Glazed Blueberry Buttermilk Coffee Cake — The BEST blueberry coffee cake you’ll ever make! The blueberries are juicy, abundant, and make this cake taste like one big, soft, moist blueberry muffin!
Easy Blueberry Coffee Cake Recipe
There’s something about a good old-fashioned coffee cake that I love. And this one is easier than going to the store and bringing home an Entenmann’s.
If you’re in need of an easy cake for breakfast, brunch, a shower, gathering, or just want to whip up a cake on Tuesday, just because, this is the one. The batter comes together in 10 minutes, it bakes for 30, and you can therefore be eating blueberry buttermilk coffee cake within the hour if you start now.
It’s sweet, soft, moist and loaded with blueberries. Underneath the blueberries, there’s a swirly pattern of jam, which adds another burst of berry flavor.
The cake is far better than the photos do it justice. And in reading the recipe you’ll think so what, another coffeecake, it happens to have blueberries in it. Big deal.
But I promise you, this one is different. Simple, real ingredients combined in such a way that the best of everything shines. The result is a cake that’s far greater than the sum of it’s individual parts.
It’s by far the best blueberry coffeecake I’ve ever had. And ranks right up there for coffee cakes in general. I can’t think of any that top it.
The berries are abundant, juicy, and make this cake taste like a big blueberry muffin.
I reminded my 6-year-old that blueberries stain and to please be careful while she was eating it. And she said, “Well it’s kind of hard, Mom, because these blueberries keep jumping out at me.”
What’s in the Blueberry Buttermilk Coffee Cake?
To make this blueberry breakfast recipe, you’ll need:
- All-purpose flour
- Granulated sugar
- Baking powder and baking soda
- Egg
- Buttermilk
- Unsalted butter
- Vanilla extract
- Blueberries
- Jam
How to Make Blueberry Buttermilk Coffee Cake
I used my stand mixer, or use a large mixing bowl and hand mixer, and combine the dry ingredients and mix them momentarily.
Add the wet ingredients and beat for a couple minutes until smooth. Turn the batter out into a cake pan, dollop on your favorite jam, and swirl it around.
Sprinkle the cup of blueberries and it’ll seem like a ridiculous amount, covering every last inch of batter space, but they settle in while baking. And really, there’s no such a thing as too many blueberries. The more, the berrier.
Can I Use Frozen Blueberries?
Yes! I used frozen blueberries and if using frozen, keep them unthawed. Add them straight from the freezer bag and into the cake, frozen.
Frozen berries run and bleed less than if thawed. You could use fresh, but frankly I’m cheap and bake with frozen and save my fresh for snacking.
Can I Use Different Berries?
Go for it! If you have frozen strawberries, fresh peaches, seasonal plums, past-their-prime grapes, I can envision many kinds of fruit being easily substituted for the blueberries.
Can the Buttermilk Be Omitted?
The buttermilk and butter lend a light buttery taste, with vanilla peeking through.
I almost used oil in the batter because it tends to produce moister cakes, but wanted buttery flavor and went with butter, knowing the buttermilk was my secret agent to keep it soft, tender, and moist.
If you don’t normally keep buttermilk on hand, you can make it in 10 minutes with a tablespoon or two of lemon juice or vinegar to one cup of regular milk.
Tips for Making Blueberry Buttermilk Coffee Cake
I turned my oven down to 375F in the last 5 minutes of baking because the edges were getting a little too browned for my liking before the center had fully set; watch your cake in the last 5 to 10 minutes of baking and turn down oven if necessary, or tent with foil.
Feel free to omit the glaze, but I like the little extra touch of a glaze on my coffee cake. The buttery, vanilla tones in the glaze bring them out in the cake, too.
I stored my blueberry buttermilk coffee cake at room temperature. However, you’re welcome to store it in an airtight container in the fridge if you’re not comfortable leaving the glaze out.
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Glazed Blueberry Buttermilk Coffee Cake
Ingredients
For the Coffee Cake
- 1 cup all-purpose flour
- ¾ cup granulated sugar
- ½ teaspoon baking powder
- ½ teaspoon baking soda
- 1 large egg, at room temperature
- ½ cup buttermilk
- ¼ cup unsalted butter, softened
- 1 ½ teaspoons vanilla extract
- 1 cup frozen or fresh blueberries, if using frozen, keep them unthawed and add them frozen
- about 1/3 cup jam, use your favorite flavor, blueberry is best
- 3 tablespoons sugar, for sprinkling (I used 1 tablespoon turbinado and 2 tablespoons granulated)
For the Glaze
- ¼ cup unsalted butter, melted
- about 1 cup+ confectioners’ sugar, sift if it’s particularly lumpy
- ¾ teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
Coffee Cake
- Preheat oven to 400F. Spray a 9-inch round cake pan with floured cooking spray, or grease and flour the pan; set aside.
- To the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment (or a large mixing bowl and hand mixer), add the flour, 3/4 cup granulated sugar, baking powder, baking soda, and mix momentarily to incorporate.
- Add the egg, buttermilk, 1/4 cup butter, vanilla, and beat for 1 minute on medium-low speed. Stop, scrape down the sides of the bowl, and beat for 1 minute on medium speed.
- Turn batter out into prepared pan.
- Using a spoon, dollop the jam over the batter surface in teaspoon-sized mounds, making about 15 mounds (doesn’t have to be precise; some jam blobs will be bigger than others and that’s fine). Using a table knife, lightly marble the jelly into the top surface of the batter, going up and back in a zigzag pattern a couple times.
- Sprinkle blueberries evenly over the batter (it looks like a ton). Sprinkle evenly with 3 tablespoons sugar over the blueberries.
- Bake for about 30 minutes or until center is set and not jiggly, and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean, or with a few moist crumbs dangling, but no batter. Note – I turned my oven down to 375F in the last 5 minutes of baking because the edges were getting a little too browned for my liking before the center had fully set; watch your cake in the last 5 to 10 minutes of baking and turn down oven if necessary, or tent with foil.
- Allow cake to cool in pan for about 10 minutes before turning out onto a wire wrack to cool completely (I invert it onto a cutting board, then slide it off the cutting board and onto the rack with the blueberry side up).
- While the cake cools, make the glaze.
Glaze
- Melt the butter in a small, microwave-safe bowl, about 45 seconds.
- Add about 1/2 cup sugar, vanilla, and whisk to combine. Continue adding sugar and whisking until smooth and desired glaze consistency is reached. If you accidentally make it too thick, adding a tiny splash of milk or cream will thin it out.
- Drizzle glaze over cake in big ribbons, going up and back, over the surface (the photos show the glaze much skimpier because I wanted the blueberries to be visible, but I used all the glaze after the photos were completed).
Notes
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
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Blueberry Streusel Coffee Cake — An EASY, no-mixer cake studded with juicy blueberries and topped with big buttery streusel nuggets that are just SO GOOD!! Not overly sweet and PERFECT with a cup of coffee for breakfast, brunch, or a snack!!
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Strawberry Coffee Cake — Sweet, juicy strawberries are found in every bite, and the cream cheese glaze is the perfect tangy complement to the creamy, sweet cake.
great
I made this cake last night and doubled the recipe. It was a little too sweet (would decrease the sugar by a third) so I did not make the glaze. After the cakes were baked and had rested in their pans for 15 minutes, I was turning them over to put on a rack to cool and the first one broke apart as it was so moist so I would suggest parchment paper in the cake pans to avoid this.
I’ve never had an issue with them breaking but all climates, ingredients, etc. vary – which can also contribute to the sweetness aspect. Some jams are just sweeter than others; as are some blueberries. Thanks for trying the recipe.
I’ve made several of the cakes and muffins from here and this coffee cake is my mom’s absolute favorite. I make it for her every time I visit her. So quick and easy! I use only 1/2 the amount of sugar but it’s still sweet thanks to the jam.
Thanks for trying the recipe and I’m glad it’s a family favorite!
I made this today and it’s delicious!! I used blueberry jam because it’s my fav and i added about a teaspoon of blueberry jam with the glaze to make blueberry flavoured glaze!!! Thank you for the recipe!!
Thanks for trying the recipe and I’m glad it came out great for you! The glaze sounds great!
Hi Averie, this looks divine! I’m a sucker for anything with blueberries, and well when it comes to coffee cake? I’m all over that.
I just have a question, are the steps in the right order? Can you really start with the dry ingredients first? I’m used to starting with creaming the butter and wet ingredients first? Just want to make sure before I ruin this delicious recipe.
Yes the steps are in the right order. Enjoy the cake!
This looks beautiful, thanks for sharing this delicious recipe.
Simon