There are muffins you bake because breakfast needs something sweet. And then there are muffins like these Vegan Flourless Chocolate Muffins — the kind that come out of the oven with a slightly cracked, deeply dark top and an interior so dense, so fudgy, and so intensely chocolatey that they taste far more like a brownie than anything that should reasonably be called a muffin. This is that muffin. The one that proves flourless baking is not a compromise but a genuinely different and in many ways superior category of chocolate treat. The one that is so rich and satisfying that a single muffin genuinely, completely satisfies a chocolate craving.
These muffins use almond flour and oat flour in place of all-purpose flour, with flax eggs and almond butter providing binding and richness in the absence of both gluten and eggs. The result is a deeply fudgy, dense, intensely chocolate muffin that is naturally gluten-free, higher in protein and fiber than a standard muffin, and somehow tastes more indulgent despite being made from ingredients that are genuinely more nourishing.
What makes these muffins so outstanding is the texture — the combination of melted dark chocolate, almond butter, and the two alternative flours produces a crumb that is fudgy and dense in a way that wheat flour simply cannot replicate, creating a muffin that is categorically different from a standard chocolate muffin in the best possible way.
This recipe is 100% vegan, naturally gluten-free, ready in just 30 minutes, and absolutely wonderful eaten slightly warm when the chocolate is still soft and the fudgy texture is at its most spectacular.
Recipe Information
| Prep Time | Cook Time | Total Time | Servings | Calories |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 mins | 20 mins | 30 mins | 10 | ~210 kcal |
Ingredients
For the Muffins
- 150g vegan dark chocolate (70% cocoa), melted and cooled slightly
- ½ cup (130g) natural almond butter
- ½ cup (100g) cane sugar or coconut sugar
- 2 flax eggs (2 tbsp flaxseed meal + 6 tbsp water — rest 5 minutes)
- ⅓ cup (80ml) plant milk
- 1 tsp pure vanilla extract
- ½ cup (50g) almond flour
- ¼ cup (25g) oat flour (certified gluten-free if needed)
- 2 tbsp cocoa powder
- 1 tsp baking powder
- ¼ tsp fine salt
Optional Add-ins
- ½ cup (85g) vegan chocolate chips folded through for extra indulgence
- ¼ tsp espresso powder to intensify the chocolate flavor
- A pinch of flaky sea salt pressed onto each muffin before baking
- ¼ cup (30g) chopped toasted walnuts or pecans folded through
Instructions
- Preheat the oven. Preheat the oven to 350°F (175°C). Line a 10-hole muffin tin with paper liners.
- Make the flax eggs. Combine the flaxseed meal and water, stir, and let rest for 5 minutes until gel-like.
- Melt the chocolate. Melt the dark chocolate in a heatproof bowl over a pot of gently simmering water, stirring until smooth. Let cool for 5 minutes.
- Combine wet ingredients. In a large bowl whisk together the melted chocolate, almond butter, sugar, prepared flax eggs, plant milk, and vanilla extract until smooth and well combined.
- Add dry ingredients. Add the almond flour, oat flour, cocoa powder, baking powder, and salt to the wet mixture. Fold until just combined — the batter will be thick and dense. Fold in any optional add-ins.
- Fill and bake. Divide the batter evenly between the 10 lined muffin holes — it will be considerably thicker than standard muffin batter. Smooth the tops slightly. Bake for 18–22 minutes until the tops are set and a slight crack has formed on the surface. The centers will seem underdone — this is correct. They firm up to a fudgy consistency as they cool.
- Cool before eating. Let cool in the tin for 10 minutes before transferring to a wire rack. These muffins are good warm but genuinely spectacular once fully cooled, when the fudgy center texture has fully set.
Pro Tips
- Do not overbake — flourless chocolate muffins firm up considerably during cooling and should be removed from the oven when they still look underdone in the center.
- Allow the melted chocolate to cool slightly before adding to the other wet ingredients — hot chocolate can begin to cook the flax eggs.
- Use good quality dark chocolate with at least 70% cocoa — the chocolate is the dominant flavor in this recipe and its quality is directly reflected in the finished muffin.
- Let the muffins cool fully before eating for the best fudgy texture — eating them warm produces a slightly gooey, almost molten center that is also delicious but different in character.
Why Flourless Chocolate Baking Works
Removing wheat flour from a chocolate muffin does not produce a lesser version — it produces a fundamentally different product with its own distinct appeal. Without the gluten network that wheat flour creates, flourless chocolate muffins cannot trap as much air and therefore cannot rise to a light, cakey texture. Instead they set around their fat, chocolate, and nut flour base into a dense, fudgy, concentrated mass that delivers more chocolate flavor per bite than a conventional muffin, with a texture that is closer to a ganache or truffle than a standard baked good.
This is not a compromise. It is a different category.
Flavor Variations
- Peanut Butter Chocolate Muffins: Replace the almond butter with natural peanut butter for a classic peanut butter and chocolate combination.
- Mocha Chocolate Muffins: Add 1 teaspoon of espresso powder to the batter for a deep coffee-chocolate mocha character.
- Orange Chocolate Muffins: Add the zest of an orange to the batter for a chocolate-orange version that is particularly spectacular for the holiday season.
Nutritional Highlights (Per Muffin)
| Calories | Protein | Carbs | Fiber | Fat |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ~210 kcal | 6g | 20g | 4g | 13g |
Storage
- Room temperature: Store in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The texture improves during storage as the fudgy center sets further.
- Refrigerator: Keeps for up to 6 days. Bring to room temperature or warm briefly before eating.
- Freezer: Freeze individually wrapped muffins for up to 2 months. Thaw at room temperature or microwave for 30 seconds.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use a different nut butter instead of almond butter?
Yes — peanut butter produces a slightly stronger flavor, cashew butter produces a milder result, and tahini produces a more neutral, slightly sesame-flavored version. All work well with the same quantities.
Why are my muffins falling apart?
Flourless muffins are more fragile than conventional muffins, especially when warm. Let them cool fully in the tin before removing and handling. They firm up considerably once completely cool.
Can I make these without oat flour?
Yes — replace the oat flour with additional almond flour in the same quantity for a fully nut-flour-based muffin with a slightly richer, more tender result.
Tried this recipe? Leave a comment below and let us know how it turned out! Tag us on Instagram and Facebook — we love seeing your plant-powered creations. Looking for more indulgent vegan chocolate and gluten-free dessert recipes? Browse all recipes on Easy Vegan Recipes — new recipes posted every single week!