Butter

Claire Saffitz's Preserved Lemon Meringue Cake

by:
March 16, 2021
5
7 Ratings
Photo by Alex Lau
  • Prep time 5 hours 10 minutes
  • Cook time 40 minutes
  • Serves 10
Author Notes

Preserved lemons, a staple of North African and Middle Eastern cuisines, add a pungent lemon flavor to savory dishes without the puckering acid of fresh lemons. Short of using extract or an impractically large amount of fresh grated lemon zest, it's not easy to infuse lemon flavor into baking recipes, so I thought preserved lemons might be a cool and interesting way to flavor a cake. As a test I blended the rind of a few preserved lemons (generally the only part you use, even though the whole fruit is preserved) into some plain yogurt and added it to a batter, and the resulting flavor was complex and floral and even better than I expected. Preserved lemons are cured in salt and therefore very salty, so there's no need to add additional salt to the cake recipe. Look for them jarred in Middle Eastern grocery stores or well-stocked supermarkets.

Special Equipment: Stand mixer, standard or handheld blender, three 8-inch cake pans, candy or instant-read thermometer, kitchen torch (optional)

Reprinted from Dessert Person. Copyright © 2020 by Claire Saffitz. Photographs copyright © 2020 by Alex Lau. Published by Clarkson Potter/Publishers, an imprint of Random House, a division of Penguin Random HouseFood52

Ingredients
  • Preserved lemon cake
  • Butter for the pans
  • 3 whole small preserved lemons (about 6 ounces/170 grams)
  • 3/4 cup plain whole-milk Greek yogurt (6.3 ounces/180 grams), at room temperature
  • 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice (1 ounce/28 grams)
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • Finely grated zest of 1 lemon
  • 3 1/3 cups cake flour (14 ounces/400 grams)*
  • 1 tablespoon baking powder (0/42 ounces/12 grams)
  • 1/4 teaspoon baking soda
  • 2 sticks unsalted butter (8 ounces/227 grams), at room temperature
  • 1/3 cup neutral oil, such as vegetable or grapeseed (2.6 ounces/75 grams)
  • 2 cups sugar (14 ounces/400 grams)
  • 5 large eggs (8.8 ounces/250 grams), at room temperature
  • Italian meringue & assembly
  • Lemon curd (recipe follows)
  • 3 large egg whites (3.7 ounces/105 grams)
  • 1/2 teaspoon fresh lemon juice
  • Pinch of kosher salt
  • 3/4 cup sugar (5.3 ounces/150 grams)
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract or orange blossom water
  • Lemon curd
  • 3/4 cup sugar (5.3 ounces/150 grams)
  • Finely grated zest of 2 lemons*
  • 4 large egg yolks (2.5 ounces/70 grams)
  • 1 large egg (1.8 ounces/50 grams)
  • 3/4 cup fresh lemon juice (6 ounces/170 grams), from 5 to 6 large lemons
  • 1/2 teaspoon Diamond Crystal kosher salt
  • 1 stick unsalted butter (4 ounces/113 grams), cut into 1/2-inch pieces, chilled
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Directions
  1. Preserved lemon cake
  2. Preheat the oven and prepare the pans: Arrange two oven racks in the upper and lower thirds of the oven and preheat to 350°F. Lightly butter the bottoms and sides of the cake pans and line the bottoms with rounds of parchment paper, smoothing to eliminate air bubbles. Butter the parchment and set the pans aside.
  3. Blend the lemon into the wet ingredients: Halve the preserved lemons and pull out and discard the pulpy innards and seeds, leaving only the rind. Rinse and coarsely chop the halves, then weigh and measure the amount. You should have about 3 ounces/85 grams or a scant 1/2 cup. In a blender, combine the chopped preserved lemons, yogurt, lemon juice, vanilla, and grated zest and blend on low speed to liquefy, then on high until the pieces of lemon rind disappear and the mixture is smooth. Set the mixture aside.

    Mix the dry ingredients: In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, and baking soda and set aside.
  4. Cream the butter, oil, and sugar: In a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, combine the butter, oil, and sugar and beat on low until smooth. Increase the speed to medium-high and continue to beat, scraping down the sides occasionally, until the mixture is very light and fluffy, about 5 minutes.

    Add the eggs: Reduce the mixer speed to medium and add the eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition. Beat on medium-high until the mixture is very light and thick, about 1 minute.
  5. Alternate the dry and wet ingredients: With the mixer on low speed, add about one-third of the flour mixture and mix until the flour has almost disappeared. Scrape in half of the yogurt mixture, mixing just until incorporated, then add the remaining flour in 2 additions, alternating with the remaining yogurt mixture. When the last traces of flour disappear, stop the mixer and remove the bowl. Use a flexible spatula to scrape down the sides and fold the batter several times to make sure it’s evenly mixed.
  6. Fill the pans and bake the layers: Divide the batter among the three prepared pans (if you have a scale, weigh out 1 lb 3 oz / 539g of batter per pan). Smooth the batter in an even layer all the way to the sides. Transfer the pans to the oven, placing two on the upper rack and one on the lower rack, staggering so the pan below doesn’t have another pan directly above it. Bake the cakes until the centers spring back when pressed, the surface is golden, and a cake tester or toothpick inserted into the centers comes out clean, 25 to 30 minutes, switching racks and rotating the pans front to back after 20 minutes.
  7. Cool the cakes: Remove the cakes from the oven and let them cool completely in the pans.
  8. Split the layers: Use a small offset spatula or paring knife to cut around the sides of the pans to loosen the cakes. Invert them onto a wire rack, peel off the parchment, then reinvert onto a cardboard cake round or cutting board. The cakes should bake very flat so you won’t need to level them. You are, however, going to split the layers in half horizontally to make six thinner layers out of the three.
  9. Holding a serrated knife horizontally, mark the midway point around the side of a cake by making shallow score marks all the way around. Then, using long, even strokes and positioning the knife parallel to the work surface, follow the shallow cut as a guide all the way around the cake to slice it into two even layers. Lift the top layer off the cake and set aside. Repeat with the remaining layers so you have six total.
  10. Stack, fill, and chill the layers: Place a cake layer, cut-side up, on a cake round, serving plate, or cake stand and slide several strips of parchment partially underneath and all around the cake to cover and protect the plate or stand during frosting. Using a small offset spatula, spread a slightly heaping ⅓ cup cold lemon curd across the surface, leaving a ½-inch border. Place another layer on top, cut-side up, making sure it’s centered. Press gently to level, then spread with another slightly heaping ⅓ cup curd. Repeat until you’ve stacked all six layers and used all the curd, placing the final layer cut-side down. The layers might start to slide around, so cover the cake with plastic wrap and carefully transfer it to the refrigerator to chill until the curd has firmed up and the layers are stable, about 20 minutes. You can also stick a skewer down the center of the cake through all the layers to hold them in place.
  11. Make the Italian meringue: In a clean stand mixer bowl fitted with the whisk attachment (make sure all the mixer parts are free of grease, or the meringue won’t whip up), combine the egg whites, lemon juice, and salt. In a small saucepan, combine the sugar and ¼ cup water (2 oz / 57g) and set over medium heat, stirring with a heatproof spatula to dissolve the sugar. When the syrup comes to a boil, stop stirring and wash down the sides of the pan with a wet pastry brush to dissolve any sugar crystals. Clip a candy thermometer to the side of the pan (or use an instant-read thermometer) and cook the syrup, gently swirling the pan often, until it reaches 244°F. While the sugar syrup is cooking, turn the mixer on medium-high speed to begin to whip the egg whites— you want them foamy and softly whipped right as the sugar hits 244°F. Immediately remove the saucepan from the heat and, with the mixer still on medium-high, very slowly stream the hot sugar syrup into the egg whites. Try to stream the sugar down the side of the bowl to avoid hitting the moving whisk and splattering the sugar.

    Beat the meringue and cover the cake: Once all the sugar syrup has been added, increase the mixer to high and continue to whip until the meringue is very glossy and forms a firm peak off the end of the beater. Be careful not to overbeat or the meringue will become dry and take on a curdy texture, making it hard to smooth over the cake. Beat in the vanilla. Remove the cake from the refrigerator and uncover. Scrape all of the meringue over the top of the cake and smooth it across the surface and down the sides with an offset spatula, covering the entire cake and making lots of swirls.
  12. Torch, if desired, and serve: Slide the parchment strips out from underneath the cake. If desired, use a kitchen torch to toast the meringue all over before cutting the cake into slices and serving.
  13. DO AHEAD The cake layers, well wrapped and stored at room temperature, will keep up to 2 days or can be frozen up to 1 month (split them in half horizontally before freezing). Fill and stack the frozen cake layers, then cover and let the cake thaw overnight in the refrigerator before covering with the meringue. The cake layers can be filled and stacked 1 day ahead; keep covered in the refrigerator. Let the cake come to room temperature and cover with the meringue just before serving. The coated cake will keep at room temperature for at least 1 day, but the meringue will deflate over time.
    *If you don’t have or can’t find cake flour, in a pinch you can substitute an equal amount of all-purpose flour: Just replace 1 tablespoon flour with 1 tablespoon of cornstarch per 1 cup flour called for in the recipe.
    **For a simpler spin on this cake, skip the Italian meringue and instead coat the layers in stiffly whipped, lightly sweetened cream just before serving.
  1. Lemon curd
  2. Beat the eggs and sugar in the saucepan: In a small, heavy-bottomed saucepan,** combine the sugar and lemon zest and use your fingertips to massage the zest into the sugar until the mixture is fragrant and looks like wet sand. Add the egg yolks and whole egg to the pan and whisk vigorously, making sure no unincorporated sugar is trapped around the sides, until the mixture is very pale, light in texture, and thick, about 2 minutes.
  3. Add the lemon juice and cook the curd: Slowly stream in the lemon juice, whisking constantly and scraping around the sides, until the mixture is smooth. Whisk in the salt. Place the saucepan over medium-low heat and cook, whisking constantly, until the curd turns opaque yellow, is thick enough to coat the back of a spoon, and barely holds the marks of the whisk (it will also register 170°F on an instant-read thermometer), 7 to 10 minutes. Immediately remove the saucepan from the heat.
  4. Whisk in the butter and vanilla: Whisk in the butter one piece at a time, waiting for each piece to disappear into the curd before adding the next, until all the butter is incorporated and the mixture is smooth. Whisk in the vanilla. ***
  5. Chill the curd until set: Scrape the curd into a medium glass or plastic bowl or container and press a sheet of plastic wrap directly onto the surface (this will prevent a skin from forming).****
  6. Refrigerate until the curd is cold and set, at least 3 hours.
  7. VARIATION Meyer Lemon Curd: Decrease the quantity of sugar to 2/3 cup (4.6 ounces/130 grams) and replace the regular lemon zest and juice with Meyer lemon zest and juice.
  8. DO AHEAD The curd, covered and refrigerated, will keep up to 5 days.
    *Finely grate the zest from the lemons before you juice them; it’s much easier than trying to zest juiced halves.
    **Using a heavy saucepan with a thick bottom and sides will prevent the curd from heating unevenly and possibly overcooking in places. If you only have a thin, flimsy saucepan, you can still make this curd by stirring it in a large heatproof bowl set over a large saucepan filled with 1 inch of simmering water (don’t let the bottom of the bowl touch the water). Just note the curd will take longer to thicken because of the gentler heat.
    *** I don’t strain lemon curd because straining removes the flavorful zest. But if for any reason you have lots of solid bits (where the egg likely curdled), it’s best to go ahead and strain.
    ****Don’t store the curd in a metal bowl, even one that’s nonreactive or stainless steel, as the curd will eventually acquire a metallic taste.

See what other Food52ers are saying.

10 Reviews

chowter January 3, 2021
I made preserved lemons just so I could make this cake, and it was absolutely worth the month's wait for the lemons to be ready. I opted for a German buttercream instead of the meringue and served it with Christmas dinner. Everybody loved it! Second helpings were had. Will definitely make again!!
hcmgrace December 22, 2020
I have to say - hands down this recipe was just incredibly good. I can't rave about it enough. the cake was fluffy, light, the lemon flavour was just right. Imagine eating a lemon candy droplet but in light cake form. I used meyer lemons, incredible flavours. If you're going to spend 6 hours making it, I'd go with meyer lemons, more pricy but well worth it!!
johnpaultran November 1, 2020
This recipe doesn't state the amount of sugar needed for the Lemon curd?
Coral L. November 4, 2020
Hi there—thanks for flagging. I've added the sugar line back in: 3/4 cup sugar (5.3 ounces/150 grams)
johnpaultran December 2, 2020
Phew, I did the correct amount. I made this cake and it was DELICIOUS!!! Everybody can not stop talking about it. Thank you!
Kristin October 23, 2020
There is no amount of flour listed in the ingredients and the step for creating the flour mixture in the directions is missing as well.
Coral L. October 23, 2020
Hi Kristin! Missing details added in. Thanks for flagging!
Kristin October 24, 2020
Sorry, still wrong. It reads 3 1/2 “cakes” cake flour. I’m assuming it’s supposed to read 3 1/2 cups. 😆
Coral L. October 24, 2020
Good eye!
PhillipBrandon October 28, 2020
You don't buy your flour in "cakes" like fresh yeast? :P