Mile High Orange Jell-O Pound Cake

Mile High Orange Jell-O Pound Cake

This recipe started out as an experiment to see if you could swap all the sugar in a pound cake recipe for Jell-O (which is almost 90% sugar) in order to add flavor and color. It was a success! The texture is soft and a bit chewier and stickier than normal but the flavor is wonderful!

1 pound (4 sticks) butter, room temperature
27 oz orange Jell-O (4 family size boxes plus one regular box), not sugar-free
1 tablespoon vanilla extract
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
8 large eggs, room temperature
4 1/2 cups cake flour or White Lily All Purpose Flour
1 1/3 cup half and half, room temperature

Preheat oven to 300°F. Prepare Old Country Kitchenware square tube pan by brushing with pan coat (if using two piece pan, fit with a parchment paper square between the two pieces first). Beat butter and Jell-O in the bowl of a stand mixer until pale, light and sticks to the bowl (about 6 minutes at medium speed). Add extract, baking powder, salt, and 1/2 cup flour, beat until combined. With the mixer running on low, add one egg at a time, beating well after each addition until fully incorporated. Alternate beating in the flour until it just disappears and drizzling in half and half with the mixer running on low, beginning and ending with flour. Scrape the bottom and sides of the bowl and beat for another 10 seconds. Pour batter into prepared tube pan and gently shake to settle the batter. Place on middle rack of oven with a baking sheet on the rack below it to catch any drips. Bake 2 hours or until a skewer inserted into the cake comes out clean. Let cool until the pan is comfortable enough to handle. (If using two-piece pan, place it over a metal can and press down to remove the outer piece first). Transfer the cake to a wire rack in two steps: first, turn the cake up on its side, then invert fully. Let cool completely.

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7 comments

Janice, I’m not sure as I haven’t tried it! I’d fill the loaf pans only 2/3 of the way though

Old Country Kitchenware

If I decide to make this not in my tube pan but loaf pans would it work good and how many loaf pans would I need?
I figured maybe I could divide the batter in half and put the lemon jello in half and blue jello in the other half of the batter.
What do you think would that work? I’m just wondering if i put half in loaf pans would I want 4 loaf pans 2 for each flavor jello. I don’t know how much this cake rises.

Janice Suchanek

That sounds like a great plan! Be sure to share photos when you make it!

Old Country Kitchenware

I wanted to make it for tailgating in the U of M Michigan colors. So I was thinking of cutting in half the recipe and making in smaller tube pan to make one in lemon jello and one in a blue jello.

Janice Suchanek

Janice, this recipe will work in any 18 cup tube pan but works best in our square tube pan (it’s available on our website here at oldcountrykitchenware.com). if yours is smaller you can scale this recipe down, or make a bundt pan plus a loaf! for a 12 cup pan you’d reduce the recipe by 1/4. bake times will be different in different pans

Old Country Kitchenware

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