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Bookmark this Better-Than-Classic Pound Cake from Deb Perelman's latest cookbook, Smitten Kitchen Keepers

She shares the last pound-cake recipe youll ever need plus her go-to toppings for this towering loaf.

She shares the last pound-cake recipe youll ever need plus her go-to toppings for this towering loaf

an overhead shot of a pound cake in a loaf pan on top of a baking sheet
(Photography by Deb Perelman, styling by Barrett Washburne)

This XL pound cake is from the pages of Deb Perelmans latest cookbook, Smitten Kitchen Keepers: New Classics For Your Forever Files. Since you can bake it for any and all occasions, we were curious about some of the ways Perelman likes to enjoy it. I like pound cake with fresh berries and lightly sweetened whipped cream or creme fraiche, she told us. A lemon icing is never unwelcome, nor is a drizzle of butterscotch sauce. Less popular but delicious application: A little whipped salted butter and jam. You can even lightly toast a slice of the cake first. Read on for more reasons why this one's a keeper.

Better-Than-Classic Pound Cake

By Deb Perelman

I want this to be the last pound-cake recipe youll ever need. It tries to earn this crown in several ways: a craggy, crisp top that I constantly have to swat small and large hands away from picking off in barklike flecks (though I hardly blame them). Its buttery but not bland, thanks to sour cream, vanilla, and exactly the right amount of salt and sugar. And its totally unpeskyno separated eggs, odd measurementsoh, and youre going to make this in one bowl, because Im too lazy to make it in two and wont write the recipe any other way. Before you balk at the amount of sugar or butter, please note the towering proportions here; this is a two-and-two-thirds-pound pound cake. I dont make pound cakes that force you to look down into the pan to see them. I think pound cakes should dome tall and chaotic over the rim. They should make an entrance and feed the crowd that forms around them. This one is ready for her spotlight.

Ingredients

  • 8 oz (1 cup, or 225 g) unsalted butter, melted and cooled slightly
  • 1 cup (200 g) plus 1 tbsp (15 g) granulated sugar, divided
  • cup (110 g) turbinado or packed light-brown sugar
  • 2 tsp (6 grams) kosher salt
  • 3 large eggs
  • 1 cup (240 g) sour cream
  • 1 to 2 tsp vanilla extract (use smaller amount if youre using vanilla bean paste, too)
  • tsp vanilla bean paste (optional)
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • 2 cups (260 g) all-purpose flour

Preparation

Heat the oven to 350F(175C). Coat a 6-cup (check! see note) loaf pan well with nonstick spray or butter, and line with a sling of parchment paper that extends up the two long sides.

In a large bowl, whisk together melted butter, 1 cup granulated sugar and all of the turbinado sugar and salt. Add the eggs, one at a time. Add the sour cream, vanilla extract, and vanilla-bean paste, if using, and whisk until smooth. Sprinkle the baking powder over the surface of the batter, and whisk many more times than are needed to make it disappear; we want to make sure its very well dispersed through the batter. Add the flour, and stir with a spatula until just combined.

Scrape the batter into the loaf pan, and drop the pan on the counter a couple times to release any trapped air. Smooth the top, and sprinkle with the remaining 1 tablespoon granulated sugar.

Bake for 1 hour and 10 to 15 minutes, until a skewer inserted all overespecially in the top third, where raw spots like to hidecomes out batter-free. Let it cool in the pan. Run a knife along the short sides of the cake, and use the parchment sling to remove the cake for slicing.

Notes

Very key here is the size of your loaf pan, because this batter will fill out every speck of it before it is done. Mine holds 6 liquid cups; its 8 by 4 inches on the bottom and 9 by 5 inches on the top. If yours is even slightly smaller, or youre nervous, go ahead and scoop out a little to make a mini-cake muffin or two. If youre still nervous, bake the cake on a larger tray to catch drips.

This cake uses melted butter. Do not, I repeat, do not soften and whip the butter and sugar together as you would for other cakes. The crumb is way less rich.

Do ahead

This cake is good on the first day and gets better on the second and third. It keeps at room temperature for 5 days. I like to store it back in its loaf pan with the top uncovered (so it stays crisp). I press a piece of foil or plastic against the cut side only.

Makes 1 loaf, or 8 to 10 slices.

a sliced pound cake loaf on a wooden cutting board
(Photography by Deb Perelman, styling by Barrett Washburne)

From Smitten Kitchen Keepers: New Classics for Your Forever Files by Deb Perelman. Copyright 2022 by Deb Perelman. Excerpted bypermissionof Alfred A. Knopf, a division of Penguin Random House LLC. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted withoutpermissionin writing from the publisher.

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