Lemon Blueberry Cake Recipe

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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!

Lemon Blueberry Cake 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.

  • 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.

How To Make Lemon Blueberry Cake

  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 Recipe

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 206 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
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5 from 206 votes (177 ratings without comment)

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Comments

    1. Hi Tiffany, no need to thaw or rinse the frozen blueberries. (Unless for some reason they are homegrown and not rinsed before freezing.) Hope you love them! – Meggan

    1. Hi Kelly, I haven’t tried making this into 3 8-inch rounds. I’m not sure there would be enough batter to make three full whole rounds. Sorry about that. – Meggan

  1. Five stars for this recipe! It was delicious and perfectly moist. I added a 1/2 stick of unsalted butter in the batter and used lemon juice in the glaze. I made a 9×13 sheet cake. I will keep this recipe and make it again and again! Thank you!5 stars

  2. I made this for a work function, and it was the main topic of conversation!! It was a hit. I’m baking a third cake as I type because it’s so loved!
    Thank you so much!

    1. Oh my gosh, that’s amazing! Go you!!! Thank you for trying my recipe and loving it 🙂 – Meggan

  3. I have not tried the recipe yet. Is there an adjustment to the time or recipe to accommodate over 5,ooo elevation?5 stars

    1. Hi Lynn, I haven’t tested this recipe at your elevation, however, here is my advice. This recipe is based on a boxed cake mix, and they should have altitude adjustments printed on the box, so you could try following those. I think it would probably work well and you’d be successful, although I haven’t tried it myself. Normally altitude adjustments involve decreasing leavening agents or sugar or increasing liquid ingredients, but since it’s a boxed mix, you cannot really tweak a lot of that. I suggest following the advice on the box, that’s your best bet. Thanks! Good luck. – Meggan

  4. 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

  5. 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

    2. Hi! If you dust the blueberries in flour first, it will help them to not settle to the bottom. Just toss them in a bowl with a tbs of flour, just to coat lightly5 stars

  6. 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