Bolzano Apple Cake
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
Scented with vanilla and custardy in texture, this simple apple cake comes together in one bowl and emerges golden-crusted. It is one of the most delicious apple cakes I make and never fails to please adults and children alike.
The roots of Bolzano apple cake lie in the Alto Adige region of Italy, where Scott Carsberg of Seattle’s Lampreia trained as a young chef. There, Carsberg worked at the Michelin one-star restaurant, Villa Mozart, whose menu reflected the simple foods of the region, and whose chefs taught him how to make Bolzano apple cake, a classic northern Italian peasant dessert.
Over twenty years later, Carsberg put the cake on his menu, serving it with caramel ice cream. Yum (Read more about Carsberg, Lampreia, and the Bolzano apple cake in this New York Times article: Seattle Grown, Italian Flavored.)
I adore this cake, and I want you to, too. Some of you, however, have had trouble with this recipe, mostly with the baking time, which some of you have noted has taken as long as 90 minutes. I know every oven is different and every pan conducts heat differently, so baking times will surely vary, but I worry that cooking this “cake” for over an hour will severely alter its delicate texture and flavor.
Why? Because Bolzano apple cake is more like a cross between a clafouti and a pancake. After the cake is removed from the oven, it falls, and the slices of vanilla-seed speckled apples meld together sinking into the tiniest of tiny layers of custardy cake. It is delectable.
If you fear your oven’s temperature and dial aren’t quite calibrated accurately — mine certainly are not — I recommend getting one of these little oven thermometers. Mine hangs from my top oven rack, and I refer to it every time I use my oven.
When testing the doneness of this cake, inserting a knife will offer little guidance. The paring knife I used emerged covered with little bits of batter. I still removed the cake from the oven after 55 minutes of cooking and let it cool in its pan on a rack for more than 30 minutes before tucking in.
I most enjoy eating this cake when it has cooled to room temperature. I’d wager, in fact, that it peaks at breakfast the next day. Good things come to those who wait? Or something like that.
PrintBolzano Apple Cake
- Total Time: 1 hour 30 minutes
- Yield: 1 cake
Description
Source: Adapted from The New York Times 2004
I’ve adjusted the recipe only every so slightly in that I make this in one bowl, whisking the salt and baking powder directly into the batter, and adding the milk and flour successively as opposed to alternately.
Ingredients
- 1 stick butter (4 ounces | 114 g), plus more for greasing pan
- 2 eggs
- 1 cup (200 g) sugar
- 1 vanilla bean (or 2 teaspoons vanilla paste or extract)
- 3 to 4 apples, such as Fuji or Honey Crisp (about 1¼ pound or about 3 cups once peeled and sliced)
- ½ cup (64 g) all-purpose flour
- 2 teaspoons baking powder
- 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
- ½ cup (140 g) milk at room temperature
- powdered sugar
Instructions
- Heat oven to 375ºF. Grease a nine-inch-circle pan with butter. Cut a circle of parchment paper to fit the bottom of the pan and place inside pan. Grease sides of pan and parchment round with butter.
- Melt butter in small saucepan. Set aside. Beat together eggs and half of sugar in a bowl. Continue to beat while slowly adding remaining sugar until thick — it should form a ribbon when dropped from spoon.
- Split vanilla bean in half lengthwise. Scrape seeds into the egg-sugar mixture and add pod to melted butter.
- Peel apples and cut straight down around the core into four big chunks. Discard the core then slice the apple pieces thinly.
- Remove vanilla pod from butter and discard. Whisk butter into the sugar-egg mixture. Add the salt and baking powder and whisk to combine. Whisk in the milk. Whisk in the flour.
- Add the apples, and use a spatula to incorporate them, coating every piece with batter. Pour the batter into the prepared pan.
- Bake for 55 to 60 minutes or until the cake pulls away slightly from the pan and is brown on top. Cool for at least 30 minutes, then cut into wedges sprinkling each with powdered sugar if desired.
- Prep Time: 30 minutes
- Cook Time: 60 minutes
- Category: Dessert
- Method: oven
- Cuisine: Italian, American
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
313 Comments on “Bolzano Apple Cake”
I made it with Honey Crisp apples and used 1/2 cup of sugar and it was PLENTY sweet. Can’t imagine using the full cup! I’ve made a lot of apple cakes and this was really different. It’s not MEANT to be cake-y so don’t add more flour!
Made this today as written! So delicious! I used 4 honey crisp apples and probably should have used less as it filled my 9” cake pan to the top! Mine tuned out darker than yours – but not burnt – more like caramel! My husband loved it! Apple – custard- crispy edge goodness!❤️ love your blog – all your recipes sing!
So nice to hear this, Annie 🙂 🙂 🙂 Thanks so much for writing.
Excellent recipe…my Italian hubby loves it, especially the custardy part. Question: how do I store it? Should leftovers be refrigerated or left a room temperature?
I’d store it at room temperature especially if your kitchen is on the cool side and if you think it will only last another day or two. That said, if you have enough leftover for 3-4 days, you may consider refrigerating it — it is going to be warm outside (at least up here) these next few days.
So nice to hear this!!
What type of flour would be a good substitute to make this GF? Almond?
I know lots of people have used gf mixes with success here. I’m not sure how almond flour alone would do, but it’s worth a shot. It might be on the dense side, but this is a very custardy cake, so perhaps not all that different than the gluten version.
The batter went under the parchment paper and I had a separate cake under! I will try no paper! What is the reason for the parchment paper?
Bummer! To prevent sticking to the bottom of the pan. I think it will work without parchment, however.
I made this dish exactly as written and it was a HUGE hit! I used 4 different kinds of apples: Granny Smith, Honey Crisp, Cortland & McCowan. The taste was a nice balance of sweet/tart and soft/crisp. Mine came out darker, too, but it was not burnt -just nicely caramelized. Thank you for this simple, one bowl dessert.
Great to hear, Beatrice! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes — 4 different types of apples sounds lovely.
So delicious, I used unpeeled honey crisp apples, it was perfect! Thank you for another great recipe.
(Can’t wait for the pizza cookbook!)
Good to know! I’ve been meaning to try. And thank you so much 🙂 🙂 🙂 Means the world.
This is a fantastic baked good. I hesitated to call it a cake because it is so much more than that! It is combo of cake, custard, and dutch pancake! It is absolutely delicious! My hubby is the baker in the family but this just sounded too good not to try. And i loved the history surrounding the recipe! I don’t like really sweet desserts and this is just perfect in terms of sweetness, creaminess and then there’s the outside “crust” which sort of caramelized and provided a tasty crunchy treat!
I made it exactly as the recipe called for except I used almond milk, which you couldn’t taste. It’s just what I had. Fantastic recipe!!
Great to hear, Cathy! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes 🙂
Hi! We have a group coming over tonight and I’d like to try this. Do you think it would work to double it and put it in a 9×13?
Should be fine! The thickness might be a little different than when baked in a cake pan, but it will still be delicious. Go for it 🙂
Sugar should be 3/4 cup or less. Butter quantity can be reduced as well. the taste is absolutely delicious.
I had trouble with cooking time; it was still pretty soft and wet in the center after 60 min. I turned off my oven and let it sit another 5min. I cut sugar to 1/4 cup and it was great. I will definitely add this to my recipe favs.
I would give it more than five stars if I could. I made this recipe with plant based butter and oat milk because my daughter is allergic to dairy. It can put fantastic. Next time I’ll make two at the same time.
So nice to read this, Christina 🙂 🙂 🙂 Thanks for writing and sharing your notes — so helpful for others.
This cake is an absolute dream. So delicious and easy to make. Kids loved it. Perfect after baking and the next day. Thanks for sharing.
Great to hear Dominika 🙂 🙂 🙂 Thanks for writing.
Followed the recipe to a T (although doubled it) and it was AMAZING! I served it at a dinner party and everyone loved it (a few even asked for the recipe). We used Granny Smith apples for their tartness – so good! One thing I will note is that the top was getting dark after only half an hour in the over so I turned the heat down to 300 and pulled it out after another 15 minutes – it was cooked perfectly! Thank you so much for posting this recipe 🙂
Great to hear! Thanks for writing and sharing these notes — others have asked about doubling. So glad it worked out and glad you kept an eye on it, too 🙂
A one bowl wonder! Thank you! So easy and delicious- another gem!
So nice to hear, Jess! Thanks so much for writing 🙂
Wow! Loved, loved this cake…thanks for this recipe !
Great to hear, Amy! Thanks for writing 🙂
Made this for the first time tonight (after seeing an earlier post from Ruth Reichl posted on Instagram about this type of cake). Came out absolutely delicious and my house smelled amazing!
Will definitely make again!
Great to hear, Rachel! Thanks for writing 🙂
so good!! Such a easy and quick dessert (outside of baking time) to make. Delicious!
Great to hear, Mary Anne!
Can this be frozen?
Not sure! I haven’t tried. My guess is that it wouldn’t hold up as well as other cakes.
I made this tonight. It is absolutely delicious. It is definitely a combination cake/Dutch baby. The edges got crispy. Absolutely delicious. I was wondering if anybody has used a Spring form pan to make it easier to take out?
Great to hear, Laureen! I can’t personally speak to using a spring form pan, but others have successfully.
I made this today using Bobs Redmill GF flour. I also used vanilla sugar which was delicious.
I will definitely make this again
Great to hear! Thanks for writing and sharing your notes, Jill 🙂
Hi.
Can’t wait to try this one out!
Can you freeze it?
Hi! I haven’t tried but I don’t think this is the best cake to freeze… I worry it will lose its custardy texture.
Really easy to follow recipe and very tasty cake. I agree that it’s best the next morning and at room temperature.
I’ve made it twice now, once using a vanilla pod, and the second time I replaced about 8g of the sugar with vanilla sugar instead, and that was still really nice (and a lot cheaper).
I baked it at 175°C with the fan on for 55 minutes and it came out perfect both times.
Great to hear, Sabrina! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes 🙂
Wow! We all loved it. It’s simply beautiful and so delicious. I had no problem with the baking time and I used GF flour and nobody could tell! That’s always a plus!
This Bolzano cake was delicious. I will cut back on the sugar however and serve it with a caramel sauce or cinnamon or caramel ice cream. My neighbor went nuts for this. Cutting back on the sugar will for sure cut back on all the sugary edges however.
My baking friend and I made this during our baking weekend in early October and it was amazing. A tiny bit overbaked so darker than yours but still custardy inside.
We shared it with friends and in fact the entire meal was Alexandra based; a cornmeal crust savory galette, the cabbage, fennel salad affair with the citrus dressing and candied pepitas.
My husband and I went to Lampreia once for a special occasion meal, a big splurge for us at the time, and while I don’t remember the meal, I don’t think it included this applecake. I’ve added it to my holiday dessert list this year.
Thank you for always providing background and context for all the delicious recipes you share with us. Yours is is one of a few food sites I visit regularly any longer and I will make sure I stop by even more frequently now while you fundraise.
Like so many other of your followers, I am eager to see the pizza book. I have pre-ordered two copies but I know I’ll be gifting additional copies to friends (I think to date, I have given away 8 copies of Bread Toast Crumbs).
Thanks again.
Awww, Susanna, it is so nice to read all of this. Thank you so much. How fun that you’ve been to Lampreia. I’m still dying to visit Seattle and other parts of the Pacific Northwest. Maybe next spring! It means the world to hear you’ve preordered Pizza Night, and I can’t thank you enough for spreading so much Bread Toast Crumbs love. Thank you 🙂
Hi! The top of the cake burned within 15 minutes of putting it in the oven!!! I tripled checked the temperature to make sure I didn’t make a mistake. Any idea why this happened? I out a foil paper on top and will try baking it until it’s cooked and save the bottom part. It looked so yummy while I was making it :((
Bummer to hear this! Does your oven typically run hot?
Absolutely delicious. I love custardy desserts. And it’s perfectly sweet and light.
Great to hear, April! I agree 🙂 🙂 🙂
This is an easy and delicious recipe. I’ve made it about four times now and each time it’s an absolute delight. Fancy enough to serve to company but casual enough to just have on a rainy afternoon with my sweetheart. I’ve made it with Gravenstein apples, Honeycrisp apples, and one time I made it with crisp, Bartlett, pears. Absolutely scrumptious.
Great to hear, Nancy! Thanks for writing 🙂
Cake turned out perfect, cut the sugar a bit as I used sweet tango apples, baked quickly and is delicious, Thank You !
Great to hear, Rick! Thanks for writing 🙂
It was delicious! My family loved it. Added a scope of Dulce De Leche ice cream.
Yum!