My upside-down fruit salad cake is a quick and easy store cupboard standby with only three ingredients. This cake is unbelievably simple to make with tinned fruit cocktail. Fun, frugal and tasty, it’s also vegan, fat free and fuss free.
Easy Upside-Down Fruit Cocktail Cake
This cake really does use just three ingredients. You need a can of fruit cocktail (in juice, not syrup), self-raising flour, and sugar. I just added a little extra water to increase the amount of liquid and give a nicely sized cake.
This cake is perfect if are low on ingredients but don’t want to go shopping, as all the ingredients will be from your pantry.
Why Make It?
- This tinned fruit cake works for everybody – it’s fat free, vegan and is part of your daily intake of fruit and veg!
- The recipe only uses store cupboard ingredients – ideal when you can’t get to the shops.
- No food waste, as you use the juice and the fruit!
- It keeps well. If anything, I think it tastes better the next day, making it a great make-ahead cake.
- The batter mixes easily with a spoon, so there’s no need for a mixer.
- The recipe is very forgiving, so there’s none of that Bake-Off style obsessing about accurate measurements.
How to Make 3 Ingredient Upside Down Fruit Salad Cake
Grab your ingredients:
- Canned mixed fruit (in juice)
- Self-raising flour
- Caster sugar
Preheat the oven to 170°C (fan)/340°F/Gas Mark 5. The cake needs to go into a hot oven, so it’s important to wait for it to reach the correct temperature before you start work.
Step 1 – Open a can of fruit cocktail in juice and strain it over a bowl, reserving the juice. Line a cake tin with baking paper (grease-proof paper or baking parchment). Lightly oil the top of the paper. Arrange the fruit in the cake pan.
You can use
- 8″ / 20 cm round tin
- 8 x 6″ (20 x 15 cm) rectangular tin
- or a 7″ square tin
Step 2 – Mix the flour and sugar together. Then fold in the fruit juice with two tablespoons of water. The batter should be thick, but if needed add a little more water to loosen it.
Step 3 – Pour the batter over the fruit. Gently shake the cake pan from side to side to spread the batter out. Now put the cake in the oven immediately to bake for 35 minutes.
Step 4 – After 35 minutes, check that the cake is cooked. If it is ready, the top will be golden and springy. Use a toothpick to test – it should come out clean. If necessary, return the cake to the oven for another 5 minutes before checking again.
When it’s done, allow to cool for 5 minutes.
Step 5 – Put an upside down wire cooling rack over the cake and careful flip it over. Gently ease the cake tin off your fruit cocktail cake. Slowly and carefully peel off the parchment paper, using a knife if any fruit gets stuck to it.
Hints & Tips
- If you don’t have self raising flour, add 2 teaspoons of baking powder to plain flour. Mix well before using.
- I use golden caster sugar, but any caster sugar is fine. Even granulated will work.
- Strain the juice well.
- You need to bake the cake as soon as you have mixed the batter because of the reaction between the raising agent in the flour and the juice. Heat the oven and prepare the cake pan before you make the batter.
- This cake is actually better on the second day, once the sponge has absorbed more juice from the fruit.
- The cake can be kept at room temperature for a day. If the weather is hot, or if you need to keep it for longer, wrap and keep in the fridge. If you don’t do this, the fruit may ferment! Eat within 3 days.
- If you have a fresh lemon to hand, you could grate a little lemon zest and add to the batter.
- If you love fruit cocktail try this fruit cocktail crumble
More Easy Cakes
- Vegan ginger cake
- Olive oil cake
- Fruit loaf
- Berry yogurt loaf cake
- Marmalade cake
- Dorset apple cake
- Soul cakes
Simple Tinned Fruit Cake
Ingredients
- 410 g fruit salad/cocktail in juice
- 100 g (0.5 cups) caster sugar (I prefer golden)
- 185 g (1.5 cups) self raising flour
Instructions
- Measure out the self-raising flour and sugar. Switch the oven to 170°C (fan)/340°F/Gas Mark 5 to heat up. The cake needs to go into a hot oven, so wait for it to reach the temperature before you start to mix the batter.
- Grease a 8" x 6" cake tin with vegetable oil or cake release spray, and line the bottom with baking paper (greaseproof paper or baking parchment). Lightly oil the top of the paper.
- Arrange the drained fruit in the cake tin.
- Put the flour and sugar in a large mixing bowl and add the juice along with two tbsp cold water. Mix with a spoon or spatula to make a thick batter.
- Spread the batter over the fruit. Then gently shake the cake pan from side to side to spread the batter out. Put in the oven immediately to bake for 35 minutes.
- Test to see if the cake is cooked. When it's ready the top will be golden and springy to touch. A tooth pick pushed into the middle of the cake should come out clean. If not, return the cake to the oven for another 5 minutes before checking again.
- Let the cake stand for 5 minutes to cool and firm up.
- Put a wire cooling rack over the cake and carefully flip it over. Carefully remove the tin. Slowly and carefully peel off the parchment paper using a knife if any fruit gets stuck to it.
Notes
- If you don't have self raising flour, add 2 teaspoons of baking powder to plain flour. Mix well before using.
- I use golden caster sugar, but any caster sugar is fine. Even granulated will work.
- Strain the juice well.
- Heat the oven and prepare the cake pan before you make the batter.
- This cake is actually better on the second day, once the sponge has absorbed more juice from the fruit.
- The cake can be kept at room temperature for a day. If the weather is hot, or if you need to keep it for longer, wrap and keep in the fridge. If you don't do this, the fruit may ferment! Eat within 3 days.
- If you have a fresh lemon to hand, you could grate a little lemon zest and add to the batter.
- This recipe is 8 Weight Watchers Smart Points per portion
Video
For more easy cakes recipes, try my easy peasy ginger cake or my delicious (and vegan) traditional tea loaf.
Danielle
Ah, I’ve always enjoyed upside-down cakes. I am sure this one won’t be an exception. It is so bright and looks absolutely delicious!
Kristen
This fruit cake is so good! Thank you for sharing the recipe!
Christie Gagnon
So good!
Anita
This is such a simple and cool cake recipe with only 3 ingredients! Perfect when I am craving a cake and doesn’t want to do complicated recipe. :)
Cate
Love this recipe! It looks so yummy and beautiful, thanks for sharing!
Michelle
Delicious, quick, easy, and perfect for lockdown baking when you don’t have any eggs but fancy a teatime treat. Fabulous!
Robyn
Amazingly easy to make and utterly delicious. It works perfectly.
Nikki Ward
Upsidedown fruit cakes remind me of childhood and I love them. what a brilliant idea. So simple too.
james
wow what a healthy & mouth watering post is this i am trying daily some foods to cook due to lockdown and now next one is fruit cocktail cake shared by you i hope i will get best and tasty cake for my family thanks for sharing i will share my experience
Helen
I hope that you enjoy it.
dominique
Helen, thankyou for your recipe. I tried it but my cake turned out dense. Probably because I didn’t sift the flour?
Helen
Hi Dominique,
It is quite a dense cake – more of a pudding cake, than a light and fluffy one. It’s possible your baking powder was stale.
The cake does improve after a day as the sponge absorbs the fruit juice. We also love it served with lightly whipped cream.