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    User post: A Pineapple Upside-Down Cake that should shut the foodies up!

    I have the worst restaurant seating karma. Without fail, I wind up at the least desirable table at any given eatery. And what's worse is it's often my own fault. I once arrived for dinner at a place that was super crowded. I was already nervous that my friend, who had warned me he was cranky and hungry but had yet to show up, would be irritated if we had to wait too long for a table given his self-diagnosed low blood sugar issue. A table for two had just opened up so I said "Yes!" when the maitre d' asked if I'd take it. I knew I was in for it the minute I sat down. I was led waaayyy in the back, wedged between two loud parties of four, and equi-distant from both the swinging kitchen door and the less than fresh smelling bathrooms. I immediately cursed myself for letting my anxiety get in the way of my patience. For, a lovely table by the window in front become available just 3 minutes later as my friend walked through the door with a "What were you thinking?" roll of the eyes and a furrowed brow. But it was too late. I was half-way through my first glass of Chenin Blanc and we resigned ourselves to an evening of "pardon-me-scuse-me" and yelling across the table to each other to be heard over the din of the Carrie Bradshaw wannabes sitting to my right.

    The other night my frequent dining partner (aka Rich) and I got out of a late movie and were excited to find a pleasant looking table ready for us at a restaurant which is normally hard to penetrate. Company, a high-end pizza place in Chelsea created by bread baking guru Jim Lahey, serves charred, crusty pies with inventive toppings and I've been wanting to try it since it opened. So, we took a table along a long wall, I sat inside (as the lady or the mobster always should) and my heart sank. Sitting to my left were two young guys vying for the Most Annoying Jackass Foodie Award of 2010. Jerk #1: "Dude, I bought amazing ricotta fresca from the blah-blah creamery when I was up in the Hudson Valley this weekend. It was sick!" Jerk #2: "No, dude. I just picked up like the most incredible ramps at Union Square. I'm totally making Floyd Cardoz' sautéed spinach and ramps, he uses lentils too. It's gonna be sick." And blah, blah, blah.

    It was all I could do to keep from letting out a primal scream. What I wanted to yell was, "Shut up! I don't care about your precious ricotta, or your ramps, or the Union Square Greenmarket! And stop saying sick when you're talking about food! You're making me sick!"

    Yes, I sound like an angry, crazy lady because I really hate foodies. First of all, I hate the word. What does it even mean? They care about food more than someone else does? And who decides who cares most? People care about food in their own way. But second of all, there is nothing worse than the one up-manship of the foodie; it is so New York. The constant competition of who knows their butcher's first name, who travels (by subway of course-you need to be local and green) to the outer-most borough to source the best buffalo mozzarella or roof cultivated honey or rice noodles and who wins?

    Look, if the care and feeding of your food before it comes to your restaurant or kitchen table is meaningful to you, great. That is a good thing. But it's the ad nauseum soliloquies of so many cooks and diners that sends my blood pressure skyward and threatens a stroke. Why can't we just enjoy our meals and not talk them to death? It's like what my parents say about my generation's habit of analyzing the minutiae of every fragile relationship…"too much talk!" (So true, and a lesson I have yet to learn.)

    When did all of this food fetishizing start? Do we blame Top or Iron Chef? Alice Waters? Gordon Ramsay and his Hell's Kitchen Nightmares? Which came first? The foodie or the (local, organic) egg?

    When our dining neighbors readied themselves to leave they noticed our pondering of the menu, leaned over and said "Get the ramp pizza. It's killer." And I'll confess. We tried it and they were right. But I'm not going to talk about it.

    As a reaction to my foodie rage I embarked on the least foodie-ish dessert I could think of that I would actually still want to eat. How about something with an ingredient that comes out of a can and has the (optional) addition of maraschino cherries? The top of this cake is so moist it is almost juicy and really has a tarte tatin vibe to it with sticky, caramelized pineapple. Try it with vanilla ice cream or whipped cream or crème fraiche. It's sick.

    For more stories with your recipes please visit In Sweet Treatment

    Please Stop Talking Foodie! Pineapple Upside-Down Cake
    From Heirloom Baking with the Brass Sisters, Marilyn Brass & Sheila Brass, 2006
    Printer Friendly Version

    Ingredients
    ½ cup butter, melted
    1 cup dark brown sugar, packed
    7 slices/rings of canned pineapple from 20 oz can, and 5 Tablespoons reserved juice
    1 cup cake flour (not self rising)
    1 teaspoon baking powder
    ½ teaspoon salt
    3 eggs, separated
    1 cup white granulated sugar
    1 teaspoon vanilla

    Directions
    Preheat oven to 350. Rack should be in middle position.
    Sift together cake flour, baking powder and salt into a medium bowl and set aside.
    In 9 inch cake pan, swirl butter to coat the bottom and sides of pan. (Do it over the sink in case of drips) Most will settle to the bottom.
    Sprinkle brown sugar over the bottom of the pan.

    Using a paper towel pat pineapple slices dry on both sides and arrange in a decorative pattern on the bottom of the pan.

    In a large bowl stir egg yolks just to break them up and add sugar, vanilla and 5 Tablespoons of reserved pineapple juice. Mix well and stir in flour mixture until combined. Set aside.
    Place egg whites in bowl of electric mixer fitted with whisk attachment and beat until just stiff but not dry.
    Fold egg whites into the batter already in the large bowl until fully combined.

    Pour batter into cake pan.

    Bake 45-55 minutes until tester inserted into middle comes out clean.
    Cook pan on rack 2-3 minutes then invert onto another cooling rack. It will still be quite warm and very moist. Scrape any remaining bits of sugar or fruit from pan onto top of cake.
    Serve warm or at room temperature.

    Yield: 8 delicious slices.

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    28 comments

    • DEE  •  1 year 6 months ago
      My mom always made the Pineapple upside down cakes during the holidays. Unfortunately she passed away this year from Breast Cancer so now i will be making the cake for the first time. I love this recipe and it will be the one I will follow. Thanks and wish me luck!!!
    • Gina  •  2 years 0 months ago
      You can make this by using Bisquick and then adding the eggs and fruit. A lot faster.
    • THE TRUTH  •  2 years 0 months ago
      lucious looks good enough to eat.my favorite.mmmmmmmmmmm cant wait to try it.thank- you.
    • Harland  •  2 years 0 months ago
      This is even better if you add the maraschino cherries (I usually cut them in half and put them in the pineapple holes). To put it over the stop, sprinkle some chopped pecans over the pineapple, butter and brown sugar before adding the cake batter.
    • V  •  2 years 0 months ago
      What is fabulous, is great food and correct spelling. :)
    • ILoveFriday  •  2 years 0 months ago
      Where is the cherry?
    • Tor D  •  2 years 0 months ago
      I get accused of being a Foodie regularly. There are a large number of pretentious, annoying people who use food for one-upsmanship.That doesn't mean that those of us who are passionate about food (good, decadant, or just plain comforting)are all going to be jerks about it. It is something that we are fascinated and excited by -- not unlike most guys with sports or most women with shoes. I'll happily spend half an hour talking about cheeses with somebody else who loves cheese, but I'm certainly not going to bore the snot out of YOU with it if you're not a cheese-foodie. Don't judge all of us by the boors that we can't stand either.
    • Peggy  •  2 years 0 months ago
      i have made this cake for years .a recipe from my mother , but we add cherries in each hole in the pineapple and pecans all over in the pan before pouring cake mix .then bake it . it is a good cake.
    • Flame-n-Heather  •  2 years 0 months ago
      I am printing out your recipe to make. I LOVE pinapple upside down cake and have always wanted to make one. This one sounds delicious!! Thanks for sharing! :)
    • CARMINA  •  2 years 0 months ago
      i love it
    • Nerdgirl  •  2 years 0 months ago
      Pineapple upside down cake is really nice with pears or peaches instead of pineapple.
    • Peggy  •  2 years 0 months ago
      i have made this cake for years .a recipe from my mother , but we add cherries in each hole in the pineapple and pecans all over in the pan before pouring cake mix .then bake it . it is a good cake.
    • Lorin W  •  2 years 0 months ago
      I made this last night after reading this article and it was delicious; my son and I loved it! (Husband isn't big on sweets.) I even passed some on to a mom that I do day care for!

      However, even after letting it sit a few minutes to cool, the butter/brown sugar spilled everywhere when I inverted the pan.
    • jeo  •  2 years 0 months ago
      I too am part of the restaurant seating phenomenon...the bathroom/kitchen triangle! What's up with that?????
    • Habanero♥™  •  2 years 0 months ago
      That cake looks sooooo great!!!!
    • Habanero♥™  •  2 years 0 months ago
      Nathaniel....Thanks for the great link to evernote.com.
    • Talulah C  •  2 years 0 months ago
      Evernote.com, huh? I'll check it out, 'cause I'm finding new recipes to use once I move in with my mom...we're gonna be sharing an apartment...but I don't have a printer I can use, so I mostly have them saved in my bookmarks. Thanks for the tip, Nathaniel!

      And I agree with Tor, really. My family all call me a foodie because I'm usually very passionate about the food that I eat, but I seriously doubt that they'd say that I'm like the people you encountered, because I'll just grab whatever ingredients I can at the supermarket, and maybe stop by the farmer's market with my grandmother if she feels like going, while wondering the whole time I'm there what the hell a lot of the items are, and I don't go on forever about certain ingredients or chefs just to sound like I'm better than someone.

      Actually, I'm the type of person who'll open a can of soup, heat it up, and toss in enough spices to make most people sick, and sometimes I'll add lunchmeat(turkey usually) and some vegetables if I have any.
    • Peggy  •  2 years 0 months ago
      i have made this cake for years .a recipe from my mother , but we add cherries in each hole in the pineapple and pecans all over in the pan before pouring cake mix .then bake it . it is a good cake.
    • Nathaniel  •  2 years 0 months ago
      Here's a tip for anyone who finds an amazing recipe like this one and wants to save it while saving a tree and not printing it. USE EVERNOTE.COM It's a great way to save notes and other snippets especially recipes for later use.

      Love your writing style, I felt I could totally relate to you and I've saved your cake recipe to my evernote page so I can make it later. thx
    • -  •  2 years 0 months ago
      I definitely want to try the cake recipe. My first attempt at pineapple upside down cake was a disaster, I cooked it in a bundt pan (which is how it was done in the recipe I was using), and it came out half cooked. I wasn't aware of that until I went to flip it on to a plate and it slopped all over the counter. Whoops :)

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