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32 Comments
Dona
June 22, 2022
This is a great cake! I’ve been making pound cake for 50 years and this may be the best.
Sonya
June 17, 2022
The image at the top of this page (chickpeas & ??? inside a food processor w additional ingredients to the left) looks nutritiously inspiring; however, what recipe does it pertain to? Any feedback is greatly appreciated. Ty.
Anita104
June 17, 2022
Would this work with gluten free flour plus xanthan gum?
Stacey
June 17, 2022
You can use either Bob’s Cup for Cup flour or the Cup 4 Cup brand (Thomas Keller) in almost ANY recipe and it will come out perfect. No xanthan gum needed. (All the binders are in these two flour blends.) I’ve fooled chefs…
Anita104
June 17, 2022
Thanks, that was my feeling also, but because this uses cake flour, I wasn't sure.
Stacey
June 17, 2022
If you have or can buy buttermilk powder, a tbsp in a recipe really lightens things up :)
Pamela G.
June 17, 2022
My family and I are use to old fashion pound cake with that tang of sour cream or buttermilk. How can I add that to this recipe? I recently made this recipe as my arm is in a sling following shoulder surgery and it was so much easier than my traditional recipe but was missing that traditional taste. Thanks for any suggestions.
Stacey
June 17, 2022
Have you ever tried using buttermilk powder? You can add a tablespoon or two without changing the recipe. It gives it that tang, and that lactic acid chemical reaction gives most recipes an awesome lightness.
gigi123
June 5, 2022
I was looking for a reply to the question of wouldn't the hot butter cook the eggs. It was the first thing I thought of when I read the recipe. Does anyone know why this is not a problem?
HalfPint
June 7, 2022
Butter tends to melt around 90F-100F. Eggs scramble at a much higher temperature, 144F-158F. Even though the melted butter is "hot", it is not hot enough to scramble the eggs. That's my guess based on the physics.
Winness
June 5, 2022
I avoided most recipes that called for ice-cold butter that had to be cut into flour for recipes for scones and dozens of others. Until...I read a tiny hint a long time ago and gave it a try. I melt my butter now and then mix it into the cold milk, buttermilk, or whatever cold liquid is called for. Instantly, that melted butter turns into floating globules after a quick stir. Pour into the flour and the butter is dispersed throughout the batter. Results...perfect. So, I am not surprised that melted butter in a pound cake results in a beautiful bit of heaven. Sometimes the old rules need to be broken.
Saz M.
July 27, 2020
Literally tasted of rotten trash! I think maybe cook it on high for less rather than longer on low. It was green brown and not good. I don’t know how I screwed that up but I did. Yuck. Threw it away.
Judy B.
January 15, 2021
I laughed out loud at your recipe mixup. When I read your comment about the trashy and green, I thought what the heck?
Glad you corrected quickly. So funny, made my day.
Glad you corrected quickly. So funny, made my day.
Winness
June 5, 2022
I roared when I read your review! Yay for flame-outs. I'm not the only one on the planet who has done this. Phew! BTW, that broccoli recipe must be avoided at all costs.
jewelgreenberg
June 5, 2022
Saz, this is hilarious. The only thing I could think of was that your eggs must have been bad, but a broccoli recipe makes more sense! Thanks for the laugh, and a reminder of how wonderfully human we all are. 💗
wildgourmet
August 7, 2018
I've made this recipe before when I saw it at ATK or in Cook's Magazine, I forget which...it was one of those recipes where they found the best method to do something. I'm a decent baker and love a good pound cake but had not had a lot of luck without making bricks before trying this recipe. It might as well be called "no fail pound cake" for how good it is. Even I don't have a food processor, it can be done with an immersion blender or even a wire whip/whisk and it still works.
Leigh
July 3, 2018
Could I use unbleached all-purpose flour instead of unbleached cake flour?
Michele
July 3, 2018
I just made mini ones with AP flour, removing 3 tablespoons of the flour and replacing with cornstarch to mimic cake flour. It worked fine. They needed about 45 minutes in mini loaf pans to get to 212F. Good luck.
Nikkitha B.
July 3, 2018
My pound cakes pretty much always end up feeling like doorstops, so I'm very excited for this one!
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