The Best Pineapple Upside-Down Cake — 🍍🧡😋 So soft, moist, and really is the best! A cheery, happy cake that’s sure to put a smile on anyone’s face! This 100% from-scratch cake is an EASY reader favorite you’re going to love!
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I love this easy scratch cake because it’s fast and easy to make, and it always turn out supremely moist, springy, and fluffy thanks to the buttermilk, sour cream, and oil. That trifecta of moisturizing and tenderizing ingredients makes it impossible to have a dry cake.
Not to mention, the buttery, brown sugary pineapple juice that seeps down into the cake from the slices on top make the cake so soft, moist, and buttery that it just melts in your mouth.
The cake is soft, sweet, with an almost imperceptible tang from the buttermilk that adds another layer of flavor. The pineapple slices add chewiness and texture to the otherwise falling-apart-soft crumb.
There’s no better way to get your Vitamin C than via pineapple baked in it’s own brown sugar-browned butter sauce!
Pineapple Upside Down Cake Ingredients
To make this easy pineapple upside down cake, you’ll need the following ingredients:
- Unsalted butter
- Light brown sugar
- Canned pineapple slices
- Maraschino cherries
- All-purpose flour
- Granulated sugar
- Baking powder
- Egg
- Buttermilk
- Sour cream
- Canola oil
- Vanilla extract
Note: Scroll down to the recipe card section of the post for the ingredients with amounts included and for more complete directions.
Ingredient Swaps
You must use each of these ingredients as they’re listed. Substitutions like whole wheat flour or an alternative sweetener may result in a less than stellar upside down cake.
How to Make Pineapple Upside Down Cake
Making pineapple upside down cake from scratch is so easy! First you’ll arrange the pineapple-cherry topping, then you’ll prepare the cake batter.
- Arrange the pineapple-cherry topping: I used one 20-ounce can pineapple slices. I kept one slice whole for the center of the cake, and then fanned 12 halves around it. I used the remaining 3 slices (6 halves) to line the sides of the pan. Nobody likes bald sides.
- Make the cake batter: After getting the pineapple and cherries in the pan, whisk together the cake batter and turn it out into the pan. I filled my 9-inch round cake pan about 3/4-inch full with batter.
- Let the cake cool before flipping: I made the cake before bed and let it cool overnight in the pan with a sheet of foil over it. There’s no big rush to get it out of the pan. Because of how buttery the topping is, the pan is so well-greased that the cake just plopped right out.
Baking Tip
Although the cake doesn’t rise a ton, it’s still a cake and rises some, so don’t exceed about 3/4-full, the same idea as when filling a muffin tin. Discard the last bit of batter if need be. I mention this because all cake pans, the exact amount of pineapple, cherries, etc will vary slightly.
Baking FAQs
No, regular round cake pans aren’t deep enough. You also can’t use a 9-inch square baking pan for this. You have to use a 9-inch round springform pan, otherwise this homemade pineapple upside down cake recipe won’t turn out right.
I recommend making this easy pineapple upside down cake in this 9-inch springform pan. This is the exact pan I use at home and it works every time! However, readers have told me it’s often out of stock. In that case, I suggest this comparable 9-inch springform pan.
I haven’t tried that before because I just don’t have the patience for it! So unfortunately I can’t tell you if this recipe can be made as cupcakes.
Yes, you just have to be precise with your arrangement of the pineapple upside down cake topping in the bundt pan before you add the cake batter. The bake time may need to be altered slightly, so watch the oven and not the clock.
I’ve only ever used canned pineapple rings so I can’t say for sure whether fresh pineapple would work in place of canned. Most likely yes, but please let me know if you try this and it works out!
If possible, get your hands on real buttermilk. If that’s not possible, you can try making a buttermilk substitute (for every 1 cup of milk, mix in 1 tablespoon lemon juice or white vinegar). If you have to make a buttermilk substitute, you should use 2% or whole milk for the best results.
Time! The cake needs time to cool in the pan (at LEAST 30 minutes, but preferably overnight) before it’s safe to invert it onto a plate. As the cake cools, the pineapple on the bottom (soon to be the top!) firms up, the sugars set to create a caramel-y sauce, and the cake itself sets.
If your cake turned out mushy, you likely didn’t drain the pineapple and cherries well enough.
Absolutely! In fact, making it a day in advance means the cake will pop out of the cake pan so much easier when you’re ready to invert it.
Melted butter! The butter gets added to the bottom of the pan before all of the toppings are arranged. The sugar and butter caramelize in the oven, but there’s enough butter that the cake should pop right out of the pan once cool.
Storage Instructions
Room temp: You can store the cake at room temperature for up to five days. Cover the pan with foil. The cake will stay super moist thanks to the juicy topping.
In the freezer: Since this is such a moist cake that’s loaded with fruit, I do not recommend freezing it.
Thank you for this recipe! I’ve made it about 5 times and follow the recipe exactly and every time it turns out perfectly. Everyone enjoys it and now requests it. Excellent cake!
Jamie
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The Best Pineapple Upside Down Cake
Equipment
Ingredients
- ½ cup unsalted butter
- ¾ cup light brown sugar, packed
- one 20-ounce can pineapple slices
- about 12 maraschino cherries
- 1 cup all-purpose flour
- ¾ cup granulated sugar
- 2 teaspoons baking powder
- pinch salt, optional and to taste
- 1 large egg
- ½ cup buttermilk, or Powdered Buttermilk, use 2 tablespoons with the dry ingredients + 1/2 cup water added with the wet
- ⅓ cup sour cream, lite is okay (plain Greek yogurt may be substituted)
- 3 tablespoons canola or vegetable oil
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350F.
- In a small, microwave-safe bowl, melt the butter, about 1 minute on high power.
- Pour the butter into a 9-inch springform cake pan. Use your finger to run a bit of butter around the side of the pan so it’s well-greased.
- Evenly sprinkle the brown sugar over the butter.
- Add 1 whole pineapple slice to the center of the pan.
- Halve the remaining slices vertically. Stagger them in a fan-like fashion going around the cake. I used 12 slices.
- Place the remaining slices around the sides of the cake pan with the curved side pointing down toward the bottom of the pan (see photos for reference). There will likely be bare side patches with no pineapple coverage, that’s okay.
- Place 1 cherry in the center of the whole pineapple slice in the middle of the pan.
- Place 1 cherry in the center cutout of all the fanned pineapple slices; set pan aside.
- In a large bowl, whisk together flour, granulated sugar, baking powder, optional salt; set aside.
- In a separate small bowl, whisk together the next 5 wet ingredients (through vanilla).
- Add the wet mixture to the dry, mixing lightly with a spoon or folding with a spatula until just combined. Small lumps will be present, don’t overmix or try to stir them smooth.
- Gently turn batter out into prepared pan, being careful to not disturb the pineapple slices on the sides or bottom. Fill pan only to about 3/4-full. If you have a little extra batter, discard it rather than overfilling your pan.
- Place pan on a cookie sheet (to catch anything that does overflow) and bake for about 40 minutes, or until center is set and not jiggly, and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean or with a few moist crumbs, but no batter. Only go down about 1-inch with the toothpick, not all the way to the bottom where you’ll hit gooey pineapple juice.
- Place pan on a wire rack and allow cake to cool for at least 30 minutes before inverting, slicing, and serving. I allowed cake to cool overnight, covered with a sheet of foil, before inverting.
Video
Notes
- Cake will keep airtight at room temperature for up to 5 days.
- Cake base adapted from Blueberry Muffin and Buttermilk Pancakes Cake.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
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More Easy Pineapple Desserts:
Layered Carrot Cake with Cream Cheese Frosting – A tender and moist classic two-layer carrot cake with tangy-sweet cream cheese frosting!
Pineapple Coconut Oil Banana Bread — Banana bread spiked with pineapple and coconut oil that’s so good!
Hummingbird Cake — A super SOFT and moist cake with bananas, pineapple, coconut, cream cheese frosting, and pecans!! Makes a huge cake that’ll feed a crowd!
Pineapple Poke Cake With Pineapple Glaze — A pineapple version of a poke cake with a pineapple glaze that you’ll adore!
Tropical Escape Pineapple Crumble Bars — Soft, tender bars that have a great crumble topping that will remind you of the tropics!
Angel Pineapple Lush Parfaits — This is a 4-ingredient, no-bake dessert that’s ridiculously easy, you don’t need a mixer, and you don’t have to turn your oven on.
Pineapple Coconut Bars — Eat your piña colada rather than drinking one with these fast, EASY, no-mixer bars that taste TROPICAL!! Pineapple, coconut, white chocolate, and cherries!!
Recipe originally from March 2014 and reprinted in May 2018
Gorgeous cake and beautiful photos Averie!! Perfection right here!
Thank you and that means a ton coming from you, Jaclyn! You’re the queen of gorgeous food :)
Love that you cut the pineapples to fit more in the cake, totally right about getting a pineapple cake with not much that is so wrong!! This cake recipe looks so easy but so deliciously moist!! I need it in my life :)
Oh goodness Averie… I’m, well, QUITE a bit older than your daughter, and I’ve never had a real traditional pineapple upside down cake despite calling pineapple one of my favorite fruits too! How embarrassing. And I’m a baking blogger! Think you can stash a slice in your freezer for me? ;)
I love your tips about the fanning technique and adding the few leftover rings to the sides. It looks so pretty that way, and all that extra pineapple — yum!
That looks absolutely delicious!
We are on the same wavelength this week, lady ;) I just made my niece her very first pineapple upside down cake over the weekend! She loved it, but it definitely wasn’t as stunning as this one!!!
I’m sure your cake was totally gorgeous :) And what a wavelength we’re on :)
Not only did you maximize the pineapple but you maximized the cherries which I can never get enough of. I love your fruit to cake ratio usually there is too much cake for my liking. I’m definitely making this. So yummy.
Oh I know what you mean about the dry cake…ick! There is NONE of that here. I mean none. This cake is falling apart moist, literally. LMK if you make it!
What a beautiful, sunny cake! I wish tomorrow’s weather forecast looked like that, but I guess we’re in for another snowy blast. I love how you arranged the pineapple slices for maximum “fruit coverage”. I bet Skylar loved it. I’ve never made a pineapple upside down cake–I definitely like them but haven’t thought about one in a long time. It’s great to keep the classics alive!
She totally loved it and raved about it and yes to max fruit coverage. Otherwise what’s the point, you know :) Keeping the classics alive, yes. It’s nice to bring back some of these old time recipes!
What a beautiful cake! I love pineapple upside down cake and used to bake them frequently, but never thought to maximize pineapples on top by halving and fanning…genius idea! More cherries that way too! :)
I’m just curious…did your daughter love the cake as well?
Omg yes she LOVED IT! She raved about it and gave it a 10 out of 10 she said :)
Sometimes I feel like pineapple upside down cake is the forgotten cake. I’m not sure why, because it is so delicious! This one you made is no exception. It looks perfectly moist and baked to perfection!
It really is (or could be easily forgotten) and nowadays if it’s not dripping in choc or PB or salted caramel, it doesn’t seem to get noticed. But this is one of my fave cakes in the whole world and wanted to do my part so it would get some attention!
You know what? Jordan loves pineapple and has never had one of these cakes either! But, then again, I’m not a pineapple person (are you surprised?) but I love the flavor of it. This cake recipe sounds so good, and it looks so juicy and good I can almost taste it…I think it’s time I tried pineapple upside down cake…even if I give Jordan all my pineapple and take all her cherries. :)
Completely gorgeous!
What a nice ray of sunshine for this dark winter day.
Absolutely gorgeous cake my dear.
Nobody likes bald sides, lol. This cake is so gorgeous, Averie! I’ve never made a homemade pineapple upside down cake, but I’ve eaten it many times. It always reminds me of summer! I love how bright and colorful this cake is. Like a ray of sunshine. :)
This is an absolutely gorgeous cake that just screams spring! Perfection on a plate. Pinned.
Pineapple Upside Down Cake is so fifties and one of my favourite cakes ever!!! So pinned!! Another gorgey recipe – honestly, that cake needs to be in a bakery window!!
Love pineapple upside down cake! In Brazil we always made banana upside down cake but the pineapple + maraschino cherries make the pineapple one a lot more ‘dressy’ than the banana cakes (although both taste delicious). Would it be ok to use fresh pineapple or do you think they wouldn’t be as soft as canned?
I really don’t know about fresh. You really want the uniformity of the rings that you can get in canned. Yes, you can do it with fresh if you are very skilled with a knife I guess but I prefer canned..it’s also much cheaper :)
Banana-upside down cake. I’ve see them but I don’t know if I’ve ever had one? Sounds excellent! And didnt know you lived in Brazil!