In my experience, caching application objects has a considerable amount of benefits over caching raw query results.
If your application is already structured with a DAO layer which separates business logic from database access, it is quite easy to add a tiny caching layer on top of your DAOs using the Cache Proxy pattern (that is, providing an entity which implements the same interface of your DAO, handles the storage/retrieval from cache and delegates database access to the actual target entity if needed).
This approach leads to a series of key considerations in the design of the application:
there is a clear separation of responsibilities between the database access logic, the caching layer and the business logic
all details of the caching logic (key generation, storage policies and expiration management) are encapsulated in a separate entity
you may choose to enable caching facilities selectively, e.g. only for some methods/DAOs
the DAO and the Cache Proxy share the same interface, e.g. it is easy to switch cache on/off also at runtime
you can test separately the DAO and the Cache Proxy
Being more practical, caching your application objects implies:
when storing or retrieving objects you pay a single serialization/deserialization overhead, while when retrieving query results you still need to build your objects
the complexity of your object (almost) doesn't matter (e.g. the Cache Proxy ignores that the DAO created the object with 3 separate queries on 2 different data sources)
generating the cache key can be tricky in some cases, while hashing the query string (which you don't know in the Cache Proxy) is much easier
the serialized object in cache (a json string, for example) can be read and used from other applications too (undesirable, but sometimes needed)
chances are that your database already implements a complex and fast cache query mechanism, which you may want to tune for your needs instead of building another layer on top of it
You can build a caching layer for your DAOs on your own. If your application is already based on frameworks such as Spring, the caching support may be already built-in and you just need to setup proper configuration (although not always as flexible as you want).
Finally, I can't say using a query cache has particular disvantages over a well thought objects cache. Nevertheless, it should make me wonder the fact that a popular framework such as Hibernate comes with the query cache disabled by default and the requirement to selectively enable it on individual queries.