Roasted Pears with Dark Chocolate Ganache (The Easiest Impressive Dessert)

These roasted pears with dark chocolate ganache are the easiest impressive dessert you’ll make all year. One pear, a maple-cinnamon glaze, a simple ganache. Forty-five minutes. Done.

Baked pear halves filled with glossy dark chocolate ganache and topped with chopped hazelnuts, served on a rustic wooden board with a fresh pear in the background

Some desserts look like they took hours. This one actually takes about 45 minutes, uses a single pear, and requires zero baking skills, but when you bring it to the table, people are going to think you trained at a patisserie.

Roasted pears with dark chocolate ganache. That’s it. That’s the whole trick.

The pear goes into the oven with a maple-cinnamon glaze, slowly caramelizes into something soft and fragrant and golden, then gets a spoonful of rich, glossy dark chocolate ganache nestled right into its center. Add a scattering of toasted hazelnuts, and you have a dessert that is genuinely, embarrassingly easy and genuinely, embarrassingly delicious.

I made this for the first time on a Tuesday night, just for myself. And then I made it again on Saturday for guests. It hit differently both times, which is honestly the mark of a great recipe.

Why You’ll Love This Recipe
  • Ready in under 45 minutes with minimal hands-on time
  • Only one pear needed – scales perfectly for one or two people
  • Feels elegant and restaurant-worthy without any technical skill
  • Dark chocolate + pear + cinnamon = a flavor combination that just works
  • Naturally not-too-sweet – it’s a grown-up dessert
A gold fork lifting a piece of baked pear coated in rich dark chocolate ganache sauce, showing the glossy texture and caramelized fruit underneath
The Ingredients (And Why Each One Matters)

This recipe is intentionally short. Every ingredient earns its place.

The Pear

Use a ripe but firm pear – Bartlett is my go-to, but Bosc or Anjou work beautifully too. You want it ripe enough to have sweetness and fragrance, but firm enough that it holds its shape during roasting. A pear that’s too soft will collapse in the oven.

If you love the combination of roasted pear with rich, creamy toppings, my Baked Brie Pear with Honey, Rosemary & Pine Nuts is another favourite – same cozy energy, totally different flavour profile.

The Maple-Cinnamon Glaze

This is where the magic starts. Butter, maple syrup, brown sugar, cinnamon, and just a few drops of vanilla. It sounds simple, but after 35-40 minutes in the oven, it transforms into a sticky, fragrant lacquer that caramelizes around the edges of the pear. The maple brings a depth that plain sugar simply can’t match.

The Dark Chocolate Ganache

50g of 70% dark chocolate, 30g of heavy cream, a pinch of flaky salt. That’s it. The ratio leans thick and rich on purpose – it holds its shape in the cavity of the pear without running all over the plate. If you’ve never made ganache before, this is the version to start with. It’s genuinely difficult to get wrong.

Hands holding a dark chocolate bar over a ceramic plate, with fresh pears in the background, ingredients for baked pears with chocolate sauce

The Flaky Salt

Don’t skip this. A pinch of flaky salt stirred into the ganache is what separates a nice dessert from an exceptional one. Salt amplifies chocolate the same way it amplifies everything else – it just makes the flavor louder and more complex.

The Hazelnuts

Optional, but highly recommended. The toasty crunch against the soft pear and smooth ganache is textural perfection. It also gives the dessert a visual finish that looks genuinely impressive.

Love that sweet-salty-crunchy combination? My Pistachio Baked Brie with Honey Glaze & Honeycomb plays with the same idea in a completely different way.

How to Make Roasted Pears with Dark Chocolate Ganache

Here’s the step-by-step. The full recipe card with exact measurements is below.

Step 1: Roast the Pear

Preheat your oven to 375°F (190°C) for gentle, even caramelization, or 400°F (200°C) if you want deeper color and a more intense caramelized crust. Halve your pear, scoop out the seeds with a melon baller, and place cut-side up in a baking dish.

Mix your glaze – butter, maple syrup, brown sugar, cinnamon, a few drops of vanilla — and spoon it generously over each pear half. Roast for 35-40 minutes until the pear is completely soft and the edges are deeply golden.

Step 2: Make the Ganache (While the Pear Roasts)

This takes about 5 minutes and then needs 20-30 minutes in the fridge, so start it as soon as the pear goes in the oven. Heat your cream until it’s just steaming – not boiling – then pour it over your chopped dark chocolate. Leave it for a full minute without touching it, then stir slowly from the center outward until it’s completely smooth. Add the pinch of flaky salt, stir again, and refrigerate.

About 5 minutes before the pear is done, take the ganache out of the fridge. You want it thick and spoonable — not liquid, not rock solid. If it’s too stiff, let it sit a little longer at room temperature.

Step 3: Rest, Then Assemble

When the pears come out of the oven, let them rest for 3-5 minutes. If there’s excess liquid pooled in the cavity, tip each half briefly cut-side down onto a paper towel before plating – this gives you a clean base for the ganache.

Spoon the ganache into the center of each pear half and let it settle naturally. Finish with your chopped toasted hazelnuts, and serve immediately.

Tips for the Best Roasted Pears
  • Choose the right pear. Firm-ripe is the sweet spot. If it gives a lot when pressed, it may collapse during roasting.
  • Don’t rush the ganache. Letting the cream sit on the chocolate for a full minute before stirring is what gives you that perfectly smooth, glossy result.
  • Timing the ganache pull from the fridge is key. Take it out 5 minutes before the pear is done so it’s perfectly spoonable when you need it.
  • Toast your hazelnuts in a dry pan for 3-4 minutes over medium heat until fragrant. It makes a significant difference to the flavor.
  • If you’re making this for guests, the pears can be roasted ahead and kept warm in a low oven. Make the ganache fresh.
Variations Worth Trying

Add Orange Zest to the Glaze

A teaspoon of fresh orange zest stirred into the glaze adds a bright, citrusy note that pairs beautifully with the chocolate and spice. It elevates the whole thing into something that feels genuinely refined.

Swap the Hazelnuts

Toasted walnuts or pecans both work well. Pistachios would be stunning visually – that flash of green against the dark chocolate.

Serve with Something Creamy

The pear is wonderful on its own, but with a dollop of whipped cream, a scoop of good vanilla ice cream, or a spoonful of mascarpone alongside, it becomes a full restaurant-worthy dessert. The cold creaminess against the warm pear and room-temperature ganache is genuinely excellent.

And if you’re already turning the oven on, my Baked Brie with Pear and Honey makes a stunning starter before this dessert – pear on the table twice, zero complaints.

Make It Milk Chocolate

Not everyone loves the intensity of 70% dark. A milk chocolate ganache (same ratio) is sweeter and more crowd-pleasing – great if you’re making this for kids or people who aren’t dark chocolate fans.

Serving and Storage

This recipe is best served fresh and warm. The contrast between the caramelized pear, the glossy ganache, and the crunchy nuts is at its best right out of the kitchen.

If you need to make it ahead: roast the pears, make the ganache, and store separately. Reheat the pears gently in a low oven (300°F / 150°C) for 10 minutes, then assemble just before serving. The ganache can be gently warmed in 10-second microwave bursts, stirring between each, until it reaches the right consistency.

Leftovers keep in the fridge for up to 2 days. The pear softens further overnight, which some people actually prefer.

A baked cinnamon pear half sliced open and filled with dark chocolate ganache, topped with chopped hazelnuts, on a wooden board — a simple elegant fall dessert recipe
Frequently Asked Questions

Can I make this for one person?

Absolutely – just use half the pear and halve the ganache quantities. The rest of the process is identical.

What pears work best for roasting?

Bartlett, Bosc, and Anjou are all excellent choices. Avoid very small or very ripe pears. The pear should yield slightly to pressure but still feel firm overall.

Can I use milk or white chocolate instead?

Yes. Keep the same ratio (50g chocolate to 30g cream). White chocolate ganache is very sweet, so the flaky salt becomes even more important as a counterbalance.

My ganache is too runny. What happened?

It likely needs more time in the fridge. Give it another 10-15 minutes and check again. If it’s still too thin, your cream may have been too hot when added – this can cause the fat to separate. Next time, make sure the cream is just steaming, not simmering.

Can I double this recipe for more people?

Easily. Use one pear half per person, and scale the glaze and ganache proportionally. You may need a larger baking dish so the pears aren’t crowded.

Final Thoughts

There’s something deeply satisfying about a recipe that looks far more complicated than it actually is. These roasted pears with dark chocolate ganache are exactly that – they feel like a special occasion dessert, but they ask almost nothing of you in return.

Make them on a Tuesday for yourself. Make them on a Saturday for someone you want to impress. Either way, I don’t think you’re going to be disappointed.

If you make this recipe, I’d love to hear how it went. Leave a comment below and let me know – and if you added the orange zest variation, definitely tell me, because I need that feedback.

Loved this recipe? Pin it, share it, or save it for later!

And if you’re looking for more easy elegant recipes, start with my Pear in Puff Pastry with Brie & Honey – it’s another one that looks far more impressive than the effort involved.

Baked pear halves filled with glossy dark chocolate ganache and topped with chopped hazelnuts, served on a rustic wooden board with a fresh pear in the background

Roasted Pears with Dark Chocolate Ganache

Soft caramelized pear with a rich dark chocolate ganache center, finished with toasted hazelnuts. Elegant enough for a dinner party, easy enough for a Tuesday night. Ready in 45 minutes with minimal effort.
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 35 minutes
Total Time 45 minutes
Servings: 2 1 pear half each
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: American, French

Ingredients
  

For the pear:
  • 1 ripe but firm pear Bartlett, Bosc, or Anjou
  • 1 tsp unsalted butter softened
  • 2 tsp maple syrup
  • 2 tsp light brown sugar
  • ¼ tsp ground cinnamon
  • A few drops of vanilla extract
For the ganache:
  • 50 g dark chocolate 70%, finely chopped
  • 30 g heavy cream
  • 1 pinch flaky sea salt
Optional to serve:
  • 2 tbsp chopped toasted hazelnuts
  • Whipped cream vanilla ice cream, or mascarpone

Method
 

  1. Preheat the oven to 375°F (190°C) for gentle caramelization, or 400°F (200°C) for deeper color and a more intense crust.
  2. Prep the pear. Halve the pear lengthways and use a melon baller to scoop out the seeds and core, creating a neat cavity.
  3. Make the glaze. In a small bowl, mix together the butter, maple syrup, brown sugar, cinnamon, and a few drops of vanilla extract until combined.
  4. Roast. Place the pear halves cut-side up in a baking dish. Spoon the glaze generously over each half. Roast for 35–40 minutes until completely soft and deeply caramelized at the edges.
  5. Make the ganache (start this while the pear roasts). Heat the heavy cream in a small saucepan until just steaming – do not boil. Pour over the chopped chocolate in a heatproof bowl. Leave untouched for 1 full minute, then stir slowly from the center outward until completely smooth. Add the pinch of flaky salt and stir to combine. Refrigerate for 20–30 minutes until thick and spoonable.
  6. Temper the ganache. About 5 minutes before the pears are done, remove the ganache from the fridge. It should be thick and spoonable – not liquid, not set hard.
  7. Rest the pears. Remove from the oven and rest for 3–5 minutes. If liquid has pooled in the cavity, tip each half briefly cut-side down onto a paper towel before plating.
  8. Assemble. Place pear halves cut-side up on serving plates. Spoon ganache into the center of each and allow it to settle naturally. Finish with chopped toasted hazelnuts and serve immediately.

Notes

  • Pear choice matters. Firm-ripe is the sweet spot – ripe enough for sweetness, firm enough to hold its shape during roasting.
  • Oven temperature. 375°F gives gentle, even caramelization. 400°F gives deeper color and a slightly more intense edge. Both work well
  • Ganache timing. If the ganache is too firm when you take it out, leave it at room temperature for a few extra minutes. It should fall from a spoon in thick, slow ribbons.
  • Make-ahead. Roast the pears and make the ganache separately. Reheat pears in a 300°F (150°C) oven for 10 minutes. Warm ganache gently in 10-second microwave bursts, stirring between each.
  • Variation. Add 1 tsp of fresh orange zest to the glaze for a bright citrus note that pairs beautifully with the dark chocolate.
  • Serving suggestion. Excellent alongside whipped cream, vanilla ice cream, or a spoonful of mascarpone.

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