This Lemon Elderflower Cake is my copycat version of the royal wedding cake! Elderflower infused lemon cake layers with lemon curd and elderflower buttercream.

I am so excited to share this cake with you today, as it’s my version of Prince Harry and Meghan’s wedding cake. This Lemon Elderflower Cake was heavily inspired by Claire Ptak at Violet Cakes in London, who made the actual royal wedding cake for the couple.
I found out about the flavors shortly before the wedding, and was inspired to create my own version of it. Any excuse to make a cake and try something different, right??

The cake consists of lemon infused cake layers, an elderflower syrup, lemon curd, and an elderflower Swiss meringue buttercream.
Maybe I’m living under a rock (likely) but I actually hadn’t heard of elderflower until recently. I was actually shocked to find elderflower cordial in the first grocery store I checked. Usually I’m traipsing all over the city and back to find certain ingredients, only to give up and order them online, so to see it right there on the grocery store shelf was nothing short of a miracle.

Elderflower cordial is very floral, with an almost citrusy aftertaste. It goes really well with lemon, and is just perfect for the spring/summer season.
For the lemon cake, I used the same recipe I used for my Lemon Blueberry Cake, but scaled it up for slightly thicker layers. For the lemon curd, I modified a recipe we used in pastry school (it’s SO good omg). Be sure to check out my tutorial for How to Make Lemon Curd. Those went off without a hitch, but I made a couple of mistakes working with the elderflower cordial.
Initially, I made an elderflower syrup by bringing 1/4 cup water and 1/4 cup sugar to a boil before stirring 2 Tbsp of elderflower cordial into it. This tasted delicious, but once used on the cake, the elderflower was overpowered by the lemon flavors. The cordial itself is actually already a syrup (since you’d need to dilute it to use in drinks, etc.) so I should have just used it straight up. You can choose to do it either way though.

Speaking of drinks.. as I was working on this Lemon Elderflower Cake, I found out there’s actually an elderflower liqueur too! What to do?! You know I love to booze up my cakes here and there, so I was so tempted to try this instead. A quick Google search led me to a $50 price tag though… yikes.
Nevertheless, I set out to find it. I didn’t really try that hard though: I checked one liquor store and they didn’t have it, so I decided to move on. I already had the cordial, and I didn’t need to spend money on liqueur that will literally just sit in the cabinet after (I pretty much only use it for baking).

The second issue I had with the elderflower is that, in typical Olivia fashion, I forgot to put it in the buttercream!! Thankfully, I realized this after the crumb coat, so I added it in then. There’s lemon curd between the layers instead of buttercream, so it wasn’t too bad, but STILL. I need to be more organized. I always write down the recipe, but never actually refer to it while making the frosting!
How much elderflower you add to the buttercream is really to your taste. I found it to be quite subtle, but some can find it overpowering. However much you add, be sure to do it slowly (1 Tbsp at a time) and stop if it feels like you’re affecting the texture of the buttercream. I’ve been able to add up to 1/4 cup of liquid to buttercream without affecting it, but just something to be aware of.
I waited until after the wedding to make the cake, as I wanted to see how it was decorated so I could emulate that as much as possible.
There’s a lot of mixed feelings out there about the cake, but I think it looks beautiful. I love the rustic elegance to it — the juxtaposition of the ornate gold stands with the rustic flowers and frosting.

Decorating this cake was fairly simple. It was SUCH a relief to not have to worry about perfectly smooth frosting and sharp edges. It really was one of the easier cake frosting techniques I’ve tried. To be fair though, it’s possible I totally lucked out and it just worked on the first go around. I am super pleased with the results.
I was also lucky enough to find peonies in the exact color I was looking for. In the first flower shop I went into!! High fives all around. I ended up spending $60 on peonies though, which is sort of ridiculous. Good thing I passed on the liqueur!

Overall, this Lemon Elderflower Cake turned out better than I expected, both in flavor and aesthetic. It was easy to decorate, and I think it looks stunning. I can see why Harry and Meghan chose this style and flavor combo for their special day.
Looking for more Lemon Desserts?
- Lemon Blueberry Cake
- Lemon Cake
- Mini Meyer Lemon Loaves
- Lemon Poppy Seed Bundt Cake
- Meyer Lemon Bundt Cake
Tips for making this Lemon Cake with Elderflower:
- I recommend not diluting the elderflower cordial for the cake layers too much (or at all), or you’ll lose the flavor.
- The amount of cordial you use in the buttercream is up to you. Only add it 1 Tbsp at a time though, and add to taste.
- If you’d like to use St. Germain instead of the elderflower cordial, I recommend making a simple syrup and adding the liqueur to that:
- Bring 1/4 cup water and 1/4 cup sugar to a boil, simmer 1 min. Remove from heat and add in 2Tbsp of St. Germain. Cool completely.
- Be sure to check out my tutorial for How to Make Lemon Curd
- Be careful about putting too much lemon curd in between the layers. This can make the cake more unstable.
- Regardless of the amount of lemon curd, you must do a dam of frosting around the perimeter of each layer to hold in the curd. This is not optional!
- You will have some curd left over which you can freeze if you like or use in another dessert.
- The buttercream recipe makes enough to fully frost the cake (if you weren’t using curd). You can freeze this as well if you have extra or just reduce the recipe slightly.
- If you use fresh (non-edible) flowers like I did, be sure to protect them from the cake (I used floral tape around the stems).
- Be sure to check my Swiss Meringue Buttercream post for tips and troubleshooting.
- To help ensure your cake layers bake up nice and flat, check out my Flat Top Cakes post!

Lemon Elderflower Cake (Copycat Royal Wedding Cake)
Ingredients
Lemon Cake:
- 3 cups all-purpose flour
- 1 Tbsp baking powder
- 3/4 tsp salt
- 1 cup unsalted butter room temperature
- 1 Tbsp lemon zest from one large lemon
- 2 cups granulated sugar
- 4 large eggs room temperature
- 2 tsp vanilla extract
- 2/3 cup milk room temperature
- 1/3 cup lemon juice fresh squeezed, from one medium lemon
Lemon Curd:
- 4 large eggs
- 1 cup granulated sugar
- 1/2 cup lemon juice fresh squeezed, from one large lemon
- 1 Tbsp lemon zest from one large lemon
- 6 Tbsp unsalted butter cubed
Elderflower Swiss Meringue Buttercream:
- 6 large egg whites
- 2 cups granulated sugar
- 3 cups unsalted butter room temperature
- 2-4 Tbsp elderflower cordial to taste
Assembly:
- elderflower cordial/syrup
Instructions
Lemon Cake:
- Preheat oven to 350F. Grease and flour three 8″ cake rounds and line with parchment.
- In a medium bowl, whisk flour, baking powder, and salt until well combined. Set aside.
- Using a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, cream butter and lemon zest until smooth. Add sugar and beat on med-high until pale and fluffy (approx 3mins).
- Reduce speed and add eggs one at a time fully incorporating after each addition. Add vanilla.
- Alternate adding flour mixture with milk & lemon juice, beginning and ending with flour (3 additions of flour and 2 of milk & lemon juice). Fully incorporating after each addition.
- Spread batter evenly between the prepared pans and smooth the tops.
- Bake for approx. 35mins or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out mostly clean.
- Place cakes on wire rack to cool for 10mins then turn out onto wire rack to cool completely
Lemon Curd:
- Place eggs and sugar into a small pot, whisk to combine. Add lemon juice, zest, and butter. Cook over medium-low heat whisking constantly until mixture thickens and coats the back of a spoon.
- Transfer to a glass bowl and lay plastic wrap directly on surface to prevent a skin from forming. Chill for 3 hours to set. Makes 2 cups.
Elderflower Swiss Meringue Buttercream:
- Place egg whites and sugar into the bowl of a stand mixer, whisk until combined.*
- Place bowl over a pot with 1-2″ of simmering water and whisk constantly until the mixture is hot and no longer grainy to the touch or reads 160F on a candy thermometer (approx. 3mins)
- Place bowl on your stand mixer and whisk on med-high until the meringue is stiff and cooled (the bowl is no longer warm to the touch (approx. 5-10mins)).
- Switch to paddle attachment. Slowly add cubed butter and mix until smooth.**
- Add 2-4 Tbsp elderflower cordial (to taste) one Tbsp at a time whip until smooth.
Assembly:
- Place one layer of cake on a cake stand or serving plate. Poke holes into the cake using a bamboo skewer. Brush with elderflower cordial.***
- Spread a thin layer of buttercream on top of the layer and pipe a border around the outside to hold the lemon curd in. Fill with approx 3/4 cup of lemon curd. Repeat with next layer.
- Place final layer on top and do a thin crumb coat on the cake. Chill for 20mins.
- Frost the top and sides of the cake with remaining frosting in a rustic manner. I started by spreading a generous amount of buttercream on the top and letting it overhang on the sides. Then I used a flat spatula to add buttercream to the sides of the cake and to smooth the which created a top lip with the overlapping buttercream.
- Top with fresh peonies if desired, but be sure to wrap the stems in floral tape.
Notes
** The buttercream may look like it’s curdled at some point. Keep mixing until it is completely smooth.
*** You can dilute the cordial if you like, by adding it to some simple syrup.
Karen says
Hi Olivia
Thank you for sharing your wonderful recipe. I was so excited to try a version of the royal wedding cake. I ordered the elderflower cordial immediately after the wedding. I looked at the bottle everyday and was a bit intimidated by using it. I searched the internet for a good recipe, and came across yours. Your elegant cake immediately caught my attention. I made a smaller version of yours. It came out excellent. Everything from the buttercream, curd, and cake was explained in very easy to follow directions. It was a fun experience for me. Thanks again..
Olivia says
Thanks so much for the feedback, Karen! I’m so glad you liked it 🙂
Bethany P says
Thanks for the awesome recipe, I adapted it for cupcakes and they turned out absolutely delicious! Due to your thorough comments, my first time making Swiss meringue buttercream went off without a hitch! For cupcakes, I made 1/2 the cake recipe, 1/4 lemon curd, and 1/3 buttercream. It was perfect for making 12 cupcakes. I also used the Elderflower syrup from IKEA.
Olivia says
Hi Bethany! Thanks for the feedback, I’m so glad you liked it (and that it worked well as cupcakes!). And YAY for a perfect first Swiss meringue buttercream 🙂
Ellen Russell says
I bought the IKEA Elderflower but have read it was too seeet. Did enough Elderflower taste come through?
Bethany P says
Hi Ellen! I bought the IKEA Elderflower drink concentrate and ended up using about 3 Tablespoons total (for 1/3 of the buttercream recipe). I added one T at a time, then tasted. I did not dilute or alter the concentrate in any way before adding to buttercream. I thought it was the perfect amount that allowed the Elderflower flavor to come through without being overpowering. I did not find it overly sweet, but I did also use salted butter on accident as I wanted to use the higher quality European Kerry’s Gold (and did not realize it was salted), so maybe that balanced it out? Either way, my recommendation would be just to add 1 Tablespoon at a time and taste it until it is to your liking, that way it’s not too sweet for you. Also, it will taste less sweet (and in my case, not salty anymore) after chilling in the fridge as opposed to eating it at room temperature.
Ashley says
Hi there! This recipe looks amazing and I can’t wait to try it out, however I need to make the cake gluten free. Is it possible to just substitute gluten free AP flour?
Olivia says
Hi Ashley! I think a GF all-purpose flour blend would work fine.
Ashley McLaughlin says
Hi Olivia,
Could I sub cake and pastry flour and add an extra 1tbsp per cup, or does the ap flour provide more structure for the cake? Also I have two 10″ cake pans and want to try this as a two layer only. Do you think there is sufficient batter to accommodate?
Kindly,
Ashley
Olivia says
Hi Ashley! You could sub cake or pastry flour. I just use all-purpose as it’s what most people happen to have in their pantry. Converting pan sizes is always tricky. Here’s a site I use as a guideline: http://www.joyofbaking.com/PanSizes.html
akashocd says
Wow this cake recipe is so good,thank you for sharing your blog
Olivia says
Thanks so much! Glad you like it 🙂
Margy says
I have just found your recipe for the Elderflower cake. Am I able to use the buttercream as the base before adding a mirror glaze icing? It’s for a 30th birthday. Many thanks in advance.
Olivia says
Hi Margy! I’ve never used a mirror glaze before, but I suspect it would be fine.
Miriam says
I’m sorry I didn’t rate the recipe
Olivia says
Thank you!! 🙂
Miriam says
Hi, Olivia. Thank you for sharing the recipe. I just made this cake for my daughter’s 12th birthday, and I have to tell everybody that read this recipe, “please, give it a try to this cake, you’re going to love it, believe me, it’s soooooooo delicious and elegant at the same time” sorry for my spelling, I’m from Mexico.
Thank you Olivia you made with this recipe the best birthday cake to my daughter
Olivia says
Thanks so much Miriam! I am so glad you and your daughter liked it 🙂
Debs says
I just made this and brought it into work & it was a huge hit – even though it didn’t look as good as yours! I did have some problems assembling it. I only used a little more than half of the lemon curd and still the layers keep sliding around and the curd oozed out. And my icing was nice and stiff until I added the butter, then it got too loose (and flattened) to really maintain the moat to keep the curd in. I’m wondering what I might have done wrong – (plus there was lots left over.) I used a ton of frosting but there was still enough leftover to do another cake.
It did taste great, but I’d like to do a better job next time.
Olivia says
Hi Debs! I’m so glad it was a hit! Re: the soft frosting, this is not uncommon — it’s usually due to either butter being too soft and/or the meringue still being a touch warm. A 20min session in the fridge and then rewhipping should bring it all back together nicely 🙂 Oh and the recipe makes enough frosting to fully frost the cake, in case people didn’t want to use the curd after all.
Laura says
Hi,
Am hoping to make this cake for my mum’s birthday, when you say multi purpose flour, is that self raising or plain? Many thanks x
Olivia says
Hi Laura! My guess is that it would be plain, but I used plain flour myself once (using a different recipe) when I was visiting my sister and it didn’t turn out. It’s definitely not self-raising flour though!
Debs says
This looks great! I’ve been looking to make a copy of this cake. I was wondering, does the cake needs to be kept refrigerated? Thank you!
Olivia says
Hi Debs! I always refrigerate my cakes, but it should do fine at room temperature for a few hours. I would refrigerate overnight though.
Debs says
Thank you! I did! Turns out a refrigerated cake is great on a 95 degree day anyway!
Julia says
Does refrigeration mess up the texture of the SMBC? I’ve only made it once, and mine got grainy in the fridge… perhaps I just didnt let it sit out long enough before we ate it to bring it back to room temp. I’m making a wedding cake for a friend, and am still trying to decide which frosting to use, which is tough because frosting isn’t my favorite usually – too sweet! Thanks for your advice!
Olivia says
Hi Julia! The SMBC will go very firm in the fridge but will be silky smooth again when brought to room temp. It should not get grainy at all provided the sugar was properly dissolved in the first place.
Julia says
Thank you!!
Stephanie says
Made it last night. We had far too much butter/icing left over, as in enough for another cake, and same with the curd. Tasty though, but super buttery
Olivia says
Hi Stephanie! The curd and buttercream both freeze really well if you had a lot left over.
Oksana says
This cake looks (and I bet tastes) gorgeous!!!! It’s absolutely stunning and very elegant.
Just wanted to share (if somebody needs that info) that I found elderflower concentrate in IKEA at their food isle )))
Olivia says
Thanks for the tip!! I keep meaning to check there 🙂
Teresa Baca says
Hi
I am from Mexico . Even here i couldn’t find elderberry cordial I replaced it with mezcal .
Great recipe . Everything worked perfectly. It is very hard to find a perfect recipe . Thanks for sharing.
Olivia says
Thanks so much Teresa, I’m glad you liked it!
Lauren Holden Kilbane says
I made this cake for Julie Richardson’s birthday (author, Vintage Cakes + rustic Fruit Desserts) and she was wow’ed.
So was I – it is delicious and beautiful too. THANK YOU!
I was not shy about “brushing” the cakes with a St.Germain simple syrup – the cake was moist and wonderful. I’m wondering what the difference would be if I had just brushed it straight up with St. Germain? They baked in half the time specified and I only used a fraction of the lemon curd and half the buttercream.
MAKE AHEAD: I made the cakes and buttercream a few days ahead, wrapped the cakes and put them in the freezer, covered the buttercream and put it in the fridge. Thawed the cake the morning of, warmed up the buttercream quickly in a double boiler and whipped it back into silkiness.
We draped a cascade of sweet peas over the top and down the sides to great effect.
Thank you for making me a birthday baking hero to the stars 🙂
Olivia says
Hi Lauren! I think it would be fine to brush it with straight up St. Germain, but it would be more potent (nothing wrong with that though!), so it just depends on how strong you want the flavour. Strange that they baked up so fast for you! Maybe your oven runs warmer than mine. I’m so happy to hear that everyone liked it!!
Darlene says
I made this cake and it was a hit! Can it be frozen?
Olivia says
Hi Darlene! Yes, it freezes quite well.
Mila says
Hello, for how long this cake can sit at room temperature? This recipe/ flavour would be great for wedings, baby showers, birthdays, you name it. My only worry is egg yolks in the curd, even though they’ve been pasteurized. Thanks!
Olivia says
Hi Mila! It should be ok for a few hours at room temperature.
Kim is High on Cake says
This cake is so gorgeous! and it must taste incredibly. Besides your pictures are to die for!
Olivia says
Thanks so much Kim!
Amber Jackson says
I made this cake, and it won me the office bake off!! I was astounded at how good it was. I used IKEA elderflower concentrate for the buttercream, and had to use twice the amount recommended, but it’s a huge bottle so no worries there!
I will say, I wish the instructions for the buttercream and lemon curd went before the cake, as a help for recipe-challenged people like me, who tend to miss the “sit for 3 hours” at first glance. Also, I messed up the cakes the first time by putting in 1 stick of butter instead of 1 cup- you might consider writing it out both ways for oven-incompetent.
That said, kerfuffles aside, I love this cake, and I would totally make it again.
Olivia says
Hi Amber! So glad to hear you liked it! Thanks for the feedback 🙂
Jay says
This cake looks absolutely gorgeous!!! I’m planning on making it this weekend. In terms of the cordial, how do you know when the cake is sufficiently coated/soaked?
Olivia says
Hi Jay! I dip a pastry brush into a small bowl of the cordial and generously brush it on. You don’t want to pour it over and soak the cake, but you want to make sure the flavour is there. If I had to guess I’d say I use about 2-3 TBsp of syrup per layer or so.