Gathered At My Table - seasonal baking recipes with a creative twist

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Browned Butter Peach Upside Down Cake with Honey Whipped Cream

A simple, browned butter and sour cream snack cake topped with brown sugar caramel and the best summer stone fruits.

If you are anything like me, you are extremely well-intentioned when purchasing fruit. However, that does not always translate into the actual consumption of fruit. I’m especially terrible at this in the summer. There are so many options and fruit is at it’s bounty! It’s also burning hot outside in Florida and the cute little peaches and berries appeal to my quest for all things “refreshing”. Fast forward a week or two later, and I my refrigerator full of peaches and berries are decidedly less cute. It’s not that I dislike fruit, I just struggle to eat it straight up, and I will always choose a more savory, vegetable centered snack. So in walks this cake. A one-bowl, ultra moist, perfect little vessel for all of that well-intentioned fruit currently ripening in your kitchen.

how to make an upside down cake

The cake is made using the blending method, a simple mixing method where you whisk together your dry ingredients and wet ingredients separately and then combine them. This method is used when making recipes that call for a liquid fat, like oil or melted butter, and the aim is minimal gluten development, which results in a ultra-moist final product. If you’re feeling fancy and want a lighter crumb, you could substitute cake flour for the all-purpose, or even do a mix of the two. The cake’s flavor hinges on browned butter, which is one of my favorite kitchen smells. (Someone please tell Yankee Candle that we don’t need any more “vanilla cookie” scents, but if they could work out a browned butter candle, I would definitely be interested.) Browning the butter essentially carmelizes the milk solids in the butter. You will see the butter beginning to foam and it will start to smell nutty and fall-like. That’s when you pull it from the heat. There will be little mocha-colored specks on the bottom of the pot, make sure to scrape all of that up because that’s where the flavor lies! When adding your melted butter to your final cake batter, the fat in the butter will probably cause the batter to do a little slip-n-slide action and it might be a little difficult to whisk. You can help to curb the slickness by taking a little bit of batter, maybe 1/4 cup, and adding it to your butter first. Whisk vigorously to combine the two and then add it all back into your big bowl of batter. The butter will integrate much more easily leaving you with a little less mess.

This cake can be made with all sorts of fruit in danger of losing its pizzazz. Nectarines and peaches really shine and they are sturdy enough to hold their shape during baking, but pineapple would give a little classic Hawaiian vibe, if you’re here for that.

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