To Amanda Marsteller, this delicious German plum cake is the edible bearer of autumn and a meaningful family tradition.
By Amanda Marsteller
When the Brooklyn air turned crisp this year, it meant only one thing: time to bake Pflaumenkuchen. To me, this German plum cake is the edible bearer of autumn and a meaningful family tradition. I remember both my mother and grandmother making this cake as soon as the weather turned, when the special Italian prune plums are in season in late summer and early fall. These purple bruise-hued, oblong plums with their lime green innards are crucial for the success of this dessert, as no ordinary plum will do. They are better suited to baking than eating raw, as when baked their flesh experiences a magenta metamorphosis and softens to a mellowed tartness. Though the translation of the German word is plum cake, this cake is really more of an open-faced tart. The plums rest in neat rows over top a dense, cookie-like crust. This crust is sturdy enough to contain the plums’ bleeding juices and is flavored with almond, reminiscent of marzipan.
Perhaps the most important element of this plum cake is the preparation of the Italian prune plums. I’ve always been taught to quarter and pit the plums so that each quarter remains linked to its brothers, arm-in-arm. This ensures a uniform row of green plum soldiers, ready to be neatly placed over the crust in formation. Aside from the detailed plum prep, this cake is elegant in its simplicity, and is well-served with a light scattering of sugar over top to draw out the sweet plummy nectar. It is not unheard of for an individual to devour an entire baking sheet‘s worth of Pflaumenkuchen alone, as the glistening plum juices stain the rich nuttily-scented crust, and beckon fall straight from the oven.
PrintFall-Flavored: Pflaumenkuchen
- Total Time: 1 hour 20 minutes
- Yield: 12 1x
Description
A juice-laden autumnal tart that celebrates the ripe season of the Italian prune plum.
Ingredients
- 3 pounds (1.36 kg) Italian prune plums
- 2 cups (453 g) flour
- 1/2 cup (113 g) sugar
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- 1 pinch salt
- 1/4 cup (57 g) butter
- 1 egg, beaten
- 1 teaspoon almond extract
- Milk
- Sugar for sprinkling
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.
- Quarter each plum so that all four quarters remain clinging together, forming a row.
- In a bowl, mix the flour, sugar, baking powder, salt, and butter together by cutting the butter in with a fork.
- In measuring cup, combine the beaten egg and almond extract, then add enough milk to make 3/8 of a cup total.
- Add this to the dry ingredients and mix them together with your hands, forming a dough.
- If the dough is too sticky, add a touch more milk.
- Spread the dough thinly over a 13×9 inch jelly roll pan and cover it with overlapping rows of plums.
- Bake the tart for 1 hour and let it cool slightly before sprinkling with sugar.
- Prep Time: 20 mins
- Cook Time: 1 hour
Can you make this with a different kind of plum when Italian plums are out of season? It is November here in New York and I can’t find any Italian plums.
Thank you was sooooo good…
I am German and I remember my mother making Pflaumenkuchen in the fall.
I just found the correct plums at a store and will endeavor to make this Kuchen this Sunday. I just don’t understand that the recipe does not let the dough “rise”.
If you can, please reply – someone.
Thank you
Eva Hamilton
It is indeed very close to an original. Und bitte mit viel schlagzahne!
This is the closest recipe I’ve found for pflaumemkuchen that matches the amazing ones I had in Germany. I’ve been homesick for my homeland and have had a craving for this for years, always with the promise that my Oma will make me one someday. Well my birthday ia coming up this Sunday, and I plan on making it myself! So danke sehr for the wonderful recipe!!!
I sometimes add a little more milk to this to loosen up a sticky dough. I don’t usually add flour to avoid it becoming too heavy. Oftentimes, just adding a little milk is enough.
Interesting, I guess I’ll try it soon enough, as I’ll make “der Pflaumenkuchen” this weekend. Thank you.
Hope to see this on the thanksgiving table!
“If the dough is too sticky, add a touch more milk.”
More milk or more flour?