Lemon Cupcakes with Lemon Cream Cheese Frosting โ Soft, fluffy, moist, very lemony cupcakes from scratch! Easy one-bowl, no-mixer recipe for cupcakes that taste like they’re from a bakery!
Classic Lemon Cupcakes
I had so many lemons in my crisper drawer and needed to find a way to use lots of them up at once. Lemon cupcakes with lemon frosting was the answer.
Lemon seems to be one of those ingredients that when people like it, they really like it. They’re super into it and have recipes for lemon pound cakes, lemon muffins, lemon pies, and lemon bars. Name a lemon thing, and they love it.
I’m indifferent with lemon, and while I do love these lemon bars, between a lemon bar or a Triple Peanut Butter Chocolate Bar, I will always pick the latter.
However, my almost 7-year old loves lemons. She eats them like oranges. She calls it “her strange food addiction.” I don’t judge because I can eat balsamic reduction by itself, by the spoonful. I can also sit down to a half jar of homemade peanut butter by itself, by the spoonful. I wish the latter wasn’t quite so easy for me.
Since I knew she’d love them, I made soft, springy, moist lemon cupcakes with a tangy, zippy lemon cream cheese frosting.
One of my peeves with lemon recipes is when they’re not lemony enough. These lemon cupcakes are pretty darn lemony, but if you’re really a fiend, you can always add more zest to the batter. Taste it as written and see what you think, and if you’re in need to really pucker up, add more zest, to taste.
To make them, I very loosely adapted my Red Velvet Cupcakes recipe. It became very popular on Pinterest before Christmas and I’ve had hundreds of positive comments saying they’re the best (and easiest) red velvet cupcakes, so I knew I had a winning base if I could just tweak it to omit the cocoa and incorporate lemon.
The cupcakes are made in one bowl, no mixer, no creaming ingredients, and itโs a cupcake batter thatโs more like a muffin batter. Whisk together wet ingredients, fold in the dry, pour into liners, and bake.
One issue with lemon cupcakes, and cupcakes in general, is that they’re prone to dryness. Dry calories aren’t worth my time. These easy lemon cupcakes are incredibly moist from the trifecta of moistening and tenderizing ingredients: oil, buttermilk, and Greek yogurt. I stopped at nothing to make sure they werenโt dry.
For baked goods that I want to soft, springy, and bouncy, like cakes, cupcakes, and muffins, I generally prefer using oil to butter because oil does a better job keeping things soft and moist.
My daughter was in lemon heaven.
What’s in These Lemon Cupcakes?
To make these ultra lemony cupcakes and the lemon cupcake frosting, you’ll need:
- Egg
- Granulated sugar
- Buttermilk
- Canola oil
- Lemon juice and zest
- Greek yogurt
- Vanilla extract
- All-purpose flour
- Baking soda
- Salt
- Cream cheese
- Confectioners’ sugar
How to Make Lemon Cupcakes with Lemon Frosting
To make the lemon cupcakes, whisk together everything but the flour and baking soda. Then, gently whisk in the remaining dry ingredients just until combined.
Fill your muffin cups 3/4 full, then bake the cupcakes until domed, set, pale golden, springy to the touch, and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out mostly clean.
After the lemon cupcakes have been allowed to cool completely, make the lemon cupcake frosting. To make the lemon cream cheese frosting, whip together the cream cheese, lemon juice, and zest until smooth. Slowly add in the confectioners’ sugar until the frosting reaches your desired consistency.
Pipe or spoon on the frosting, then garnish with additional lemon zest and enjoy!
Can I Use a Buttermilk Substitute?
Yes! Buttermilk does a fabulous job of tenderizing and softening the texture and crumb of breads and cakes, and when in doubt, I always opt for buttermilk over plain milk or cream. However, if youโre the type of person who doesnโt tend to keep buttermilk on hand, you can make your own by adding about 2 tablespoons vinegar or lemon juice to 1 cup regular milk, letting it stand 10 minutes to curdle, and then use as indicated.
Or, you can buy a tub of Powdered Buttermilk and itโs shelf stable for years. Itโs the perfect solution for that once-in-a-blue moon recipe that calls for buttermilk. Although, Iโve got tons of recipes to help you use it up.
Can I Freeze Lemon Cupcakes?
Yes, you can freeze the unfrosted, cooled cupcakes for up to 3 months. You can also prepare a batch of lemon cream cheese frosting and freeze it separately, or you can make a fresh batch of frosting when you’re ready to serve the frozen cupcakes.
Can I Make This Recipe Into a Cake?
I’ve only made this recipe as cupcakes, so I can’t say for certain if you can bake this as a cake. However, I’ve had some readers report success with doubling the ingredients and baking the batter as a layer cake!
Tips for Making Lemon Cupcakes
The batter makes enough for about 14 cupcakes, but because I have a small oven, I can only fit one 12-cup muffin pan in my oven at a time. The remedy is to either sample the batter (raw eggs don’t bother me), discard the batter (criminal), or bake a mini loaf in a mini loaf pan that fits on the same oven rack as the muffin pan.
I use my mini pans all the time for a 13th or 14th cupcake, extra muffin batter, or for mini cakes. Four mini pans for $10 bucks is such a steal.
I used light cream cheese in the frosting which always creates softer frosting, and in conjunction with the lemon juice, the frosting is on the thinner and runnier side. It’s perfect here and you can just spoon it on with the hassle or fuss of piping, but if you want to pipe it, don’t use light cream cheese.
It’s the perfect tangy, sweet-with-a-little-sour complement to the soft, fluffy, moist, lemony cupcakes.
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Lemon Cupcakes with Lemon Cream Cheese Frosting
Ingredients
Lemon Cupcakes
- 1 large egg
- 1 cup granulated sugar
- โ cup buttermilk, or Powdered Buttermilk, use 2 1/2 tablespoons + 2/3 cup water
- ยฝ cup canola oil
- ยผ cup lemon juice, freshly squeezed if possible
- 2 tablespoons lemon zest, or more to taste if youโre really into lemon
- 2 rounded tablespoons Greek yogurt, or sour cream
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1 ยพ cups + 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour, 2 cups minus 2 tablespoons
- ยพ teaspoon baking soda
- pinch salt, optional and to taste
Lemon Cream Cheese Frosting
- ยผ cup cream cheese, softened*
- 2 tablespoons lemon juice, freshly squeezed if possible
- about 1 1/4 cups confectionersโ sugar, or as necessary for desired consistency
- 1 to 2 tablespoons lemon zest, optional for garnishing
Instructions
Make the Cupcakes:
- Preheat oven to 350F. Line a Non-Stick 12-Cup Regular Muffin Pan with paper liners; set aside. You will likely have batter for a 13th or 14th cupcake, and I baked it in a cooking-sprayed mini loaf pan because my oven is small and that pan setup fits; discard extra batter if thatโs easier.
- In a large mixing bowl, whisk together the first 8 ingredients, through vanilla, until smooth.
- Add the flour, baking soda, optional salt, and whisk until just combined; donโt overmix.
- Using a 2-inch cookie scoop, place about 2 heaping tablespoons of batter per cupcake into each of the 12 cavities so theyโre solidly 3/4-full. I poured the excess batter into the mini loaf pan.
- Bake cupcakes for about 18 to 19 minutes (I baked the mini loaf for 23 minutes), or until domed, set, pale golden, springy to the touch, and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out mostly clean, or with a few moist crumbs, but no batter; donโt overbake.
- Allow cupcakes to cool in pan for about 15 minutes before removing.
- While cupcakes cool, make the frosting.
Make the Lemon Frosting:
- Combine first 3 ingredients in a large mixing bowl, add about 1 cup confectionersโ sugar, and whisk to combine or beat with an electric mixer until smooth.
- Continue adding sugar until desired frosting consistency is reached. Because I used light cream cheese, the frosting stayed on the runnier side. If you want frosting thick enough to pipe, do not use light cream cheese. If you like your frosting really piled on thick and high, make a double batch.
- With a spoon, add 2 to 3 tablespoons frosting to the top of each cupcake and smooth with the back of the spoon if necessary. My frosting just ran naturally (from the light cream cheese). Optionally transfer frosting to a piping bag and frost the cooled cupcakes. I like the Wilton 1M tip for cupcakes.
- Optionally, garnish each cupcake with a pinch of lemon zest.
Notes
- *I used Trader Joeโs soft spreadable light cream cheese; donโt use light cream cheese if you want thick frosting that you can pipe.
- You may have a small amount of frosting left over. It will keep airtight in the refrigerator for up to 1 month.
- Storing cupcakes: Cupcakes will keep airtight at room temperature for up to 3 days. I personally am comfortable storing cream cheese-frosted items at room temp, but if you prefer to store in the fridge, thatโs fine, but note the fridge will dry cupcakes out much more quickly.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
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More Lemon Desserts:
Softbatch Glazed Lemon Cream Cheese Cookies โ These super soft, very lemony cookies are topped with a lemon glaze that adds to the pucker-up power.
Lemon Buttermilk Cake with Lemon Glaze โ An easy buttermilk cake with big lemon flavor!! Soft, fluffy, and foolproof if you like puckering up!!
The Best Lemon Loaf (Better-Than-Starbucks Copycat) โ It took years, but I finally recreated it!! Easy, no mixer, no cake mix, dangerously good, and SPOT ON!! Youโre going to love this lemon pound cake recipe!
Lightened Up Blueberry Lemon Pound Cake โ The blueberry-lemon combo is always a win, and so is pound cake that wonโt break your caloric piggybank. This Lemon Blueberry Pound Cake is a keeper!
Soft and Chewy Lemon Cookies โ The cookies pack a powerful lemon punch, theyโre soft and dense rather than cakey, and theyโre thick enough to sink your teeth into.
Lemon Blueberry Bundt Cake with Lemon Glaze โ Almost more berries than cake in this soft, fluffy lemon blueberry bundt cake! The lemon glaze is plate-licking delish!!
Lemon Lemonies โ Like lemon brownies, but made with lemon and white chocolate! Dense, chewy, not cakey and packed with big, bold lemon flavor!
Oh Averie these are amazing! Thank you for this recipe.
Oh Averie these are amazing! Thank you for this recipe.
Thanks for the 5 star review and I am glad they turned out amazing for you!
Can I use this recipe to make orange cupcakes? What changes should I do? Do u have Orange cake recipe …I just couldn’t find it.
I don’t have an orange cake recipe. I have quite a few lemon recipes but no orange. Sorry. You could replace the lemon juice/vanilla extract with orange juice/orange extract and see how that works. Haven’t tried so can’t say…
I love this recipe and was hoping to make them ahead of time for my daughter’s birthday party – Do you have any experience with freezing them (unfrosted) ?ย
Thanks !
I haven’t tested the recipe by doing it as a freeze-ahead recipe so can’t say for sure. Cupcakes usually freeze pretty well but since this is for a special event, I’d do a test batch, and freeze, etc. exactly like you plan to do for the main event.
I tried these and while they were good, I think maybe I had some wrong assumptions about them, so I wanted to post and clarify for anyone else! These were definitely much more like muffins than cupcakes. They had a kind of moist, chewy crumb rather than a rich, cakey crumb, if that makes sense. The lemon flavor was quite light too, just kind a subtle background note. I haven’t frosted them yet, but I plan to tomorrow. I guess I was hoping for more cake-like than muffin-like, but that’s my fault.
This is no criticism! I really appreciate your blog (though I think this might be the first time I’ve commented) and appreciate you bloggers for putting your recipes out there. Thank you!
The frosting definitely will add quite a bit more pop of lemon. So trying them unfrosted isn’t quite the same as frosted. I know you will find the lemon flavor more intense with the frosting added.
As for the texture, I love moist desserts and despise anything dry or overly cakey. Many times cakey translates to dry in my book so when I make things, I make them to be moist and tender. Just my personal preference. Thanks for trying the recipe.
I’ve made these cupcakes three times in the last two weeks and they are so good! My brother isn’t much for sweets but he just loves these and keeps asking me to make them again. I also made them for a brunch with my friends and they all loved them. Thank you for this amazing recipe!
Thanks for trying the recipe and I’m glad it came out great for you – all three times in the last two weeks!
Can you make these with cake flour?
I’m sure you could, with some experimentation. As written though, no, you cannot swap AP flour for cake flour and get the same result.
These are fabulous cupcakes! Not only are they super easy to put together, but tender ย and perfect lemon flavor. ย We haven’t even frosted them yet!. Thanks!
Thanks for trying the recipe and Iโm glad it came out great for you – even without the frosting so far!
Now you HAVE to try this b/c it sounds like you’re a lemon lover…no words
These look lovely for spring! And now I’m wondering, since you mentioned the frosting is on the softer side, what if one makes these with the frosting inside? Lemon cupcakes with lemon cream cheese filling mmmm..I wonder if that would work, what do you think? :)
It sounds lovely but I haven’t tried it that way so not sure how things will all pan out but sounds like a great idea in theory!
They turned out fantastic! I tried to reply with picture but it wouldn’t let me. I am very happy with the results! However, the best thing was the moistness and taste. So delicious. My co-workers will benefit from my hard work. I’ll put my work website above.
I apologize that I had never seen your website before but now you’re bookmarked and I look forward to trying many other recipes.
Jen
So glad they turned out great and that they were nice and moist! My website doesn’t allow pics to be uploaded but you can tweetpic me at @averiecooks or on facebook.com/averiecooks
I am going to be trying this recipe today. I actually spent the morning making a vanilla cupcakes with a chocolate center and topped with vanilla frosting. Not bad but as you said, cupcakes tend to be a little dry and these were no exception. I decided I wanted lemon next and googled ‘extra moist’ lemon cupcakes and your recipe turned up. I am looking forward to making them!
Thank you, Averie!
Hope you enjoy my recipe and please LMK how it turns out for you!
Mm this sounds yummy, thanks for posting this recipe, looks quite easy to make.
Simon
Can you double this recipe and make it into a layer cake with two 8×8 pans?
Probably but I haven’t tried so cannot speak with certainty.
These were wonderful!
Glad to hear it! Thanks for trying the recipe!
you are a goddess averie! i was searching for a lemon cupcakes recipe that doesnt use butter bc my mum loves them but she recently discovered that she has a high cholesterol level. and these are perfect!
Glad you’re happy and that your mom can enjoy, too! Thanks for the compliments and trying the recipe!
I doubled this and made it into a layer cake with raspberries and blueberry icing. YUM!
I love your idea and it sounds amazing – thanks for sharing what you did and glad it’s a winner!