Edna Lewis’s Lemon Cheese Layer Cake

Total Time
2 hours
Rating
4(48)
Notes
Read community notes

This recipe for lemon cheesecake by the Southern chef Edna Lewis was featured in a Times article about Southern cakes. It is a lovely layer cake that makes economical use of yolks and whites, and it’s nothing like what a New Yorker thinks of as cheesecake. The “cheese” is really an eggy lemon curd piled between layers of cake made sturdy by egg whites. More lemon curd covers the whole cake, its layers visible beneath the slightly translucent jelly. The cake tastes better the next day. —Kim Severson

Featured in: Festiveness, Stacked Up Southern Style

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Ingredients

Yield:One layer cake

    For the Cake

    • 1cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter at room temperature, more to grease pan
    • cups cake flour
    • teaspoons baking powder
    • ¼teaspoon salt
    • 2cups granulated sugar
    • 8egg whites
    • 1cup milk
    • 2teaspoons vanilla extract

    For the Lemon Curd

    • cups granulated sugar
    • ¾cup plus 1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice
    • ¾cup (1½ sticks) unsalted butter, melted
    • 12egg yolks
    • 3tablespoons finely grated lemon zest
    • ½teaspoon salt
Ingredient Substitution Guide

Preparation

  1. For the Cake

    1. Step 1

      Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Grease three 9-inch cake pans and line with parchment or waxed paper. Mix flour, baking powder and salt and sift onto a piece of waxed paper or parchment.

    2. Step 2

      In a large mixing bowl, beat sugar and butter until light and fluffy, scraping sides as needed. Whisk egg whites until well blended but not foamy, and add to batter in 4 batches, making sure each addition is well incorporated.

    3. Step 3

      Add dry ingredients and milk to batter, alternately, in 4 batches, mixing each only until just blended. Mix in vanilla.

    4. Step 4

      Divide batter among 3 pans. Gently drop each one on a counter to eliminate large air bubbles. Bake for about 20 minutes or until cake springs back in center when pressed or a cake tester comes out clean. Let rest for 5 minutes, then remove cake from pan and cool completely on rack.

    5. Step 5

      Meanwhile, make curd: Put all ingredients in a non-reactive saucepan and whisk to blend. Set over medium heat and cook, stirring constantly, until filling thickens and a candy thermometer registers 170 degrees. This can take 10 to 15 minutes. Do not let filling simmer or boil. Remove from heat and pour into a bowl to cool to room temperature.

    6. Step 6

      Place a cake layer on a cake stand or plate and spread ⅔ cup curd on top to the edges. Stack another layer and continue until all layers have been used. Use remaining curd on top and sides. Filling is somewhat translucent, so layers will be visible through curd on sides. If layers slide while frosting, push 3 or 4 long wooden skewers through them to hold until cake sets. Cake is best left covered at room temperature overnight.

Ratings

4 out of 5
48 user ratings
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Cooking Notes

Growing up in southern middle Georgia, my mother and aunt would make this cake. My brother recently asked if I knew the recipe, which was always his favorite. I do not usually use recipes and I was off point with the measurements of a couple of ingredients. This recipe brought everything together as we remembered the taste and texture. It is an excellent treasure for generations to come!

My aunt made this with pound cake layers and added a 7 minute frosting. I have had many fabulous homemade Southern cakes in my life as everyone in my family are excellent cooks. I am not exaggerating that this cake, the way my aunt in SC made it, was the BEST cake I have ever eaten.

We made the lemon curd only. The taste and consistency is great. We put a little extra lemon juice and zest in and it still thickened nicely. It's a little sweet, so I think next time I might add a little less sugar or substitute "fake" sugar for all or part of the recipe to see if that might work.

Growing up in southern middle Georgia, my mother and aunt would make this cake. My brother recently asked if I knew the recipe, which was always his favorite. I do not usually use recipes and I was off point with the measurements of a couple of ingredients. This recipe brought everything together as we remembered the taste and texture. It is an excellent treasure for generations to come!

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Credits

Adapted from “The Gift of Southern Cooking,” by Scott Peacock and Edna Lewis (Knopf, 2003)

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