Hello everybody, hope you’re having an incredible day today. Today, we’re going to prepare a distinctive dish, apple-pecan upside-down cake. It is one of my favorites food recipes. This time, I will make it a bit unique. This will be really delicious.
Sprinkle chopped pecans on top butter-sugar mixture. Drain and pat dry apples and place in circles, slightly overlapping, over pecans. Add brown sugar and granulated sugar, beating on medium speed until combined and scraping bowl as needed (see Tip).
Apple-Pecan Upside-Down Cake is one of the most well liked of recent trending foods in the world. It is enjoyed by millions every day. It is simple, it is fast, it tastes yummy. Apple-Pecan Upside-Down Cake is something that I have loved my whole life. They’re fine and they look wonderful.
To begin with this recipe, we must first prepare a few components. You can cook apple-pecan upside-down cake using 14 ingredients and 13 steps. Here is how you can achieve it.
The ingredients needed to make Apple-Pecan Upside-Down Cake:
- Make ready 100 g Pecans,
- Take 142 g Unsalted Butter Softened,
- Get 3-4 Red Apples Preferably Gala or Honeycrisp,
- Take 3 TBSP Calvados or Any Apple Brandy,
- Take 100 g Light Muscovado Sugar,
- Make ready 128 g Unbleached All Purpose Flour,
- Take 1 TSP Sea Salt,
- Prepare 1 TSP Baking Soda,
- Get 1/2 TSP Baking Powder,
- Get 1/4 TSP Nutmeg Freshly Grated,
- Take 1.5 TSP Cinnamon Powder,
- Take 50 g Demerara Sugar,
- Prepare 2 Eggs,
- Get 125 g Greek Yogurt,
Brown sugar, melted butter and pecan halves are mixed together and spread in a cake pan, which then gets topped with a sweet Bisquick™ batter, baked, and drizzled with a powdered sugar-milk glaze. The end result is a gooey pecan pie layer that sits atop a fluffy—yet dense—cake. Yeah this cake was one of those. When I flipped it upside down the brown sugar caramel goodness on the bottom drizzled down the sides.
Steps to make Apple-Pecan Upside-Down Cake:
- Preheat oven to 180 degree celsius or 350 fahrenheit. - - In a skillet over medium heat, add pecans. - - Toast the pecans until aromatic. - - Remove from heat and transfer into a mortar.
- Using a pestle, pound the pecans into fine coarse bits. - - Transfer into a large bowl and set aside. - - In the same skillet, without any heat, add in 30g of butter. - - The butter will start to melt as you are preparing the apples.
- Peel and core the apples. - - I didn't follow what Claire did. She used a melon baller to core out the seeds and stems. I, however, used an apple corer. You of cos, can choose whichever method as desired. - - Slice the apples into halves. - - Place them immediately, cut side down on the skillet. - - The apples will oxidize fast, especially on the cored and cut sides. Do it this way will slow down the oxidization.
- You may need 3 or 4 apples, depending on the size of your apples and skillet. - - Once all the apples are prepped, turn the heat up to medium. - - Cook until the bottom is golden brown. - - You may have to rotate the skillet to allow even browning.
- Once bottom is golden brown, flip. - - Add in 2 TBSP of calvados and let it flambe. - - Be very careful will doing this. - - Once bottom is lightly browned, remove from heat and set side on a plate lined with kitchen paper or wire cooling rack, cut side up.
- Retain any leftover liquid in the skillet. - - With that same skillet over medium heat, add in 50g of light muscovado sugar. - - Stir to dissolve the sugar. - - Cook until the sugar caramelized.
- Remove from heat and set aside. - - Add flour, salt, baking soda and powder into the same bowl as the pecans. - - Mix to combine well. Set aside.
- In another large bowl, add the remaining butter, light muscovado sugar, nutmeg, cinnamon and demerara sugar. - - Cream butter until light and fluffy with a hand or stand mixer. - - Add in eggs and the remaining 1 TBSP of calvados.
- Continue whisking until well combine. - - Continue whisking, alternating between the pecan mixture and yogurt, 1/3 portion at a time, into the butter mixture until everything is fully incorporated. - - Lay the apples in the skillet with the cooled caramel, cut side down.
- Spoon the batter over the apples, making sure all the nooks and crannies in between each apples are filled with the batter. - - Smooth the top surface with an offset spatula. - - If your cast iron skillet comes with non-metal handle, wrap the handle with aluminium foil.
- Wack into the oven and bake for 30 to 40 mins or until the top is evenly browned and the center springs back when gently pressed. - - Set aside to cool slightly, about 10 mins. - - Run along the edges with a sharp knife or an offset spatula.
- Place a larger serving plate over the skillet. - - Confidently, flip and unmold the cake. - - If there are any apples that are stuck on the skillet, remove and pop it back into the cake. - - If there is any leftover caramel that is also stuck on the skillet, add a splash of water and turn the heat up to medium.
- Swirl to dissolve the harden caramel. - - Pour the caramel over the cake. - - Slice and enjoy. - - The cake can be kept at room temperature, wrapped tightly with parchment paper, for up to 2 days.
The apples were soft and baked right into the amazing cake. The cake was so moist and it was especially good with the fresh whipped cream on top. In a small saucepan over medium heat, melt brown sugar, butter, vanilla, cinnamon, and salt. The best part about the classic pineapple upside-down cake is its gooey fruit topping, and this fresh take on the beloved dessert is no exception. We replaced canned pineapple with fresh apple slices whose tart flavor is the perfect balance to a sticky-sweet caramel sauce.
So that is going to wrap it up for this special food apple-pecan upside-down cake recipe. Thanks so much for your time. I am confident that you will make this at home. There’s gonna be interesting food at home recipes coming up. Remember to bookmark this page on your browser, and share it to your loved ones, friends and colleague. Thank you for reading. Go on get cooking!