7-Up Pound Cake With Lemon Glaze

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This old-fashioned 7-Up pound cake recipe with lemon glaze is a classic Southern dessert that uses 7-Up to make a buttery and moist from-scratch cake that has a hint of lemon flavor.

Bite of 7-Up pound cake

Pound cakes are such an integral part of Southern cooking. Made with simple ingredients like butter, flour, sugar, and eggs, they’re known for their crisp crust and velvety soft buttery interior that’s both dense and rich in texture and taste. Pound cakes are also traditionally baked in either a Bundt cake or tube pan.

So while this is a traditional pound cake recipe, it includes a secret ingredient… 7-Up lemon-lime soda. The carbonated soda acts as a leavening agent and replaces baking soda (yep, really). It helps make the cake rise and gives the cake a lemon-lime flavor. This 7-Up pound cake tastes like a classic lemon pound cake. Plus, we pair it with the perfectly complementary sweet lemon glaze.

So besides 7-Up, the other baking ingredients you need to make this pound cake include sugar, flour, butter, eggs, shortening, vanilla extract, and lemon extract. Fortunately, this is a very easy pound cake recipe. You’re just going to cream together the butter, shortening, and sugar, then slowly mix in the remaining ingredients. We pour the cake batter into a bundt pan and wait patiently for it to bake.

Then we have to be patient some more and invert the cake, before mixing together powdered sugar, milk, and lemon extract to make the lemon glaze. The final step is to pour this over the cooled cake and your 7Up pound cake is complete!

Keep scrolling for some serving suggestions and to learn exactly where the 7Up cake came from. I hope you enjoy this classic Southern treat. You’re bound to always find a bundt cake at any Southern gathering, whether it’s a baby shower, potluck, or family gathering. It’s just the Southern way, y’all!

Labeled ingredients for 7-up pound cake.

Recipe Ingredients

  • Flour
  • Granulated sugar
  • Shortening
  • Unsalted butter or margarine
  • 7-Up or similar lemon-lime soda
  • Eggs
  • Vanilla extract
  • A bit of lemon flavoring

How to Make 7-Up Pound Cake

Place sugar, shortening, and butter in mixing bowl.

Place your sugar, shortening, and butter in a mixing bowl.

Mix that up until well blended.

Add lemon extract to mixing bowl.

Add your lemon extract or flavoring or whatever it is you found in your pantry or went out and bought.

Add vanilla to mixing bowl.

Add in your vanilla…

Add eggs to mixing bowl.

And all of your eggs.

Mix ingredients together.

Mix that up really well.

Add flour to mixing bowl.

Add in your flour…

Add 7-Up to mixing bowl.

And your 7-Up.

Mix all of that up.

Grease bundt pan with cooking spray.

Grease your bundt cake pan with cooking spray.

Pour cake batter into bundt pan.

Then pour your cake batter into the greased bundt pan.

Baked 7-Up Pound Cake

Bake at 325 for one hour or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.

Turned out 7-Up pound cake.

After it has baked, let it sit in the pan for 10 minutes, and then turn the cake out onto a wire rack to continue cooling.

Goodness, can you smell that?

Combine glaze ingredients in mixing bowl.

The lemon glaze

Now we need to make our glaze.

Place your confectioner’s sugar in a bowl and add a wee bit of lemon flavoring. Then add a wee bit of milk.

Stir that up until it looks kind of like school glue. Don’t worry, it won’t taste like glue  😉.

If it is a bit thin, just add more confectioner’s sugar. I always end up making mine too thin to begin with and have to add more.

Pour glaze over cake.

Pour the lemon glaze over the cooled cake.

Glazed 7-Up pound cake.

It should look a little bit like this.

Fork breaking off a piece of 7-Up pound cake.

Now grab a slice and enjoy your 7Up cake!

Storage

  • Store leftover cake in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 4 days or in the fridge for up to 1 week.
  • You can also freeze 7-Up pound cake for up to 3 months. I’d double-wrap individual slices or store them in an airtight container. I’d also freeze them without the glaze if possible.

Slices of 7-Up pound cake.

Recipe Notes

  • For best results, use room-temperature butter, shortening, and eggs.
  • Another wait to guarantee the best results is to properly grease the cake pan with cooking spray or butter and flour. We definitely don’t want this cake to stick to the pan.
  • Don’t overmix the cake batter once you add the flour to make sure your cake doesn’t turn out tough.
  • Now, experts say that Sprite and 7-Up have different levels of carbonation, so you really only want to use 7-Up in this pound cake recipe to ensure it rises perfectly. But hey, you can use diet 7-Up if you really want to!
  • If you don’t have lemon extract, I’ve got another suggestion for you to give that cake its lemon flavor! First, add 2 tablespoons of fresh lemon zest to the cake batter. Then add 1 tablespoon of fresh lemon juice to the glaze.
  • Speaking of the glaze, you can make a 7-Up glaze instead by combining 1 cup of powdered sugar with 2 tablespoons of 7-Up. 

Recipe FAQs

Where is 7-Up cake from?

7-Up cakes are a Southern recipe, as baking with soda became popular in the South in the 1950s when Southern women realized that carbonated beverages are an innovative leavening agent.

How long should you wait to flip a pound cake?

You should wait at least 10 minutes to flip your pound cake, but some recipes say to wait at least 30 minutes, so you do you. If you’re wondering why you wait, you want the cake to cool and firm up before you flip it to avoid it breaking apart.

Do I have to use a bundt cake pan?

You don’t HAVE to use a bundt pan, but I do recommend it. Otherwise, you can use a tube pan or 2 loaf pans.

Can I make my pound cake in advance?

I recommend making your pound cake up to 24 hours ahead of time. The cake gets moister the longer it sits.

How do you serve 7Up pound cake?

You can serve your pound cake as is or with some fresh fruit (I like fresh berries) and fresh whipped cream or a scoop of vanilla ice cream. However, you can also skip the glaze and simply serve your cake with a dusting of powdered sugar instead.

You may also like these pound cake recipes:

Apple Pound Cake

Aunt Sue’s Easy Pound Cake Recipe

Mini Bundt Cakes Using Aunt Sue’s Famous Pound Cake

Chocolate Pound Cake with Fudge Glaze

Buttermilk Lime Pound Cake

7-Up Pound Cake with Glaze

7-Up Pound Cake

This old-fashioned 7-Up pound cake recipe with lemon glaze is a classic Southern dessert that uses 7-Up to make a buttery and moist from-scratch cake that has a hint of lemon flavor.
Prep Time: 20 minutes
Cook Time: 1 hour
Total Time: 1 hour 20 minutes
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: American
Keyword: cake, pound
Servings: 12
Calories: 465kcal

Ingredients

  • 1 cup butter or margarine
  • 1/2 cup shortening
  • 3 cups granulated sugar
  • 1.5 teaspoons lemon extract
  • 1.5 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 5 eggs
  • 3 cups all-purpose flour
  • 7 fluid ounces 7-Up

Lemon Glaze

  • 1.5 cups confectioner's sugar
  • 2 tablespoons milk
  • 1/4 teaspoon lemon extract

Instructions

  • In a large bowl, place butter, shortening, and sugar. Beat until it is fluffy and well-mixed.
    1 cup butter or margarine, 1/2 cup shortening, 3 cups granulated sugar
  • Add in lemon extract, vanilla flavoring, and eggs and beat again until blended in.
    1.5 teaspoons lemon extract, 1.5 teaspoons vanilla extract, 5 eggs
  • Add in all of your flour and then the 7-Up. Mix until smooth and creamy.
    3 cups all-purpose flour, 7 fluid ounces 7-Up
  • Pour into a greased and floured tube pan. Bake at 325 for one hour or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.
  • Let your cake sit in the pan for 10 to 30 minutes and then turn it out onto a wire rack.
  • Combine all the glaze ingredients in a mixing bowl and stir until smooth. Add more milk if too thick and more confectioner's sugar if too thin.
    1.5 cups confectioner's sugar, 2 tablespoons milk, 1/4 teaspoon lemon extract
  • Pour over the cooled cake.

Nutrition

Calories: 465kcal
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103 Comments

  1. Christy, I LOVE your recipes and I plan to attempt making this cake. Can you do a fellow southern belle a favor and include a pic of a cut slice of the cakes that you post? I’d like to see how the cake will look when it’s cut into.

    1. I normally do in all of my posts (hope you get to read more of them!). It all depends on whether or not the slice of cake is in the mood to have it’s photo taken. This particular cake was very camera shy so I had to just take a photo of the cake with a slice missing 🙂
      Cakes are fickle that way!
      Gratefully,
      Christy

  2. I made this cake 6 days ago and there’s only a little left. Those last 2 pieces still taste good! That’s my idea of a good cake! There are only 2 of us so desserts that last a while are great 🙂 I made the glaze too and it was the first glaze I’ve actually really liked. I dislike the flavor of powdered sugar and the lemon covered it up. Also Christy’s advice that the glaze should be like school glue was immensely helpful, turns out I’ve been making my glazes too thick! This time the glaze looked pretty and didn’t drip down the sides of the cake and make a pool 🙂 As a wedding gift we received one of those books to write down favorite recipes in and this is the first one that’s goin’ in.

  3. LOOOOOOOOOVE THIS CAKE!!!
    I wanted to say that I recently made this cake for a party and the cake was so delicious that some of my family members were arguing over who should get the last slice. Now I have multiple requests for the cake. I have one in the oven right now! This cake is so good that my fiance won’t even share a slice with the kids!!

  4. Christy, I couldn’t sleep so decided to bake this cake at 2 am! I made it just like you said, let it sit in the pan for 30 minutes exactly, then unpanned it (what is the right term?) onto my cake plate. A little bit of it stuck to the pan just like yours, but no matter. It’s the best bundt cake I’ve ever made! My husband and I both had big pieces of hot cake just now. I didn’t even get as far as putting the glaze on it. It’s so tender and moist and the lemon flavor is great. I’m curious about how it will be after it cools completely! There is only one cake we regularly buy from the store, and it’s a lemon bundt cake that we always seem to walk out of Safeway with. We only go to Safeway once every couple of months but always end up with one of the lemon cakes. This cake tastes like it! Yummy! Also, we loved Jeanne’s video and have watched several others. She reminds me of my elementary school principal, who was another very classy, very tall and skinny, very friendly and funny Southern lady.

  5. I made this tonight, baked it one hour and ten minutes and it came out great! Definitely something I will make next time I have company. Thank you again.

  6. Did anyone else have problems with the cooking temperature/time? I would like to make this but my first bundt pan cake experience ended in disaster. By disaster I mean half of the uncooked cake came plopping out all over the counter when I turned it. Any advice would be very much appreciated!

    p.s. note to Christy- I have tried your crockpot chicken and dressing and corn casserole so far and both came out excellent- I’m new here but love your site and can’t wait to get the cookbook. Thank you!

    1. Hey Laura!
      I always go by testing to see if a cake is done. First of all, I see if the top center has risen. If it has, I stick a toothpick in the center. If the toothpick comes out clean, I know the cake is done. If it doesn’t, I bake for ten minutes more and check then. I hope this helps!!!
      Oh wow, you just named two of my favorites, I gotta make them soon! Thank you!
      Gratefully,
      Christy

  7. I’m going to be looking to see if I have everything for this recipe and make it this weekend.
    And I LOVED LOVED LOVED the video clip – I’m going to have to send that one around to some “transplanted” northerners – I’m betting they will understand it perfectly
    Thanks for sharing

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