After making the plum ice cream in my last post, I wanted to make another plum dessert while plums were still in season. At some point, I came across this post at Red Star to Lone Star for plum upside-down cake, and I knew I had to make it!
So I started by slicing my ripe juicy plums into thin wedges. Then I made the brown sugar caramel, and poured it into the bottom of my 9-inch pan.
Next I arranged my plum slices in a pretty pattern on top of the caramel. I had two different types of plums, so I arranged the darker ones on the outside, and the lighter ones in the middle.
Then I whipped up the simple cake batter according to the recipe, except I used cinnamon instead of cardamom. After pouring the cake batter on top the plum slices (I forgot to take a picture of this, doh!), I baked it for about an hour. By this time the whole house smelled of delicious cake and cinnamon!
After letting the cake cool for about half an hour, I inverted it onto my cake stand, and removed the cake pan.
The pattern from the plums turned out beautiful! And the cake was delicious! Caramelized plums, moist fluffy cake, and a hint of cinnamon. Best when eaten warm. :)
Later that week, I made another upside-down cake using the same recipe, except I used nectarines instead of plums, and that cake turned out even better! Stay tuned for the post!
That's a seriously beautiful cake! Bravo!
ReplyDeletehi erin! thank you! :)
DeleteThis cake looks amazing - what a beautiful pattern. The gorgeous photo of the brown sugar caramel is definitely making me crave something sweet!
ReplyDeletethanks @Lucy! i love hearing that my food photos make people crave things! ;)
DeleteOh my goodness, what a gorgeous cake!! It is simply stunning. BTW, "brown sugar caramel" is really butterscotch. Weird, huh? White sugar makes caramel, brown sugar makes butterscotch.
ReplyDeletethanks @Tina ! and thanks for the info on caramel vs butterscotch, good to know! :)
DeleteMichele, a super addition to our plum collection - thank you. Hope you have a lovely weekend.
ReplyDeletewhat if I were to make a plum and nectarine upside down cake...would the flavors compliment each other?
ReplyDelete@Maggie - that sounds like it'd be delicious! let me know how it turns out! :)
DeleteWhat kind of plum is this?
ReplyDelete