Maple Persimmon Upside-Down Cake with Maple Cream
Ta-da! Okay, now you can eat.
Our kitchen managers are just this good.
Maple + butter, anyone?
Prep your dry ingredients.
Then take to them with a whisk.
A stick of butter: the start to any good dessert.
Add in your maple syrup. (Bonus points for such a pretty vessel.)
Take a break, pause, rest. And then scrape down the sides of the bowl.
Now you know the drill: dry...
...then wet...then dry one more time.
Don't forget the pecans! They enter the equation now.
Time to get artsy.
Admire your work, and then keep going until the whole pan is filled with beautiful slices.
Batter, meet persimmons.
When it looks like this, its stint in the oven is over.
Invert a serving plate on top of the pan, but you'll have to wait for the big reveal.
First: whip cream. Lots of it.
Author Notes: When I decided to make a persimmon upside-down cake, I didn't think that using a standard pineapple upside-down cake recipe would fly, so I went for a sturdier, denser cake, reinforced with extra egg yolk and ground nuts. I also liked the idea of caramelization via maple syrup, which, it turns out, is great with the fruit. The flavors will mellow and meld overnight, but the cake will stay very moist, so it's a great bake-ahead dessert, though ideally it should be served warm. I love using the traditional cast iron pan, but if you don't have one, be sure to use a minimum 10-inch cake pan-- there's a good amount of batter. Most important, though, is to use fuyu persimmons, which have the right texture for the recipe (as opposed to hachiyas, which are too soft). Cut them in slices parallel to the equator to get the sweet little star pattern. - vvvanessa - vvvanessa
Food52 Review: WHO: vvvanessa is a recreational baker who lives in California.
WHAT: A new go-to dessert you'll be dreaming about long after the persimmons are gone.
HOW: Mixing a batter and layering persimmons all pays off the moment you get to flip this baby upside down.
WHY WE LOVE IT: This cake is like your favorite spice cake meets the caramelized fruit goodness of a tarte tatin. We'd stop there, but then, there's the faintly sweet Maple Cream. You have direct orders not to skip the latter. - A&M
Serves 8-10
Persimmon Upside-Down Cake
- 8 tablespoons unsalted butter
- 1 cup plus 2 tablespoons real maple syrup (grade B if you can get it, but grade A is fine as long as it's the real thing)
- 1 1/2 cup all-purpose flour
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
- 1/2 teaspoon fine table salt
- 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
- 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
- 1 large egg at room temperature
- 1 large egg yolk at room temperature
- 2/3 cups buttermilk
- 1/2 cup finely chopped roasted pecans
- 2-3 ripe fuyu persimmons, cut into slices parallel to the equator, about 1/4-inch thick
Maple Cream
- 1 cup heavy whipping cream, well-chilled
- 2 tablespoons real maple syrup, well-chilled
- 1/8 teaspoon ground cinnamon
- Preheat the oven to 350ºF.
- Over low heat on the stovetop, melt 2 tablespoons of butter and 2 tablespoons of maple syrup in a 10-inch cast iron skillet. It should not get hot or bubbly, just melted. Remove the pan from the heat.
- In a bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, cinnamon, and nutmeg. Set aside.
- In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat the remaining 6 tablespoons of butter and 1 cup of maple syrup over medium-low until they are thoroughly combined, about 2 minutes. Scrape down the bowl, add in the egg and egg yolk, and beat for another minute.
- Add in half of the flour mixture and beat for 10 seconds. Add in the buttermilk and beat for 10 seconds more. Add in the rest of the flour mixture, beat for 10 seconds, scrape down the bowl, and beat for 20 seconds more.
- Stir in the pecans, scraping down the bowl in the process.
- Take the cast iron pan, and swirl the butter-syrup mixture to make sure the sides and bottom of the pan are thoroughly coated, taking care if the pan is still hot. Set one slice of persimmon in the middle of the pan, then layer the persimmons in outward-moving concentric circles, overlapping them as necessary to cover the bottom of the pan completely.
- Pour the batter over the fruit, and smooth out the surface.
- Bake on the center rack for 45-50 minutes, rotating the pan about 20 minutes into baking. The cake will brown slightly and is done when it tests clean in the middle.
- Remove the pan from the oven. Allow it to cool until it can be handled safely without oven mitts (anywhere from 20 minutes to an hour or more). Using a thin butter knife or an icing spatula, gently loosen the sides of the cake. Place a large serving plate inverted on top of the pan. Bracing the plate against the pan with one hand, flip the cake over and out of the pan and onto the plate. If there is another set of hands to help with the heavy pan, all the better.
- Allow the cake to finish cooling on the plate. While the cake is cooling, make the maple cream. Whip the cream, maple syrup, and cinnamon together to form soft peaks. Keep refrigerated until the cake is ready to serve.
- Serve slices of cake warm with a big dollop of the maple cream.
- Your Best Persimmons Contest Finalist!
- This recipe was entered in the contest for Your Best Non-Pie Thanksgiving Dessert
Tags: cake, fall, fall, Maple syrup, persimmon, upside down cake


4 months ago Kukla
Congratulations Vanessa! This is a great recipe and a beautiful Cake!
4 months ago fiveandspice
Emily is a trusted source on Scandinavian Cuisine.
Congratulations Vanessa! My mouth is watering just looking at this. Our grocery store isn't getting any more persimmons for the season, but next year I am making this the moment I spot one!
4 months ago My Pantry Shelf
Beautiful Vanessa! I love persimmons. I have long since used all mine up for the year, but I am saving the recipe for next year. Congrats on being a finalist!
4 months ago TheWimpyVegetarian
Wow, this looks just amazing Vanessa! Many congrats on being in the finalist circle. Fabulous!!
4 months ago EatSimplyEatWell
Wow! Looks incredible. I'd nearly given up on finding a way to eat persimmons in anything but their raw form. I'll need to get myself a new bagful and try this.
4 months ago vvvanessa
Thanks! I hope it works out for you!
4 months ago mrslarkin
Mrs. Larkin is a trusted source on Baking.
Holy cow. Yum. Congrats vvv!
4 months ago vvvanessa
Many thanks, mrslarkin!
4 months ago jeaninoakland
Eli loves persimmons. This may replace the kale chips as his favorite.
4 months ago vvvanessa
The first cake next season will be for him!
4 months ago hardlikearmour
hardlikearmour is a trusted home cook.
Congratulations, triplev! This is a beauty, and on my list for next time I have persimmons.
4 months ago vvvanessa
Thank you!
4 months ago creamtea
Beautiful! Congratulations!
4 months ago vvvanessa
Thanks, creamtea!
4 months ago Midge
Dying to try this. Congrats Vanessa!
4 months ago vvvanessa
Thanks so much, Midge!
4 months ago drbabs
Barbara is a trusted source on General Cooking.
yum. congratulations!
4 months ago vvvanessa
Thank you, drbabs!
4 months ago kate
Congrats Vanessa! Looks awesome!
4 months ago vvvanessa
Thanks, Kate!
4 months ago savorthis
Beautiful. Congrats!
4 months ago vvvanessa
Thank you, savorthis!
4 months ago sdebrango
Suzanne is a trusted source on General Cooking.
Absolutely fabulous cake, congratulations on being a finalist. I just love upside down cakes and using persimmons was genius.
4 months ago vvvanessa
Cake is my favorite food, and caramelized fruit makes it that much more exciting. Thanks, sdebrango!
5 months ago hardlikearmour
hardlikearmour is a trusted home cook.
This is a gorgeous cake!
5 months ago vvvanessa
Thanks!
over 2 years ago mrslarkin
Mrs. Larkin is a trusted source on Baking.
Sounds delicious! I'm afraid i would eat the maple cream by the spoonful!
over 2 years ago vvvanessa
well, that definitely qualifies as a "non-pie thanksgiving dessert"!
over 2 years ago vvvanessa
thank you! i was focused on persimmons because i was given a giant bag of them and took it as a challenge to find out how to bake them away!
over 2 years ago vvvanessa
whoops. that comment was aimed at lizthechef!
over 2 years ago drbabs
Barbara is a trusted source on General Cooking.
What a beautiful cake!
over 2 years ago vvvanessa
thank you!
over 2 years ago Midge
You've been on a serious baking bender this week! All of your recipes look amazing, this one especially.
over 2 years ago vvvanessa
thanks! yes, i call them "baking fits."
over 2 years ago monkeymom
Your desserts this week have been AMAZING! I am so glad to get recipes to try with the fuyus.
over 2 years ago vvvanessa
thanks, monkeymom! my kitchen overfloweth!