Upside Down Plum Cake
I’m plum crazy about this Upside Down Plum Cake. It’s plum delicious. Plum pretty, too. The recipe is a riff on one that my sister-in-law, pastry chef, Alison Sullivan, developed for a story I wrote for the San Jose Mercury News. I’ve made it half a dozen times since. The original is nothing short of plum perfect.
Wholesome Upside Down Plum Cake
I pulled out the recipe a few weeks ago when a bundle of juicy plums showed up in my CSA box. When I started gathering ingredients, I found myself looking at the cake with a different set of eyes. It had more sugar and butter than I remembered and none of the whole grain flours which I’ve grown accustomed to using. So I tinkered, scaling back the sugar and butter, using whole grain flour, swapping almond meal for some of the wheat flour, and simplifying the method. All of this adds up to an upside down plum cake that may not be as rich and buttery as the original, yet it remains undeniably delicious and lovely to look at.
Brown sugar-sweetened plums crown a tender moist cake that can stand on its own, but is excellent served with a spoonful of vanilla frozen yogurt, ice cream, or whipped cream. Even better, in my opinion, is to eat it Day Two for breakfast along with a side of plain Greek yogurt (and perhaps a side of your morning coffee).
How to Make Upside Down Plum Cake
If you’ve never attempted an upside down cake, no need for intimidation. Here are a few tips:
- Halve the plums with a paring knife and pop out the pits. If they’re a little stubborn, use the tip of your knife to cut them out.
- Warm the butter and brown sugar right in the cake pan set directly on the stove top until they melt together.
- Nestle the plum halves cut-side-down right into the brown sugar/butter, covering the surface of the pan. The number of plums will vary based on their size, but it should look something like this.
Or follow my fine example and don’t wait. Not one single second. You have my permission.
(P.P.S. Special thanks to my friend Pam Rupright, an excellent baker who tested this recipe and helped make it a better one).
If you like this wholesome summer cake, you make like:
Summer Fruit Crisp with Date Walnut Topping
Wild Blueberry Tart with GF Crust
Double Chocolate Zucchini Cupcakes/Muffins
Upside Down Plum Cake
Ingredients
- 6 to 8 plums, number depends on size
- 1/4 cup brown sugar
- 8 tablespoons unsalted butter, softened to room temperature, divided
- 1 cup whole-wheat pastry flour
- 1/2 cup almond flour
- 2 teaspoons baking powder
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 3/4 cup sugar
- 2 eggs
- 1 cup buttermilk
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
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Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
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Use a paring knife to cut the plums in half through the center, twist and separate. Remove the pits. If the pits don't come out with ease, use your paring knife to cut them out. Set aside.
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Sprinkle the brown sugar to cover the bottom of a 9-inch cake pan. Dot 2 tablespoons of the butter over the brown sugar. Set the pan directly on a burner of your stove over low heat. Allow the butter and sugar to melt together, swirling occasionally so nothing burns. You want the butter/sugar mixture distributed evenly over the bottom of the pan. Use a spatula to help spread the mixture, if needed.
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Place the plums cut-side-down into the cake pan so the fruits are touching. Start with the outside perimeter of that pan and work your way to the center. Set aside.
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Put the whole-wheat pastry flour, almond flour, baking powder, and salt in a medium bowl. Stir with a fork and set aside.
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Use an electric mixer to cream the butter and sugar together in a large bowl until smooth. Add the eggs and mix until thoroughly blended. Add the buttermilk and vanilla and mix again. If the batter is a little curdled looking, don't worry.
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Add the flour mixture and to the butter/sugar/egg mixture and mix together into a creamy, smooth batter.
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Pour the batter over the plums. Set in the oven with a baking sheet beneath to catch any plum juices that may spill over.
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Bake until a toothpick inserted into the cake comes clean, about 45 to 50 minutes.
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Remove from oven and cool completely in the pan, at least an hour.
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To remove cake, set a plate large enough to cover the pan on top. Flip the plate over so the cake inverts onto it. Lift off the cake pan.
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Serve with lightly sweetened whipped cream or Greek yogurt.
Recipe Notes
Much gratitude to Alison Sullivan on whose Upside Down Pluot Cake this one is adapted.
Comments
07.01.2014 at8:33 AM #
Pam H
looks amazing!
07.01.2014 at8:33 AM #
Katie Morford
Thanks….yummy, too!
07.01.2014 at3:22 PM #
Pam R
Thanks for the testing opportunity! Such a delicious cake, we will keep taste testing it for years to come.
07.01.2014 at3:22 PM #
Katie Morford
Appreciate the help and the endorsement!
07.13.2014 at9:02 AM #
Kate @ ¡Hola! Jalapeño
Oh Katie this is so beautiful! I can’t get enough of all this gorgeous produce!
07.13.2014 at9:02 AM #
Katie Morford
Me too! I think plums get overlooked sometimes for baking and jam and they are so delicious when cooked.
05.15.2015 at6:05 PM #
John
what temperature for the oven?
05.15.2015 at6:05 PM #
Katie Morford
350 degrees F. Just added it to the recipe and thank you for bringing that to my attention!
06.09.2015 at8:28 AM #
liz - Meal Makeover Mom
I adore plums. Jealous that you got them in your CSA basket. Here in New England, we don’t have local stone fruit yet. Can’t wait! This cake is too pretty not to pin 🙂
06.09.2015 at8:28 AM #
Katie Morford
We are spoiled with early EVERYTHING in California. But we don’t get beach plums 🙂
06.09.2015 at11:36 AM #
Rebecca @ Strength and Sunshine
I haven’t gotten my hands on any plums yet this season, but my o my, I will 😉
06.09.2015 at11:36 AM #
Katie Morford
It’s my favorite way to cook with plums.
06.09.2015 at4:53 PM #
Anne|Craving Something Healthy
SO pretty! I haven’t had any plums yet, anxiously awaiting their arrival! Pinned and can’t wait to try this 🙂
06.09.2015 at4:53 PM #
Katie Morford
Oh good. Thanks Anne.
09.07.2017 at5:55 AM #
Maria Krapf
Hi I am going to try this receipe. Just one point of concern. You mentioned eggs seperated does that mean you beat the egg yolks with butter and towards the end beat the whites and fold lastly into the dough, thanks
09.07.2017 at5:55 AM #
Katie Morford
Hi Maria,
My sister-in-law’s recipe, from which this is adapted, had you separate the eggs and fold in the whites as the last step. I have simplified the method so the eggs go in together. I didn’t realize the recipe still reflected the former method. Thanks for bringing it to my attention!