Bringing back the retro classic! You’ll love this Pineapple Upside Down Cake with the sticky caramelised edges on the pineapple. The ultra-moist, tender vanilla cake is studded with pineapple pieces and infused with pineapple juice. You can’t help but smile at the sight of this cheerful-looking cake. Right? 🙂
Pineapple Upside Down Cake
“Everything is brown!“, I observed, looking at the latest dessert recipes I’ve shared. “Chocolate, caramel, fruit cake – brown, brown, brown. Give me some COLOUR!”
And therein lies the exact reason I chose to share this cake today. A girl needs a splash of colour in her life every now and then, despite her commitment to all things chocolate.
And this girl needs little encouragement to bring retro fun into her life! Disco balls and flares, perms and … Apricot Chicken?? Hmm, I might pass on the Apricot Chicken!
Pineapple Upside Down Cake – What it tastes like
Pineapple Upside Down Cakes were all the rage from the 60’s right through the 80’s. Though as far as Aussies are concerned, they never went out of fashion. Rarely a summer would go by without one making an appearance at a barbie at some stage! (That’s a barbecue to you non-Aussies!)
“Upside Down” refers to the way the cake is made. Like a French tarte tatin, the cake is assembled and baked with fruit at the bottom and the batter on top. To turn it out, you flip the cake upside down, leaving you with the glistening, caramel-napped fruit layer exposed and the cake underneath it – Upside Down Cake!
The cake part is a vanilla cake. You’ll see versions that are more on the pudding-like side (ie. quite dense and wet like syrup-soaked cakes) and others that are quite dry sponge cakes. Mine lies squarely in the middle. It’s soft and fluffy, like my classic Vanilla Cake (except this is faster to make), but it is a bit more moist than traditional cakes because of the juices from the pineapple (and we are all for those juices!).
As for that pineapple topping? Think juicy pineapple pieces with caramelised edges, studded with sweet candied cherries. It is literally the crowning glory of this cake!
What you need for Pineapple Upside Down Cake
Pineapple Cherry Topping
Here’s what you need for the signature pineapple-and-cherry-studded topping:
Pineapple slices in JUICE – Be sure to get canned pineapple slices in juice rather than syrup. Syrup is too sweet for our needs. Also, we use some of the juice for the batter – and we save the rest for cocktails!
The recipe calls for 600g/20oz of canned pineapple. Those of you in Australia will need 1 large can (425g) and 1 small can (225g) which together totals 650g. This is more pineapple than you need to cover the surface. So chop up leftovers and toss them into the batter!
Maraschino cherries (image below) – These are preserved, sweetened cherries commonly used as a cocktail garnish, such as for a Tequila Sunrise, and desserts like Black Forest Cake. True maraschino cherries are marinated in a cherry liqueur called maraschino – hence the name. However these are expensive and hard to source, so mostly you’ll find cheaper substitutes that don’t use real maraschino. These are totally fine and actually better here for their vivid colour! Find it at liquor stores and some grocery stores, such as Harris Farms in Sydney. Substitute with glacé cherries; and
Butter and brown sugar – Together, these form the shiny caramel coating on the top of the cake.
Cake Batter
Here’s what you need for the cake batter:
Flour – Just plain/all-purpose flour;
Sour cream – This is a neat baker’s trick to thicken the batter without adding more flour, keeping the crumb of the cake nice and moist. We need a thick batter for this cake so it doesn’t leak under the pineapple slices which would tarnish the look of the surface!
Sugar – White sugar, which makes a nice light coloured cake crumb;
Unsalted butter – Softened to room temperature (18°C/64°F). This is the temperature at which butter is pliable and can be beaten (creamed) so it’s nice and fluffy, which in turn means a fluffy cake.
If the butter is so soft that when you touch it, you end up with a thick slick of grease on your fingers, it is too soft. This will likely lead to a greasy cake, or one that does not rise as much as it should. If your butter is >20°C/68°F, I wouldn’t use it for a cake. Refrigerate to chill before using;
Large eggs, at room temperature – “Large eggs” are 55-60g / 2oz each, which an industry standard. Large eggs are sold in cartoons labelled as such.
It’s important to ensure the eggs are at room temperature before using in cakes to ensure they incorporate fully. Fridge-cold eggs added into a batter with butter in it can cause the butter to solidify – spelling disaster!
What is an egg at room temperature? Just take it out 30 minutes prior to using. As long as the egg is not fridge-cold when you hold it, it’s fine. There is more margin for error with eggs than there is with butter;
Baking soda AND baking powder – I always try to avoid the need for using both but sometimes it’s inevitable! Baking soda is like baking powder on steroids, it is 3x stronger. When combined with an ingredient with even a bit of acid in it (sour cream in this case), you get a great lift boost when the cake goes in the oven. This cake benefits from that extra boost because the batter is quite heavy. So unfortunately, we need both!
Milk – Any fat % is fine here, it’s not a major ingredient; and
Vanilla extract – This adds better flavour than vanilla essence, but essence is fine to use too.
How to make Pineapple Upside Down Cake
I feel like there’s a lot of process step photos below, which is quite misleading given how straightforward the recipe is. It’s not hard, I promise. 🙂
Part 1: Prepare pineapple topping
Pineapple juice for batter – Measure out 1/4 cup pineapple juice and set aside for the batter. Reserve the remaining juice for smoothies or cocktails!
Pat fruit dry – Pat the pineapple slices and cherries dry;
Melted butter – Pour melted butter in the cake pan and brush it over the bottom and sides;
Sugar – Sprinkle the brown sugar around the base. No need to be too even here, the caramel will just move around once melted;
Arrange pineapple slices – Cover base with pineapple slices. You can arrange as depicted, using one whole ring surrounded by halves (giving most coverage), or you can just use whole rings. Decorate with cherries, either just in the pineapple ring holes (as depicted), or with extra ones filling gaps between the pineapple. Press pineapple and cherries down firmly. This reduces the amount of caramel that adheres to the final presentation surface when baking so you get better vibrant yellow and red colour pops (that are not tarnished by caramel); and
Chop leftover pineapple – We’re going toss these into the batter. Note: you may not have leftover pineapple, it depends on the size of your can(s)!
Part 2: The batter
Dry ingredients – Whisk them in a bowl;
Wet ingredients – Whisk the milk, sour cream and pineapple juice in a separate bowl;
Cream butter and sugar – Then in a third (and I promise, last!) bowl, beat the softened butter and sugar for 2 minutes until it’s light and fluffy;
Add flour in 3 parts – Use a rubber spatula to fold the flour through rather than an electric mixer. This will ensure you don’t over-mix the batter which leads to a tough cake crumb;
Alternate with Milk Mixture (Wet ingredients mix) – Between each addition of the Flour Mixture, add the Milk Mixture in 2 parts. So: 1/3 flour, mix, 1/2 milk, mix, 1/3 flour, mix, 1/2 milk, mix, 1/3 flour mix. This might seem tedious to you at the time, but just wait until you see how soft the cake comes out!
Stir through pineapple pieces – Do this right at the end. Stir just to disperse the pineapple through.
Part 3: Baking
Scrape batter into cake pan over the pineapple;
Spread to level surface;
Bake uncovered for 30 minutes at 180°C/350°F (160°C fan);
Cover with foil, then bake for a further 15 minutes;
Check cake is cooked – Remove foil and check to ensure the cake is cooked by inserting a toothpick into the centre. It should come out with just crumbs on it, no raw batter!
Part 4: How to turn out Pineapple Upside Down Cake
There is nothing to fear with this step! And most importantly, I have NEVER had problems with the pineapple sticking to the cake pan – and as you can see, I do not use a non-stick pan!
Cover cake pan with a plate or serving platter;
Flip with confidence – now is not the time to hesitate! 😂
Lift the cake pan off slowly and … voila!
PRO TIP: If, when lifting off the inverted cake pan (slowly!), you can tell that the base is sticking, tap the base gently and/or shake gently. This will help loosen it. That said, with the amount of butter used in the base to make the caramel “sauce” that soaks into the pineapple topping, it is highly improbable that you’ll encounter sticking issues. But stranger things have happened in life!
This is not a very tall cake. It stands around 4cm/ 1.6″ tall using a 23cm/9″ cake pan. A smaller cake pan would make it stand taller but it would take too long for the middle of the cake to cook before the caramel on the base becomes too brown, I think.
Also, at this height, you have a nice ratio of cake to caramelised pineapple.
Pineapple Upside Down Cake will keep for 5 days or so in the fridge. The crumb will get a bit more soaked with those caramel pineapple juices as it sits. But nobody complains, that’s for sure! – Nagi x
PS. This is what I was listening to as I was typing up this post. Just in case you also want to get into the retro spirit. 👯♂️
Watch how to make it
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Pineapple Upside Down Cake
Ingredients
Topping:
- 565g/ 20 oz canned pineapple slices in juice (not in syrup, Note 1)
- 12 – 18+ maraschino cherries (Note 2)
- 60g/ 4 tbsp unsalted butter , melted
- 1/2 cup brown sugar
CAKE:
- 1 1/2 cups flour
- 1 tsp baking powder
- 1/4 tsp baking soda (sub 1 tsp baking powder)
- 1/4 tsp salt
- 1/3 cup milk , full or low-fat
- 1/4 cup pineapple juice , reserved from can (under Topping ingredients)
- 1/4 cup sour cream , full fat (sub plain yogurt)
- 1 tsp vanilla extract (or essence)
- 115g/ 1 stick butter , unsalted, softened (to 18C/64F, Note 3)
- 3/4 cup white sugar
- 2 large eggs , at room temperature (Note 4)
- Any leftover pineapple , chopped (Note 1)
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 180°C/350°F (160°C fan).
Pineapple decorative top:
- Dry fruits: Line a tray with paper towels or a tea towel, then place pineapple and cherries on. Pat dry with paper towels.
- Butter: Pour melted butter into a 23cm/9" cake pan at least 5cm/2" deep. (Not springform, as they'll leak.) Brush butter up the sides.
- Brown sugar: Sprinkle sugar over the base, roughly spreading it out (use the brush).
- Arrange pineapple: Place one pineapple ring in the centre, then surround with either halved pineapple rings (as pictured), or whole ones.
- Decorate with cherries as desired. Most people just put them in the middle of the pineapple rings.
- Press cherries and pineapples down firmly so they are in direct contact with the base of the cake pan – so you get vibrant red and yellow colour pops at the end, not tarnished by caramel. (Note 5)
Batter:
- Flour Mixture: Whisk flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt in a bowl.
- Milk Mixture: Whisk milk, sour cream, pineapple juice and vanilla in a 2nd bowl.
- Cream butter and sugar: In a third (final!) bowl, beat the butter and sugar for 2 minutes on speed 7 (handheld mixer) until fluffy.
- Eggs: Add eggs one at a time, beating for 20 seconds in between.
- Add Flour Mixture then Milk Mixture, alternating: Add 1/3 of the Flour Mixture, then mix in using a rubber spatula. Add 1/2 the Milk Mixture, mix in. Add half the remaining Flour Mixture, mix. Add all the remaining Milk Mixture, mix. Then mix in the last of the Flour Mixture. Stir in the leftover pineapple pieces.
- Fill pan: Spread batter over pineapple layer, smooth and level the surface.
- Bake: Bake for 30 minutes. Remove, loosely cover with foil, then bake for a further 15 minutes until a toothpick inserted into the centre comes out clean.
Turning out cake:
- Cool 20 minutes: Remove cake from oven and leave inside pan to cool for 20 minutes.
- Flip! Run a butter knife around the inner edge of the cake pan. Put a plate or serving platter over the cake, then flip. Tap base / shake pan gently then lift slowly. Voila!
- Cool completely before serving.
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
More classic cakes
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Joyce says
Thank you for this recipe, it was my first attempt to make one and it turned out beautifully, I am so happy.
Nagi says
I am happy that you enjoyed it Joyce! N x
Sasha says
This is an amazing cake!! Step by step as written and it came out perfect! 4 of us ate the whole thing 😁 after dinner (we are regular size people)
Nagi says
😂😂😂!! N x
Serafina says
are you using plain flour?
Katy Arthur says
This is without a doubt the BEST pineapple upside down cake I have ever had! Absolutely delicious!
Karen says
Absolutely fabulous tasting cake – best ever! Can’t wait to try the Lemon Cake recipe nest.
Kelly Walker says
Going to give this a try. Not sure what size cake pan? This the problem I find with some recipes online, size matter!! LOL! Looks DELICIOUS!!
Sasha says
23 cm
Emmanuel Okafor says
I like it very well.main looking at the outcome of it from the oven, it’s really delicious.i will like to have your recent catalogue in my email please
Dhilanee says
Can you please give measurements for vanilla cake for 10 inch round cake tin please. I need to do a cake by next week and love using your recipes. The Thai chilli chicken was a hit with the younger generation of kids. Thank you
Liz D says
I had bought a couple of pineapples around the new year, as had my daughter. So I decided to make your cake because of the ratings, and it was a hit. Because I was using fresh pineapple instead of tinned, I ‘sautéed’ it with the butter & brown sugar in the oven for about 10 minutes before adding the cherries & batter. It produced some juice, which I gently stirred into the batter before putting the dish into the oven.
JG says
I made this recipe on a whim at 10pm because I had a tin of pineapple slices and wanted something sweet after dinner. Oh my goodness! So delicious and easy to make. I swapped half of the sugar with stevia and used half the brown sugar, and it was still delicious. The first time my upside down came out of the pan without issue. Amazing! The whole family loved it.
Charlotte says
This was 1st time using this recipe and my boyfriend loved it!!!
Para says
I followed the recipe to make a wonderful cake. Additionally, I added a handful of roasted cashew nuts to the batter. I shared the cake with my dinner guests who were all very impressed. Thank you Nagi.
Sandi Onaran says
I bought a whole pineapple so I thought I would make this.
Since I have a lot of fresh cranberries I grew here at the beach in FL.. jk.. I thought I would use those instead of the cherries. I love cranberries. I think it should be fine. I will let you know. Nagi.. thanks for the great tips too. I am not much of a cake baker.. carrot cake is really the only cake I made when kids were growing up. Your tips will come in handy. I am craving sweets after being very ill for months and losing a lot of weight. Happy holidays to all.
Nagi says
I hope that you are feeling better!! Good luck with the baking! N x
Michelle says
Hi Nagi. I want to make this for our Christmas celebration, my only problem is that one of my sons cannot tolerate gluten. Can I make this cake with special gluten free flour and will it taste the same?
Nagi says
HI Michelle – I really don’t know the answer to that without testing it. G/f flour varies from brand to brand and does not work the same as all purpose or plain flour. Maybe consider a cake that is already g/f like my orange cake: https://www.recipetineats.com/flourless-orange-cake/#wprm-recipe-container-51724 Happy holidays! N x
Michelle says
Hi Nagi. First of all I wish you, Dover and your whole family all the best for this year.
Nagi I just want to let you know that I made both cakes, the Orange cake and the Pineapple Upsidedown cake and all I can tell you is that there were no leftovers. Everybody loved the cakes so much. Thank you very much for advising me. I am looking forward to new recipes to try out.
Michelle says
Thank you so much for your reply Nagi. I will definitely be making the orange cake that you suggested. Everything that I am cooking for Christmas are your recipes, they are always delicious and everyone loves them. Thank you so much Nagi and Happy Holidays for you and your family too 🧑🏻🎄🎄
Angela says
Absolute winner! I/m not a baker and I made this the day before our family Christmas dinner and it was so so good!
My husband took the leftovers to work the following day and the next day someone asked if there was more cake coming? Nagi – you are my favourite.
Sandi Onaran says
Hi all. I am short on space and pans. Can I make this in a largish glass pie pan? I have an abundance of fresh pinepple cored so I want to use it up. Will this work? Looks delicious. Thanks
Joe says
When do you add eggs??
Nagi says
In step 4 of the batter section of the recipe! N x
Nivedita says
Hi Nagi! I am planning to make this cake. After it’s baked, do I turn it out immediately or should I let it rest in the pan for a few minutes? If yes, how long should I let it rest before turning it out? Thanks!
Diane says
I’ve been baking from scratch for 50 years. I enjoy recipes that give easily understandable instructions. Your recipe is nicely detailed and SO fun. I love your helpful comments. I can picture you smiling as you wrote it. I’ll be looking for more of you recipes. Thank you.
Kristy says
Love this recipe! Cooked it for my family and they loved it! I also did single ones in muffin tins and just turned heat up to 375 and cooked for 15 min. Turned out great!
I just made it again tonight but made kind of a faux pas. I let it stand in pan for 20 min and then flipped it. I then covered with a metal bowl. When I came back a few hour later, there was a bunch of water condensating in the bowl from the heat (obvious in hindsight). The cake looks okay but now I’m worried that I may have made it soggy? Or do you think it’ll be fine with this type of cake?
Thanks for a great recipe!
Kristy
Diane says
Nagi, first I would like to say that I hope that your time off working on your cookbook has been productive. Second, I’ve made this pineapple upside down cake numerous times and by far is the best dessert that I’ve ever made. It is spot on as written. I love making my own cake instead of using boxed cake mixes. It’s just so much better. This time I tried making them in a jumbo muffin pan as one other reader had commented. Just an update…just as fantastic. I prepped each jumbo muffin tin just as you would normally do for the cake. I put 1/3 cup of the cake batter in each tin and baked for 25 minutes. They turned out perfect! And they were soooooo cute looking. Each guest got an individual pineapple upside down cake. It was a big hit. Thank you once again for making me like a way better cook than I actually am.
Luana Maria Rathman says
Best PUDCake recipe I have ever tried. Truly Top Shelf’.