Olive Oil Orange Cake

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Orange Olive Oil Cake — A super soft and moist cake that’s made with olive oil!! Orange zest, orange juice, and Grand Marnier add tons of AMAZING orange flavor to this easy, no-mixer cake that’s unique, refined, and INCREDIBLE!!

Orange Olive Oil Cake dusted with powdered sugar on white plate

This easy, one-bowl, no-mixer orange cake with olive oil is a huge eye-opening kind of cake for me. After blogging for nearly 10 years and making hundreds of cakes, this was my first ever cake made with olive oil. But it won’t be my last because it was supremely soft, tender, and exceedingly moist without being too heavy or dense.

You can literally almost see the moistness oozing from the olive oil cake, but it doesn’t taste greasy and it stays moist for days. I still had leftover cake that I forgot about in the back of my cupboard and a week later that was just as good as the first day, and even more moist. I don’t know how that’s possible but it happened.

I cannot say enough amazing things about this cake. A personal fave of mine for sure.

Love Olive Oil Cakes? Make My Lemon Version Next!

Another long-time reader favorite is my Lemon Olive Oil Cake recipe. It’s made with lemon zest, juice, extract, and Limoncello. I can’t decide whether the orange or lemon version is my favorite!

slice of Orange Olive Oil Cake on white plate

The olive oil cake itself if not overly sweet by any means. It would be the perfect cake to serve after a fancier dinner party with equally rich or luxurious food.

I liken this olive oil orange cake to cakes served in fancy restaurants. They are never sugar bombs, even the chocolate ones. They are more refined and tend to have unique flavor pairings that you don’t encounter often.

I cannot wait to make this olive oil cake again, especially in the winter for holiday parties and events. It is a talking piece kind of cake rather than just another chocolate cake that we’ve all had a zillion times. Unique and different in the best possible way.

I gave half the cake to some ladies at my daughter’s school and they loved it. Every time I’ve since encountered them, they are all still thanking me for this cake!

Orange Olive Oil Cake on white plate with slice missing

Ingredients Needed

To make this orange olive oil cake, you’ll need: 

  • Extra-virgin olive oil
  • Eggs
  • Whole milk 
  • Orange zest and juice
  • Grand Marnier 
  • Granulated sugar
  • All-purpose flour
  • Kosher salt
  • Baking powder and baking soda
  • Confectioners’ sugar

Note: Scroll down to the recipe card section of the post for the ingredients with amounts included and for more complete directions.

How to Make Olive Oil Cake

This orange and olive oil cake recipe couldn’t be simpler to make! Here’s an overview of the recipe:

  1. Just whisk together the wet ingredients, then add in the dry. 
  2. Turn the batter into a greased and lined 9-inch springform pan.
  3. Bake until the orange cake is golden brown and domed in the center, and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean or with a few moist crumbs.
  4. You’ll need to let this olive oil cake cool for a few minutes before turning out of the pan to finish cooling on a wire rack.

Garnishing the Cake

I dusted the cake with confectioners’ sugar rather than making a glaze or frosting and it was perfect. I almost made a glaze with confectioners’ sugar and Grand Marnier and may try that next time but simply dusting the cake with confectioners’ sugar was so fast and easy.

slice of Orange Olive Oil Cake in front of bottle of Gran Marnier

Recipe FAQs

What’s the Best Olive Oil to Use in Cake?

I used Trader Joe’s Premium Extra Virgin Olive Oil and while I’m sure the flavor of the cake will change depending on the exact brand and type of oil used, I recommend a quality extra-virgin olive oil here. Something you’d dip bread in, cook chicken in, or use in a homemade salad dressing.

Can I Omit the Grand Marnier?

You only use 1/4 cup in the entire cake, which doesn’t sound like much but it’s also something I wouldn’t skip. It adds a luxurious flavor that is so elegant tasting. If you don’t drink alcohol for whatever the reason, I cannot say how the cake will taste or turn out if you, for example, just use 1/4 cup water in its place or use an extra 1/4 cup orange juice. Adding more orange juice really worries me more because of the extra acidity in the OJ coupled with the baking soda/powder and I’m not sure what will happen.

My thoughts are that during baking, the potency of the actual alcohol bakes off and what you’re left with is simply the flavor. Again, it’s only 1/4 cup divided between a cake that will easily feed 8 to 10, so each person is maybe getting 1/2 teaspoon. Cough syrup has more.

Why use oil in cake instead of butter?

I have always preferred oil in cake rather than butter. Oil is 100% fat whereas butter is about 80% fat. That extra 20% of fat keeps oil-based cakes softer and moister than butter cakes. You can’t argue with science.

Does the cake taste like olive oil?

No! I personally wouldn’t have known this orange olive oil cake was specifically olive oil based on taste alone. Olive oil has quite a distinct flavor in comparison to canola or vegetable oil and I went into the cake thinking I’d be able to taste the olive oil specifically and prominently but it wasn’t like that. Very subtly, yes, but not distinctly.

What I tasted more than anything was the orange flavor. The cake has orange flavor incorporated three ways: orange zest, orange juice, and Grand Marnier liqueur. I realize it’s a bit of a pricier liqueur, but I highly recommend it here.

Baking Tips

Pan size: You must use a 9-inch springform cake pan for this olive oil cake recipe. Do not make this cake in a regular 9-inch cake pan. Most are only about 1 1/2 to 2 inches deep, and this cake rises to about 2 1/2 to 3 inches on the sides and nearly 4 inches in the center. It will overflow in a regular 9-inch pan.

Grand Marnier hack: If you don’t want to buy an entire bottle of Grand Marnier you can purchase mini bottles that contain about 1/4 cup of liquid. This tip came from a reader who made this recipe! 

Bake time: his cake bakes in a fairly cool oven for a long duration. Don’t be alarmed if a small circular patch on the top of the cake appears to be burning early on in the baking process. Ultimately, it doesn’t darken much more and when the cake is done, the cake is approximately the same color as the initial dark patch. 

Olive Oil Orange Cake - A super soft and moist cake that's made with olive oil!! Orange zest, orange juice, and Gran Marnier add tons of AMAZING orange flavor to this easy, no-mixer cake that's unique, refined, and INCREDIBLE!!

Video Tutorial

I have made this recipe atleast 10 times and I’ve found it tastes best hands down (and I get the most compliments) when I substitute about 1-2 tbs of olive oil with orange infused olive oil. It gives a little more defined orange flavor. 
I LOVE this recipe! 

Kirsten Heder

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4.48 from 399 votes

Orange Olive Oil Cake

By Averie Sunshine
Orange zest, orange juice, and Grand Marnier add tons of AMAZING orange flavor to this easy, no-mixer olive oil cake that's unique, refined, and INCREDIBLE!!
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cook Time: 1 hour 10 minutes
Cooling Time: 1 hour
Total Time: 2 hours 20 minutes
Servings: 10
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Ingredients 

  • 1 ⅓ cups extra-virgin olive oil
  • 3 large eggs
  • 1 ¼ cups whole milk
  • 1 ½ tablespoons grated orange zest
  • ¼ cup orange freshly squeezed juice
  • ¼ cup Grand Marnier
  • 1 ¾ cups granulated sugar
  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 ½ teaspoons kosher salt, or to taste
  • ½ teaspoon baking powder
  • ½ teaspoon baking soda
  • confectioners’ sugar, for dusting

Instructions 

  • Preheat oven to 325F, add a circle of parchment paper to the base of a 9-inch springform pan, and spray the parchment paper and the sides of the pan very well with cooking spray; set aside. Do not make this cake in a regular 9-inch cake pan. Most are only about 1 1/2 to 2 inches deep and this cake rises to about 2 1/2 to 3 inches on the sides and nearly 4 inches in the center. It will overflow in a regular 9-inch pan.
  • To a large bowl, add the olive oil, eggs, and whisk well to emulsify and incorporate.
  • Add the milk, orange zest, orange juice (I was able to get sufficient zest and juice from one large orange), Grand Marnier, and whisk to incorporate.
  • Add the sugar and whisk to incorporate.
  • Add the flour, salt, baking powder, baking soda, and whisk until just incorporated; don’t overmix. The batter in on the thin side; this is normal.
  • Turn batter out into prepared pan, place pan on a baking sheet as insurance against a leaky springform pan, and bake for about 70 to 75 minutes. Start checking after 60 minutes since all ovens vary. Cake will be golden browned and domed in the center when done, and a toothpick inserted in the center will come out clean or with a few moist crumbs. **
  • Allow cake to cool in the springform pan for about 1 hour before releasing it and allowing the cake to finish cooling on a wire rack.
  • Dust with confectioners’ sugar prior to serving.

Notes

  • Cake will keep airtight at room temp for 1 week.
  • **This cake bakes in a fairly cool oven for a long duration, low and slow. Don’t be alarmed if a small circular patch on the top of the cake appears to be burning early on in the baking process. Ultimately it doesn’t darken much more and when the cake is done, the cake is approximately the same color as the initial dark patch. This may or may not happen to you and possibly is just what happens in my oven, but I am pointing it out as nothing to worry about.
  • Recipe adapted from Food52

Nutrition

Serving: 1, Calories: 583kcal, Carbohydrates: 72g, Protein: 6g, Fat: 31g, Saturated Fat: 5g, Polyunsaturated Fat: 25g, Cholesterol: 59mg, Sodium: 327mg, Fiber: 1g, Sugar: 52g

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

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Originally posted September 14, 2018 and reposted with updated text March 25, 2022.

4.48 from 399 votes (345 ratings without comment)

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Please note: I have only made the recipe as written, and cannot give advice or predict what will happen if you change something. If you have a question regarding changing, altering, or making substitutions to the recipe, please check out the FAQ page for more info.

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Comments

  1. 5 stars
    I thought this cake had great orange flavor and it was very moist. My springform is just too leaky and I haven’t bought another one yet, so I used my 10″ cake pan. Its about the same volume as a 9″ springform but it makes a shorter cake that was done in about 55-60 minutes. I also had the brown spot in the middle of the cake and I’m guessing it has to do with the alcohol used. By the way, for those who don’t want to buy a full bottle of Grand Marnier, it comes in what I call “airplane bottles”; little 50ml bottles that are exactly 1/4 cup.

    1. That is a great tip about the airplane bottles, I never thought of that! Iโ€™m glad to hear that you enjoyed this cake and thanks for the five star review. Glad it worked well in the pan that you have and that you didnโ€™t have to go out and buy a springform.

  2. 5 stars
    This recipe is a must tried. I was craving for orange cake but I didn’t have all the ingredients on hand so I decided to bake it with what I have. I used avocado oil instead of olive oil, I didn’t have the grand Marnier so I substituted it for orange juice(frozen orange juice to be exact) and I had the other ingredients.i followed up all your instructions.
    The cake turned super moist and delicious. I’m pretty sure the grand Marnier would give it the extra touching flavor but oh well I couldn’t wait to try this recipe. Thank you so much for sharing it .

    1. Thanks for the five star review and glad it was a winner even without the Gran Marnier. Glad to know it works ok with frozen OJ and avocado oil.

  3. This sounds wonderful. I’ve made one similar with olive oil but you boil the whole oranges skin and all then whiz the lot in the food processor. It’s a fantastic cake too.

  4. I love olive oil cakes! Probably because they’re healthier so I have the excuse to eat more of them :p This cake sounds like a perfect Chinese New Year treat and I can’t wait to make it next year with mandarin oranges! In the meantime, I’m going to try this with the large packet of Meyer lemons in my fridge :)

  5. 5 stars
    My family isnโ€™t a huge fan of orange flavor, so I used lemoncello, lemon juice, and lemon zest! This was very good and very easy!

    1. Thanks for the five star review and glad this worked out great with lemon! I actually was tempted to make this cake exactly how you did, and went with the orange, but may give it a whirl now too as a lemon version!

    1. I have only made it as written and in that pan size and I recommend making it that way so that it will turn out as pictured.

  6. Oh my, you had me at Grand Marnier! Everything tastes a little better with this liqueur in it. And the colour of that cake is phenomenal. Have to save this recipe for later. Thanks for sharing!

    E || OH LA LATKES

  7. Hi Averie, Do You you think I could halve the ingredients, if so what would be the approx cooking time? Cheers Lesley

  8. Love how the crumb is more dense rather super light/airy like many cakes. Looks like an amazing texture due to the high amount of liquid ingredients in the cake! :)

  9. Is the nutritional information for the whole cake or one serving. 4611 is an awful lot of calories Iโ€™m hoping thatโ€™s an error

  10. 5 stars
    Hello!
    Wonderful recipes!
    I`m from Europe.
    I`m subscribed to you,
    I have difficulty with the American quantities of products, can you in grams to post
    US Customarry- Metric
    Thank you so much!
    Greeting! Maria

  11. Seeing this cake gives me that late summer/early fall vibe– the texture looks incredible and it sounds delicious (especially with Gran Marnier in it)!

    1. This cake could do well in many seasons….winter because of the citrus and the booze aspect for holiday parties. Or spring/summer because it’s light and bright looking. Honestly, and I make a lot of cakes, I *loved* this cake. A total personal favorite!