Delish Lemon Poppy Seed Bread

There are two kinds of lemon poppy seed bread: the dry, crumbly loaf that makes you contemplate your life choices, and the sunshiney, tender one with a tangy glaze that demands “just one more slice” until you’re out of slices and out of excuses. This is the second one. It’s basically brunch perfume: bright lemon, tiny poppy crunch, and a glaze that drips down the sides like it pays rent. Yes, the pan is too small. No, I won’t wash fewer dishes. If I wanted to be sensible, I wouldn’t be baking a sugar-glazed loaf on a Tuesday.
My family? Utter menaces. My husband called it “chia bread” and asked why it didn’t get slimy. My kid “taste-tested” the glaze by dragging a spoon directly across the cooling loaf like a tiny lawn mower. The dog ate the end piece I “sacrificed to even it out,” which is a polite way of saying I mauled it with a butter knife. And my mother-in-law took a bite, sighed, and said it was “very moist”—which is honestly the only review I need.
Why You’ll Love This Delish Lemon Poppy Seed Bread
– It tastes bakery-fancy without the bakery prices or the judgy barista asking if you want oat milk again.
– The lemon hits first, the poppy seeds crunch second, and the glaze covers all your baking sins. Cracks in the top? Fashion.
– One bowl, no mixer, and it still looks like you tried. I won’t tell if you made it in pajamas.
– Stays soft for days, freezes like a dream, and somehow tastes even better sliced cold.
– Works for breakfast, snack, dessert, and that weird 3 p.m. “am I hungry or bored?” moment.
Time-Saving Hacks
– Microwave your lemons for 10–15 seconds before juicing. They’ll give up more juice like a citrus confessional.
– No fresh lemons? Mix bottled lemon juice with fresh zest. Is it legal? Spiritually questionable. Totally fine.
– Stir the glaze in a mug with a fork. Measuring spoons are just tiny spoons. Live dangerously.
– Line the pan with a parchment sling so you can yank the loaf out like a magician instead of chipping it out with a spatula.
– Skip the fancy stand mixer. Whisk everything in a large measuring bowl and pour like a champ.
– Rushing? Melted butter or neutral oil plays nice with tender crumbs and zero creaming. The loaf won’t narc.
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Serving Ideas
– Breakfast: a warm slice with salted butter and a smug cup of coffee.
– Brunch board: berries, Greek yogurt, honey, and this loaf acting like the main character.
– Dessert: toast a slice, top with vanilla ice cream, lemon zest, and pretend it’s “deconstructed cake.”
– Afternoon snack: tea if you’re civilized, iced coffee if you’re me, wine if the kids practiced drums on the walls.
– Bare minimum: eat it straight off the cutting board while “cleaning up.” It’s called efficiency.
What to Serve It With
– Soft-scrambled eggs with chives, because you’re fancy but also hungry.
– Crispy bacon or salty prosciutto for a sweet-salty situation.
– Lemon curd or raspberry jam if you like chaos (and color).
– Ricotta or mascarpone whipped with a little honey.
– Sparkling water with lemon slices or a mimosa if it’s brunch o’clock.
Tips & Mistakes
– Zest first, then juice. Doing it backwards turns your lemon into a slippery stress ball.
– Room-temp eggs and dairy keep the crumb tender. Cold ingredients equal sulk loaf.
– Don’t overmix. Stir just until the flour disappears, then stop like you meant to.
– Use the right pan: 8.5×4.5 bakes taller, 9×5 bakes wider; adjust time and start checking early.
– Tent with foil if the top browns too fast—golden, not charcoal.
– Poke tiny holes and glaze while warm for a juicy loaf; glaze again when cool if you’re dramatic.
– An oven thermometer saves lives, or at least loaves. Ovens lie, it’s science.
Storage Tips
Store it in the fridge… if there’s any left. Cold midnight leftovers? Sometimes better than fresh.
– Wrap snugly in plastic or a reusable wrap; then pop into an airtight container. Fridge: up to 5 days.
– Freeze slices individually, then bag them. To serve, thaw on the counter or toast straight from frozen.
– Glaze after thawing if you’re taking it to impress people. If it’s just you and a fork, live your truth.
Variations and Substitutions
– Citrus swap: Meyer lemons for floral vibes, or go full orange for creamsicle energy.
– Dairy: sour cream, Greek yogurt, or buttermilk—choose your tang.
– Fat: melted butter for flavor, neutral oil for maximum moist without drama.
– Add-ins: blueberries, raspberries, or white chocolate chips if you’re living dangerously.
– Flavor boosts: almond extract, extra zest, or a sprinkle of turbinado sugar on top for crunch.
– Gluten-free: use a good 1:1 baking blend; don’t @ me, it works.
– Sweeteners: reduce sugar a bit, or sub part with honey or maple and add a minute or two to bake time.
– Make it muffins. Same batter, 350°F, about 18–22 minutes. Portable loaf energy.
Frequently Asked Questions

Delish Lemon Poppy Seed Bread
Ingredients
Main Ingredients
- 2 cups all-purpose flour
- 1 cup granulated sugar
- 1.5 teaspoons baking powder
- 0.5 teaspoon baking soda
- 0.5 teaspoon fine salt
- 2 tablespoons poppy seeds
- 2 tablespoons lemon zest from about 2 lemons
- 0.75 cup sour cream full-fat
- 0.25 cup whole milk
- 0.5 cup unsalted butter, melted slightly cooled
- 2 large eggs room temperature
- 0.25 cup fresh lemon juice
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1 cup powdered sugar for glaze
- 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice for glaze
- 1 tablespoon milk for glaze, optional for thinning
Instructions
Preparation Steps
- Preheat oven to 350°F. Grease a 9 x 5 inch loaf pan and line with a parchment sling for easy removal.
- In a large bowl, whisk together flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, poppy seeds, and lemon zest.
- In a separate bowl, whisk the granulated sugar, eggs, sour cream, milk, lemon juice, and vanilla until smooth. Slowly stream in the melted butter while whisking.
- Pour the wet mixture into the dry ingredients and gently fold with a spatula until just combined; do not overmix.
- Transfer batter to the prepared pan, smooth the top, and bake 50 to 60 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Tent loosely with foil if browning too quickly.
- Cool in the pan for 10 minutes, then lift out and cool on a wire rack until barely warm or room temperature.
- For the glaze, whisk powdered sugar with lemon juice, adding milk as needed for a pourable consistency. Drizzle over the cooled loaf and let set for 15 minutes.
- Slice into 10 pieces and serve. Store covered at room temperature up to 2 days, or refrigerate up to 5 days.
Notes
Featured Comments
“Super easy and so flavorful! My family asked for seconds. Saving this one.”
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“New favorite here — so flavorful. creamy was spot on.”
“Super easy and so flavorful! My family asked for seconds. Saving this one.”
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“Made this last night and it was family favorite. Loved how the creamy came together.”