pineapple upside down cake deluxé

March 9, 2008 at 2:36 am (blueberries, cake, dessert, recipes, vegetarian) (, , , , , , )

International Women's Day though women’s movements worldwide are local and- with love and care- sustainable, this is the opposite of a local, sustainable recipe.

Pineapple and coconut in Brooklyn? During the icy windy gusts of March? As you know, however, the Radical Muffin kitchen came into all this free fruit and has been generating a bevy of recipes seemingly out of line of the ethics of this collection.

it has been fun to indulge in a few recipes with a retro twist like the pineapple upside down cake below. As one kitchen maven writes, “It is so easy, and it makes everyone feel special.” Serving suggestion: with black patent leather peek-a-boo lady shoes.

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let ¾ cups of butter (1 ½ sticks) and three eggs come to room temperature if refrigerated. Heat the oven to 375º. While the oven is heating, toast a few handfuls of delicate coconut flakes (about ½ a cup or more or less on your love of texture in cake and coconut). Spread them on a cookie sheet and bake for a minute or two. Watch them carefully; they burn quickly.

butter a 9 inch round baking pan with a ¼ cup (½ stick) of butter. Grease the entire pan then break off dabs of butter and place them all around. Some folks line the pan with parchment paper, but I think this is one instance where the outcome is better if you suffer through the clean up of the naked pan. The sugars come to caramel more richly. There is also a camp who prefer glass over metal and those who wouldn’t back in anything other than a cast iron skillet. I used a middle-American non-stick baking pan. Next time I happen across pineapple, I am trying this in my cast iron skillet. (I will also add a few slugs of rum.)

sprinkle ¼ cup of brown sugar evenly over the bottom of the pan. Lay out slices of pineapple to cover the bottom of the pan. The pineapple up-side down cake came into its glory in the 1920s, with the blue and yellow appearance of Dole canned pineapple on the shelves of supermarkets and had a resurgence in the ’50s in the era of canned everything. The machine-cut rings punctuated with bomb shelter strength Maraschino cherries are classic PUC styling.

many recipes call for chunked or even crushed pineapple. I sliced the chunks from the fruit plate and formed a layer of more or less rectangles, sometimes overlapping corners, a little jumbled. You will need about 3 cups of pineapple or one pound; fresh recipes call for a full pineapple. Since they were on hand, I sprinkled blueberries over the pineapple.

triple sift 1 ½ cups of all-purpose flour with ¾ teaspoon baking powder and ½ teaspoon of salt, and set aside.

 

with a large fork or an electric hand mixer, beat 1 cup of granulated sugar into the soft ½ cup of butter. Add the 3 eggs one at a time, beating each one in thoroughly. Add 1 teaspoon of vanilla and ¾ cup of coconut milk then beat until creamy. Gradually beat in flour mixture until combined.

 

gently, with a wooden spoon, stir in the toasted coconut. Spread the batter over the pineapple and bake for about an hour and 15 minutes or until the cake is golden and a toothpick comes out clean. Pull the pan from the oven, and cool on a wire rack for 15 minutes. Run a knife along the edge and invert the cake onto your serving vehicle.

Ciao Bella’s vanilla gelato has been my accompaniment of choice, when I can get a slice to a plate and not just break off pieces with my fingers.

5 Comments

  1. work perks « Radical Muffin said,

    [...] recipe that follows and the Pineapple Blubbery Upside Down Cake and the Precious Berries Muffins (forthcoming) are from the booty (and my [...]

  2. international women’s day « Radical Muffin said,

    [...] Since I knew they were coming, I baked a cake. [...]

  3. zorra said,

    I love pineapple! Sound delicious. Thank you for your participation in IWD.

  4. R said,

    I would like to point out that while the radical muffin has been most generous with her recipes, she has yet to release the bread pudding recipe that my gf would follow her around the world for.

  5. an ode in recipes ii « Radical Muffin said,

    [...] junk food generation at the twin towers and pineapple upside down cake [...]

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