Homemade vs Starbucks LEMON LOAF CAKE | Delicious Dupes
Today I'm making a STARBUCKS Lemon Loaf at home! More Dupes:
Panda Express:
Chick-Fil-A:
➜ ORDER My New COOKBOOK!
➜ SUBSCRIBE:
➜ STORE:
➜ Blog:
➜ Instagram:
➜ Twitter:
➜ Business inquires: hi@dzunglewis.com
➜ Mailing Address:
26500 Agoura Rd.
Ste 102
Calabasas, CA 91302
Iced Lemon Loaf Cake Recipe:
1/2 cup butter, softened
3/4 cup sugar
2 large eggs, room temperature
1 tbsp grated lemon zest
2 tbsps lemon juice
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon baking soda
¼ tsp baking powder
1/2 cup greek yogurt
2 tbsps butter
3 oz cream cheese
1 tsp vanilla extract
lemon juice
1 cup powdered sugar
1-2 tbsps milk
Pinch salt
I’ll start by creaming ½ a cup of butter that I’ve left out at room temp to soften, and to that, I’ll add ¾ cup of sugar. We’ll cream it up with a hand mixer until it’s well combined and then we’ll add 2 eggs, one at a time until they’re incorporated.
In another small bowl, I’ll combine 1 ¼ cup all-purpose flour, ½ tsp of salt, ¼ baking soda, and ¼ baking powder. I like using the combination of baking powder with baking soda for cakes to make a delicate moist and fluffy cake.
And finally, to infuse it with the lemony flavor, I have ½ cup of greek yogurt - the yogurt reacts with the baking soda to help with the leavening and it also has extra protein and fat to help keep the cake moist. 1 tsp of vanilla extract, and now I take zest of half a lemon, 2 tbsps or juice from a whole lemon.
Mix everything up and now we combine our ingredients.
Start with a little flour, mix and then a little greek yogurt, mix, flour, and yogurt until everything is gone. With a spatula, give it a final mix until it’s just combined and then we’ll transfer it onto an 8x4 baking pan that we’ve lined with parchment paper.
Into the oven it goes at 350 degrees for 55-60 minutes, I always err on the side of taking it out on the earlier side.
Let it cool completely for about an hour and while we wait for it to cool, let’s make a drink!
Do you know what goes well with this iced lemon cake? A matcha shakerato. I don’t think they have this at Starbucks, but they should.
We’ll start by prepping our matcha. I have this matcha packet and I’ll add it into a small bowl. Pour in about 4 oz of hot water, whisk it up and set aside.
Now for the fun part, into a cocktail shaker or a mason jar will do, add ice, your milk of choice (I like using almond milk or oat milk for this) and 1 tablespoon of maple syrup, 1 tsp of vanilla extract, a pinch of salt - trust me on this, it really balances out the flavors - and then give it a shake shake shake. Or mix mix mix. Now you could use this mason jar, but since we’re extra, i’ll pour it into a glass full of fresh ice, and then top it with our matcha. We get a nice frothy milk foam on top and a matcha drink that’s super refreshing.
Okay but back to the lemon cake. It’s completely cooled now and so I want to give it another pop of flavor by making a cream cheese glaze. In a bowl, we’ll add 3 oz of room temp cream cheese, 2 tbsps of room temperature butter, 1 tsp of vanilla extract, 1 cup of powdered sugar, a pinch of salt, and slowly add in 1 tbsp of milk at a time, mixing it until you get a nice pourable consistency. We’ll take our lemon loaf, put it on an icing rack and pour the glaze right over. Let it set in the fridge or at room temp for 15 minutes and let’s see if this iced lemon loaf cake is more dang delicious than Starbucks.
If you don’t want to eat just a pastry for breakfast or snack, let’s make it even more filling and balanced treat. I’ll cut the cake into cubes and drop it into a cup. Put a dollop of Greek yogurt, some berries, add some more of our cake cubes, and another dollop of yogurt, and berries. Now you have a lemon yogurt trifle parfait.
However you enjoy it, it’ll 100% be more delicious than Starbucks so give this recipe a try. LIke and subscribe for more dang delicious dupes of your favorite spots and I’ll see you next time for the next Dang Delicious Dupe!
© 2022 Honeysuckle®
All Rights Reserved.
Angelo's Mom Makes Lemonolathopita - Greek Lemon Cake
My mom makes a Greek lemon cake with olive oil instead of butter. Don't be afraid of olive oil cake. Here's the recipe:
Support us on Patreon:
Twitter:
Facebook:
Buy merchandise:
I'm Angelo, creative director here at FlyingOverTr0ut. I also make sketches, commercial parodies, music videos, short films, drama, 9 hour videos of me sleeping, and videos with my Greek immigrant mom.
I'm always trying to come up with new videos and have collaborated with The Angry Grandpa, Maddox, TJandFriends, iMustDestroyAll, Tim and Eric, and others. Please subscribe and tell a friend about all the great content you enjoy here at FlyingOverTr0ut.
Cooking with Angelo's Mom playlist:
The Pitzman's Saga™-my mom's feud with Tim Heidecker:
My videos about what a dump Annandale, VA is:
My videos with Angry Grandpa:
My videos with Maddox:
Moist Andy collaborations:
Angelo's Mom Hates Dick Masterson series:
Angelo's Mom Loves Logic videos:
iMustDestroyAll Pranks on Angelo's Mom:
My videos with TJandFriends:
Angelo's Mom's Weight Loss series:
My videos with Shoenice:
The Room, Tommy Wiseau, and Greg Sestero series:
Angelo Sleeping series:
Edited on Magix Vegas Pro
GreekFoodTv☼ Lemon Cake with Olive Oil and Yogurt
Lemon Cake with Olive Oil and Greek Yogurt is a healthy dessert that's easy and quick. To see recipe press the more button.
Lemon Cake with Olive Oil and Greek Yogurt
8-10 servings
2 ½ cups sugar
2 ½ cups all-purpose flour
½ tsp. salt
1 Tbsp. baking powder
1 cup/240 ml extra-virgin Greek olive oil
¾ cup/180 ml orange juice
2 Tbsp. Greek yogurt
4 eggs
1 tsp. vanilla extract
Grated zest of 1 lemon or 2 tsp. lemon extract
1 ½ cups powdered sugar, for garnish
1. Heat oven to 325˚F/165˚C. In a large bowl, add sugar, flour, salt, baking powder, olive oil, orange juice, yogurt, eggs, vanilla extract and lemon zest. Blend at low speed until moistened, for about a minute. Then beat 3 minutes at medium speed.
2. Lightly grease a 12-cup cake pan with oil. Pour batter into the pan.
3. Bake in the preheated oven for 40 to 50 minutes or until toothpick inserted near center comes out clean. Remove cake from the oven.
4. Invert cake onto a serving plate. Cool completely and dust the cake on top with powdered sugar. Serve.
This is the Greek Food Channel
Come to visit Diane and Vassili at their GLORIOUS GREEK KITCHEN COOKING SCHOOL (Ikaria). They run cooking classes and organize culinary tours in Greece for recreational and professional cooks. They also own DV FOOD ARTS CONSULTING, a food marketing company that produces specialty books and other food-and-wine-related literature for a wide variety of clients and independently for the tourist and other markets. Diane consults on Greek cuisine for restaurants, retail outlets and producers of fine Greek foods. Vassilis Stenos (photographer) offers an extensive archive of food and travel photographs of Greece.
Diane Kochilas is an internationally known food writer, cookbook author, culinary teacher, food consultant and food guru. She has more than 20 years' experience in the Greek kitchen. Diane divides her time between Athens, Ikaria, and New York. She is the consulting chef at Pylos, one of New York's top-rated Greek restaurants as well as consulting chef at Avli Restaurant in Chicago. She writes frequently for the US food press and appears regularly on American television. Her articles have appeared in The New York Times, Gourmet, Saveur, Food & Wine, Eating Well and in other food and general-interest publications. In Athens, she is the weekly food columnist and restaurant critic for Ta Nea, the country's largest newspaper. She has written 19 books on Greek and Mediterranean cuisine, including the award-winning The Glorious Foods of Greece. Her books include: The Food and Wine of Greece, The Greek Vegetarian, The Glorious Foods of Greece, Meze, Against the Grain (good carbs), Mediterranean Grilling, Mastiha Cuisine, The Northern Greek Wine Roads Cookbook, and Aegean Cuisine (see below).
She is also a consultant for Hellenic Gourmet, the duty free food shops at the Venizelos International Airport and around Greece, to help upgrade the store's selection and source product. Her knowledge of Greek regional foods, wines, and culinary lore is extensive.
Books
The Country Cooking of Greece, Chronicle Books. Scheduled for Spring 2012 * Aegean Cuisine. ΚΕΤΑ, Syros 2009 * The Dictionary of Greek Food, (in Greek) Τα Νέα, Athens, 2007-2008 (12 volumes) * The Northern Greek Wine Roads Cookbook (in Eng. And Greek), ENOABE pub., Spring 2008 Mastiha Cuisine—More than 50 Recipes with the World's Most Seductive Spice, MastihaShop Publishers. Athens. Dec. 2007 * Mediterranean Grilling. William Morrow Publishers, New York, Spring 2007 * Varoulko: Aromas and Flavors. This is a chef's book I authored. Ell. Grammata Publishers, Athens, 2007 * Classic-Iconoclastic (editor) Hellenic Foreign Trade Board, Athens. 2006 * Hortomania (in Greek), Ell. Grammata pub., Athens 2005 * Against the Grain: 150 Good Carb Mediterranean Recipes. William Morrow Publishers, New York, August 2005. * Street Food. Motivo Publishers, Athens, Greece, 2004. * Meze: Small Plates to Savor and Share from the Mediterranean Table. William Morrow Publishers, 2003 * Μεζές (transl. of above). Minoas Publishers. 2003 * The Glorious Foods of Greece, William Morrow Publishers, New York, March 2001 * H Ellada tis Gefseis (transl. of above). Εκδ. Ελληνικά Γράμματα, 2003 * Four Seasons of Delicious Food (in Greek). Livanis Publishers, Athens, 1998 * Τhe Greek Vegetarian. St. Martin's Press, New York, Nov. 1996 * The Food and Wine of Greece, St. Martin's Press, New York, 1990