In my mathematics course in Uni. (I'm a physics student) my prof. gave us the following exercise: to express the Hurwitz Zeta function $\zeta(2k+1,\frac{1}{4})$ with $k=1,2,3,\dots$ in terms of the Riemann zeta function. He says there is a closed form for this, something like $\zeta(2k+1,\frac{1}{4})=C(k)\zeta(2k+1)$. With $C(k)$ some elementary function of $k$.
After some basic calculations I found the following
$\zeta(2k+1,\frac{1}{4})=2^{2k+1}(2^{2k+1}-1)\zeta(2k+1)-\zeta(2k+1,\frac{3}{4})$
but I don't know what to do about $\zeta(2k+1,\frac{3}{4})$. Trying the same method on this function, I stumble upon $\zeta(2k+1,\frac{1}{8})$. And I'm going in a loop getting nothing like my prof. said. Also I've looked through books and articles on the Hurwitz function and found nothing.
It can't be written as a scaled up version of the zeta function by elementary functions, however $$\zeta(2k+1,\frac{1}{4})=2^{2k}(2^{2k+1}-1)\zeta(2k+1)+\frac{(-4)^kE_{2k}\pi^{2k+1}}{2(2k)!}$$
Where $E_k$ are euler numbers, with the first few
$E_0=1$
$E_2=-1$
$E_4=5$
$E_6=-61$