The Best Sweet Potato Pound Cake
This sweet potato pound cake is a force to be reckoned with, y’all. A cake that’s so tender, warmly spiced, and loaded with flavor. Every single bite is beaming with buttery richness + sweet potato taste. Topped with an insane brown butter glaze!

I saw a meme the other day that had a funny jab about those who are on #teampumpkin and those who are on #teamsweetpotato. Every holiday season the jokes get funnier and funnier lol. Listen, I ain’t gonna lie; I do love myself some pumpkin-flavored goodies but when it comes to which one ranks higher…I’m screwing pumpkin and marrying sweet potato, all day, everyday. Ha!
Yuh, I said it. There is nothing at all like that good ole sweet potato goodness for me. I love it during the holiday season and all year ’round. Sweet potato is such a rich and respected food item within the Black community, too. Every year I make it a point to add new sweet potato-inspired recipes to my portfolio and omgggggg, y’all. This sweet potato pound cake is insane! Let’s dig in!
…& if you love sweet potato, you cannot miss my sweet potato cinnamon rolls, these sweet potato biscuits, or these sweet potato pancakes, yasss.

The Best Sweet Potato Pound Cake 😍
Friends, can we all collectively gather around and get into this here cake for a hot second?! I promise you that while there are many sweet potato pound cakes out there…ain’t none like this one. This cake is packed with sweet potato flavor, super moist + tender, and topped with a brown butter glaze, amen. If you’re looking for a real delectable treat to make, look no further.
What Is A Pound Cake?
A pound cake is an old fashioned, primarily Southern, dessert recipe that features heavy ingredient ratios. For example: one pound of butter, one pound of sugar, one pound of eggs, and one pound of flour. This is a heftier kind of cake due to the weight of ingredients; a true pound cake will have a traditionally dense, buttery flavor, and silky smooth texture. It’s a real delight.
In addition, a pound cake is typically baked in a loaf pan or a classic bundt cake mold. For these images, I used a 10-inch fluted tube cake pan. Pound cakes are also cakes that usually do not feature frostings and such like other typical cake recipes. Instead they’re often served as is, with a light dusting of confectioners sugar, with fresh fruit/whipped cream, or a glaze/icing.

Ingredients Needed For This Pound Cake
(Note: the full ingredients list, including measurements, is provided in the recipe card directly below.)
- for the cake: flour, baking soda, salt, cinnamon, nutmeg, butter, brown sugar, sweet potato puree, eggs, vanilla/almond extract, and buttermilk.
- brown butter glaze: powdered sugar, butter, milk, vanilla bean paste or vanilla extract.
- optional goodies: pecans, for topping and vanilla ice cream, for serving.
How To Cook Sweet Potatoes
🍠 ⇢ Let’s chat about sweet potato puree: For any of my sweet potato-forward recipes, I exclusively make homemade sweet potato puree. There are 3 ways to cook your sweet potatoes for making this pound cake:
- Boiling: This is the method that I almost always go for. A lot of people think boiling sweet potatoes will create waterlogged potatoes but I never have this issue. Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Then place your peeled and quartered sweet potatoes in. Boil them until fork-tender. Here’s what I do to make sure there is no water-logging issue >> drain the potatoes completely and then add them back into the same pot and mash them up. The residual heat in the pot will cook off/out any remaining moisture, tadow.
- Roasting: A bit more time consuming but great! Preheat the oven to 425°F. Rinse and scrub the potatoes clean and pat dry. Then use a fork to prick them all over a few times to aerate. Rub a touch of oil all over the potatoes. Place them onto a baking sheet lined with foil. Bake them for 35-45 minutes or until fork-tender. Once cooled, slice open and spoon the flesh out.
- Microwaving: Rinse and scrub the potatoes clean and pat dry. Then use a fork to prick them all over a few times to ventilate. Place the sweet potatoes on a microwave-safe plate/paper towel and microwave for 5 minutes, then turn them over and microwave once more for another 5 minutes. Check and make sure that they’re fork-tender. Note: larger potatoes will need to cook for longer, 1 minute more. Be mindful not to overcook!
⇢ Pro-tip: While any cooking method above will do the trick, there’s one more thing. Real, mashed sweet potato will contain their stringy fibers and such. Thus, I always recommend giving it a quick pulse in a food processor to achieve a nice, silky smooth puree! This will make sure your cake has the best texture.
Homemade sweet potato puree is the best for this sweet potato pound cake, peeps! Personally, I find canned sweet potato puree to contain a high amount of moisture/hydration– but of course, this can depend on the brand used.
How To Make Sweet Potato Pound Cake
(Note: please see the recipe card directly below for the complete written instructions.)
- Combine the dry ingredients. In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, baking soda, salt, cinnamon, and nutmeg- then set aside.
- Cream the butter/sugar. Using a mixer, beat the butter and sugar together until light and fluffy.
- Add in the mashed sweet potato and eggs. Empty the mashed sweet potato in and continue beating the mixture, then add in the eggs one at a time.
- Pour in the flavorings. Add the vanilla + almond extract.
- Alternate the flour/buttermilk. Add the flour mixture and buttermilk into the wet ingredients in stages.
- Pour the batter into the pan. Empty the cake batter into the bundt pan.
- Bake away! Bake the cake and then let it cool.
- Prepare the glaze. Make the brown butter glaze.
- Pour the glaze onto the cake. Then allow the glaze to set.
- Serve. Garnish, slice, and serve immediately, enjoy!

The Best Brown Butter Glaze
Sheesh, this sweet potato pound cake is great on its own but when paired with my brown butter glaze, yum! Sweet potato, brown sugar, and butter are besties together and the flavors are unreal. That brown butter nuttiness soaks into the moist sweet potato cake and creates such a dreamy symphony, peeps.
Pound Cake Tips + Tricks
Since pound cakes require a bit more tlc and attention…here are my top tips + tricks to make sure that your pound cake comes out flawlessly ♡
⇢ Grease/butter the pan– You’ll want to generously grease/butter your bundt pan mold very well. Like even when you think you’ve done it good, go back and double grease every single nook and cranny, and crevice. We want a flawless cake release in the end.
⇢ Room temperature ingredients– The butter and eggs within this recipe need to be at room temperature. You need softened butter to cream together with the sugar. And the eggs need to be room temp to blend well within the batter and not coagulate. I like to leave these out on the counter the night before baking or a few hours before.
⇢ Beat the butter/sugar well– You’ll want to cream these ingredients together very well until they achieve a light and fluffy texture, about 3-4 minutes.
⇢ Careful when beating the eggs– Over beating the eggs can cause cracks within the cake’s finished texture. Always beat until each egg just combines and dissolves within the batter.
⇢ Alternating the flour/buttermilk– This method has to do with gluten development. When you add the flour in stages with the buttermilk, the process allows the flour to bind with the fat (butter) and prevents the formation of gluten when the buttermilk is added in >> gluten in a cake is no bueno.
⇢ Let the cake rest– When done baking, allow the cake to cool in the bundt pan for at least 10 minutes before inverting it out onto a plate.

I just know y’all are going to love this sweet potato pound cake, can’t wait to hear what you think. We like serving this one with a big ole scoop of vanilla ice cream. That combined with this luscious cake and brown butter glaze, whew.
More Treats You Will Love
- Double Chocolate Bundt Cake
- Lemon Sweet Rolls
- Mocha Chocolate Cream Pie
- Funfetti Pudding Cookies
- Date Night Chocolate Cake
- Skillet Peach Cobbler
- Easy Apple Crisp
The Best Sweet Potato Pound Cake
- Prep Time: 15 minutes
- Cook Time: 1 hour 10 minutes
- Total Time: 1 hour 25 minutes
- Yield: 12
- Category: Dessert & Sweets
- Method: Baking
- Cuisine: Southern
Description
This sweet potato pound cake is a force to be reckoned with, y’all. A cake that’s so tender, warmly spiced, and loaded with flavor. Every single bite is beaming with buttery richness + sweet potato taste. Topped with an insane brown butter glaze!
Ingredients
For the sweet potato pound cake:
- 3 cups all purpose flour, sifted if lumpy
- 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
- 1 teaspoon kosher salt
- 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
- 1/2 teaspoon ground nutmeg
- 1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, room temperature
- 1 1/2 cups packed light brown sugar
- 1 cup sweet potato purée
- 6 large eggs, room temperature
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1 teaspoon almond extract
- 1 cup whole buttermilk
- chopped pecans, for garnish- optional
- vanilla ice cream, for serving- optional
For the brown butter glaze:
- 1 1/2 cups powdered sugar
- 1/2 cup (1 stick) salted butter
- 3 tablespoons whole milk (or milk of choice)
- 1/2 teaspoon vanilla bean paste or 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
For the sweet potato pound cake:
- Preheat the oven to 325°F and generously spray a 10-cup bundt pan with baking spray or grease with butter and then set aside.
- In a large bowl, combine the flour, baking soda, salt, cinnamon, and nutmeg together. Whisk the dry ingredients super well to combine and then set the bowl aside.
- Using a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment or a handheld electric mixer, beat the butter and sugar together until light and fluffy, about 3-4 minutes. Add in the sweet potato purée and continue beating to fully combine. Add in the eggs, one by one, beating until just combined after each addition. Then add in the vanilla and almond extract.
- Next, add in the flour mixture a little at a time in stages alternating with the buttermilk (ex: a little flour mixture, then a little buttermilk). Begin and end with the flour until all of the flour/buttermilk is combined within the cake batter until just combined- careful not to over-mix.
- Empty the cake batter into the prepared bundt pan and use a spoon to evenly smooth the top of the cake batter nicely.
- Bake the cake for 1 hour and 10 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the cake comes out clean. Allow the cake to cool in the pan for 10 minutes. Then carefully invert the cake onto a wire rack to continue cooling. While the cake cools, prepare the glaze.
For the brown butter glaze:
- In a small saucepan over medium heat, melt the butter. Allow the butter to melt, undisturbed, to brown- the entire process takes about 5-6 minutes. You should hear the butter bubbling as it cooks. Then the butter will turn golden brown and have a nutty aroma with brown bits on the bottom- careful not to walk away as it can go from perfectly browned to burned in seconds! Once achieved, remove the saucepan from heat and set aside to cool down.
- In a large bowl, combine the powdered sugar and lightly cooled brown butter together and stir to combine. Pour in the milk along with the vanilla paste/extract and continue mixing until everything is well incorporated.
For the cake assembly:
- Place the cake onto a large plate or cake vessel (with enough space/height to hold in the glaze to keep from spilling over) and drizzle the glaze over the pound cake. Let the glaze sit on the cake for a few minutes to set.
- Garnish the cake with chopped pecans, if desired. Then slice the sweet potato pound cake into wedges and serve warm with ice cream, if you’d like. Enjoy!
Notes
- For best recipe success, please read the blog post & notes in its entirety with video tutorial before beginning.
- Storing: Keep cake leftovers stored in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 1 week, serve at room temperature.


158 Comments on “The Best Sweet Potato Pound Cake”
First, this recipe is delicious! However, my cake came out with a “gel-like” band at the bottom where I think the sweet potato puree settled. Has this ever happened to you? How do I prevent this in the future? If I can make this cake and NOT have that band at the bottom of the cake this cake would be 5-stars!
Hi Christina- Hmmm, I’ve never encountered that issue with this cake. I’m thinking that your sweet potato puree wasn’t properly blended within the cake batter or maybe a bundt pan issue? But glad you still enjoyed the recipe! 🙂
Wow! Loved this cake. I had some yams to use up and don’t like to eat them. So glad I found this recipe. Cake lovely and moist and the glaze is toe curlingly good!
Is it possible to get the recipe with the measurements in weight? It might just be me but I feel like my baking isn’t as good when I use a recipe that isn’t weighted
Hey there- This is a good note, I’ll consider adding weighted measurements into my recipes! 🙂
Fantastic!! A keeper recipe for sure!
Hi! I made this cake once before. It was very good but also very dense. Do you think if I added a small amount of baking powder, it might turn out a little lighter?
Thank you!
Hi Joy- This is a pound cake, so it’s meant to be more dense than a traditional light and fluffy cake. Baking powder is a leavening agent and doesn’t really have anything to do with the weight of the cake- hope this helps! 🙂
it was hit at the thanksgiving table! everyone loved it and the icing makes 10/10.
This recipe is absolutely AMAZING!!! I am in LOVE!!! So Moist and Delicious, and the Brown Butter Glaze is WOW!!! Yes, Yes, Yes!!!
First time making this and it was pretty easy to make , turned out good but was wondering if the cake suppose to have a pudding texture, that’s how mine turned out?
Hi Ebony- No, the cake should not have a pudding texture, the texture should be more dense and cake-like.
This cake was wonderful and tasted better the next day!
I’ll start this by saying I believe this is the first time I’ve ever reviewed a recipe but I just had to give my compliments and thanks to the lady that gave us this recipe. I ran up on this recipe on accident. I had never thought of sweet potato cake. We are avid sweet potato pie eaters in my house. I made this cake for Thanksgiving 2 days ago and I’m preparing to bake another now. This cake is perfection. This cake is so moist. The browned butter glaze is scrumptious but my FAVORITE part is the addition of the almond extract. Oh my, that takes this cake to another level!! This recipe will definitely be in regular rotation here in Mississippi. Big thanks to butterbeready for sharing this.
Hi Paula- And let me start off by saying wowww, thank you so much for taking the time to drop me this review, it’s appreciated more than you know. This cake is one of my top faves on the site! I’m so glad you + everyone that tried the cake thoroughly enjoyed it 🙂
Great recipe. Haven’t tried mine yet but taking it over for the family to eat on. Looks so good!
This sweet potato pound cake recipe is absolutely divine and a must-try for anyone with a sweet tooth!
Just a hint for removing the stringy fibers…I long ago noticed that the majority of the fibers were located at the ends of the sweet potatoes. Cutting off 1 to 1½ inches on each end will take care of the problem.
Made it because we had a lot of sweet potatoes left over from a meal, but without the frosting. Even the most pickiest of the family loved it.
They asked me to repeat it, which I will be doing soon.
This cake is absolutely delicious! Most definitely one of the best! The flavor!!!! The brown butter glaze just makes it all that! Thank you for sharing this recipe.
Hello! I love this recipe so much. I’ve been craving some sweet potato pound cake since I had it at a restaurant and found this recipe online. The cake came out so good! I was wondering if the cake would be okay if I were to freeze to save some slices longer to share or is the one week refrigerated the only saving option? Thank you!
Hi Alexis- You can freeze cake slices and thaw overnight in the fridge 🙂
I’ve used this recipe before for a Juneteenth celebration. I was fantastic! I’m going to try my hand again but this time I’m using the glaze but with walnuts. I’m
Hi there- Ohh how nice, so glad to hear that you enjoyed the recipe! 🙂
OMG!!This cake is sooo delicious. Just finished it,can’t wait to share with my coworkers. It’s definitely going to be one of those favorites at every event. Thank you so much for your share.
I loved the idea of a sweet potato pound cake but being gluten intollerant I had’nt had much luck with cakes. I followed the recipe substituting the wheat flour for gluten free flour and full fat plain yogurt for milk because I don’t consume milk. I also managed to burn the cake because I didn’t realize that I had to change the cooking time when using a different type of flour. All-in-all I didn’t have much hope for this cake and was resigned to throw it out when my husband urged me to give it a chance.
This was easily one of the best cakes I have ever made. Even with having to cut off the burnt section the cake was moist and flavorful. The cake was perfect. My husband usually won’t touch a cake with eggs in it but he didn’t think twice about it when it came to this cake. This is a wonderful recipe and even with my major substitutions the cake turned out. I had kind of given up hope of ever eating a delicious easy to make cake once cutting gluten from my diet. Thank you so much, this is a recipe that will be passed down through the generations.
Hi! Professional baker of 11 years and I wanted to ask if you would/recommend doing 2 cups AP/1 cup cake flour for a lighter bake? I’m hesitant because of all the moisture but I really want less dense of a pound cake.
Hi there- Yeah, I don’t see why 1 cup of cake flour wouldn’t work here if you’re looking for a lighter crumb, but I haven’t tested it myself so I can’t speak to it for 100% certain…lmk if you try! 🙂
Looking forward to trying your recipe. It looks like you had milk or something white at the bottom of your pan before pouring your batter into. Could you please explain if that was the case?
Thank you,
Audrey Brown
Hi Audrey- So, I sprayed the bundt pan generously with nonstick spray (I use Baker’s Joy to help with a flawless cake release in the end), that’s the stuff you see prior to me adding the cake batter in the pan. Hope this clears any confusion haha! 🙂
Can I substitute all spice for cinnamon?
Hey Vanessa- Sure thing! 🙂
I made a vegan version of this and it did not disappoint. Before becoming vegan I used to make pound cakes all the time. I missed baking since many of my vegan attempts were bad. My ego was hurt! I saw this recipe and knew I had to give it a try for the holiday, but keep it vegan. The cake did not rise as high as yours but it is moist and flavorful.
I looked at some of your other recipes and will make them for my non-vegan family members. Thanks and have a great holiday season!
Hi Missy- Oh wow, how cool! Love to hear how you made the recipe your own alla vegan! Happy holidays! 🙂
love this recipe!!! ive made it for the past couple years and it’s a staple for me. quick question, if the cake cracks at the top do you know what that may indicate? ive tried lowering the temp in my oven some but it always cracks and ends up giving thecake like a strange height when you flip it, lol
Hi Tamia- Cake cracks on top can occur from oven temperature, over-mixing the batter, and also the type of pan you used. Helpful suggestions I recommend to help cakes with minimal to no cracking: try baking on a lower rack, grease the bundt pan super well, and mix the batter until just combined. Hope this helps! 🙂