Upside Down Pear Skillet Cake
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Upside Down Pear Skillet Cake is a simple but show-stopping dessert. Pears, walnuts, cinnamon, and maple make a dreamy combination of flavors. This luscious dessert will make your face dance and this recipe is easy to make even if you’re new to baking.
Upside Down Pear Skillet Cake
Why does pineapple get to have all the fun? You can use any fruit for an upside-down cake. The beauty of an upside-down cake is the juice from whatever fruit you use combined with
I do, however, recommend a big scoop of vanilla ice cream with your Upside Down Pear Cake.
What you’ll need to make this cake
The full recipe with ingredient amounts and instructions is at the bottom of this post. You can save a tree and the recipe to your personal and private recipe box here on Call Me PMc. This way, youโll never misplace it.
- Butter. Real
butter , margarine doesn’t react the same. - Light brown sugar. You can use dark brown sugar.
- Maple syrup. Real maple syrup.
- Pears. I used Bosc pears. You’ll want to peel, core, and slice into approx 1/4-inch thick slices
- Walnuts. Whole or pieces. Lightly toasted for beat flavor.
- All-purpose flour.
- Ground cinnamon.
- Baking soda.
- Salt.
- Greek yogurt.
- Pure vanilla extract.
- Black walnut extract.
- Granulated sugar.
- Eggs. Large eggs or the equivalent at room temperature
Upside down cake
This cake is moist. The
More fan favorite cake recipes
- Skinny Peaches & Cream Greek Yogurt Cheesecake
- Amaretto Peach Upside Down Pound Cake
- Amaretto Pineapple Upside Down Pound Cake
- Pineapple Upside-Down Bread Pudding
- Peach Upside Down Cake
- Blueberry Upside-down Cake
- Pineapple Upside-Down Carrot Cake
Upside Down Pear Skillet Cake
Ingredients
For the topping:
- 4 Tablespoons butter
- ยฝ cup brown sugar packed
- ยผ cup maple syrup
- 2 large pears I used Bosc – peel, core and slice into approx 1/4-inch thick slices
- 1 cup walnut pieces lightly toasted
For the cake
- 1 and ยฝ cups all-purpose flour
- 1 and ยฝ teaspoons ground cinnamon
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- ยฝ teaspoon salt
- ยฝ cup Greek yogurt
- ยฝ teaspoon pure vanilla extract
- ยฝ teaspoon black walnut extract
- ยฝ cup butter at room temperature
- ยฝ cup granulated sugar
- โ cup maple syrup
- 2 large eggs room temperature
Instructions
For the topping:
- In a seasoned 10 inch cast iron skillet, melt butter and medium heat. Spread the butter out to cover the skillet. Add the brown sugar and maple syrup. Simmer, whisking until sugar is dissolved, about 2 minutes. Remove from heat. Arrange pear slices decoratively over the sugar and butter mixture. Sprinkle walnuts over and around pears. Set aside and mix cake batter.
For the cake:
- In a large bowl, whisk flour, cinnamon, baking soda, and salt. Set aside. In another bowl, combine greek yogurt, vanilla, and walnut extracts. Set aside. In the bowl of an electric mixer, beat butter until smooth. Add sugar and beat until light and fluffy, about 5 minutes. Beat in the 1/3 cup maple syrup and mix 2 to 3 minutes. Turn mixer to low, add eggs one at a time. Beat well after each addition. Reduce the speed and add dry ingredients alternating with greek yogurt beginning and ending with dry ingredients. Scrape bowl if necessary. Beat only long enough to incorporate the ingredients, over-beating will result in a tough cake.
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees fahrenheit.
- Carefully drop batter by spoonfuls over pears in skillet. Spread evenly, careful not to move the pears. Bake at 350 degrees 40 to 45 minutes. Test with a wood pick in center. Wooden pick should come out clean when cake if done. Cool the cake in the skillet on a rack for 10 minutes.
- Run a knife around the edge of cake. Carefully invert cake onto a platter. I’ve found wearing oven mittens is the easiest way to do this without slipping. Remove the skillet and allow cake to cool on platter on wire rack.
- Serve warm or at room temperature with vanilla ice cream.
Nutrition
Nutritional information given is an automatic calculation and can vary based on the exact products you use and changes you make to the recipe. If these numbers are important to you, I recommend calculating them yourself.
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I love your logic when it comes to dessert. Runs a close second to diamonds. Your looks mighty delicious too.
hehe, I’m right, aren’t I? ๐
I’ve never made an upside down anything! I might have to give this a try sometime, it looks delicious. HUGS!
It’s tricky… and stressful ๐
Paula, I really enjoyed reading this post…made me smile. This cake looks delicious. I’ve never ventured into making a cake in a skillet; I may have to give it a go. Thanks for sharing this fab recipe and enjoy your boots!
Turning it out was iffy because the skillet was so heavy!! I was thinking about you this afternoon! I found a huge Christmas tree cookie cutter and my boys are so excited to make some! I’ve got to visit your site for tips and tricks!
Your cake sounds delicious. Loving your photographs.
Thank you so much!
I am all into upside down cakes lately, so this is def. something I would try.
Thank you! IT’s really good!
This is one fantastic looking recipe. You do such a great job. Come and visit us this week. We are giving away a Delta faucet for your kitchen valued at nearly $700! You will love it! c
I will! Thanks for stopping by!
Very nice and good luck!
Thank you Peter!
Your cake looks beautiful Paula! When I saw it I thought it was yours ๐
Thank you Emily. I have one photography style, don’t I ๐
This looks amazing, Paula! ๐ Yum!
Pinned & sharing!
Thanks Carrie and thank you for pinning!
Paula, oh I LOVE this! There definitely are not enough desserts with pears as far as I’m concerned! ๐ Woohoo, I’m excited to try this! Pinning and sharing! Hope you have a happy Thursday!
Thank you, Cindy. I love how this turned out. The brown sugar and butter made a good glaze that oozed down through it, yummy – which just makes me want to eat the caramel-ly part…