This delicious vegan pineapple upside down cake is moist, rich and topped with pineapple, cherries and caramelized brown sugar.
Vegan pineapple upside down cake is here! And I am thrilled about it.
It’s a gorgeous cake that can be made any time of year since you use canned pineapple, and it has a wonderfully rich flavor that almost tastes a bit like a little something something (ahem, I mean something boozy) has been added. But there isn’t any booze. Just delicious pineapple flavor.
Pineapple juice is added to the cake batter and you have brown sugar caramelizing on the top with those pineapple slices and cherries and the result is really spectacular.
How To Make Vegan Pineapple Upside Down Cake
This cake is so easy! You don’t even need a mixer as there is no frosting.
You start off by melting some vegan butter and then pour that out onto the bottom of a 9 inch round cake pan (sprayed with non-stick spray).
Then you sprinkle on some brown sugar and then layer slices of pineapple along the bottom of the cake pan. I cut some slices in half and then put the half slices up the sides of the cake pan as well.
Place maraschino cherries everywhere you can find a gap.
The cake itself is a simple single layer vanilla cake. I adapted the recipe from our vegan vanilla cake.
That gets poured over the top of the pineapple slices and smoothed out and then you bake the cake for around 55 minutes.
Recipe Tips
Use canned pineapple slices. Not only is this easier, but you will get more consistent results. If you use fresh pineapple slices, they will tend to release more moisture during the baking process which can affect your outcome.
Also, when you use canned pineapple you can also just use the juice from the can in the cake batter, whereas if you use fresh pineapple you will need to buy pineapple juice separately.
Don’t use parchment paper to line the bottom of your cake pan, just spray the cake pan with non-stick spray. Parchment paper will interfere with your pineapple topping and trap some of the caramelized brown sugar. I tried it that way in one of my recipe tests and I don’t recommend it.
Cover the cake with foil after it has been baking for 30 minutes to prevent over-browning.
My 9 inch cake pans are quite deep so I only had to loosely cover the top with foil and didn’t need to ‘tent’ it with foil. If your cake pans are more shallow, then tent with foil so that the foil doesn’t touch the top of the cake and interfere with the baking.
Tenting just means to create a sort of tent shape over the top, instead of having the foil flat across the top of the cake pan.
Let it cool for around 10 minutes after it has come out of the oven and then do the flip.
Doing The Flip!
The flip can be the trickiest part of the entire cake making process!
Basically you want to put a plate or cake stand on top of the cake pan and then flip it so that you have your cake pan upside down on top of the plate or cake stand.
Leave it for a few seconds as you want all that brown sugar to drip down over your cake, and then remove the cake pan and there’s your pineapple upside down cake!
The part I found tricky is that in doing the flip, sometimes you fail to hold the two things (cake pan and plate or cake stand) in the same position while flipping. On one of my test versions I ended up with a cake that was not at all in the center of the plate but rather all the way over on one side of the plate!
And let me tell you, once you’ve done the flip that cake is NOT moving. Where it lands is where it’s gonna stay.
Hahaha, this cake does not co-operate when you try to move it. So take a breath, visualize the perfect flip in your mind and then go for it.
Make It Gluten-Free
If you want to make this cake gluten-free you can use our recipe for gluten-free vegan vanilla cupcakes for the 9 inch round single cake layer.
The only adjustment you would make to that recipe is to use ¾ cups (180ml) of non-dairy milk instead of 1 cup and add in ¼ cup (60ml) of pineapple juice.
Storing Tips
This cake is at it’s best when totally fresh and still warm from the oven! Serve it as is or with some vegan vanilla ice cream!
Keep leftovers covered in the fridge. You can cut a slice and warm it gently in the microwave if you prefer it warm, or just serve it cold. Consume within 3 days.
It is also freezer friendly for up to 3 months. The best method is to wrap and freeze individual slices.
More Delicious Vegan Cake Recipes
- The Most Amazing Vegan Chocolate Cake
- Vegan Coffee Cake
- Vegan Lemon Cake
- Vegan Strawberry Cake
- Vegan Carrot Cake
- Vegan Victoria Sponge
Did you make this recipe? Be sure to leave a comment and rating below!
Vegan Pineapple Upside Down Cake
Ingredients
For the Topping:
- ¼ cup Vegan Butter (56g) Melted
- ½ cup Light Brown Sugar (100g)
- 10-12 Slices Pineapple Canned
- 15-20 Maraschino Cherries
For the Cake:
- 1 ¾ cups All Purpose Flour (220g)
- 1 cup White Granulated Sugar (200g)
- 1 tsp Baking Soda
- ½ tsp Salt
- ¾ cup Soy Milk (180ml) or other non-dairy milk
- ¼ cup Pineapple Juice (60ml) reserved from the can or use fresh
- 2 tsp Vanilla Extract
- ⅓ cup Canola Oil (80ml) or other vegetable oil
- 1 Tbsp Distilled White Vinegar or Apple Cider Vinegar
Instructions
- Spray a 9-inch round cake pan with non-stick spray.
- Melt the vegan butter and then pour it out into the bottom of the cake pan and spread it around so it lines the bottom evenly.
- Sprinkle the brown sugar over the melted butter and spread it around evenly.
- Then layer the pineapple slices along the bottom. Cut some slices in half and use those to go up along the sides (see our photo).
- Place maraschino cherries everywhere you find a gap.
- Set the prepared cake pan aside while you prepare your cake batter.
- Preheat the oven to 350°F (180°C).
- Sift the flour into a mixing bowl and add the white sugar, baking soda and salt and mix together.
- Then add in the soy milk, pineapple juice, vanilla, oil and vinegar and whisk together with a hand whisk until just combined.
- Pour out over the pineapple slices and smooth down with the back of a spoon.
- Place into the oven and bake for 55 minutes. Bring it out at the 30 minute mark and cover loosely with foil and return to the oven for another 25 minutes. The foil will prevent it from over-browning.
- It’s ready when a toothpick inserted into the center of the cake comes out clean (don’t push it too far down or you’ll hit the base and then the toothpick won’t come out clean even if it is ready).
- Let the cake cool for 10 minutes before inverting it onto a plate or cake stand.
- To flip it, place a plate or cake stand against the cake pan and then flip it so that the cake pan is upside down on top of the plate or cake stand. Let it sit for a few seconds for the caramelized brown sugar to run down over the sides of the cake, and then lift the cake pan off.
- Slice and enjoy.
Notes
- Keep leftovers covered in the fridge. You can cut a slice and warm it gently in the microwave if you prefer it warm, or just serve it cold. Consume within 3 days.
- It is also freezer friendly for up to 3 months. The best method is to wrap and freeze individual slices.
Parul Mehta says
What an amazing recipe! Turned out to be as pretty as it looks in the picture and delicious too. I did not have maraschino cherries so used dried cranberries and it worked. My friends loved it.
Alison Andrews says
Wonderful to hear that! Thanks so much for sharing and so glad it worked great with dried cranberries, that’s really helpful to know. 🙂 Thanks for the awesome review!
Vivi Belle says
We don’t really like maraschino cherries, so would it be possible to use fresh, or just leave them out entirely? How much flavor to they contribute to the cake?
Alison Andrews says
Hi Vivi, fresh cherries may be fine. My only worry would be that they have a higher water content so I would hope they don’t make the cake soggy. Otherwise if you don’t like them, you can definitely try it without them! All the best! 🙂
ALICE WEST says
Sorry, I’m changing the recipe only because I have to use what is on hand and I can’t easily go to a store. Although I haven’t made cake yet (and I’m sure it will be amazing) I made my own candied cherries from frozen. The cherries are draining for an hour now, after reducing liquid on stove, and then will use for cake. I see your advice about canned pineapple vs fresh. Fresh is all I have so will drain well and keep in mind canned would be best. Candied cherries and syrup is easy with water, sugar, lime/lemon, and a dash of almond or vanilla once off stove. Plenty of recipes for online. I only have whole wheat flour, not all purpose, and will fluff with a fork instead of sifting. Will report back.
Alison Andrews says
Hope it worked out great! 🙂
Shirley Frisch says
Just made the pineapple upside down cake. Only had a small can of crushed pineapple on hand so I used that. Turned out onto the plate easily. Just tried a tiny slice. Warm and delicious. Hope my family likes it!
Alison Andrews says
So glad to hear it worked out great and was easy to flip too! Thanks so much for the awesome review. 🙂
Blueberry says
Me and my mum just made this and it turned out great!! I haven’t been vegan that long so it’s so nice to have an easy to follow recipe that comes out looking and tasting lovely ?
Alison Andrews says
Oh wow, it looks amazing on instagram! Thanks so much for sharing and the awesome review! 🙂
Jon J says
Great recipe. Thanks for posting it. Highly recommend it.
Alison Andrews says
Thanks Jon! 🙂
Rubi says
I have tried the recipe, it was amazing, like you said trickiest part was flipping it. I love your cakes they are always a hit.
Alison Andrews says
So happy it was a success Rubi! Yes, it’s definitely tricky to flip it but so glad it worked out. Thanks for the awesome review. 🙂
Ashley says
Tried it with starfruit cut 1/4 in thick
Used 1/3 juice 1/4 coconut oil 1/3-1/2 light brown sugar over the fruit in greased pan ( even cut smaller chunks for the side)
Cooks for about 55-1hr10to15 min depends on how done you want it uncovered
Same cake recipe and everything else
😉 ‘‘tis a busy season
Hope you enjoy
Oh and those little cherries everywhere (some cut in half)xD
Alison Andrews says
Sounds wonderful! Thanks so much for updating us, so glad it worked out! 🙂
M H says
That looks quite interesting to try. Do you think it is possible to replace the all purpose flour with oats flour?
& if yes, what is the equivalence of 1 cup all purpose flour?
Thank you!
Alison Andrews says
No I don’t think it’s possible, I have recommendations in the post for if you want to make it gluten-free. 🙂
Alexis says
Hi! Is there any way to add alcohol to this recipe? I have some malibu pineapple upside down cake I am dying to try inside it. If so, how much would you suggest adding?
Thank You!
Alison Andrews says
Hi Alexis, if I was going to try adding alcohol to this I would replace some of the soy milk with the alcohol. The amount would be up to you! Probably 1/4 to 1/2 cup. I must just warn you though that I have personally not had success in adding alcohol to cakes (before baking). It has been a mystery why it doesn’t work, but whenever I have tried it I have had a problem with the cake being too crumbly. All I could ever find out was that alcohol changes the structure of a cake, I could not find out how to fix it. So it’s worth a try but definitely test it first. 🙂 I do agree this cake would be GREAT with alcohol added, so if you try it and it works out, please let us know. 🙂
Ashley says
Alright, thank you :)!
Ashley says
Can you use this recipe an just substitute the pineapple for star fruit (cambola) and just try using a different type of juice( like orange) do you think that would work?
( I just have so much star fruit on hand and really wanted to try an upside down cake but all the recipes I’ve found aren’t vegan :(… ) asking for your professional advice here.. what do you think
Alison Andrews says
I think it would probably be fine, since star fruit is also used to make upside down cakes, I think if you followed the directions of those other cakes in how to add the star fruit slices, and then used this recipe, it would work great! 🙂
Amber says
Amazing! The family ate the whole cake the night I made it. Served it again with Thanksgiving.
Anza says
I really love your cake recipes, everyone is always surprised how I can make cake without eggs or egg replacer like flax or apple sauce.
Thank you so much for sharing your recipes I love them a lot!
Alison Andrews says
Hi Anza, I am thrilled to hear that! Thanks you so much! 🙂
Mandy says
This is my favorite cake! And I am so happy I can make it vegan! Thanks for this amazing recipe. 🙂
Alison Andrews says
Yay for making all the cakes vegan! ?
Cap'n Dave says
I’ll be getting some bakeware later this year (or early next year) and most assuredly making this! Pineapple upside-down cake is quite possibly my most favorite dessert dish (and the only real CAKE of cakes that I care for…yeah, I’m a pie guy).
Alison Andrews says
Haha awesome! Hope you love it! 🙂
Susan says
Is sweetened pineapple used or natural unsweetened juice?
Alison Andrews says
I used canned pineapple slices and used the juice left over from the can. It’s just fruit juice, no added sugar. But either way would work out fine.
Susan says
I’m baking it now. Lots of oil accumulating on the edge. Hope I didn’t measure wrong. Hope it’s successful so I can bring to potluck today. I know, what a time to try a new recipe. I want mine to look like yours.
Alison Andrews says
Hi Susan, I hope it works out great! I think what you’re reporting is just the normal melted sugar/vegan butter from the bottom of the pan bubbling up the sides as it bakes, all totally perfect for this cake! Best of luck! 🙂