I realize how confusing this must sound. Is it a pie? Is it a cake?  Make up your mind, RecipeGirl!  It was tough for me to decide, really. In this recipe, a cake batter is poured in and around the apples to hold it all together in the consistency of a cake, but there are so many apples involved that it can officially pass for a pie too. So here you go:  Cinnamon Apple Pie Cake

Slice of Apple Pie Cake


The recipe is one that I spotted while reading through one of the cookbooks I have on my shelf:  Monday Morning Cooking Club. I’ve now been making it for many years!

monday morning cooking club cookbook cover

Here’s a description from Amazon:
In 2006, a group of Jewish women began meeting every Monday morning. They cooked, ate, drank endless cups of tea and – often heatedly – discussed the merits of different recipes. After just a few weekly meetings, the Monday Morning Cooking Club was born. Five years and hundreds of dishes later, six members of the sisterhood handpicked their favourite recipes to go into their book – the result is a generous, rich and inspiring cookbook featuring the best, most treasured recipes from a culturally diverse community. Each recipe begins with a short story of the cook and their history of the dish, and these stories, interwoven with amazing recipes, take the reader on a heartwarming and delicious journey through a community who finds a deep connection through food and the memory of generations that have gone before.

It’s a rather interesting cookbook indeed. The authors are from Australia, so it’s fascinating to read the stories that go along with the recipes.  Some of the recipes have some out-of-the-ordinary ingredients, so it’s not one that I’d cook from every day… but it’s a great one to buy if you’re a cookbook collector.  Other recipes I’m eager to try:  (there are actually a LOT):  Plumb Cake, Souffle Pancakes, Chocolate Bread and Butter Pudding, Custard Chiffon Cake, Israeli Couscous Soup, South African Cheesecake, Morroccan Fish, Chicken and Barley Soup, Chicken Paprikash, and Challah From Heaven.  There are a lot of neat things included in the book that you don’t typically see here in America.  It’s a great way to get exposed to some new food.

Making an Apple Pie Cake

How to make an Apple Pie Cake:

You need a springform pan (like the kind you make cheesecake with). Apple slices are scattered around the bottom.

Making an Apple Pie Cake

They’re piled and piled until you almost reach the top.

Making an Apple Pie Cake

The apples get a sprinkling of cinnamon-sugar.

Making an Apple Pie Cake

A cake batter is poured on top of the cinnamon apples.

Making an Apple Pie Cake

Let the cake batter drizzle down and around the apples, and give the pan a few taps on the counter to settle it all in there.

CInnamon Apple Pie Cake

The batter gets a generous sprinkling of cinnamon- sugar too.

Apple Pie Cake Recipe

Take a quick peek into the inside of the pie- cake and you can see my dilemma. It sure looks like a cake, but it’s so full of apples that it can pass for a pie too! I love this recipe. It’s really different than any apple pies or apple cakes I have made before, and it’s always a hit to serve to guests. Interestingly enough, the author of this recipe refers to this as her husband’s “favorite cake” in the introduction to the recipe, but she named the recipe “Cinnamon and Apple Pie.” Clearly, everyone is confused!

Here are a few more apple cake recipes you might enjoy:

4.19 from 22 votes

Cinnamon Apple Pie Cake

The best of both worlds in a pie and a cake put together!
Prep: 30 minutes
Cook: 1 hour 20 minutes
Total: 1 hour 50 minutes
Servings: 10 servings
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Ingredients

PIE- CAKE:

TOPPING:

Instructions 

  • Preheat the oven to 350℉. Spray a 9½ to 10-inch springform pan with nonstick spray. Line the bottom with a round of parchment paper and then spray again.
  • Layer the apple slices in the pan until they come about ⅔ of the way up the side. (I went a little higher than that and it worked out fine). Sprinkle the cinnamon-sugar over the apples.
  • Prepare the batter by beating the eggs and sugar until light and fluffy. Add the oil, applesauce and vanilla and beat well, then stir in the flour. Pour the batter on top of the apples, and sprinkle with additional cinnamon-sugar on top. Tap the pan on the counter a few times to allow the batter to sink down and around the apples.
  • Bake for 1 hour and 20 minutes, or until a skewer inserted into the center of the cake comes out clean. Cool *completely* in the pan. If you try to remove the cake from the pan while it is still warm, it will tend to break apart. I refrigerated my cake before slicing, and that worked out well. Serve slices with ice cream (warm individual slices in the microwave, if desired).

Notes

  • You want “caster sugar” for this recipe: It is a finer grind than table sugar, but not as fine as powdered. Look for “Baker’s Sugar” at the store, or simply put regular white sugar in your food processor and give it a few whirls to create superfine sugar.

Nutrition

Serving: 1serving, Calories: 437kcal, Carbohydrates: 65g, Protein: 4g, Fat: 19g, Saturated Fat: 2g, Cholesterol: 63mg, Sodium: 26mg, Potassium: 174mg, Fiber: 3g, Sugar: 46g, Vitamin A: 155IU, Vitamin C: 5.2mg, Calcium: 19mg, Iron: 1.3mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

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4.19 from 22 votes (10 ratings without comment)

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293 Comments

  1. Laura Drvlin says:

    Can I make this in a bundt pan?

    1. Lori Lange says:

      I haven’t tried a bundt pan with this cake, so not sure.

  2. Joann says:

    Can you use a boxed cake mix for this

    1. Lori Lange says:

      I have not tried that.

  3. Cynthia says:

    Can you use box cake to make it easier?

    1. Lori Lange says:

      I have not tried this.

  4. Jill says:

    5 stars
    I always wonder if recipe creators are annoyed by everyone making changes or if it’s inspiring or otherwise interesting to them. Anyway, I don’t eat eggs, so I made this vegan by substituting a commercial egg replacer for the eggs and this dessert is deliciously addictive. I think I’ll add vanilla to everything I make with cooked apples! I chose this recipe to use some of the apples from my tree. I don’t know what variety they are. They basically cooked down into apple sauce. Not sure if it’s because of the type of apple or maybe I sliced them too thin. In any case, it was still delicious and it’s even more delicious the next day!

  5. Karla Durnil says:

    I wonder if this could be made with peaches?

    1. Lori Lange says:

      I’ve never thought about that, so I’m not sure. Worth a shot?

  6. Connie says:

    What if I don’t have a spring form pan?

    1. Lori Lange says:

      That’s the only pan I’ve made this cake in– read through the comments and you might find a suggestion for baking it in another pan.

  7. Bev says:

    Would you be able to use a sugar free yellow cake instead of making one

    1. Lori Lange says:

      I have not tried that, so it would be an experiment!

    2. Kaylen says:

      Can this be made with melted butter instead of oil?

    3. Lori Lange says:

      Haven’t tried it!

  8. Eloise eloise says:

    I made this at a holiday house then realised the Oven Was broken so I dated to transfer it to a microwave safe dish and cook it in the microwave… and it worked beautifully!!!! I just told my kids it was pudding 😉 perfect!

  9. Kelly R says:

    Wondering if 9×13 pan would work instead of springform

    1. Lori Lange says:

      Have only tried this in a springform pan.

  10. Elaine Quest says:

    5 stars
    I made this with 1 and 1/4 cup of sugar because I used Honeycrisp and Red Delicious apples. I loved the crunchy, crisp crust of the pie cake upon the first night, but I reheated it in the oven on the second night to get the crispy crust. The vanilla is very good with the apples and smells delicious. It looks and smells so good out of the oven. This will be my go to recipe when I have extra uneaten apples. Thank you for the easy recipe although it took time to peel and core the apples. I made the batter first to avoid the apples browning.