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Disclaimer: This recipe contains allergens! Please use suitable substitutes if you have a nut allergy!
The “welcome home” favourite in mom’s recipe book was always an impressive upside-down apple cake with whipped cream. I can’t call it pie or tart because it is not; it is a soft sponge over whole apples filled with nuts and spices (we don’t have any food allergies).
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My cruising job contracts were usually six months long. That meant a lot of exploring the ports of call or floating at sea in between destinations.
The job involved some office work (the small Shore Excursions department onboard usually made either the first or the second-largest profit per cruise – after the Casino). It also meant an early morning start to dispatch the tours and send the passengers to see the wonders they wanted to see on their cruise.
Most of the time, though, early mornings finished early enough to allow me to jump on a tour bus and be on my way together with forty-fifty passengers. I would see the same things they saw, probably more if I happened to be a place I had visited before and knew what hidden corners I wanted to explore or (re)discover.
Yep, I was paid to do this and enjoyed it 200%!
It was a lot of hard work and equally fun. Towards the end of the contract, I would experience some wear and tear. The worst was dealing with complaints such as “I went on this Rain Forest Canopy tour, and it was raining all day. I was not happy at all!”
I had to put it on the fact that people were on vacation and left their brains at home. As I provided a service that brought millions to the company, I had to plaster a smile on my face, feel empathic and apologise that it rained in the blooming rain forest! Five-star services require nerves of steel!
As the end of the contract was nearing, I used to feel divided. One part of me wanted to stay longer, visit more of the world, be in the company of onboard friends from all over the Globe. But at the same time, I was looking forward to flying back home, seeing my family and friends who were waiting for my travel stories. And to not waking up before eight am!
After months of repetitive menus, I was craving mum’s cooking. I was dreaming of a proper moussaka, her delicious homemade chocolate or a mouth-watering cozonac. Even if it were not around a holiday, mom would still make sure to have a couple of loaves waiting for me!

But most of all, I missed moms’ fabulous baking. And most of the time, there would be a massive upside-down apple cake smothered in whipping cream in the fridge, waiting for when the jet lag would wear off.
The scent of it, the apples filled with nuts and cinnamon that reminded me of Christmas (which, by the way, I never spent at home in six years of working on cruise ships), everything was marvellous and made the start of my two months-long vacations stellar.
The first glimpse of the cake was reason enough to forget sailing the oceans. After all, the cruise ships will always furrow the seas, and I will get a new contract until I decide it is time to make a career change or settle on firm land. It was time I enjoyed my vacation!
At least it is how it used to be, this still being a memoir an’ all. The moment of writing recalls times other than the doomed years of the pandemic, which managed to halt a prosperous cruising industry among all the bad things that came out of it!
That was the story; let’s get to the recipe I still make today since I now own my mom’s old, handwritten recipe book!

Eggs
Coconut sugar
Plain flour
Tap water
Baking powder
Vanilla sugar (or vanilla extract)
A pinch of salt
Organic apples
Nuts coarsely grounded (walnuts or a mix, as long as you don’t have an allergy to nuts!)
Coconut sugar
Raisins
Mulled wine spices: ground cinnamon, clove, aniseed, nutmeg, ginger.
Jam
Sugar+cinnamon or spice mix
Banana (pureed and mixed with little sugar and raisins)
Any dry fruit mix. Be creative!
Water
Coconut sugar
Rum essence (optional)
Whipping cream (minimum 30% fat)
Icing sugar
Gelatin

Wash and peel the apples if you buy them. Even organic, they are still waxed, and you don’t need that chemical mix in your body cells. Of course, if you have an apple tree in the garden, skip this step.
Remove the core and pips with an apple corer. Use the mix of nuts, sugar, spices and raisins (or any substitutes) to fill the space thus created.
Line up the baking tin with parchment (I used a round tin with removable bottom, 26cm in diameter).
Next, Mom’s recipe says to sprinkle some sugar in the tin. I made this cake either following or ignoring this step. The only difference was that with the sugar version, the crust had burnt a little. It was excellent without sugar, and I would say it is an optional step.
Place the apples in the baking tin, leaving an equal distance in between them.
Preheat the oven to a maximum of 170°C fan/190°/gas 5.

To prepare the sponge, place the eggs, sugar, salt and vanilla (orange zest – optional) in a large mixing bowl and batter for five-seven minutes with an electric mixer.
Pro tip: if you store the eggs in the fridge, bring them out for at least an hour before starting. Eggs at room temperature whip better, increase the volume at least three times and have a creamy consistency. Using cold eggs will not triple the volume, and the consistency will remain fluid.
Using a tablespoon, add the water spoon-by-spoon (you might not need the entire quantity at this stage) and mix gently with circular motions from the bottom of the bowl up.
From now on, you can use a large silicone spatula or a wooden spoon for mixing and always add the ingredients gradually, not the entire quantity at once. The sponge needs a chance to incorporate everything slowly to remain fluffy.
Sieve the flour (mixed with baking powder) over the bowl in small quantities. Mix gently to keep it airy.
Finish by adding the vanilla and the orange zest if you choose to use them.
Pour the sponge mix over the apples. Even if they aren’t covered entirely, the sponge will rise at a high temperature during baking.
Cover the baking tray with another one (I use a round, shallow pizza tray for this purpose). Place the tray on the middle rake and bake for 20 minutes, then remove the cover and continue baking for another 20-25 minutes or until the sponge turns golden brown.
For food health and safety purposes, do the toothpick test to check if it is thoroughly baked (stick the toothpick in various parts of the cake; the sponge is ready if the toothpick is clean when you remove it.)
Before you flip the apple cake upside-down:
It might sound a bit tricky, but it is doable. Be careful not to burn yourself, and ask any audience you might have to take a few steps back until all is safe!
Also, please keep the tin over the table when you perform the turning manoeuvre; I’m not implying that it might happen, but you want to prevent your cake from accidentally flying off your hands and landing on the floor!
Now that the apple cake is safe on the cake stand, you can remove the tin, peel off the baking paper and permit it to cool completely.
Meanwhile, prepare the syrup by boiling the water with the sugar for a few minutes until it reduces slightly. When it cools, you can add some rum essence and mix (the essence is oily; it will not dissolve, but that’s okay).
You can now spread it all over the sponge using a tablespoon. When absorbed, the syrup will make the sponge even softer.

The last step is decorating the upside-down apple cake with a generous dollop of whipped cream.
Prepare the whipped cream with the required quantity of icing sugar until stiff. Add the already prepared gelatine to help the cream preserve a nice decorated shape for longer.
Spread half the whipped cream on the top and side of the cake and cover it uniformly. If you have a piping bag, get creative and decorate upon your heart’s desire!
It is essential to use cold ingredients for this step and cool the icing bag for a while before getting creative. Whipped cream works better if it is well refrigerated.
When you are happy with the results, place the cake in the fridge for at least a few hours. If you can, wait until the next day to slice it (I can’t, and I won’t!)
Your exquisite upside-down apple with whipped cream is ready, and the house is filled with the scent of Christmas, no matter the season. Make yourself a nice cup of coffee (even better, a cappuccino!) and savour a slice.

Poftă bună! This is your first step in learning a new language, and it means Bon appetite in Romanian!













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The post Upside-Down Apple Cake With Whipped Cream – Mom’s Astonishing “Welcome Home” Delight appeared first on The World Is an Oyster.
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