Blueberry, Lemon & Almond Cake

Hooray, the Swedish forests are down with the blues again! You can literally just take three steps from the porch of our summer house and stand completely surrounded by an ocean of blue gems. It’s an August luxury when you live in Sweden. Even Elsa sneaks away on short blueberry foraging tours. You can easily tell where she has been just by looking at her blue stained hands, mouth, knees and … dress. And of course by the big grin on her face when she says: “I found bueblerries!”.

We mentioned earlier that we have been baking and eating bueblerries, ehm, blueberries in lots of different ways these last weeks. They have of course been thrown into smoothies, used in tarts, gobbled down by the handfull and sprinkled over our breakfast yogurt. But one of the most fun thing we did was Mini Calzones with ricotta, maple syrup, lime & blueberries. We made this dough, divided it in small cirkles that we filled it with blueberries, lime juice, maple syrup and ricotta cheese, and wrapped them up like calzones. Super cute and delicious. We did half the batch with normal savory filling and half with the sweet blueberry filling. That way, our dinner seamlessly turned into dessert. But now we’re loosing ourselves in the calzones when we should really talk about this cake.

We have baked a couple of different gluten free cakes before, but until this day we had never made an almond cake. Today we made three. Think of this cake as a distant relative to a sponge cake, although grain free, dairy free (well, that depends on what you glaze it with), possibly vegan, and much tastier. We filled it with lemon to give a sour twang to the richness of the almond flour, poppy seeds because they are so fun to chew on, and blueberries because it would be stupid using any other fruit this month.

Blueberry, Lemon, Poppy Seed & Almond Cake
Serves 8-10

Inspired by Coco’s and Elana’s almond cakes.

4 cups (400 g) almond flour
3 tbsp poppy seeds
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/2 cup (120 ml) rapeseed oil or ghee
1/2 cup (120 ml) honey or maple syrup
2 small organic lemons
3 large eggs (replace with chia seeds* if you are vegan)
2 cups (300 g) blueberries (save half for topping)

Glazing
1 cup/240 ml (250 g) Turkish yogurt, drained (use vegan cream cheese if you are vegan)

2 tbsp honey or maple syrup
1 tsp vanilla extract

Preheat oven to 350°F / 180°C. Combine almond flour, poppy seeds, salt, baking powder and baking soda in a large bowl and set aside. Heat oil and honey in a sauce pan on very low heat until combined. Grate the zest from the 2 lemons and add it to the honey/oil batter. Divide them in half and squeeze the juice from three of the halves into the mixture, saving one half for the glazing. Add the batter to the bowl with the dry ingredients. Beat the eggs and then fold them into the batter together with 1 cup of the blueberries. Stir gently around with a wooden spoon until combined. Grease a 8-inch spring form cake tin, and add the batter to it.

Bake for about 40-50 minutes (depending on size of the pan and oven), or until golden on the outside and baked all way through (you can cover the cake with tin foil during the last 15 minutes of the baking time, if it starts looking burned) . Remove from oven and let cool for at least 30 minutes before removing the sides. Meanwhile, start making the glazing. Drain yogurt in a milk cloth or coffee filter for about 10 minutes. This is to make the yogurt less runny. Discard the water and combine the thick yogurt with honey vanilla extract and the juice from the remaining lemon half. Leave to chill in the fridge. When the cake has cooled completely, cover it with glazing, top with the remaining blueberries and serve. You could also just serve the cake with blueberries and yogurt on the side.

* You can replace three eggs with 3 tbsp chia seeds and 9 tbsp water that you combine and let sit for 15 minutes.

148 Comments

  • Laura
    I can’t wait to make this cake, looks delish! Can you tell me how long it keeps for once baked? Thanks, Laura
  • Eszter
    hi! this cake is amazing! i made it with lactose free butter and peaches. Thank you this cool and easy recipe! Have a beautyful day! Greeting from Hungary
  • Adriana
    Can you swap the honey or maple syrup for granulated sweetener
  • My husband and kids loved this blueberry lemon almond cake when I made this last Christmas! Will surely make this again soon!
  • I love blueberry! I love lemon! And I love almonds! It's the perfect combination of my three favorite things. This is an amazing recipe.
  • Elyse
    I just made this cake with greek yoghurt but am wondering how to get the glaze a perfect consistency without having the use of coffee filters or a cotton sheet. I tried paper towel massive fail and a bit silly of me really. I put the yoghurt on but its quite watery hoping it may set a little whilst in the fridge.
  • Christine Burkins
    I love the look of this cake and the recipe seems lovely. I tried printing off the recipe only to end up with pages and pages of comments. That is truly frustrating.
  • In your ingredients on this specific website; you mispelled GRAPESEED OIL, and put RAPESEED OIL. :(
    • Carol
      Rapeseed oil is a thing, rapeseed is related to canola.
  • Carol
    This is a fabulous recipe!! Thank you!! I made it with the chia eggs and it was loved by all!! My 5yo was particularly impressed. I topped it with a cashew, lemon and honey frosting.
  • Aggi
    Can I use white poppy seeds or just omit them altogether?
  • charlotte
    I just wondered if this cake would freeze well? Thinking about weddings...
  • Your photo makes a blueberry cake look sublime. I also like the mini calzones idea. I might be trying that soon!
  • Louise
    I made this cake yesterday. It is so delicious and not overly sweet. The poppy seeds add a lovely texture/crunch. Thank you.
  • Andrea
    I made this tonight and it was a total disaster. I followed the recipie and wondering what I did wrong? It was a crumbly dry mess
  • Danielle
    Hello, I really want to try this for my Daughters 1st Birthday cake. Could I use coconut flour instead of almond and would melted butter or olive oil be better? Many Thanks, Danielle
  • Evelina
    Hi, Would like to try this recipe, this cake looks very delicious and healthy. I would prefer not to use baking soda and baking powder. Can I use instant yeast instead? If so, how much instant yeast should I put in there and how long should I let it proof before I start to mix with other ingredients? Will the baking time and temperature the same? thanks, Evelina
  • Sara D
    So I took a chance and made this in a regular 8 inch cake pan, liberally greased with coconut oil, and had no problems removing the cake from the pan after cooling. It held together perfectly in fact, and did not seem at all fragile. I set my timer for 30 minutes and the center was still too wet, so I baked for another 10 minutes. I think that was a tad too long, so next time I'll try 35. I used frozen blueberries, rinsed first and then dried on paper towels to prevent bleeding into the batter. Next time I'll also make a warm blueberry sauce to serve on top of the cake (tried it the first time with a coconut flour icing which I did not like at all).
    • Susanne
      Thank you, Sara, for your reply! Did you thaw the blueberries before you put them in the cake? The blueberry sauce is a great idea!
      • Sara D
        Yes, I put the frozen blueberries in a strainer and ran cool water over them for a minute to help thaw them (and I read online that this prevents frozen berries from bleeding into the batter), and then I spread them on paper towels to dry while I made the cake. I'd say they were pretty well thawed out by the time I folded them into the batter. This is a great birthday cake if you don't like sickening, overly sweet desserts, and would also be great for brunch!
        • Susanne
          Thank you for your advice! The cake was a success :)
  • Susanne
    I want to bake this cake for my sister's birthday this weekend. Will frozen blueberrier work?
  • Sara D
    I only have a 9 inch spring form pan. Do you think I could make this ia regular 8 inch cake pan or would it stick too much? Thanks!
  • K
    Can you use the pie filling , we don't get fresh blueberries here
  • hannah
    I made this with "flax eggs" instead of eggs (for a vegan alternative) using 3 tbsp flaxseed and 9 tbsp water.. Unfortunately it didnt work out at all. The cake was far too dense and thick (so I added some almond milk to make it mixable),even so after cooking it just crumbled and wouldnt hold together. Any suggestions for next time? Still tasted delicious though!
  • Dawn
    Just making this now with chia seeds instead of poppy and will top with fresh whipping cream. Yay for blueberry season!!
  • Patricia Roy
    I love this. I just made this as a cupcake.
  • Gabrielle
    I am going to make this vegan, and instead of vegan cream cheese I made some homemade cinnamon cashew cream with dates and figs as a natural sweetener to the cream. I was wondering though instead of chia seeds could you use applesauces as an egg replacement?
  • emm
    Has anyone used the Chia seeds? If so how much should I use?
    • Liz
      I did. you prepare 1 TBSP of Chia Seeds + 3 TBSP water for EACH egg needed; stir well and let sit for 5 min. before folding it in to the batter. For this recipe you would need 3 TBSP of Chia Seeds + 9 TBSP water. Cheers, LiZ
  • Cait
    Such an amazing cake! I've made it several times now and everyone absolutely loves it! I make it with chia seeds instead of eggs and it always turns out amazing! Even the raw batter is phenomenal! Instead of putting a dairy frosting on top, I make a coconut whipped cream with a touch of lemon juice and local honey. The coconut topping works well with this cake. Thank you for sharing the recipe and beautiful photographs!
  • Laura
    Hi! i have both your books and cook recipes from them and your website all the time! So thank you for a lot of great diners where my friends are always amazed (ultimate favorite: the chocolate chili beans!). I have friends coming over next week so I'm planning to make this cake and I have 2 questions concerning the recipe: first, is it okay if I use Olive oil? or does it have to be rapeseed? and second, what is turkish yogurt? I'm not sure I can find it in France easily... can greek yogurt or reguler yogurt work as well? Thank you so much for you answer and for all your recipes! all the best, Laura
    • Hi Laura, yes you can use olive oil, you might want to try choosing a mildly flavoured one. And Turkish yogurt is a thick yogurt very similar to Greek yogurt, so they can easily be substituted with each other. Regular yogurt might be too thin for this. /David
  • This looks absolutely amazing and i really want to make it for my mothers birthday this weekend! I was wondering if I could make this cake 2 days in advance and keep it in the fridge (unfrosted). Would it still taste the same? Thanks for a great blog!
  • Amanda
    Hi, do you know the calories in this cake?

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