Gluten-Free Brownies + Carrot Cake

I’ve been working hard behind the scenes on a super sweet Valentine’s Day baking project for Simply Organic.  A few months back they asked if I would develop and photograph recipes for gluten-free brownies and gluten-free carrot cake.  Of course I was up for the task!

After countless trials and way toomuch sugar I had two definite winners, and I am beyond excited to finally share them with you!

The BEST Gluten-Free Brownies | edibleperspective.com
The BEST Gluten-Free Brownies | edibleperspective.com
The BEST Gluten-Free Brownies | edibleperspective.com
The BEST Gluten-Free Brownies | edibleperspective.com
The BEST Gluten-Free Brownies | edibleperspective.com
The BEST Gluten-Free Brownies | edibleperspective.com

Gluten-free brownies are something I’ve avoided for years now.  I just haven’t found one I love.  And it’s another one of those recipes I’ve been hesitant to try on my own.  I knew they would be a big undertaking involving many trials, multiple chocolate induced sugar comas, and tons of patience.  And that is exactly what happened.

There were at least 8 trials [I stopped counting] that I ever so slightly tweaked each time.  At first I tried using brown rice flour [with oat flour and almond meal] and it was horrific.  The texture was terrible.  From there I experimented using only oat flour and almond meal and got the ratios just right.  Only TWO flours!  No starches or gums and a pretty simple recipe.  I also tested different sweeteners, mixing methods, baking powder vs. baking soda, oven temperatures, chocolate vs. cocoa powder or both, and amounts of butter before finally landing on just the right combination of everything.

When it comes to brownies one thing I absolutely cannot do is health them up.  I can eat + enjoy a healthy cookie, a healthy muffin, or a healthy doughnut, but I cannot enjoy a healthy brownie.  I need the real thing.  And it also needs to have the exact right texture.  I don’t want to eat a slab of fudge and I don’t want anything fluffy and cake-like.  It must, must be super thick and chewy.

I know I haven’t had a brownie in a very long time but I’m pretty sure these are the best ever.  Gluten-free or not I promise these will not disappoint.

Gluten-Free Brownies

gluten-free

  • 2/3 cup gluten-free organic oat flour
  • 2 tablespoons organic almond meal
  • 2 tablespoons Frontier Organic cocoa powder
  • 1/4 teaspoon fine grain sea salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon baking soda
  • 6 tablespoons organic unsalted butter
  • 6 ounces high-quality organic dark or bittersweet chocolate, about 1 cup standard sized chocolate chips
  • 3/4 cup organic pure cane sugar
  • 2 large organic eggs
  • 2 teaspoons Simply Organic vanilla extract
  • optional mix-ins: chocolate chips, chopped pecans or walnuts, shredded coconut
  1. Preheat your oven to 350* Fahrenheit and thoroughly grease an 8x8 glass pan with butter.
  2. In a medium bowl whisk together the oat flour, almond meal, cocoa powder, sea salt, and baking soda. Set aside.
  3. Simmer water in a double boiler or place a large, heat-safe mixing bowl on top of a pot with simmering water [water should not touch the bowl]. Melt the butter. Add in the chocolate and stir frequently until the chocolate is melted and smooth.
  4. Remove bowl from double boiler and stir in sugar with a wooden spoon for about 30 seconds. Add in both eggs and stir until fully combined [about 20 seconds]. Stir in the vanilla extract.
  5. Pour dry ingredients into the wet bowl and stir until smooth and fully combined [about 20 seconds]. If adding any mix-ins fold in now. Pour into your pan and spread with a spatula to level.
  6. Bake on the middle rack for 33-38 minutes. Test with a toothpick for doneness. Toothpick should be moist but not gooey. Edges will rise slightly higher than the center.
  7. Place on a cooling rack and allow to fully cool before cutting. Brownies will firm and give a clean cut once fully cooled.

Notes:

If you cannot tolerate gluten-free oat flour feel free to substitute with a high quality all-purpose gluten-free flour for the oat flour only [outcome will vary slightly from original]. Oat flour can be ground in a blender or food processor from organic and gluten-free oat groats, steel cut oats, or rolled oats [not quick oats] until flour-like in texture. Sift out any larger pieces if necessary. Best ground in 1 cup batches. Almond meal can be ground from organic raw almonds [skin on] in a blender or food processor until flour-like in texture. Sift out any hard pieces if necessary. Best ground in 1 cup batches.

 

The BEST Gluten-Free Brownies | edibleperspective.com
The BEST Gluten-Free Brownies | edibleperspective.com

And now to the carrot cake.

Gluten-Free Carrot Cake | edibleperspective.com
Gluten-Free Carrot Cake | edibleperspective.com
Gluten-Free Carrot Cake | edibleperspective.com
Gluten-Free Carrot Cake | edibleperspective.com
Gluten-Free Carrot Cake | edibleperspective.com
Gluten-Free Carrot Cake | edibleperspective.com
Gluten-Free Carrot Cake | edibleperspective.com
Gluten-Free Carrot Cake | edibleperspective.com

I created a carrot cake recipe last year that has been one of the most popular recipes on the blog.  It’s dairy free and topped with an orange maple cashew cream frosting that you will want to eat with a spoon.

That recipe was the starting point for this cake.  It didn’t take quite as many trials as the brownies, but I did tinker with a few things.  The one main difference is that I left out the sweet rice flour and again used only oat flour + almond meal.  Only TWO flours, again!  The frosting isn’t dairy free but it is a bit lighter than a traditional cream cheese frosting.  I used neufchatel cheese and homemade powdered coconut sugar.  The coconut powdered sugar is much less processed than traditional powdered sugar and creates the most amazing caramel-like flavor.  I infused the frosting with orange zest and Simply Organic Orange Flavor for that burst of freshness I loved from my original recipe.

If you do happen to be dairy free just head to this recipe for a dairy free frosting.

Get the recipe–>Gluten-Free Carrot Cake*Don’t miss the notes at the bottom of the recipe for ingredient + substitution info.

Gluten-Free Carrot Cake | edibleperspective.com
Gluten-Free Carrot Cake | edibleperspective.com

I only wish you could have been here for the testing week to help me eat the mountains of sweets. 

Pass the kale.

Ashley

This post is not a sponsored post.  I’m just ridiculously excited to share these recipes and tell you about my work with Simply Organic!

Chocolate Almond Meal Cake with Chocolate Whipped Coconut Cream

Wednesday = cake day

Chocolate Almond Meal Cake with Chocolate Whipped Frosting | edibleperspective.com
Chocolate Almond Meal Cake with Chocolate Whipped Frosting | edibleperspective.com

Chocolate cake day to be exact.

Chocolate Almond Meal Cake with Chocolate Whipped Frosting | edibleperspective.com
Chocolate Almond Meal Cake with Chocolate Whipped Frosting | edibleperspective.com

With a chocolate whipped coconut cream frosting.

Chocolate Almond Meal Cake with Chocolate Whipped Frosting | edibleperspective.com
Chocolate Almond Meal Cake with Chocolate Whipped Frosting | edibleperspective.com
Chocolate Almond Meal Cake with Chocolate Whipped Frosting | edibleperspective.com
Chocolate Almond Meal Cake with Chocolate Whipped Frosting | edibleperspective.com
Chocolate Almond Meal Cake with Chocolate Whipped Frosting | edibleperspective.com
Chocolate Almond Meal Cake with Chocolate Whipped Frosting | edibleperspective.com

Showered with more chocolate.

Chocolate Almond Meal Cake with Chocolate Whipped Frosting | edibleperspective.com
Chocolate Almond Meal Cake with Chocolate Whipped Frosting | edibleperspective.com

And generously sliced.

Chocolate Almond Meal Cake with Chocolate Whipped Frosting | edibleperspective.com
Chocolate Almond Meal Cake with Chocolate Whipped Frosting | edibleperspective.com
Chocolate Almond Meal Cake with Chocolate Whipped Frosting | edibleperspective.com
Chocolate Almond Meal Cake with Chocolate Whipped Frosting | edibleperspective.com

My first trial [first photo] used 3 eggs, raw buckwheat flour instead of oat flour, and applesauce.  This created a crumbly and more muffin-like texture.  It was tasty but not really cake-like.  In the 2nd version I added more cocoa powder, switched to the softer oat flour, added 1 egg, and used pumpkin puree instead of applesauce.  The pumpkin helped the texture tremendously. 

The end result kind of blew me away.  I was still expecting something more dense and bread-like, but it was neither of those things.  It errs on the thick side but in the best way possibly with a slight cakey-crumb.  The texture is slightly fudgy thanks to the pumpkin puree but still softer + lighter than you would expect from an almond meal cake.  The fluffy whipped coconut cream frosting is the perfect compliment to this single layered beauty.

The cake and whipped topping are both pretty easy to make.  Just be sure to read the directions and notes before starting and you should be good to go!  Refrigerating the coconut milk can overnight will help get you started right away.

Chocolate Almond Meal Cake with Chocolate Whipped Frosting | edibleperspective.com
Chocolate Almond Meal Cake with Chocolate Whipped Frosting | edibleperspective.com

Print this!

adapted from: The Sprouted Kitchen cookbook, Almond Meal-Strawberry Cake

Chocolate Almond Meal Cake with Chocolate Whipped Coconut Cream

gluten-free, dairy-free // yields 8-12 servings

for the cake:

  • 2 cups almond meal
  • 1/2 cup gluten-free oat flour
  • 1/2 cup coconut sugar, or sucanat/pure cane sugar
  • 6 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 4 large eggs
  • 1/2 cup pumpkin puree
  • 1/4 cup honey, or brown rice syrup/coconut nectar
  • 3 tablespoons liquid from coconut milk can, or almond milk/soy/etc.
  • 2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
  • 3 tablespoons unrefined coconut oil, melted and slightly cooled
  • 1/3 cup chopped dark chocolate chips, dairy free if needed

for the frosting:

  • coconut cream from 1, 13.5oz can full fat coconut milk
  • 2-3 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 2-3 tablespoons powdered coconut sugar, or powdered sugar
  • 1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

to separate the coconut cream: Place the can of coconut milk standing right side up in your freezer for 1 hour or in your fridge overnight.  Flip the can over and open so the liquid will now be on top.  Pour the liquid into a container/bowl, measure 3 tablespoons, and set aside.  [Place excess liquid covered in the fridge and use in smoothies, etc.]  Scrape the solid coconut cream into a bowl and place in your fridge. 

cake: Preheat your oven to 325* F and grease an 8-inch round pan thoroughly with coconut oil. 

In a large bowl stir together the almond meal, oat flour, coconut sugar, cocoa powder, baking soda, baking powder, and salt.  In another bowl whisk the eggs together briskly.  Then whisk in the pumpkin, honey, coconut liquid, and vanilla until fully combined.  Whisk in the melted coconut oil and pour into the dry ingredients.  Whisk or stir until just combined [when you no longer see dry flour].

Pour into the pan, spread with a spatula, and bake for 32-37 minutes. While the cake bakes make the frosting below.  Test with a toothpick for doneness [slightly moist but not sticky].  Place on a cooling rack for 30 minutes.  Slide a butter knife around the edge of the pan and slightly nudge the sides with the knife if needed to help release.  Place one hand on top of the cake and the other holding the pan and gently turn the pan over.  Gently place the cake right side up on the cooling rack and let fully cool before frosting.

whipped frosting: Place the solid coconut cream in a cold metal bowl and beat with your whisk attachment [hand mixer or stand mixer work] working up to high speed until semi-stiff peaks form, ~2-4 minutes.  Beat in the cocoa powder, powdered coconut sugar, and vanilla until smooth.  Place in the fridge until cake is fully cooled.

Spread the frosting over the top of the cake and top with chopped chocolate chips.  Slice and serve.  Keep leftovers covered and refrigerated for about 3 days. 

----

notes: The topping is very light in texture with a whipped cream consistency.  It’s not like buttercream frosting.  Sometimes the peak stiffness will vary depending on the brand of coconut milk used but it should still be very thick and spreadable.  To make coconut powdered sugar [I never buy powdered sugar!], simply blend 1/2-1cup coconut sugar in your blender until powdered.  Store excess in a sealed jar.  You can also do this with pure cane sugar.  If you cannot tolerate GF oat flour substitute a high-quality GF all-purpose blend for the oat flour only.  The bottom edges of the cake are slightly crumbly but the cake should hold together well once fully cooled. 

For an extra intense flavor try adding 1-2 teaspoons of instant espresso powder to the dry cake ingredients!

Chocolate Almond Meal Cake with Chocolate Whipped Frosting | edibleperspective.com
Chocolate Almond Meal Cake with Chocolate Whipped Frosting | edibleperspective.com

Forget the gifts for Valentine’s Day this year.  Just make this cake and call it a day.

Ashley