The first time I made chocolate cherry upside down cake, it was completely by accident. I’d planned to make a regular chocolate cake for Lina’s birthday, but I’d bought too many fresh cherries at the farmers market and they were getting soft. Standing in my kitchen with cherries I needed to use and a chocolate cherry upside down cake pulled up on my phone, I remembered my grandmother’s pineapple upside down cake and thought “why not?” I dumped the cherries in the bottom of the pan with some brown sugar and butter, poured chocolate cake batter on top, and hoped for the best.
Why You’ll Love This Chocolate Cherry Upside Down Cake
Back making this decadent chocolate cherry upside down cake dessert for birthday parties, dinner parties, and random Tuesday nights when I just wanted something sweet, I know exactly what makes it work. The cherries on top are sticky and sweet with this caramel-like glaze from the brown sugar and butter that melted into them while baking. The chocolate cake underneath is rich and fudgy but not too dense it’s got this perfect crumb that’s moist without being heavy. When you cut into it, the cherry juice has soaked into the top layer of cake creating these pockets of intense cherry flavor.
What really makes this chocolate cherry upside down cake using cake mix (or from scratch) so great is how impressive it looks for minimal effort. You literally dump ingredients in a pan, bake it, flip it over, and suddenly you look like you know what you’re doing in the kitchen. Lina’s friends’ parents always ask if I went to pastry school when I bring this to events. I just smile and don’t mention that the hardest part was remembering to let it cool before flipping. It’s that perfect dessert for when you want to look fancy but don’t want to spend hours decorating a layer cake.
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Ingredients for Chocolate Cherry Upside Down Cake
For the Cherry Topping:
- Fresh or frozen cherries
- Brown sugar
- Butter
- Vanilla extract
- Pinch of salt
For the Chocolate Cake:
- All-purpose flour
- Cocoa powder
- Granulated sugar
- Baking powder and baking soda
- Salt
- Eggs
- Buttermilk or sour cream
- Vegetable oil
- Vanilla extract
- Hot coffee or water
Optional Add-Ins:
- Dark chocolate chunks
- Chocolate chips
- Almond extract
- Kirsch or cherry liqueur
See recipe card for quantities.
How To Make Chocolate Cherry Upside Down Cake Step By Step
Prepare the Cherry Layer
- Melt butter in your cake pan
- Pour melted butter into bottom of pan
- Sprinkle brown sugar evenly over butter
- Arrange pitted cherries in single layer on top
- Pack them close together, covering the whole bottom
Make the Chocolate Batter
- Whisk together flour, cocoa powder, sugar, baking powder, baking soda, and salt
- In separate bowl, beat eggs with buttermilk, oil, and vanilla
- Pour wet ingredients into dry ingredients
- Stir just until combined (don’t overmix)
- Add hot coffee last and mix gently

Bake the Cake
- Pour chocolate batter carefully over cherries
- Spread evenly but don’t disturb the cherry layer
- Bake at 350°F for 35-40 minutes
- Toothpick should come out with few moist crumbs
- Edges will pull away from pan slightly

The Flip
- Cool in pan for exactly 10 minutes (set a timer)
- Run knife around edges to loosen
- Place serving plate upside down on top of pan
- Hold both firmly and flip quickly
- Let pan sit for a minute before lifting off
Serve Warm
- Best eaten same day
- Serve while still slightly warm
- Top with whipped cream or vanilla ice cream
- Any stuck cherries can be scooped out and placed on top

Smart Swaps for Chocolate Cherry Upside Down Cake
Cherry Options:
- Fresh cherries → Frozen cherries (thaw and drain first)
- Regular → Cherry pie filling (super easy shortcut)
- Pitted cherries → Canned cherries (drain well)
- Sweet cherries → Tart cherries (better flavor, less sweet)
Chocolate Changes:
- From scratch → Chocolate cake mix (saves time)
- Regular cocoa → Dutch-process cocoa (darker, richer)
- Standard → Add espresso powder (intensifies chocolate)
- Plain → Mix in chocolate chips
Sugar Swaps:
- Brown sugar → Coconut sugar (same caramel notes)
- Regular → White sugar (less caramel flavor)
- Standard → Honey (different texture, still good)
Dairy Alternatives:
- Buttermilk → Sour cream (makes it denser)
- Regular → Milk with vinegar (homemade buttermilk)
- Dairy → Almond or oat milk (dairy-free)
- Standard → Greek yogurt (extra moist)
Fat Options:
- Standard → Applesauce (healthier, different texture)
- Vegetable oil → Melted butter (richer flavor)
- Regular oil → Coconut oil (slight coconut taste)
chocolate cherry upside down cake Variations
Black Forest Style:
- Add kirsch (cherry liqueur) to the cherry layer
- Use dark sweet cherries
- Top with whipped cream and chocolate shavings
- Fancy dinner party version
Double Chocolate:
- Add chocolate chips to the batter
- Use dark chocolate cocoa powder
- Drizzle melted chocolate on top after flipping
- Lina’s favorite version by far
Almond Cherry:
- Add almond extract to both cherry layer and cake
- Sprinkle sliced almonds over cherries
- Use cherry and almond together
- Tastes like marzipan
Individual Cakes:
- Make in muffin tins instead
- 3-4 cherries per cup
- Bake 18-20 minutes
- Perfect for parties
Boozy Adult Version:
- Soak cherries in rum overnight
- Add liqueur to the brown sugar layer
- Not for kids obviously
- Book club hit
Mixed Berry:
- Use half cherries, half raspberries
- Or cherries with blackberries
- Different flavor profile
- Summer version
Equipment For chocolate cherry upside down cake
- 9-inch round cake pan (with solid sides, not springform)
- Large mixing bowls
- Whisk
- Rubber spatula
- Cooling rack
- Serving plate (bigger than your pan)
Storing Your Chocolate Cherry Upside Down Cake
Room Temperature (2 days):
- Cover loosely with foil or plastic wrap
- Keep on the counter if your kitchen isn’t too warm
- Cake stays moist for about 48 hours
- The cherries get even more jammy
In the Fridge (5 days):
- Cover tightly with plastic wrap
- Bring to room temperature before serving
- Or warm individual slices in microwave 15 seconds
- Cold cake is denser but still good
Freezing (3 months):
- Wrap entire cake tightly in plastic wrap, then foil
- Or freeze individual slices wrapped separately
- Thaw overnight in fridge
- Warm slightly before serving
Serving Later:
- Cherry juice soaks in more
- Make a day ahead and leave covered on counter
- Actually tastes better next day
- Flavors meld together

Top Tip
- My aunt makes upside down cakes all the time, and hers always come out looking like magazine photos while mine sometimes had cherries stuck to the pan or the whole thing would crack when I flipped it. I finally asked her what I was doing wrong, and she laughed and said the problem wasn’t my technique-it was my pan. She pulled out this old, beat-up metal cake pan that looked like it had been through a war and said “nonstick pans are your enemy for upside down cakes.”
- Turns out, those fancy nonstick pans get too slippery. When you flip the cake, everything slides around and you lose that perfect pattern of cherries on top. Old metal pans that are just greased with butter create the right amount of stick-enough to hold everything in place during baking, but not so much that the cake won’t release.
- Her other secret? After you flip it and lift off the pan, if any cherries stuck to the bottom, don’t panic. Just scoop them out with a spoon and press them back into the empty spots on top of the cake. Nobody will ever know. The brown sugar glaze is sticky enough that they’ll stay put. I’ve “fixed” probably half the cakes I’ve made this way, and Lina has never once noticed. He just sees a beautiful cake covered in shiny cherries and thinks I’m a baking genius.
Why This Chocolate Cherry Upside Down Cake Recipe Works
From making this cake so many times and figuring out what makes it succeed, I’ve learned exactly why this method produces such good results. The brown sugar and butter mixture on the bottom creates a caramel sauce as it bakes the heat melts everything together and the sugar caramelizes slightly, creating that glossy, sticky coating on the cherries. Meanwhile, the juice from the cherries seeps down into that caramel layer, making it even more flavorful. When you flip the cake, all that caramelized goodness becomes the topping instead of being hidden on the bottom.
The chocolate cherry upside down cake batter itself stays incredibly moist because of two things the buttermilk adds tanginess and keeps it tender, while the hot coffee (or water) thins the batter just enough that it bakes up fluffy instead of dense. That thinner batter also means it can seep around the cherries better, so you don’t get big air pockets. The cocoa powder mixed with hot liquid blooms and releases more chocolate cherry upside down cake flavor than it would with cold liquid. It’s a trick professional bakers use that makes boxed cake mix taste homemade.
FAQ
What is the biggest mistake to avoid when making a dump cake?
Not letting it cool properly before flipping is the biggest mistake. If you flip too early, everything falls apart. Too late and it sticks to the pan. Set a timer for exactly 10 minutes after removing from oven. Also, don’t use a springform pan-the juice leaks everywhere and makes a huge mess in your oven.
What is a Tom Selleck cake?
A Tom Selleck cake is basically a pineapple upside down cake that became popular in the 1980s. It’s named after the actor because apparently he loved pineapple upside down cake. Our chocolate cherry upside down cake version uses the same upside down technique but swaps pineapple for cherries and adds chocolate cake instead of yellow.
Does chocolate go well with cherries?
Absolutely yes. Chocolate and cherries are a classic combination-think Black Forest cake or chocolate cherry upside down cake-covered cherries. The tartness of cherries cuts through rich chocolate perfectly, and when the cherries caramelize with brown sugar like in this recipe, they balance the chocolate even better. Lina wasn’t sure at first but now requests this specifically.
Do you wait for an upside down cake to cool before flipping?
Yes, wait exactly 10 minutes. Not longer, not shorter. Set a timer. If you flip it hot, everything slides off and makes a mess. If you wait too long, the caramel hardens and the cake sticks to the pan. That 10-minute window is when the cake is set enough to hold together but the topping is still slightly soft.
Bakery-Worthy Dessert Made Simple!
Now you’ve got all the secrets for making chocolate cherry upside down cake from using the right pan to nailing that crucial 10-minute flip timing. This isn’t just another cake recipe, it’s the one that makes you look like a professional baker without actually needing professional skills. Keep cherries in your freezer and you’ll always be ready to impress.
Want more easy desserts that look impressive? Try our The Best No Bake Moose Farts Recipe for chocolate coconut balls that kids think are hilarious. Our Delicious Brazilian Carrot Cake Recipe makes incredibly moist cake in a blender with chocolate glaze on top. And when you need a fancy dessert in 10 minutes, our Easy Bananas Foster Recipe turns boring bananas into something restaurant-worthy!
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Pairing
These are my favorite dishes to serve with chocolate cherry upside down cake

chocolate cherry upside down cake
Chocolate Cherry Upside Down Cake A rich, fudgy chocolate cake with a sticky caramelized cherry topping. Perfect for parties or an indulgent weeknight dessert.
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
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Melt butter, sprinkle brown sugar, and arrange cherries in the pan
-
Whisk flour, cocoa powder, sugar, baking powder, soda, and salt
-
Beat eggs with buttermilk, oil, and vanilla extract separately
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Add wet ingredients to dry, stir gently, then add hot coffee
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Pour batter over cherries and bake at 350°F for 35-40 minutes
Nutrition
Notes
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
