Cherry and Apricot Clafoutis Recipe (2024)

By Martha Rose Shulman

Cherry and Apricot Clafoutis Recipe (1)

Total Time
1 hour 30 minutes
Rating
5(470)
Notes
Read community notes

Cherries and apricots are both in season together, and combine nicely in many desserts. I use half almond flour and half all-purpose flour in this clafoutis. Serve it warm or at room temperature, and eat leftovers for breakfast.

Featured in: A Cherry Jubilee

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Ingredients

Yield:8 servings.

  • ¾pound ripe cherries, stemmed and pitted
  • ¾pound ripe apricots, halved and pitted
  • 2tablespoons Kirsch
  • 6tablespoons sugar
  • cup (40 grams) unbleached all-purpose flour
  • cup (35 grams) almond flour
  • 3eggs
  • 1vanilla bean, scraped, or 1 teaspoon vanilla
  • Pinch of salt
  • cup low-fat yogurt

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (8 servings)

173 calories; 4 grams fat; 1 gram saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 1 gram monounsaturated fat; 0 grams polyunsaturated fat; 27 grams carbohydrates; 2 grams dietary fiber; 20 grams sugars; 6 grams protein; 56 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Cherry and Apricot Clafoutis Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    Toss the cherries and apricots with the Kirsch and 2 tablespoons of the sugar, and let sit for 30 minutes. Drain over a bowl. Sift together the all-purpose flour and almond flour.

  2. Preheat the oven to 375 degrees. Butter a 9- or 10-inch ceramic tart pan or clafoutis dish. Arrange the drained cherries and apricots in the dish.

  3. Step

    3

    In a medium bowl, beat the eggs with the remaining sugar and the seeds from the vanilla bean or vanilla. Add the salt and the liquid from the cherries and apricots and combine well. Slowly beat in the sifted flours and whisk until smooth. Add the yogurt and combine well. Pour over the fruit, scraping out all of the batter with a rubber spatula.

  4. Step

    4

    Bake in the preheated oven for 40 minutes, until the top is browned and the clafoutis is firm and puffed. Press gently on the top in the middle to see if it’s firm. If it isn’t, return to the oven for 5 minutes.

  5. Step

    5

    Remove from the oven and cool on a rack. Serve warm or at room temperature.

Tip

  • Advance preparation: If you're making this for a dinner, you can make it several hours ahead. The leftovers will keep for about 3 days in the refrigerator.

Ratings

5

out of 5

470

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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

Rosemarie

Push a drinking straw through the cherries to perfectly pit them and leave you with a whole, pitted cherry. A sturdy straw, such as one from Starbucks, works particularly well.

Mark R

This was good and was not difficult, though it takes some time to pit the cherries (but you get a nice break afterwards while the fruit soaks). I had to use the extra 5 minutes of baking time, and it probably could have used a few minutes more. Mine looked just like the picture, but tasting it I felt that the fruit-to-cake ratio was off. Next time I would use about 75% of the specified amount of fruit.

Tasha

Why are people struggling pitting cherries? Buy a cherry pitter. It will open up entire worlds of cooking.

A Reader

Would this recipe work if all the flour were almond flour, for a gluten-free version? Thank you.

Heather T

Use a small piping tip to pit the cherries. Place bottom on cutting board and push the cherry over the tip—the seed pops right out!

Patrise Henkel

I learned to make clafoutis in southern France when the cherry harvest was coming in. We were taught to leave the cherries whole and plant them in the batter with stems sticking up, a little forest of them.

Yum!

Randy

Kirsch is recommended because of its cherry flavor but any sweet fruit flavored liqueur or fruit brandy will work: Triple Sec, Curacao, Cointreau, Grand Marnier (all are orange flavored), Calvados (apple), Mirabelle or Slivovitz (plum), etc. I have even used Limoncello in a pinch. It is only 2 TBL so it isn't a big deal. If you want to avoid alcohol you can substitute water or fruit juice. Clafouti is very adaptable. The real genius in this version is the use of almond flour.

Margarita

I experimented to make this nearly sugar-free. On the third try, I cracked it: I kept one tablespoon of sugar to macerate the fruit and replaced the rest with 18 drops of liquid Stevia. Added an egg white for structure and 1/4 cup milk, left out the Kirsch. It came out GORGEOUS, tasty, not too sweet. Because of the protein and low sugar/fat, it makes a lovely breakfast! I've made this with just apricots and just cherries - both are great. (Tip: You can pit cherries with a chopstick.)

norma

used plums instead of apricotsused honey instead of sugarused kefir and cream cheese instead of yogurt

MC Salander

Question? I haven't made this, but would like to give it a try. The cake in the picture looks upside down to me. Is the batter so creamy that it pushes the fruit to the top while baking? Also, how important is it to use a clafoutis pan (the one piece of baking equipment I don't [yet] own)?

Jonathan

Tasty and easy. I used six minutes extra baking time, without which it was still gooey. Noting prior comments about appearance, I only poured enough batter to leave the tops of the cherries exposed; there was about 2/3 cup batter leftover. I varied the recipe, substituting heavy cream for the yogurt and adding a half tsp powdered ginger; to my taste this was a slight improvement, although it added lots of fat.

Amanda

Not important to use a clafoutis pan. Use a pie plate. The clafoutis in the photo is not upside down. That is how clafoutis looks. The fruit nestles in the batter.

AllanA

While you can still get 'em.

CarolC

Clafouti is one of my most favorite dessertsI I've made it with berries, stone fruits, and even strawberries (but I wont use them again, they have too much moisture and I had to cook the clafouti forever).Traditional French clafouti is more of a custard than this recipe, made with all heavy cream and always with cherries. The recipe I have always used has milk, eggs, sugar, vanilla, and flour. And I always reduce the sugar.But I'm going to try this recipe, with blueberries!

Chris M.

This tasted good, but the fruit all stayed on the bottom, unlike the one in the picture. Perhaps the answer is to save some fruit and scatter on top?

Nancy

I'm making this today --the fruit is marinating right now. I don't have a ceramic clafoutis dish or ceramic tart pan, so I'm substituting a pie plate. I wish the recipe author had offered some guidance on alternative baking dishes and how to adjust (baking times/temp?) the recipe if needed.I think it's likely that others don't have these specialty(?) pans. Wish me luck! Thanks.

SBK

Adding this to my summer bakes - made modifications to suit what I had on hand and still turned out! Used little less than called for cherries and only (2) apricots Used Tito’s vodka in place of kirschAdded lemon zest to fruit mixture Used siggi’s black cherry low-fat yogurt Baked in a 9-inch dutch oven, heavily buttering then sprinkling sugar and rotating sugar to coat buttered surface because I felt like it. Texture came out similar to a mochi donut, light but bouncy, which I enjoyed.

Jeff

Really good; especially good warm with vanilla ice cream! Rather than buy a bottle of Kirsch to use 2 tablespoons and never touch it again, I used tart cherry juice instead.

jules

Cherries and apricots in season May-September

Mary

Used Greek yogurt as that was what's in the house. The texture felt odd, not rubbery, but it that category, and it seemed as though the batter was undercooked. Thoughts?Has anyone made this with milk and not yogurt?

lady jean

This recipe was so dense and thick. Everyone still ate it. But I’ll try a more traditional recipe next time. - using milk and butter instead of yogurt. And a higher ratio of liquid to flour.

FML

Could you use dried apricots with this?

bee g

Made with 1.5 lbs of white and yellow peaches, macerated with sugar and an herbal gin (only liquor on hand). Perfectly luscious. My new go-to clafoutis recipe, and I’ve tried many.

Tricia

We made this using GF one to one flour instead of AP flour and it was very good. I used chambord instead of kirsch.

tammy

Maybe clafoutis is just beyond me both in skill and taste - i keep trying different recipes but every result is disappointing. Cherries were delicious but the apricots (which were firm) dissolved, there was no pudding-like texture. Oh well ...

Shirley, from Upstate Manhattan

The recipe does not specify whether these are sour cherries or sweet (Bing-ish) cherries.

Susan R

The recipe for clafoutis that I learned in its place of origin (Limousin region, France) requires that the cherries NOT be pitted. This keeps the fruit whole and juicy, and keeps the juice out of the batter, giving a wonderful texture to the body of the clafoutis, as well as a beautiful color that contrasts with the cherries. It also drastically cuts prep time. (Just warn your guests about the pits.)

65th St Fan

Agree that this dessert is not really a clafouti, but it's darn good! My guests and husband loved it. It will go on my annual list of summer desserts to make.

betsy

Made recipe mostly as written but used GF flour instead of AP. Used whole milk yogurt. Used 10” glass pie dish to spread fruit out. Delicious but next time I will put batter in first and then top with fruit to see if I can get more fruit to show through batter.

Anne

I’ve always wanted to love clafoutis but find them too dense. I’ve made this recipe and others several times trying to enjoy this simple French dessert. This recipe was the best of them with the substitution of ground almonds for part of the flour. But today I made it and omitted the flour entirely; I kept everything else the same. I loved it! It’s not really a clafoutis anymore, it’s something else - and it’s very good.

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Cherry and Apricot Clafoutis Recipe (2024)

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