Peach Upside-Down Cake

Updated August 30, 2022

Media 1 of 1
Total Time
1 hour, plus cooling
Rating
4(1,236)
Comments
Read comments

Upside-down cakes are easy, adaptable and beautiful no matter what kind of fruit you use. This one calls for any kind of summer stone fruit — peaches, apricots, nectarines, plums — whatever looks ripe and juicy. Caramelizing the brown sugar in a skillet before adding the fruit gives it all a particularly deep, complex flavor. Because of the moisture in the topping, you’ll need to bake this cake a little longer than other, similar butter cakes. Underbaked cake will be soggy and apt to fall apart, but an ideal result will have a well-browned surface and dark, slightly crunchy edges.

Featured in: Take Your Cakes to the Upside Down

  • or to save this recipe.

  • Subscriber benefit: Give recipes to anyone

    As a subscriber, you have 10 gift recipes to give each month. Anyone can view them - even nonsubscribers. Learn more.

  • Share this recipe

  • Print this recipe

    or to print this recipe.

Advertisement


Ingredients

Yield:1 (10-inch) cake

FOR THE FRUIT TOPPING

  • 4 tablespoons/56 grams unsalted butter

  • ⅓ cup/71 grams light brown sugar

  • 1 ½ teaspoons freshly squeezed lemon juice (see Tip)

  • ¼ teaspoon fine sea salt

  • 3 cups sliced ripe but firm peaches, or use 3 cups sliced nectarines, plums or apricots (about 1 ¼ pounds before pitting)

FOR THE CAKE

  • ½ cup unsalted butter, melted and cooled, plus more for greasing the pan

  • 1 cup/200 grams granulated sugar

  • 1 tablespoon vanilla extract

  • 1 teaspoon finely grated lemon zest

  • 2 large eggs, at room temperature

  • ½ cup/118 milliliters sour cream or plain whole-milk yogurt

  • 1 ½ teaspoons baking powder

  • ¾ teaspoon fine sea salt

  • ¼ teaspoon baking soda

  • 1 ½ cups/195 grams all-purpose flour

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Heat oven to 350 degrees.

  2. Step 2

    Make the topping: In an oven-safe 10-inch skillet, melt butter over medium heat. Add the brown sugar, lemon juice and salt, and whisk until the brown sugar melts, 1 to 2 minutes.

  3. Step 3

    Let cook, whisking constantly, until the mixture starts to smell like caramel and darkens slightly, about 1 minute longer. (Don’t walk away or the mixture may burn.) The mixture will clump and separate, but that’s OK.

  4. Step 4

    Add fruit, gently tossing to coat with the caramel. Remove from the heat and arrange fruit into an even layer on the bottom of the skillet. Ignore any sugar clumps; they will dissolve during baking.

  5. Step 5

    Make the cake: In a large bowl, whisk together the melted butter, sugar, vanilla and lemon zest until thoroughly combined. Whisk in eggs, one at a time. Add sour cream and whisk until well mixed. Sprinkle in baking powder, salt and baking soda into the batter, one at a time, whisking vigorously after each addition.

  6. Step 6

    Using a rubber spatula, gently fold in flour until just incorporated. The mixture will be lumpy, but that’s OK. Don’t overmix. Scrape batter into the skillet over the fruit and spread evenly.

  7. Step 7

    Bake until surface is deeply browned all over (with darker brown edges) and the fruit is lightly bubbling around the sides of the skillet, about 35 to 45 minutes, rotating halfway through. A toothpick inserted into cake will come out clean.

  8. Step 8

    Once the cake is out of the oven, immediately run a butter knife or offset spatula around the edge of the skillet. Let sit for 10 to 15 minutes to cool slightly. Carefully invert cake into serving platter. If some fruit sticks to bottom of skillet, gently remove using offset spatula or knife and place back onto cake. Let cake cool until the fruit topping sets, at least 30 minutes to 1 hour, before serving. Cake is best served on the day it is baked.

Tip
  • Since you’ll need the lemon juice for the topping and the grated zest for the cake, it’s best to zest the lemon before you cut it and juice it.

Private Notes

Leave a Private Comment on this recipe and see it here.

Ratings

4 out of 5
1,236 user ratings
Your rating

or to rate this recipe.

Have you cooked this?

or to mark this recipe as cooked.

Comments

Good luck. Parchment paper on an upside down cake is decidedly a bad move. You'll never get the paper off, and to even have the paper compromises the shine, the beauty, the magic of the caramelized fruit and sugar. No. No parchment, no foil, nothing.

I’ve made this recipe twice in two days now—It’s that good. First time used blueberries and the second time strawberries with peaches. My cooking pan was a 10” cast-iron skillet. I had no problems getting the cake to release. I chilled it before serving with whipped cream. Two thumbs up.

I would bake this in a 9" round pan, well greased and with a round of baking parchment paper on the bottom. It would make getting the cake out of the pan a lot less iffy and result in a higher cake.

Since it was my first time w/this recipe, I was nervous about cake sticking so -- I did the first step (butter/b. sugar & fruit) in a separate skillet so that I could spray the cast iron skillet (used to actually bake the cake) with non-stick cooking spray. I followed all other directions, baked for the full 45 mins. and cake slipped out absolutely perfectly! It was worth washing 1 extra pan, too.

Made this with sliced pears and it was great! Super adaptable recipe

I found this cake to be heavy and on the dry side, unlike other upside down cakes I’ve made.

Private comments are only visible to you.

or to save this recipe.