Lemon Blueberry Cake

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This delicious Lemon Blueberry Cake is made from a boxed mix and either fresh or frozen blueberries. This cake is based on my popular Lemon Bundt Cake and created upon request for the readers, and it was a great idea! It’s spectacular.

A Lemon Blueberry Cake with glaze on a platter.


 

Lemon and blueberries are a classic flavor combination, and I especially love it for spring. Even though citrus has officially fallen out of season by the time blueberries arrive in June, the lemon-blueberry combo feels like a bridge between winter and summer.

I have a Lemon Bundt Cake on the site that is extremely popular, and people asked for years if they could add blueberries. Of course you can! I always consider recipes a starting point for negotiations, and you should always make them your own.

We tested the cake in a bunch of different ways and found that both fresh and frozen blueberries work. The only caveat is, you need to limit yourself to 6 ounces of blueberries. It is so tempting to go over and just load up the batter with more, but it doesn’t work out the way that you want it to.

So stick to 6 ounces, use fresh or frozen, no need to thaw frozen blueberries, and I hope you love it!

Recipe ingredients

Labeled ingredients for lemon blueberry cake.

At a Glance: Here is a quick snapshot of what ingredients are in this recipe.
Please see the recipe card below for specific quantities.

Ingredient notes

  • Boxed lemon cake mix: This gives you a head-start on the cake and is the secret to ultra-lemony flavor. Yes, even restaurants use boxed lemon cake mixes.
  • Instant lemon pudding mix: Add the dry pudding mix to the batter dry (you don’t prepare the pudding separately). Even if your cake mix says “pudding in the mix,” you should still add a box of instant pudding.
  • Lemon zest and juice: Zest the lemon before cutting it in half for juice.
  • Blueberries: Both fresh blueberries and frozen blueberries work here, just be sure to use only 6 ounces (not more). You don’t need to thaw frozen blueberries; just toss them in frozen.

Step-by-step instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Generously coat large Bundt pan with shortening or nonstick spray. In a medium bowl, whisk together cake mix and dry pudding. Add water, oil, lemon zest, lemon juice, and eggs and stir to combine. Carefully fold berries into the cake batter.
Lemon Blueberry Cake batter in a bowl.
  1. Pour into prepared pan.
Lemon Blueberry Cake batter in a bundt pan.
  1. Bake for 40 minutes or until a toothpick inserted comes out clean with a few crumbs attached.
Lemon Blueberry Cake in a bundt pan after baking.
  1. Cool 15 minutes in pan. Invert on to a rack set over a baking sheet and cool completely. To make the glaze, whisk together powdered sugar, water, and vanilla. Drizzle over cooled cake and let harden for at least 10 minutes.
A Lemon Blueberry Cake with glaze on a platter.

Recipe tips and variations

Slices of Lemon Blueberry Cake on white plates.

More Bundt cakes

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Lemon Blueberry cake on a light blue plate.

Lemon Blueberry Cake

This delicious Lemon Blueberry Cake is made from a boxed mix and either fresh or frozen blueberries.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour
Total Time 1 hour 15 minutes
Servings 12 servings
Course Dessert
Cuisine American
Calories 374
5 from 192 votes

Ingredients 

For the cake:

For the glaze:

Instructions 

  • Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Generously coat large Bundt pan with shortening or nonstick spray.
  • In a large bowl, whisk together cake mix and dry pudding. Add water, oil, lemon zest, lemon juice, and eggs and stir to combine. Carefully fold in blueberries.
  • Pour into prepared pan and bake for 40 minutes or until a toothpick inserted comes out clean with a few crumbs attached.
  • Cool 15 minutes in pan. Invert on to a rack set over a baking sheet and cool completely.
  • To make the glaze, whisk together powdered sugar, water, and vanilla. Drizzle over cooled cake and let harden for at least 10 minutes.

Recipe Video

Notes

  1. Boxed lemon cake mix: This gives you a head-start on the cake and is the secret to ultra-lemony flavor. Yes, even restaurants use boxed lemon cake mixes.
  2. Instant lemon pudding mix: Add the dry pudding mix to the batter dry (you don’t prepare the pudding separately). Even if your cake mix says “pudding in the mix,” you should still add a box of instant pudding.
  3. Lemon zest and juice: Zest the lemon before cutting it in half for juice.
  4. Blueberries: Both fresh and frozen blueberries work here, just be sure to use only 6 ounces (not more). You don’t need to thaw frozen blueberries; just toss them in frozen.
  5. Yield: This Lemon Blueberry Cake makes 12 servings (or 9 if you like large slices).
  6. Storage: Store covered at room temperature for up to 4 days.
  7. Freezer: Wrap the unglazed cake in 2 layers of freezer-safe plastic wrap. Label, date, and freeze up to 3 months. Thaw at room temperature before glazing.

Nutrition

Serving: 1sliceCalories: 374kcalCarbohydrates: 65gProtein: 4gFat: 12gSaturated Fat: 9gCholesterol: 62mgSodium: 375mgPotassium: 61mgFiber: 1gSugar: 40gVitamin A: 98IUVitamin C: 4mgCalcium: 101mgIron: 1mg
Did you make this recipe?Tag @culinaryhill on Instagram so we can admire your masterpiece! #culinaryhill
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Meggan Hill is a classically-trained chef and professional writer. Her meticulously-tested recipes and detailed tutorials bring confidence and success to home cooks everywhere. Meggan has been featured on NPR, HuffPost, FoxNews, LA Times, and more.

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Comments

  1. I have lots of blueberries to go through and I loved the blueberry muffin recipe so thought I try this one. The whole family loves lemon flavoring except me but I loved this so much! Delicious! I think I messed up on the icing though I used 3 tablespoons of lemon juice and the icing was too thick so I added water and worked out for me. Trying more recipes soon!5 stars

  2. This was delicious and so easy to make only problem was not greasing and flouring the Bundt pan. I used cooking spray and it stuck bc the blueberries settled on the bottom before it could cook. I would recommend using frozen blueberries they might work better, or smaller blueberries. Mine were fresh and very large. But still absolutely delicious!5 stars

    1. Hi Sheri, I’m glad the cake was still delicious! I’m sorry it stuck. You’ll want to make sure to fold in the blueberries and immediately put it in the oven to bake as well to prevent the blueberries from falling. I hope the next one is even better. Take care! – Meggan

  3. I am crazy about a little tang of cream cheese in a glaze. Can you suggest how I would add it to this glaze for that lemon cream cheese flavor? Thanks.

    1. Hi Susie! I love this idea! I would add 2-3 tablespoons of softened cream cheese to the icing ingredients, and add water, lemon juice, or even milk 1 tablespoon at a time until you reach your desired consistency. Make sure to taste as you go to adjust the flavor to your liking. (The thought of doing all lemon juice may result in a tart-tasting glaze.) – Meggan

    1. I’m so happy it was a hit, Cristi! I hope this one comes out wonderfully. Have a Merry Christmas! – Meggan

    1. Hi Yoli, I believe it will become dense. If the cake mix has it already, it shouldn’t be enough to impact the texture of the cake. – Meggan

  4. The lemon & blueberry Bundt cake- the ingredient *photo* says it shows all of the needed ingredients. There is a box cake mix, but also flour/baking soda/etcetc. Directions include just the cake mix- also, please mention the directions for the glaze. Thx so much!

  5. I made this cake for a family picnic. It was a huge success! My brother-in-law said it was too fancy for the picnic and I said, no way! That’s the milk glass cake stand that’s so fancy. I added 6oz of frozen blueberries and they all floated week in the batter . Perfect presentation. The cake had a just right mix of puckery lemon and sweet cake. My new favorite!5 stars

  6. My niece requested a lemon blueberry cake for her college graduation party so I made this cake. I couldn’t find instant lemon pudding so I used vanilla instead. I got lots of compliments & was told it was better than a cake they bought at a bakery shop. Definitely would make again!5 stars

    1. Thank you so much for your comment, Johnna! I’m so glad it was a hit! Take care! – Meggan

    1. Thank you so much for your lovely comment, Teresa! I’m glad you love it! – Meggan

    1. Hi Lisa, thank you for the question! I haven’t tried it myself, but I don’t see why it can’t. I would expect the bake time to be less. I would start checking for doneness at around 25 minutes, and add time as needed. I hope you love it! – Meggan

  7. Absolutely outstanding cake. Easy to make. Moist, light and tasty. The perfect ending to a meal. I am already planning on when I can make this again. I think this will become my spring “go-to” cake.
    Thank you for publishing.5 stars

  8. I made this today. I used a boxed pound cake mix, just regular flavor but followed this recipe for everything else. I put it in two bread tins, like two pound cake tins. Came out delicious!! I did make the glaze with milk, confectioners powder, pinch of salt and vanilla. My husband absolutely loved it. Very lemony and used fresh blueberries. I’m giving the other pound cake away to one of his coworkers, I’m sure they will love it too! Thanks for the recipe, so easy and delicious!5 stars

    1. You’re so welcome, Robin, I’m so glad you loved it! I’m sure his coworker will, too! – Meggan

  9. I made this over the weekend, and it was delicious. Gone in 1 day between the hubby and son!

    I added bits of pecans on top for a bit of crunch. Great idea. Will try sliced almonds next time.

    Making again today in muffin form.

    Thank you for sharing.5 stars

  10. Recipe says to whisk dry ingred then add rest of ingred and stir then fold in blueberries,,,no mention of using a mixer?

    1. Hi Jane, a mixer isn’t needed for this recipe. It can be done with a whisk and by hand. If you chose to use a mixer, you can, just make sure to not overmix the batter and still fold in the blueberries. – Meggan

  11. In 2021 with the blueberry lemon bundt cake you stated that flour coating blueberries to keep them from sinking in batter…was a myth. In 2022 with the blueberry yogurt lemon quick bread/cake you stated that you forgot to add flour to your blueberries to keep them from sinking. I find always, that tossing blueberries in flour before adding to batter to keep them from sinking…is not a myth, regardless of what you are making, with the exception of pancakes LOL. You might want to figure this out in your kitchen xo

    1. Hi Dee, you’re right. I absolutely said all of that! Here’s why. I read a post on Serious Eats about this (https://www.seriouseats.com/how-to-stop-blueberries-from-sinking-muffin-baking) and they said the flour thing was a myth. I assumed they were right (because it’s Serious Eats, after all), so I said, don’t bother. But I continued to see this technique suggested by reputable food people (such as Sim Sifton in the New York Times), so I spent more time playing around with it. And I feel like at WORST, it doesn’t hurt anything. At best, I really think it helps. I think most of the time I see a difference, and I’m sorry for flip-flopping on the issue. I don’t know that all my blog posts are current with my ideas, but I’ll check around for anything with blueberries and see what it says. Sorry for the confusion. I am always learning, happy to admit when I’m wrong, and trying to update everything in my corner of the internet. -Meggan

    1. Hi Nicole, I don’t see why not! I haven’t tried this on the lemon cake, but I would like to suggest the streusel topping from my Blueberry Muffins recipe. (Since I haven’t done it myself, it might make too much topping for the one loaf.)

      For the streusel topping:
      1/4 cup all-purpose flour
      2 tablespoons brown sugar
      2 tablespoons granulated sugar
      1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
      1/8 teaspoon salt
      2 tablespoons butter cold

      To prepare the streusel topping, in a medium bowl combine flour, brown sugar, granulated sugar, cinnamon, and salt. Using a pastry cutter, cut in butter until the topping is crumbly and coarse. Top the cake during step 3 after adding the batter and bake as directed.

      Here is the link to the Blueberry Muffins incase you would like to check it out sometime: https://www.culinaryhill.com/blueberry-muffins/ Take care and please let me know how it turns out! – Meggan

  12. Made this cake for a birthday now it is everyone’s favorite cake! I usually make all my cakes from scratch, but decided to give this one a try… so glad that I did! So moist & the icing is to die for! Thank you so much for sharing!5 stars

  13. Made this into 20 cupcakes in fancy cupcake papers, and iced with glaze and added three blueberries to top and a cute toothpick owl/birdie. Did not have lemon pudding, so used vanilla pudding mix but tripled the grated lemon peel. My five grand girls approved at their belated birthday picnic yesterday! They told me they were “delicious” – I had to agree!5 stars

  14. I made it . It came out perfect the aroma made me want to cut it but I held off.Ih my goodness it is so good .and it was a last minute decision to make it.5 stars

  15. The best Lemon Blueberry cake ever. Love the fact that this cake stays moist for days. Of course it doesn’t last that long in our home.5 stars

  16. I haven’t tried the recipe yet, but can I replace the blueberries with strawberries? I’ve looked up strawberry lemon cakes, and none of them sound like what I’m looking to accomplish.

    1. Hi Jennifer, that sounds delicious! I haven’t tried it myself but don’t see why not! I would make sure not to use too many strawberries, no more than 6 ounces, as it becomes troublesome in my tests with using blueberries. Enjoy – Meggan

    2. This cake was delicious. I baked it as a double-layer cake, and I loved how it turned out! We saved the rest of it for Father’s Day this weekend! I do have a question, though, about making it a fluffier cake since it did come out dense. My brother mentioned that adding baking powder to the recipe would enable the batter to rise more. Do you have a suggestion about how much to add?5 stars

    1. Hi Carol, the amounts are listed in the recipe card. Here they are for you: 1 teaspoon lemon zest and 1/3 cup fresh lemon juice from 2-3 lemons. Take care – Meggan

  17. My daughter asked for a blueberry cake for her 5th birthday. I decided on this recipe and am so glad!! It was so good!! I had to adjust a bit to make it gluten free. I used Bob’s Red Mill Gluten Free vanilla cake mix, but followed the recipe after that. I cooked it in a Bundt pan and it was done exactly at 40 minutes. And frosted it with cream cheese frosting (attached recipe). There wasn’t a disappointed party goer!! Delicious 😋5 stars

  18. This was a very tasty cake, and also very forgiving of the adjustments I made. I didn’t have lemon-flavored cake mix or pudding, but I had lots of lemons on hand. I used regular yellow cake mix and vanilla pudding, 1T of lemon zest, 2/3 C lemon juice and 1/3 C water. It had just enough lemon flavor and was very moist.5 stars

  19. Best recipe I’ve found and there’s a great deal of them out there. Came out perfect. Absolutely delicious, moist and flavorful. Thank you.5 stars

  20. Best recipe I’ve found and there’s a great deal of them out there. Absolutely delicious, moist and flavorful. Thank you.5 stars

    1. Hi Fabre, I would think so. I haven’t personally tested this, but I imagine there wouldn’t be enough pudding mix in that cake mix to get the nice moist consistency of this recipe. Let me know how it works out! Thanks! Meggan

  21. LOVED the cake….but it needed more than 40 minutes to bake. Only after adding extra time (Twice), which in turn caused the cake to fall and sink slightly did I see in the pre-amble that cook time was 1 hour.
    Please correct!!!!

    1. Hi Susan, I’m sorry about that! Mine has always been done in 40 minutes, but I know oven times vary so I really need to put that in the recipe (a range for the time). Thank you for the feedback! Sorry again. -Meggan

  22. Yeah, so I completely missed the part about not adding too many blueberries. My cake was a total failure. It looked good in the oven, and it seemed done, but as soon as I took it out, it fell severely and looked awful. The blueberries had all sunk to the bottom and stuck to the pan and the cake around them was still moist and gooey. I was so heartbroken. I hate wasting ingredients. And making stupid mistakes.

    In this case, more was absolutely NOT better.

  23. So the glaze is a very simple recipe that would be very hard to mess up I would think. So I’m not sure why making the glaze based on your recipe came out extremely thick and paste like. There was no possible way to drizzle something that only had 3 tablespoons of water and half a teaspoon of vanilla. Not with 2 cups of sugar added. Luckily I had a tub of cream cheese frosting in the pantry. I haven’t officially eaten the cake yet, but I know it will be good because I licked the bowl after I poured the batter out. LOL

    1. Hi Kati, the recipe says to add 1 or 2 more teaspoons of liquid if you need it, to get your desired consistency. That’s really all it takes – 3 tablespoons of water and 1/2 teaspoon vanilla IS just about the amount of liquid you need for the glaze. But, after making it 8 times last weekend with different liquids and substitutions, I ended up changing it to 1/4 cup of water and 1 teaspoon vanilla for the 2 cups of powdered sugar. It’s super runny at that consistency, but I think that’s probably what most people will want. So thank you for helping me fix it up! I am glad I took the time to try a bunch of variations and stuff. I haven’t tried it with cream cheese but I definitely need to. Thank you Kati! -Meggan