Champagne Pound Cake
Hello friends! I hope you all had a great holiday weekend. I’m hoping it was filled with lots of family time, food and joy. Ours was exactly that and I am already looking forward to the New Year and why we have a simple champagne pound cake today to ring out the year.
2015 will go down in the books as the BEST year so far. It brought with it lots of heartache but also brought us Baby Elliott, the best present a girl can ask for. He has brought nothing but happiness and love into our family and has taken over our hearts. For that (and many more blessings), I am celebrating what was a great year. Ringing out 2015 and looking forward to 2016 with prayers that it will be an even better, brighter and happier year.
In the holiday spirit (as most people are off this week), I will keep this short and sweet. I made this pound cake over the weekend as I was looking for New Year’s Eve ideas. I believe toasting up the New Year deserves this champagne pound cake recipe that is simple, soft and amazing. If you’ve never tried bubblies (champagne, wine or soda) in your baking, it’s time to. It makes for light and airy cakes that are incredibly moist and crumbly at the same time! Make that a New Year resolution to bake with bubblies in 2016, starting with this pound cake. You can use whatever bubbly you have this week; champagne, sparking wine or juice. The cake will turn out great.
I topped the cake pictured with a sprinkling of powdered sugar but a simple champagne glaze (recipe below) will be a good addition too!
As you ring in the New Year, consider making this cake for your New Year’s Eve party. I will be staying in, tucked under a blanket on the couch enjoying snuggles from my favorite little man and I won’t trade that for anything else. But this cake will be on the coffee table along with some bubbly.
Have a great week and see you in the New Year!!
Champagne Pound Cake
Ingredients
- 1 ¼ cups unsalted butter, softened
- 2 ½ cups granulated sugar
- 5 large eggs, at room temperature
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- 3¼ cups all-purpose flour
- 1 cup champagne (or pink moscato)
Icing (optional):
- ¼ cup champagne
- 1-2 cups powdered sugar
Instructions
- Heat oven to 325 degrees F. Grease a 10-inch bundt pan with baking spray.
- In the bowl of a stand mixer, beat the butter until light and creamy about 2 minutes on medium speed. With the mixer running, slowly add in the granulated sugar. Cream butter and sugar until light and fluffy, about 8 minutes on medium speed.
- Add eggs, one at time and mixing in between until combined, scraping down bowl as needed. Reduce mixer speed to low and add in the salt and the flour, one cup at a time, mixing until just combined.
- Using a rubber spatula, fold in the champagne into the mixture until well combined.
- Pour the batter into the prepared pan and bake until a cake tester inserted into the center comes out clean, about 1.5 hours. (Be sure to keep an eye on it as it could bake faster depending on the size of your bundt pan).
- Let cake cool in pan for at least 10 minutes before transferring to a cooling rack. Let cool completely.
- To make icing, whisk the champagne with the powdered sugar in a small bowl. Drizzle glaze over cooled cake.
Instead of pink Moscato can you use plain Moscato & does the wine have to be room temperature as well?
Hi Donna, any Moscato or wine will do. The keep is the flavor and carbonation.
I am trying to find a recipe for champagne cake to use for a wedding cake. Do you think this recipe will be sturdy enough for stacking?
Hi Elizabeth, I have unfortunately not stacked this cake or baked it in a round cake pan. I think depending on how high or how many cakes you plan to stack, it would be best to stick to a recipe that is tested for a round cake. I would hate for anyone’s wedding cake to be a disaster. May I suggest this champagne cake recipe that I have in a round cake? You can double, triple etc and be able to stack with the right tools. https://aclassictwist.com/pink-champagne-cake/
This cake looks great! Do you think I could add frozen strawberries to the mix without having to adjust the other ingredients in the batter?
Hi Jes, frozen strawberries could distort the nature of the cake. However, if you wanted strawberries in there, maybe try a small number of freeze-dried strawberries? I would think that would be an easy addition without having to worry about the outcome of the cake too much.
Good to know! Thank you so much for your quick reply 🙂
I baked this last night for a new year celebratory sweet and the recipe worked perfectttttly and the champagne taste was truly lovely. Well done and thank you!!
So glad to hear you loved the cake, Nick! Happy New Year!
OMG!!!Saw this while looking for an unusual pound cake for a very special Easter Saturday meal…mixing cake was simple & adding champagne was a kick!! The house smelled heavenly while baking!!
I’m patiently (?) waiting for cake to cool!!
Have decided to use your champagne glaze as a base for thick dark chocolate topper glaze…(condensed milk & chips)!!! & surround with speckled Robin eggs & fill cavity with speckled jelly beans…
no green coconut grass (would be cute, but expected!)
Hi Terre, that sounds amazing! Please share what it looks like.