Keto Lemon Pound Cake with a delicious lemon glaze is a thick slice of soft, moist heaven. This low-carb pound cake recipe has the absolute perfect texture and makes for an amazing sugar-free breakfast, snack or dessert. This recipe includes a dairy-free option as well as a paleo option.

Keto Lemon Pound Cake in slices on a white surface with lemon halves next to it

It wasn’t until making this recipe that I learned why pound cake is called pound cake. 

Am I the last person on earth to have learned this?

Pound cake is a thick, dense, moist cake typically made in a Bundt cake pan or a bread loaf pan. It is called “pound cake” because it contains a pound of butter, flour, eggs, and sugar respectively.

That’s how you know it’s good 😉

While pound cake does check all the boxes of a typical cake, it has a unique texture that gives it a denser structure and an explosion of buttery flavor.

Pound cake is amazing enough on its own, but when you do something wild like serve it with fresh berries, whipped cream, or ice cream, the experience turns from great to otherworldly lickety split.

Because I’m a long-time fanatic of classic pound cake, I figured I would make a grain-free version that is also sugar-free and keto-friendly.

Plus, adding lemon zest just makes the experience incredibly refreshing, and so this keto lemon pound cake was born. 

The overall concept is very similar to my Keto Lemon Poppy Seed Bread, but with that iconic pound cake texture.

Let’s dive right into the details!

Low-Carb Lemon Pound Cake Ingredients:

Almond Flour and Coconut Flour: The combination of almond flour and coconut flour results in tender, fluffy, yet dense and moist texture for this beautiful keto pound cake recipe. Be cautious to use the exact amounts listed, as neither one are interchangeable for the other at a 1:1 replacement. 

Sugar-Free Granulated Sweetener: In order to make this pound cake sugar-free, we use a sugar-free granulated sweetener. My top three favorite brands of sugar-free sweeteners to use in baking are Lakanto (monk fruit sweetener), Swerve (erythritol), or Truvia (Stevia leaf extract). 

Eggs: Because coconut flour is very dense and we’re working with grain-free flours, we need more eggs in this grain-free pound cake recipe than we would in an otherwise regular flour recipe. The eggs ensure the cake becomes incredibly fluffy and holds together nicely. 

Butter or Coconut Oil: The fat portion of the pound cake! Melted butter or coconut oil bring incredible rich flavor to the pound cake. Use coconut oil if you eat a dairy-free diet, or replace the butter with ghee to keep it tasting buttery but make it lactose-free.

Lemon Zest and Lemon Juice: The stars of the show! Lemon pound cake is irresistible due to its zesty, tangy, amazingly sweet flavors. Lemon zest is what provides the majority of the lemon flavor, so be sure you don’t skimp on it! You need the zest of two large lemons, which equates to about 1 tablespoon of zest, plus a few tablespoons of fresh lemon juice.

Baking Powder and Baking Soda: Both baking powder and baking soda are used as leavening agents in this recipe. Be sure you use unexpired baking powder and baking soda and that you follow the amounts in the recipe in order to get the right texture.

Sea Salt: Sea salt levels up that delicious lemon flavor, brings out the richness of the pound cake, and ensures everything tastes nice and sweet! Don’t skip it!

Optional Glaze:

For the Glaze: Sugar-free powdered sugar (also known as confectioner’s sweetener) and lemon juice. This simple combination makes for a deliciously sweet yet zesty glaze, making the pound cake taste extra refreshing.

While the glaze is optional, I do recommend it because it makes that amazing crinkly topping similar to a glazed donut that just puts the icing on the cake 😉

Top down photo of a loaf of lemon pound cake that has been cut into slices. Fresh lemons to the side

How to Make Low-Carb Lemon Pound Cake:

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit and line a bread loaf pan with parchment paper.

Whisk the melted butter, eggs, and lemon juice together in a mixing bowl until well-combined and creamy (wet ingredients).

In a separate mixing bowl, stir together the almond flour, coconut flour, sugar-free granulated sweetener, baking powder, baking soda, and sea salt (the dry ingredients) until well-combined.

Pour the dry ingredients into the mixing bowl with the wet ingredients and stir until a thick batter forms. Stir in the lemon zest until combined.

Transfer the pound cake batter to the prepared loaf pan and smooth it into an even layer. Bake on the center rack of the preheated oven for 15 minutes. Remove the pound cake from the oven, turn the oven temperature down to 330 degrees F, and cover the pound cake with foil.

Bake for another 50 to 65 minutes at 330 degrees, or until the cake tests clean.

Allow the pound cake to cool completely (at the very least, allow it to cool for 30 minutes) before covering it with glaze and slicing.

To make the glaze, simply stir together the sugar-free confectioners sweetener and the lemon juice together in a small bowl until thick and creamy. Spread all of this mixture on top of the bread. Allow the glaze to set up before slicing into the cake and serving.

As you can see, pound cake requires more time in the oven than a standard quick bread. Here’s why!

Why Does Pound Cake Take So Long to Bake?:

In order to get the texture of this low-carb pound cake to come out identical to regular pound cake, we must bake it at a lower temperature than normal for a longer period of time. 

This allows the bread to rise and cook slowly, allowing the center to become completely cooked through and at the same time achieve that lusciously soft and dense texture. If the oven temperature is too high, the top cooks faster than the middle, which is fine for some types of breads or cakes, but in this cake, we want the top of the pound cake to remain very soft.

White plate with two thick slices of low-carb lemon pound cake with a gold fork and a blue napkin

Can I Make Paleo Pound Cake?:

If you aren’t following a sugar-free, low-carb or ketogenic diet, you can easily make this pound cake recipe with other granulated sweeteners in a 1:1 replacement. To make Paleo Pound Cake, replace the sugar-free sweetener with maple sugar.

If you use can sugar in your baking, swap out the sugar-free sweetener with cane sugar.

You may also use coconut sugar although the color of the pound cake will be much darker and slightly brown.

Can I Substitute the Almond Flour or Coconut Flour?:

While I normally encourage freedom of expression with recipes, this is one of those situations where you definitely want to leave the measurements of the almond flour and coconut flour exactly as written.

Coconut flour absorbs four times the amount of liquid as almond flour, so if you take some of it away, the cake will contain too much liquid, may not cook through, and won’t have the right structure. 

Add too much coconut flour and your cake will turn out incredibly dry and suck all the moisture out of your mouth while eating it.

For the best results, stick with the recipe as is, and if you need a different version, consult a different recipe rather than trying to change this one.

Nutrition Facts:

When slicing the pound cake into 8 thick slices, each slice of keto lemon pound cake contains 4 grams of carbohydrate and 2 grams of fiber, equaling 2 net carbs per slice. Each slice is just under 200 calories. Not too shabby for a grain-free sugar-free treat!

More Keto Dessert Recipes:

Enjoy this slice of zesty, moist, soft keto pound cake!

Top down photo of a loaf of lemon pound cake that has been cut into slices. Fresh lemons to the side

Keto Lemon Pound Cake

4.48 from 36 votes
Zesty, moist, dense Keto Lemon Pound Cake made grain-free and sugar-free is a vibrant, guilt-free treat!
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour 15 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 25 minutes
Servings: 8 Servings

Ingredients

Optional Glaze:

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit and line a bread loaf pan with parchment paper.
  • Whisk the melted butter, eggs, and lemon juice together in a mixing bowl until well-combined and creamy (wet ingredients).
    Eggs and melted butter in a mixing bowl
  • In a separate mixing bowl, stir together the almond flour, coconut flour, sugar-free granulated sweetener, baking powder, baking soda, and sea salt (the dry ingredients) until well-combined.
  • Pour the dry ingredients into the mixing bowl with the wet ingredients and stir until a thick batter forms. Stir in the lemon zest until combined.
    Pound cake batter with lemon zest in a mixing bowl
  • Transfer the pound cake batter to the prepared loaf pan and smooth it into an even layer.
    Spread the pound cake batter in the prepared bread pan
  • Bake on the center rack of the preheated oven for 15 minutes. Remove the pound cake from the oven, turn the oven temperature down to 330 degrees F, and cover the pound cake with foil. Bake for another 50 to 65 minutes at 330 degrees, or until the cake tests clean.
    Finished pound cake in a bread loaf pan fresh out of the oven
  • Allow the pound cake to cool completely (at the very least, allow it to cool for 30 minutes) before covering it with glaze and slicing.
  • To make the glaze, simply stir together the sugar-free confectioners sweetener and the lemon juice together in a small bowl until thick and creamy. Spread all of this mixture on top of the bread. Allow the glaze to set up before slicing into the cake and serving.
    Horizontal image of paleo pound cake slices on a white surface

Notes

*You can replace the sugar-free sweetener with cane sugar or maple sugar if you don't need the pound cake to be sugar-free.
Similarly, you can replace the sugar-free powdered sugar with regular powdered sugar or with powdered maple sugar.

Nutrition

Serving: 1Slice (of 8) · Calories: 199kcal · Carbohydrates: 4g · Protein: 6g · Fat: 18g · Fiber: 2g · Sugar: 1g
Author: Julia
Course: Breads
Cuisine: American
Keyword: almond flour pound cake, coconut flour pound cake, easy pound cake recipe, healthy pound cake recipe, keto dessert recipes, keto lemon pound cake, paleo pound cake, sugar-free pound cake
Did You Make This Recipe?I want to see it! Tag @the.roasted.root on social media!
This post contains affiliate links, which means I make a small commission off items you purchase at no additional cost to you.

Keto Lemon Pound Cake collage for pinterest

Julia Mueller
Meet the Author

Julia Mueller

Julia Mueller is a recipe developer, cookbook author, and founder of The Roasted Root. She has authored three bestselling cookbooks, – Paleo Power Powers, Delicious Probiotic Drinks, and The Quintessential Kale Cookbook. Her recipes have been featured in several national publications such as BuzzFeed, Self, Tasty, Country Living, Brit.co, etc.

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4.48 from 36 votes (36 ratings without comment)

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Questions and Reviews

  1. Could this recipe be tweaked to use key limes instead of lemons, and would you use the same amount of lime zest and juice?

    1. Hi Charmaine! I do believe it would work great replacing lemon zest and juice with lime zest and juice. If it were me trying it, I would use the same amount 🙂 Hope you enjoy, and let me know how it goes! xo

    1. Hi Caroline!

      I bet it would work as mini muffins, but without having tried it I’m not sure what the exact bake time would be. I just googled a standard mini muffin recipe and it said 375 degrees for 10 minutes. Let me know how it turns out! xo

  2. This cake sounds wonderful, do you think it would work subbing flax eggs for the regular eggs, as I am vegan?
    Thanks so much!!

    1. Hi Kat!

      I don’t think this recipe would be a good candidate for an egg replacer, as the eggs play a pretty crucial roll in ensuring the bread fluffs up and stays held together. Coconut flour (and grain-free flours in general) is finicky in the sense that it will become very dense without the use of a lot of eggs and liquid such as oil. In my past experiences trying to make recipes like this vegan using flax eggs, for instance, they’ve turned out very dense and flat. Delicious, but not so bread-like. Sorry I couldn’t be more help!! xoxo

  3. Have you tried making this in a Bundt pan instead of a loaf pan? Any suggestions on things to do differently? It’s my birthday, so I’m thinking I’ll try it, just to be festive.

    1. Hi Nicole! I haven’t tried baking the pound cake in a bundt pan yet. My two concerns are 1.) I’m not sure what the exact difference in bake time would be and 2.) since it’s a grain-free recipe, I would worry it wouldn’t come out of the bundt pan in one piece. That said, I think if you oil the bundt pan really well, it may work out great! I’ve just had a few bundt pans in the past that needed to be super well oiled and floured or else the cake would stick. Let me know if you try it!

  4. MY 2 CENTS: Most granulated sugar-free sweeteners are made with erythritol or other sugar alcohols. I do not tolerate them well, but liquid Stevia works great for me. I have found that I can substitute a squirt or more of Stevia in most Keto baked goods with excellent results.

    1. That’s great feedback! I’ve been meaning to start baking with liquid stevia to give an additional option for those who don’t do the granulated sweeteners. I appreciate the two cents 🙂 xo

  5. Lovely looking Lemon Pound Cake, but I was wondering what size loaf pan did you use? It makes a big difference in the end result and cook time. Thank you☺

  6. Can I add fresh blueberries to the batter before baking? If so, should I cut back on liquid?

    1. Hi Melissa,

      I haven’t tested it myself with blueberries, but I think it would be just fine! I would just toss the blueberries in 1 to 2 teaspoons of coconut flour before adding them to the batter to ensure they don’t all sink during the baking process. Let me know how it turns out!