Easy Baked Pears

  3.9 – 5 reviews  

This chocolate cake recipe is a favorite in our family. According to family tradition, it was given to my aunt in the 1940s by a friend. My aunt Lu requested the recipe when “Harriet G.” presented it to a ladies’ “coffee-klatsch.”

Prep Time: 10 mins
Cook Time: 35 mins
Total Time: 45 mins
Servings: 2

Ingredients

  1. 2 large pears
  2. 1 teaspoon maple syrup, or to taste
  3. 2 tablespoons brown sugar or to taste
  4. 2 tablespoons butter
  5. 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon or to taste
  6. ½ cup vanilla ice cream

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C).
  2. Cut top quarter of pears off; create a well by scooping out the core, being careful not to puncture the bottom of the pear. Arrange pears in a shallow baking dish.
  3. Drizzle maple syrup over pears. Place 1 tablespoon brown sugar and 1 tablespoon butter in each pear; sprinkle with cinnamon.
  4. Bake in preheated oven until pears are easily pierced with a fork, 35 to 50 minutes. Serve with ice cream.

Nutrition Facts

Calories 352 kcal
Carbohydrate 57 g
Cholesterol 45 mg
Dietary Fiber 7 g
Protein 2 g
Saturated Fat 10 g
Sodium 115 mg
Sugars 43 g
Fat 15 g
Unsaturated Fat 0 g

Reviews

Sarah Hicks
I love pears, but didn’t have large ones, so I used smaller ones and cut them in half. oh so yummy! They were perfect, and I ate mine before taking a picture, so had to take another. lol.
Daniel Brooks
Made this ages ago while a kiddo, could not remember exact details. I was thrilled to find this and bake up a fresh pear, tasted just as I remembered. 🙂 I cannot use cinnamon so opted out. Did mash up the pears to made it like a pearsauce, like applesauce so all of the flavors melded together, was Simply Wonderful.
Heather Downs
I used home grown Asian pears. Recommend less butter and partially skinning the pears if they have even a slightly tough skin, it will reduce the bitterness
Lisa Wells
Not being a big fan of pears I was a little skeptical that I would like these, but I did. I added extra cinnamon, because I really like cinnamon and then I took the liquid that was produced while cooking and drizzled http over the pears.
Brian Malone
I’m familiar with baked fruits for dessert, and am normally a HUGE advocator for butter, but the butter just sat inside the pear as it baked, and when I took it out, it splashed everywhere, and ran out all over the place when I cut it, mixing with the ice cream. The amount of cinnamon was quite a lot compared to the small amount of pear flesh that was leftover after I was done scooping out the insides, and if I made this again, I would combine all the ingredients together (after melting the butter) and then just drizzle over the pears in the dish. Maybe even cut whole pears up in slices beforehand to minimize the waste from digging through the top to get to the seeds in the center. For people not used to eating fruit, this might be a way to get them to eat it, but it’s definitely not healthy nor indulgent, and the ratio of butter/sugar/spice to fruit was just way, way off for me. 🙁

 

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