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Gluten Free Chocolate Fig Cake made with coconut flour and brown rice flour. Naturally sweetened for a low glycemic, sugar-free, healthy cake!

Slice of chocolate cake on a blue plate with a roasted fig to the side.

There is something called bliss and it lives inside this cake.

There’s so much about this cake that you need to know. There’s so much about this cake that you need to eat.

Way back when I posted my Chocolate Beet Cake, a French woman left a comment saying she baked the cake and loved it, but she used less coconut sugar than the recipe called for. She explained that in France, they prefer their cakes less sweet than we do here in the states.

Little alarm bells went off in my noggin when I read her comment because I also prefer my sweets less sweet. Sweet, but not incredibly sweet.

Why You’ll Love This Recipe:

Because figs are wonderful to use as natural sweeteners, I add no sugar at all to this recipe and let the figs be the only source of sweetness.  The cake turns out marvelously! Perfectly sweet for someone like me who prefers treats with less added sugar.

This chocolate fig cake is rich in chocolatey flavor! There is also a bit of texture from the little fig seeds, so it’s like you’re eating a fig newton cake (which I love).

For those who will be serving this cake to guests, I would suggest adding some form of sugar (coconut sugar, date sugar or agave would keep it natural) because not everyone will enjoy a non-sweet cake.

I know. You’re rolling your eyes and looking at me like, “Julia, that cake is raw.” And it’s not. I promise, it’s not! It’s just super moist and delicious. And pudding-like.

Gluten Free Chocolate Fig Cake | https://www.theroastedroot.net

Chocolate Fig Cake Ingredients:

The base of this chocolate fig cake recipe is coconut flour and brown rice flour. This results in a dense, rich cake.

We also need ripe figs, eggs, avocado oil, full-fat canned coconut milk, a little pure maple syrup, and cocoa powder.

If you prefer fluffier cakes and feel like experimenting, use 4 eggs instead of 2 and use 1/4 cup of coconut milk instead of 1 cup.

The nature of the coconut flour beast is it requires more eggs than regular flour in order to get it to a fluffy consistency.

Whole chocolate cake with a slice taken out.

Chocolate cake lovers, also try some of my other favorite chocolate cake recipes!

More Chocolate Cake Recipes:

Enjoy this healthy cake recipe! Seriously. Eat it for breakfast.

Chocolate Fig Cake

5 from 25 votes
By Julia
Prep: 15 minutes
Cook: 45 minutes
Total: 1 hour
Servings: 8 Servings
The richest, most unique chocolate cake recipe, this Gluten Free Chocolate Fig Cake is perfect for those who have a sweet tooth but like to keep the sugar level lower.
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Ingredients 

Instructions 

  • Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F.
  • Cut the figs in half, place them cut-side up on a baking sheet and roast them for 15 to 20 minutes, until they’re soft and juices are running out.
  • Remove figs from the oven and allow them to cool (to speed up this process, put them in a bowl and stick them in the freezer/refrigerator just until they’re lukewarm or cold).
  • Add the figs and the coconut milk to a blender and blend until smooth.
  • In a mixing bowl, combine the blended figs/milks with the eggs, oil and vanilla extract. Mix until smooth.
  • Add the flours, cacao powder, baking powder and salt to the wet mixture and stir just until combined.
  • Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.
  • Pour the cake batter into a well-oiled 8” cake pan.
  • Bake for 40 to 45 minutes or until cake tests clean.

Notes

*you can replace the avocado oil with almond oil, canola, grapeseed, coconut, or olive oil.
**you can also use regular cocoa powder. For a sweeter cake, add 1/4 cup of coconut sugar or date sugar, or 2 tablespoons of agave nectar

Nutrition

Serving: 1Serving (of 8), Calories: 246kcal, Carbohydrates: 25g, Protein: 5g, Fat: 15g, Saturated Fat: 6g, Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g, Monounsaturated Fat: 5g, Cholesterol: 51mg, Sodium: 300mg, Fiber: 6g, Sugar: 11g

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

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Meet the Author

Julia Mueller

Julia Mueller is a cookbook author, recipe developer and owner of TheRoastedRoot.net. She shares quick and easy recipes for all occasions, from nutritious weeknight meals to holiday recipes. Dinner recipes, side dishes, desserts, appetizers, and more, can all be found on her website. Go to Julia's about page to learn more about her.

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5 from 25 votes (2 ratings without comment)

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31 Comments

  1. Nina says:

    hi I’m going to make this cake today. but I just want to clarify is that 1/2 cup rice flour or 1 to 2 cups rice flour? sorry just looks a bit confusing. thanks so much 🙂

  2. Vimala says:

    I want to make this using almond flour, what would you recommend for consistency?
    Should I still use 6 eggs, maybe 1/2 cup of almond milk (instead of 1 cup) + 1/2 cup of almond flour + 1/2 cup of coconut flour?

    Thanks again for sharing reciple

    1. Julia says:

      That’s a great question! Here’s what I would venture to guess: 4 eggs, 1/2 cup coconut flour, 3/4 to 1 cup almond flour, 1/2 to 3/4 cup almond milk. The rest of the portions I’d leave the same (but remember to add additional sweetener if you want it sweet!!). You want the consistency of the batter to be thick but still pour-able. Let me know what you end up doing and how it turns out, I’m super curious!!

      1. Twinkle says:

        This looks like a wonderful recipe! I will be trying this for Valentine’s Day with almond & coconut flours. Thank you for the potential conversions and I hope to post my feedback this week.

  3. Ashley - baker by nature says:

    This cake is so pretty I could cry… cause I’m not eating it and all! Gorgeous job, mama!

  4. Shelley @ Two Healthy Kitchens says:

    This is ridiculously gorgeous! But about that “get-out-of-scrambled-eggs” eat it for breakfast thing: why stop there? I’m thinking lunch … dinner … midnight snack … 😀

  5. Jennie @themessybakerblog says:

    This cake looks wonderful. Yeah, I’m all for delicately sweetened desserts. I’m also all for fig newton like cake. Yum!

  6. dishing up the dirt says:

    damn girl, where were you on my birthday? I needed this cake this weekend. I am also a fan of less sweet treats and this sounds perfect! beautiful photos as always!

  7. Caralyn @ glutenfreehappytummy says:

    Mmmm I love figs!

  8. Brooke Schweers says:

    Oh yay more fig recipes!!! once Figs come into season again this gorgeous cake will be the first thing I make! It just looks so moist and chocolately… mmm

  9. Aurélie says:

    I’ve just recently discovered your blog and I love it.
    I like my chocolate cake dense so this sounds just perfect! Also, roasted figs? ummm
    I’ve never seen cooking almond oil before, I need to find some!

  10. Tieghan says:

    Oh man, you are killing me with this!! Please or please will you send me some figs?? I cannot find them anywhere! UGH!!

    This is so stunning, so gorgeous and so elegant. I love that is is not super sweet and and very natural. Sounds perfect to me!!

  11. Cassie | Bake Your Day says:

    Simply stunning, Julia! I bet the chocolate and figs are a perfect match!

  12. Georgia @ The Comfort of Cooking says:

    This is such a gorgeous, rich looking cake, Julia! I love how simple it is but how elegant. Lovely recipe!

  13. Erin @ Texanerin Baking says:

    This looks amazing! Love the pudding-y-ness of it all. 🙂

    Such pretty pictures!

    And yeah… use the recommended amount of sugar in a regular American recipe in Europe and the first words you’ll hear are, “Too sweet.” At least here in Germany. I want to kick them when they say that. At least say it in a nicer way. “It’s delicious but a bit too sweet for my liking.”

    See. Not difficult! 😉

    (sorry for my rant!)

    1. Julia says:

      Aww! Yeah, I can see how the whole thing could get irritating. Thankfully, the person who mentioned the sweetness thing was really, well, sweet…and not overbearing, so that was fortunate 😉 Good luck with the un-sweet-cake-folk 😉

  14. Shashi @ http://runninsrilankan.com says:

    This cake looks INSANELY heavenly !!!

  15. Julie says:

    My niece, who happens to turn 25 today, just landed in the hospital last weekend and they discovered that she has Celiac disease. Her sister asked me for blogs with gluten-free recipes, so I sent her to your blog, This will be perfect for them! I hope you have a good weekend, my dear. P.S. I got a hard math problem and I had to think. Now I need a nap.

    1. Julia says:

      Oh no! Sorry to hear about your niece! I actually don’t know anyone with Celiac’s and I hear it can be debilitating 🙁 I hope she feels better soon and let her know she can email me any time if she has questions on gf baking/cooking or needs some ideas.

      Captchas can be ridiculously tough. Multiplication? division? Oh please, let me get my calculator! 😉

      1. Julie says:

        Thank you! I’ll let her know. Her only downside is that she lives in Barcelona (please, where are the violins of sorrow when we need them??), and I don’t think that she has an oven. I’m not clear on that. Frankly, we are pretty relieved that it’s Celiac, considering our family history. She was very sick, though. I think she’s doing better, thankfully.

  16. Alexis @ Hummusapien says:

    This is just TOO gorg. The roasted figs?? I can’t even. Pinned!

    1. Julia says:

      Thanks Alexis! Roasted figs are my favorite thing in the world right now! Must eat as many as possible before they go out of season! 🙂