Making A Foolproof Gluten Free Cake
Life without gluten can be full of obstacles and variations, but that shouldn't mean you have to settle for something less.
Take cake for an example. Gluten-free cakes will never be as good as the wheat ones, right? WRONG! I myself am not gluten intolerant, but I do know what it's like to have to give something up because it's not healthy and try to find an alternative. I don't like to settle for something less; for me taste is a very close second to healthy.
My biggest goal in producing gluten-free recipes is "foolproof-ness." Cake was a big one, and I was eager to try it. This was right about the time that I was really getting into my little coconut flour frenzy and trying to come up with as many recipes as possible for the product. Cake was something I hadn't tried yet, but I was ready to start experimenting.
The first thing was ideas. I wanted to do a yellow and chocolate cake, but decided on the chocolate first. I found a chocolate cake recipe I liked, and began the long process of taking it apart, adding, taking away, testing, testing, testing. By the time I was done it was a totally different recipe. It was by far the longest time I ever spent developing a recipe; even longer then my Coconut Flour Brownies. I tried, and tried again. Each time there always seemed to be something wrong with it. The biggest issue was the dryness. It always seemed too dry. The more I experimented, the more the amount of eggs grew. Soon they had reached a rather alarming amount, but by that time I finally had the perfect gluten free chocolate cake.
It was moist, fluffy, chocolaty, and perfectly foolproof. Many times I've made them for company dessert (many with little kids by the way) and unless I told them they were gluten free they would've never known or suspected and would've just kept on happily wolfing it down.
No, no, seriously. It's really that good. If you make it, follow the recipe exactly and please don't change a thing and then tell me it doesn't work. It really does work. The eggs are the most important part, and they definitely cannot be changed.
While you're mixing the eggs and butter together, don't panic if the butter separates into little sesame seed shapes. That's normal, and doesn't bother anything at all. I also recommend having the butter still just a tad bit cold, not near melting point.
This recipe can be made as a 2, 8 inch layer cake, a 9 inch layer cake, or cupcakes. I like to use a buttercream frosting for this cake but pretty much anything that goes with chocolate will be good on this.
If any of you try the recipe, please feel free to let me know how you liked it. :)
Making A Foolproof Gluten Free Cake
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| Gluten Free Coconut Flour Chocolate Cake recipe |
| Prepared by Sarah Shilhavy, Photo by Jeremiah Shilhavy |
- 1 cup butter - softened
- 1 2/3 cups sugar (white or brown, I recommend the whole sugar)
- 10 eggs (at room temperature)
- 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 2 cups coconut flour
- 1 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
- 1 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
- 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 1/3 cups whole milk or half n' half
- Coconut oil
Pre-heat oven to 350 degrees. Grease two 9 inch or 8 inch layer pans with coconut oil and dust with cocoa powder.
In an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, combine butter and sugar, and beat together for about 2 minutes. Add eggs in one at a time and beat high speed for about 3 minutes. Add in the vanilla while beating the eggs and butter mixture. In a separate bowl, combine the dry ingredients together and add alternately with the milk to the butter mixture. Beat batter for about five minutes on high speed. Spoon batter into the two prepared cake pans and smoothen out tops.
Bake in preheated oven for 30-35 minutes, or until toothpick inserted into the center of cake comes out clean. Place pans on wire rack and cool for 10 minutes before removing from pans. Cool cakes completely before frosting. Use your favorite frosting to frost the cake.
Peppermint Chocolate cake variation: add 1 teaspoon peppermint extract to batter before pouring into pans and mix well. Frost cake with peppermint frosting or frosting of your choice.
Cupcakes: Make recipe as directed but spoon batter into muffin cups and bake for about 26-30 minutes. Frost after cupcakes have cooled completely. Makes about 24 cupcakes.
Enjoy everyone!
Sarah Shilhavy
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| The average is oldaverage based on oldtotal votes. |






The recipe will work with regular beaters. Just watch the batter and stop mixing once it looks pretty well incorporated. As with any mixer the time it takes to mix everything together will vary. The thing that you should really follow exactly is the ingredient list, but you'll be fine with regular beaters. :)
Thanks
Susan
You can also make icing with the xylitol.
Thankyou so much for the recipe, Sarah!!!
Xylitol from birch trees is best.
I have made some other gluten-free cake recipes with coconut flour, and have found that the bunt-cake pan makes for a wonderful presentation, especially with chocolate syrup drizzled on top. Yum!
You didn't indicate if you submitted the recipe for that yummy-looking icing. Is it just a butter icing with coconut on the outside of the layers? If it's a coconut icing, I'd love to have the recipe. I'm trying your cake recipe today!
The frosting is White Chocolate Buttercream. I just frosted and filled the cake with that and pressed coconut flakes on the side. I can't remember which recipe I used (it's not on this site) but it's basically just a classic vanilla buttercream with melted white chocolate (around 5 oz). Enjoy the cake! :)
Thanks,
G
Thanks,
Kirk
I substituted the applesauce and honey for the amount of sugar that the recipe called for. I also use cocnut milk too and it was fabulous! enjoy!!
Thanks for this terrific recipe!!
I didn't know that about Agave... :0(
Trying to change the sugar and gluten aspects of my diet.
Thanks for posting!
The cocoa in this recipe plays a big part and if it were taken out the dry ingredients would be off balance, so to speak. If you need just a regular white/yellow/vanilla cake give the GF Yellow Cake recipe a try.
To be more specific, it tastes more like cocoa powder flavored bisquits with the dense heavy consistency I've come to expect from all my coconut flour baking :( Other than splenda, I followed this recipe to the letter. I just started my second kilo of coconut flour today and if I don't start getting better results, it will be the last coconut flour I buy. Unfortunate because health wise it's a great product.
I really don't recommend using splenda at all as it is NOT a healthy sweetener. There are many coconut flour recipes on here that are light and fluffy; I hope you give it another try! You can read my article here on making a good coconut flour baked good: http://www.freecoconutrecipes.com/index.cfm/2009/11/4/making-a-light-fluffy-gluten-free-coconut-flour-muffin
You can take any regular vanilla frosting recipe and swap out coconut oil for some of the butter or shortening that it calls for.
When I try this, I will substitute some of the eggs with soaked flax seed (1T of ground flax+ 3T water, set for 5 min = 1 egg). I have had great success with this in baking many times so I'll come back and post my results!
I'm so glad you are straight forward about some of these substitutions. I was so irritated when I learned how bad agave nectar, splenda, etc. really is. Have you tried Stevia? What do you think of it?
Suzie: Coconut sugar/palm sugar, same thing. We do not support the use of it as it is a non sustainable product.
Thanks so much!
Unfortunately it was very dry and crumbled when I took it out of the pan. Should I have added xanthan gum or something else? My original recipe was very moist.
Thanks for stopping by!
i made the recipe as is and added:
1 cup of cooked and finely grated beet (beetroot-purple variety)
1/2 a cup of melted dark chocolate
1/4 teaspoon of nutmeg
then decorated it with chocolate ganache icing (dark chocolate and cream) and fresh berries (blue berries, raspberries, and strawberries).
not too sweet, very rich and moist.... mmmmm yum
I have allergies to dairy products and I'm planning on using almond milk instead of cow's milk. Is there a substitue for the butter that I could use? Also, do I have to use baking soda or can I just use more of the baking powder? Thank you!
Wheat flour and coconut flour are completely different, but you definitely cannot use a 1:1 ratio. Usually anywhere from 1/3-1/2 cup of coconut flour to 1 cup of ap flour is what you'll end up getting, but to make up for the gluten you will need something like eggs or sugar. I recommend making a few tried and true coconut flour recipes first before trying to make your own.
This may be a strange question but can people who need to stay away from yeast use coconut flour? Thanks for your recipes! Leslie