This Maple Pound Cake with Maple Glaze is a dense, moist pound cake that has a whole cup of maple syrup baked into the cake! Top with an easy maple glaze and toasted pecans for the photo finish!
Prep your Pan: I sprayed my pan with cooking spray and then floured it. Tap the flour around until every inch is covered. Tap out the extra flour onto a piece of parchment on the counter. You should be left with a perfectly floured pan.
Whisk together flour, salt, cinnamon and baking soda. Set aside.
In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat butter and sugar just until a thick paste forms. Beat in the eggs one at a time, scraping down the sides of the bowl after every two eggs or so. Beat in the vanilla and maple syrup. This will probably curdle the batter. Don’t stress, just keep going!
Switch the mixer to low and then alternately add the flour and sour cream. I don’t wait until all the flour has incorporated until I add the next batch. I just keep adding with two hands. Pro-style. I do stop the mixer to add the last of the sour cream because I like to scrape it all out with a rubber spatula.
You should have a silky, smooth batter. I like to finish folding in the flour by hand just to ensure it isn’t over mixed.
Pour into prepared pan and smooth the top.
Bake in preheated oven until a cake tester comes out with a few clinging crumbs. This will take about 60-85 minutes depending on your oven. Mine baked for 70 minutes. If you overbake it will be dry. Even that much butter, sugar and sour cream can’t over compensate for overbaking. Just sayin’.
Let her COOL COMPLETELY. I know it’s a big ask. You can do it!
Loosen the edges with a paring knife and then turn it out onto a plate or cake stand of your choice. I chose to level it with a serrated knife just a smidge for the photos. Don’t worry, the cake scraps did not go to waste!
Dust with powdered sugar, drowned in glaze or just slice it right up!
Make the Glaze:
Combine all ingredients in a small bowl or measuring cup, whisk and add a little more milk to your desired consistency. Then pour over the top. This makes a light drizzle, double it if you want a lot of glaze!