Sunken Sour Cherry Cake recipe (2024)

Sunken Sour Cherry Cake recipe (1)

Speaking of Mother's Day today, Mr Gatsby's mum is no ordinary mum (although who is really?). She's a cookbook author having published a cookbook on German cakes and pastries called the German Pastry bakebook. “I wrote the book because in the 1970s pastries in the U.S. were not to my German standard. Because of that I had to do my own baking. This got me more and more interested and when going to Germany I quizzed every family member I could find for theirtraditional recipes. The challenge was that I needed to transfer them to American ingredients plus figure out the correct measurements as these recipes were very loose and not at all perfectly measured out, sometimes they were just “known” and passed down orally! So I had to try each recipe many times until getting the right combination so one could get the real German taste and flavour, and slowly but surely I wrote the German Pastry Bakebook."

She adds "The sunken cherry cake is my older sister's recipe as we always had plenty of sour cherries in our garden. I remember she explained to me that "our" sour cherries were too small to pit. If she did that, nothing would be left! This was the excuse to leave the stones in!!!! Of course one can buy now lovely sour cherries, and pitted ones too."

When her sister made this cake she did not remove the cherry pits (always a laborious task) and as a result the cake was known by the name _Spuckkuchen _or Spit Cake to signify the spitting of the cherry pits. She also suggests that you could use tart plums or any other tart fruit as the sweet cake batter helps to balance it and I agree.

Sunken Sour Cherry Cake recipe (2)

I didn't use all of the cherries as I wasn't sure how far down I should push them although the next time that I make this I would use more and keep pushing them down as they would be a juicy surprise throughout the slice. Although the cinnamon sugar adds a lovely aroma, as Margit suggest you could omit it and instead pour a cherry glaze over it or leave it and sprinkle icing sugar over it and it would look like a gorgeously golden yet rubied cake. As it is, it was soft, sweet and buttery withthe perfect counterpoint of sour from the sour cherries and a dollop of whipped cream was a sumptuous but somehow wholly necessary accompaniment. Happy Mother's Day to all the mums out there!

Sunken Sour Cherry Cake recipe (3)

Preheat oven to 375?F/190C.

Butter and flour or line a 10-inch springform pan.

Topping:

  • 2½ cups fresh, unpitted cherries or 1 pound/500g pitted cherries, canned or frozen

  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon

  • 1 tablespoon sugar

Step 1 - Drain cherries well and set aside.

Step 2 - Mix cinnamon and sugar together in a small bowl.

Batter:

  • 1 cup/2 sticks/225grams unsalted butter

  • 1? cup caster sugar

  • 3 eggs

  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract or 1 tablespoon rum

  • 2½ cups sifted flour

  • 2 teaspoons baking powder

  • 2 tablespoons sifted icing sugar to decorate

Step 1 - Cream butter and sugar together until pale and fluffy. Add eggs, one at a time until combined.

Step 2 - Add vanilla or rum.

Step 3 - Fold in flour and baking powder.

Sunken Sour Cherry Cake recipe (4)

Step 4 - Pour the batter immediately into the prepared pan and smooth it with a spatula. It will be quite a thick batter.

Sunken Sour Cherry Cake recipe (5)

Sunken Sour Cherry Cake recipe (6)

Step 5 - Distribute the cherries over the batter, pressing each down slightly to anchor it. You may find you have more cherries than can be pushed in on a single layer so just keep pushing more down.

Sunken Sour Cherry Cake recipe (7)

Step 6 - Sprinkle the cinnamon-sugar mixture evenly over all.

Step 7 - Place at once in the lower middle of a preheated 375?F/190C oven and bake for 60 minutes, or until a cake tester inserted in the middle comes out clean.

Step 8 - Cool in the pan for 10 minutes before unmolding it onto a cake rack to cool thoroughly. When cool, using a sieve, sift icing sugar over the top and serve.

Variations. Omit the cinnamon-sugar mixture. Prepare 1½ cups of cherry or plum glaze. Pour the glaze over the cake and let it cool. Or sprinkle the cake generously with confectioners sugar after it has cooled.

Serving suggestion. Serve each piece with a spoonful of whipped cream.

Adapted from a recipe by Margit Stoll Dutton from The German Pastry Bakebook

Sunken Sour Cherry Cake recipe (8)

Published on 2009-05-10 by Lorraine Elliott.

Sunken Sour Cherry Cake recipe (2024)

FAQs

How do you stop cherries sinking to the bottom of a cake? ›

The best way to avoid sinking fruit is to toss the fruit in a couple of tablespoons of the flour (just use some from the measured amount for the recipe) to coat it lightly. Once added to the cake mixture the flour coating will thicken the batter immediately surrounding the fruit and help suspend the fruit.

Why did my jam sink to the bottom of the cake? ›

If your batter is thin, says Wise, any added fruit needs support to help it stay suspended. Otherwise, it will all sink to the bottom. With any recipe, she first considers the thickness of her cake batter and how heavy, or wet, the added fruit will be.

Why has my fruit cake sink in the middle? ›

Your cake is often subject to sinking in the middle due to various factors, including inaccurate oven temperature, excessive or insufficient leavening agent, overmixing of the batter, or premature opening of the oven door. Moisture loss or incorrect ingredient ratios may also play a role.

What kind of cherries are used in cake? ›

While there's no “wrong” decision when it comes to which variety to use, the best cherries for cake are probably the sweeter ones (Morello, Bing, or Rainier).

Why do cherries sink in a cherry cake? ›

Why do cherries sink to the bottom? A: They contain a lot of moisture and syrup. Need to quarter, wash and dry thoroughly before adding to the cake mixture.

Can you put a sunken cake back in the oven? ›

If you notice quickly that your cake is underbaked, you can pop it back into the oven to finish baking. This will not 'fix' the sinkage or help it rise any further, but it may help salvage the inedible center of the cake. This needs to be done quickly, however.

Can you still eat a cake that has sunk? ›

most everyone else has too (including me.) There are a few things it could be, but first I want to tell you that just because it sunk, it may actually still be edible…so you don't necessarily need to throw it out, but we'll get to that later on. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

How do you keep jam from sinking in a cake? ›

Tweety69bird. You can boil it down on the stove to thicken it up a bit... maybe add in some gelatin too. Also, to make it easier on you, you can spread the jam filling thin on a baking sheet and freeze it and then put it on the cake while it's frozen so it'll go on as one sheet.

Why is my fruit cake wet on the bottom? ›

Sometimes if fruit cake has not cooled sufficiently and is wrapped up it can cause a slimy wettness. If your cake is not slimy it should be fine. Leave the cake unwrapped for a few hours, if it is fresh alcohol it will disperse.

Why won t my fruit cake cook in the middle? ›

“Why is my cake raw and doughy inside?” Large fruit cakes or moist carrot cakes can appear cooked on the outside but may still be under-baked in the middle. A recipe should give the correct oven temperature and timings, so follow it closely. Check your cake is cooked on the inside before you take it out of the oven.

What are the best sour cherries for baking? ›

The most common commercialized sour cherry varieties are the Morello and the Montmorency. The are too tart for most people to eat raw (I tried!) but they make a great addition to pies, jams, and are best used in homemade maraschino cherry recipes. They're also used in soups and meat dishes.

What is the difference between black cherry and sour cherry? ›

To distinguish black cherries and cherries, however, there is also the taste and texture. The cherry is sweet and has abundant and juicy pulp; sour cherry is firmer and has a flavor that combines sour and bitter tones. These characteristics make the two fruits ideal for creating different recipes.

Why do cherries split at the bottom? ›

Help, My Cherries are Splitting!

Contrary to what you might surmise, it is not the uptake of water through the root system that causes cracking in cherries. Rather, it is the absorption of the water through the fruit cuticle. This occurs as the cherry nears ripening.

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