A Classic Mid-Walk Tea Break Companion: Simple Lemon Drizzle Cake

A Classic Mid-Walk Tea Break Companion: Simple Lemon Drizzle Cake 1
5.0 from 5 votes

There is a point during almost every long day on the hills—usually around the two-thirds mark—where the initial energy of the morning starts to fade.

Your legs are feeling the miles, the wind has picked up, and the summit is behind you. That is the exact moment for the legendary British mid-walk tea break.

While heavy fruit cakes or chocolate bars have their place, nothing matches a thick, moist slice of homemade lemon drizzle cake paired with a steaming cup of tea from a flask.

Late-Trail Energy Slump ───► Fatigue & Palate Burnout ❌
Lemon Drizzle & Hot Tea ───► Sharp Citrus Awakening + Fast Carbohydrate Boost ✓

Ordinarily, standard home baking doesn’t quite fit the rugged profile of a hiking blog. But lemon drizzle is the undisputed cornerstone of British walking culture.

It is the quintessential slice you look forward to at a National Trust tea room or a village café at the end of a trail.

By baking it at home, wrapping it tightly in foil, and tucking it into your rucksack, you carry that exact piece of comforting heritage right out onto the open fells.

🍋 The Trail Side Companion Snapshot

Baking Metric

Target Setting

Why It Matters For Your Rucksack

The Tin Style

2lb Loaf Tin

Creates a sturdy, easily sliceable shape that packs beautifully without crumbling.

The Citrus Glaze

Freshly Squeezed Lemon & Granulated Sugar

Forms a crunchy, protective sugary crust that seals in the moisture.

Rucksack Durability

High Moisture Content

Stays soft and delicious for up to five days, making it ideal for multi-day trips.

Trail Performance

Fast-Release Sugars & Sharp Citrus Zing

Delivers an immediate energy injection while cutting through trail-fatigue palate burnout.

⚡ Why Sharp Citrus Beats Chocolate on the Hill

When you are pushing through the final miles of a heavy walk, your body is looking for fast-acting fuel to replenish your blood sugar levels.

Chocolate is a common choice, but in the summer it melts into a muddy mess inside your kit, and in the winter it turns rock-hard.

Lemon drizzle cake solves both problems. It handles temperature changes flawlessly, remaining soft and springy whether it is tucked into a winter coat pocket or a warm summer pack.

More importantly, the intense, sharp hit of a proper lemon drizzle works wonders for mental fatigue.

The citric acid provides a bright, refreshing shock to a tired palate, instantly waking up your senses and breaking the monotony of a long, grueling descent.

It is pure comfort that gives you the exact physical and mental boost needed to get you safely back to the car.

lemon drizzle cake served

🧭 The Foolproof Loaf Sequence

The secret to a spectacular drizzle cake is all in the timing of the glaze.

You must prick the sponge and pour the lemon mixture over it while the cake is still piping hot straight from the oven.

This allows the liquid to soak deep into the crumb, while the sugar stays on the surface to dry into a beautiful, crackly crust.

Step 1: Whisk the Sponge Base:

Time: 10 mins.

Preheat your oven to 180°C (Gas Mark 4) and line a 2lb loaf tin with baking parchment. In a large bowl, cream together 175g of softened unsalted butter and 175g of golden caster sugar until pale and fluffy.

Whisk in 3 large eggs, one at a time, followed by the finely grated zest of 2 fresh lemons.

Step 2: Fold and Fill:

Time: 5 mins.

Gently fold 175g of self-raising flour into the wet mixture using a metal spoon or spatula until just combined.

Try not to overmix, or you will knock the air out of the sponge. Spoon the smooth batter into your lined loaf tin and smooth the top.

Step 3: The Golden Bake:

Time: 40-45 mins.

Bake in the centre of the oven for 40 to 45 minutes. You will know it is ready when the top is a beautiful golden brown and a wooden skewer inserted into the middle comes out completely clean.

Step 4: Mix the Sharp Drizzle:

Time: 2 mins.

While the cake is doing its final few minutes in the oven, mix the juice of your 2 lemons with 100g of granulated sugar in a small bowl. Don’t let the sugar dissolve completely—you want those crystals intact to create the crunchy top.

Step 5: Poke, Pour, and Cool:

Time: 10 mins.

The moment the cake comes out of the oven, use a cocktail stick or fine skewer to prick deep holes all over the warm sponge. Pour the lemon syrup evenly across the top.

Let the loaf cool completely inside the tin before lifting it out, slicing it up, and wrapping it in foil for the trail.

Traditional Mid-Walk Lemon Drizzle Cake

Traditional Mid-Walk Lemon Drizzle Cake

Recipe by Janine Moore
5.0 from 5 votes

This light and moist lemon drizzle loaf cake uses basic ingredients, is easy to put together and most of all is very moreish once you’ve tasted it!

Course: SnacksCuisine: BritishDifficulty: Easy
Servings

8

Trail Slices
Prep time

15

minutes
Cooking time

45

minutes
Calories

280

kcal

Ingredients

  • The Lemon Sponge
  • 175 g Unsalted Butter (softened)

  • 175 g Caster Sugar

  • 175 g Self-Raising Flour

  • 3 Large Eggs

  • 2 Fresh Lemons (finely grated zest only)

  • The Crunchy Crunchy Drizzle
  • 2 Fresh Lemons (squeezed juice only)

  • 100 g Granulated Sugar

Directions

  • Prep: Preheat your oven to 180°C (160°C fan / Gas Mark 4). Line a standard 2lb loaf tin with greaseproof baking paper.
  • Mix Sponge: Beat the softened butter and caster sugar together in a mixing bowl until light, pale, and fluffy. Beat in the eggs one by one, then stir in the finely grated lemon zest.
  • Fold Flour: Gently fold the self-raising flour into the creamed mixture until smooth. Pour into the prepared loaf tin and level the surface with the back of a spoon.
  • Bake: Bake for 40-45 minutes until golden brown, springy to the touch, and a skewer inserted into the centre comes out clean.
  • Glaze & Cool: While the cake is hot, mix the lemon juice and granulated sugar together. Prick the top of the hot cake repeatedly with a skewer, then pour the drizzle evenly over the top. Leave the cake to cool completely in the tin before slicing.
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2 Comments

  1. Janine Moore Adrenaline Romance says:

    Mmmmm! This is nice! We would like to check if we could modify this a bit so we could cook this at the campsite. What setup/modification do you recommend so we can prepare this outdoors (which means no oven)? We bring a small burner and a cookset with us in the mountains.

    1. Janine Moore Janine Moore says:

      Hi there, I’m glad you like the recipe. I’m pretty sure with a little ingenuity, a large enough stew pot with a lid and something to use as a cake mould it is possible to make the cake on a stove. There are a few ideas online if you do a search. Would probably taste great at camp. Take care. Jan

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