Lemon Cream Cheese Pound Cake

lemon_creamcheese_cakeCurrently baking from Great Coffee Cakes, Sticky Buns, Muffins & More by Carole Walter.

So far, this has been my favorite pound cake that I’ve baked out of Great Coffee Cakes, Sticky Buns, Muffins & More. The cake was dense and moist, and the cream cheese perfectly complimented the lemon. In fact, I think it could have used more cream cheese. I’m going to play around with this recipe’s ingredients and methods; the directions seemed overly complicated and I think they can be streamlined. But this cake has a lot of promise . . .

And that’s a pattern I’m beginning to see with Walter’s recipes. Her directions are very specific (which is good), but she doesn’t tell you why she wants you to do things a certain way (which is annoying, for me). For example, when adding sugar to the cream cheese, Walter tells you to add it a tablespoon at a time, taking five or so minutes. Why? What happens if you just dump it all in?

Not that I’ve done that.

Most experienced bakers will probably understand why she wants you to do things a certain way, but not novice bakers. And even though I consider myself to be an experienced baker, there have been a couple of times I was left scratching my head in puzzlement over Walter’s directions.

Nut-Crusted Orange Pound Cake

nut_orange_cake4Currently baking from Great Coffee Cakes, Sticky Buns, Muffins & More by Carole Walter.

This was my second attempt at a pound cake from Walter’s book. Obviously, it came out of the pan easier than the last one. It also tasted better than the last one, but that was because of the crust.

With this recipe, after generously buttering the pan, you press walnut pieces up the sides. As the cake bakes, the nuts toast up and merge with the batter to form a crust.

The cake itself? Meh. It was all right. I liked the texture better than the last one. This cake is a more traditional pound cake that includes a bit of sour cream and orange zest in the batter. I like using lemon and lime zest, but I find orange zest tends to make things taste medicinal. Overall, this isn’t a pound cake that I’d go out of my way to make again.

Neil’s Whipped Cream Pound Cake

whipped_cream_cakeCurrently baking from Great Coffee Cakes, Sticky Buns, Muffins & More by Carole Walter

I hate my nonstick bundt pan. No matter how carefully I grease and flour it, just about everything sticks, including, as you can see, this cake from my next book, Great Coffee Cakes, Sticky Buns, Muffins & More.

I wasn’t sure what to expect from this recipe. I have lots of pound cake recipes, but none that call for whipped cream instead of butter. The batter starts off by whipping eggs for five minutes and then slowly adding sugar. Vanilla, a small bit of flour and baking powder are carefully incorporated, followed by cream that has been whipped to firm peaks.

The flavor of the cake was nice, but I didn’t care much for the texture. Even though it was tender, the texture was very airy, almost like an angel food cake. I think it might be good with some fresh fruit, but on its own, I wasn’t very impressed with this cake.