank you for bringing this to my attention!

      Re: lemon filling – true, it’s not very stiff and the cake slides around when being sliced, although not too badly if you have a very sharp serrated knife and saw with only very gentle downward pressure and if you make sure the lemon curd is very cold when the cream is added. Not perfect, but the filling is so delicious that I haven’t got the heart to change it. If you find this very frustrating, you might serve the cake plain, with the filling as a topping or sauce on the side, with the addition of some fresh berries. It would probably not be so frustrating if you know in advance this will happen, so I will amend the recipe to include this.

      Thanks again for your feedback. I’m happy to hear that you will make it again :)
      H

  5. Thanks Heidi – appreciate the quick reply, as I said the cake was really good, just had my moments!
    P.

  6. Was looking for a dessert after a heavy Indian/Thai meal that I am making for friends on Friday. Needed Gluten free & this sounds lovely – nothing like lemon to clear your palate after all the spices, etc. Was addicted to your’almond burgers when ReBar first opened on Johnson Street and then went daily to the new place as it was around the corner from my ofice. My daughter Gratia worked there for a while & of course Billy is a fixture. Am living in Ontario & sure miss my daily fix at the ReBar & now that I have discovered your site will visit it often. Thanks for sharing your wonderful recipes – will let you know how it turns out.

  7. Hi Heidi, I look forward to making this cake for my gluten intolerant friend this weekend. I was wondering if almond flour would also work or it if has to be potato flour/starch?

    1. Hi Grace,

      I have never tried this with almond flour. It will work, but the result will be grittier and possibly sticker/wetter/gummier than with the potato flour. Potato flour/starch soaks up a lot of liquid and is super-fine, so it makes a light, airy, fluffy, melt-in-your-mouth texture. Almond flour absorbs less moisture, is higher in fat, and is a much coarser grind than potato flour, so it will make for a denser, richer, possibly grittier cake. But I have made a similar cake with hazelnut flour and it tasted delicious. I would use more almond flour than potato flour. Try 1 cup almond flour for the 1/3 cup potato flour.

  8. Thanks Heidi. I was able to find the potato starch and the cake was wonderful. It was wonderful even though I tinkered with the recipe and halved the sugar in both the cake and the curd. I wasn’t sure what to expect but it turned out fine. When I read recipes I always try to take out extra steps, but sometimes they are important to include! So I wanted to ask you why there is an extra step of adding the lemon juice towards the end. I whipped it in as part of the yolk and sugar which made it a bit more runny, but the cake was still ok when it was cooked. So I was curious, as I am sure there are reasons for these things! Thanks for your great recipes

  9. Pingback: link schwartz
  10. Lovely recipe and absolutely delicious, even for an amateur like me! On my first attempt, the cake seemed to “deflate” quite a bit in the hour or so after baking, not sure why. Also, it took a long time to bake — about an hour at 350 degrees. I’m wondering if I should have lined both the sides AND the bottom of the pan with parchment paper? Another question… should I have left the cake in the pan to cool completely (overnight) before turning it out?
    No problems with the filling… it was GREAT!

    1. Hi Debra,
      Mine often deflate a bit as well; it’s normal for sponge cakes to do this. If it has deflated a lot, though, that could be a sign of various things: your oven temperature reading isn’t accurate (this is very common: I have to use an oven thermometer in my oven for accuracy); the cake wasn’t fully cooked; or the whites were over-beaten. But sponge cakes are finicky and can react to thinks like ambient humidity. Shrug. I serve the cake with extra filling at times like there :)
      Definitely don’t line the sides of the cake pan with parchment paper. Having parchment-lined sides allows no grip for the sponge cake batter to hold its shape while it’s rising in the oven. Yes, if you can leave the cake in the pan until it’s completely cooled, that would be best.
      I’m glad you tried and enjoyed the recipe!

    1. Hi Sam, I have not tried this recipe with a different kind of flour. I do know that potato flour is 3 or 4 times more absorbent that other flours and starches, so if I were to substitute a different flour, I would increase the quantity by at least three times. This is a basic sponge cake recipe, so it will definitely work with other types of flour, as long as you adjust the quantity. Potato flour is sometimes labeled potato starch, if that helps you locate it.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

General

COVID-19 Update

Sep 2, 2022

Cooking in Season

Salad Meals to Beat the Heat

Jun 28, 2021

Cooking in Season

Quince: Easy Peeling and Cutting Tips

Oct 25, 2020
thermometer

Digital Kitchen/BBQ Thermometer with Magnet and Clock Timer

Buy Me

61PUY-drm5L._SX398_BO1,204,203,200_

Asian Ingredients: A Guide

Buy Me

bench scraper

Bench and baking scraper, set of three

Buy Me

Follow Chef Heidi Fink on Instagram