There are desserts that impress. And then there are desserts like this Vegan Chocolate Tart — the kind that silences a room the moment it is set on the table, that makes people lean forward before they have even been served a slice, that delivers with every single forkful a depth of chocolate flavor so intense, so pure, and so completely satisfying that the word dessert feels wholly inadequate. This is that tart. The one that looks like it came from a Parisian patisserie window. The one that tastes like the finest chocolate truffle you have ever eaten but in slice form. The one that no one believes for a single second is entirely plant-based until you tell them — and even then they ask you to say it again.
This is a tart of extraordinary elegance and extraordinary simplicity. A buttery, crisp chocolate shortcrust pastry shell — made from almond flour, coconut oil, and raw cacao — filled with a ganache of such silky, glossy, intensely chocolatey perfection that it sets in the refrigerator into something that is simultaneously firm enough to slice cleanly and yielding enough to melt completely on the tongue within seconds. The ganache is made from just three ingredients — dark vegan chocolate, full-fat coconut cream, and a touch of maple syrup — and it is one of the most extraordinary things you will ever make from three ingredients.
What makes this tart so genuinely outstanding is the quality of its restraint. There is nothing superfluous here. No unnecessary ingredients competing for attention. No elaborate techniques masking mediocre flavors. Just the finest dark chocolate you can find, treated with the respect it deserves, allowed to be exactly what it is — extraordinary — in the most beautiful vessel possible.
This recipe is 100% vegan, naturally gluten-free when made with almond flour, ready in just 30 minutes of active preparation plus chilling time, and absolutely magnificent served with fresh raspberries, a dusting of flaky sea salt, and a scoop of vegan vanilla ice cream.
Recipe Information
| Prep Time | Cook Time | Chill Time | Servings | Calories |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 20 mins | 12 mins | 2 hours | 8 | ~380 kcal |
Ingredients
For the Chocolate Tart Shell
- 2 cups (200g) almond flour
- 3 tbsp raw cacao powder or cocoa powder
- 3 tbsp coconut oil, melted
- 2 tbsp maple syrup
- 1 tsp pure vanilla extract
- Pinch of salt
For the Chocolate Ganache Filling
- 300g vegan dark chocolate (70% cocoa or higher — quality is everything here)
- 1 can (400ml) full-fat coconut cream
- 2 tbsp maple syrup
- 1 tsp pure vanilla extract
- ¼ tsp fine sea salt
- 1 tbsp coconut oil (for extra gloss)
Optional Toppings
- Fresh raspberries or strawberries
- Flaky sea salt scattered over the surface
- Edible gold leaf for extraordinary occasions
- Freeze-dried raspberry powder dusted over
- Vegan white chocolate drizzle for visual contrast
- Toasted crushed hazelnuts or almonds around the edge
- Fresh mint leaves
- Cocoa powder dusted through a fine sieve
To Serve
- Vegan vanilla ice cream
- Vegan whipped coconut cream
- Fresh berry compote
- A drizzle of raspberry coulis
- Strong espresso or coffee alongside
Instructions
- Preheat the oven and prepare the tin. Preheat your oven to 350°F (175°C). Grease a 23cm (9-inch) loose-bottomed tart tin generously with coconut oil — the loose bottom is essential for removing the finished tart cleanly and presenting it beautifully. Line the base with a circle of parchment paper for additional insurance.
- Make the chocolate tart shell. In a large bowl combine the almond flour, cacao powder, and salt. Whisk together until evenly combined and lump-free. Add the melted coconut oil, maple syrup, and vanilla extract and mix with a fork until the mixture comes together into a soft, slightly sticky dough that holds its shape when pressed. The dough should feel like slightly damp sand — firm enough to press into the tin but not so wet that it sticks to your fingers excessively.
- Press the shell into the tin. Transfer the dough to the prepared tart tin and press evenly across the base and up the sides using your fingers and the back of a spoon — working to achieve a completely uniform thickness of approximately 4–5mm throughout. Pay particular attention to the corners where the base meets the sides — these areas tend to be thicker than the rest and will take longer to cook if left too thick. Use a flat-bottomed glass to smooth and compress the base for the most even result.
- Blind bake the shell. Prick the base all over with a fork — approximately 20 pricks across the surface — to prevent the base from puffing during baking. Place in the preheated oven and bake for 10–12 minutes until the shell is set, dry to the touch, and smells deeply of toasted chocolate. It should feel firm when gently pressed in the center. Do not overbake — the shell will firm further as it cools and an overbaked almond flour shell becomes brittle and crumbly. Allow to cool completely in the tin before adding the filling.
- Make the chocolate ganache. Place the chopped dark chocolate in a large heatproof bowl. Pour the full-fat coconut cream into a small saucepan and heat over medium heat until it just reaches a simmer — small bubbles appearing around the edges of the pan. Do not allow it to boil vigorously. Pour the hot coconut cream immediately over the chopped chocolate and leave completely undisturbed for 3 full minutes — this resting time allows the heat of the cream to melt the chocolate gently and evenly without the need for stirring.
- Emulsify the ganache. After 3 minutes begin stirring from the center of the bowl outward in slow, deliberate circular motions — never beating or whisking which incorporates air and dulls the glossy surface. Stir until the ganache is completely smooth, uniformly glossy, and flowing like liquid silk. Add the maple syrup, vanilla extract, salt, and coconut oil and stir gently to incorporate. The finished ganache should be deeply glossy, completely smooth, and intensely fragrant of dark chocolate.
- Pour the ganache into the shell. Pour the warm ganache into the completely cooled tart shell in a single, slow, steady pour — starting from the center and allowing it to flow outward to the edges naturally. Tap the tin gently on the counter three or four times to release any air bubbles and level the surface. If any bubbles remain on the surface pass a kitchen torch briefly over them or touch each one with the tip of a toothpick to break them.
- Add toppings and chill. Arrange any desired toppings — fresh raspberries, a scatter of flaky sea salt, a dusting of freeze-dried raspberry powder — over the surface of the ganache while it is still warm and fluid enough to hold them in place. Transfer to the refrigerator and chill for a minimum of 2 hours — ideally 4 hours or overnight — until the ganache is completely set and firm enough to slice cleanly.
- Unmould and serve beautifully. Remove the tart from the refrigerator 15 minutes before serving — allowing it to come slightly toward room temperature improves both the texture and the flavor of the ganache dramatically. Place the tart tin on a tall glass or can and allow the outer ring to drop away. Slide onto a serving plate or cake stand. Slice with a sharp knife dipped in hot water and wiped dry between each cut for the cleanest, most professional slices. Serve with vegan vanilla ice cream or whipped coconut cream alongside.
Pro Tips for a Perfect Vegan Chocolate Tart
- Use the best quality dark chocolate you can afford. The ganache is three ingredients — the chocolate is the overwhelming majority of the flavor. A mediocre chocolate produces a mediocre ganache regardless of technique. Look for dark chocolate with a minimum of 70% cocoa solids, a short ingredients list, and ideally single-origin cacao for the most complex, nuanced flavor.
- Heat the coconut cream to a simmer — not a boil. Boiling coconut cream can cause the fat to separate from the liquid, producing a grainy, split ganache rather than the silky, emulsified result this recipe achieves. Heat just until the first small bubbles appear around the edges then pour immediately.
- Rest the cream on the chocolate for the full 3 minutes. This resting period — without touching, stirring, or disturbing the mixture — allows the heat of the cream to distribute evenly through the chocolate and melt it gently from the outside in. Stirring too soon while the chocolate is still partially unmelted produces a grainy, lumpy ganache.
- Stir from the center outward in slow circles. This specific stirring technique — starting at the center and moving outward in slow, deliberate circles — produces a perfectly emulsified ganache with maximum gloss. Stirring vigorously or in random directions incorporates air and produces a matte, duller surface.
- Cool the shell completely before filling. A warm shell causes the ganache to melt and absorb into it rather than sitting in a clean, defined layer above it. The shell must be at room temperature — ideally slightly cool — before the ganache is poured.
- Dip the knife in hot water between slices. This professional technique produces clean, sharp slices with the ganache cut rather than dragged. Dip, wipe dry, cut, repeat — the difference in presentation between slices cut with a dry knife and slices cut with a hot, dry knife is significant and completely worth the extra 5 seconds per slice.
The Art and Science of Chocolate Ganache
Ganache is one of the most elegant preparations in all of confectionery — and understanding the science behind it explains why this three-ingredient filling is so extraordinarily good and why the specific technique used to make it matters so much.
Ganache is an emulsion — a stable suspension of fat droplets in a water-based liquid — created when the fat in chocolate and the fat in cream are combined in the presence of the emulsifying compounds naturally present in cocoa. The lecithin in dark chocolate acts as a natural emulsifier, allowing the fat and water phases to combine into a smooth, stable, glossy liquid that sets to a firm, silky solid as it cools.
The quality of the emulsion — and therefore the quality of the finished ganache — depends entirely on the technique used to create it. Stirring from the center outward in slow circles begins the emulsification process at the point of highest fat concentration in the bowl and gradually incorporates the surrounding liquid into a stable emulsion. Beating or whisking incorporates air into the mixture, disrupts the emulsion structure, and produces a ganache that is matte rather than glossy and grainy rather than silky.
The ratio of chocolate to cream in this recipe — approximately 300g of chocolate to 400ml of coconut cream — produces a ganache that is soft enough to pour and spread easily when warm but firm enough to slice cleanly after chilling. A higher chocolate-to-cream ratio produces a firmer ganache suitable for truffles. A lower ratio produces a pourable sauce. This specific ratio is calibrated for a tart filling that holds its shape when sliced while melting completely on the tongue within seconds of tasting.
The coconut cream in this recipe performs identically to dairy cream in the ganache-making process — its fat content, water content, and temperature behavior are sufficiently similar to dairy cream that the emulsification chemistry proceeds in exactly the same way. The subtle sweetness of the coconut complements rather than competes with the bitterness of the dark chocolate, adding a gentle tropical note that makes this vegan ganache arguably more interesting in flavor than its dairy counterpart.
Flavor Variations
- Salted Caramel Chocolate Tart: Before pouring the chocolate ganache spread a generous layer of salted date caramel over the cooled tart shell. Pour the ganache over the caramel layer and chill as directed for a tart with a molten caramel surprise beneath the chocolate that is one of the most extraordinary dessert combinations imaginable.
- Raspberry Chocolate Tart: Arrange a layer of fresh raspberries over the cooled tart shell before pouring the ganache — the berries will be suspended in the chocolate as it sets, creating a tart with a beautiful ruby interior and a bright, fruity tartness that cuts through the richness of the chocolate perfectly.
- Mint Chocolate Tart: Add half a teaspoon of pure peppermint extract to the ganache in place of the vanilla for a mint chocolate tart with a cool, refreshing character that is particularly spectacular decorated with fresh mint leaves and a dusting of cacao powder.
- Orange Chocolate Tart: Add the zest of two large oranges and a tablespoon of Grand Marnier or fresh orange juice to the ganache for a version inspired by the classic chocolate-orange combination — particularly spectacular served with candied orange peel decorating the surface.
Nutritional Highlights (Per Serving)
| Calories | Protein | Carbs | Fiber | Fat |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ~380 kcal | 7g | 28g | 5g | 28g |
At 380 calories per serving this tart delivers genuine indulgence alongside meaningful nutrition from its whole food ingredients. The almond flour shell provides protein, healthy monounsaturated fats, Vitamin E, and magnesium alongside its buttery, crisp texture. The dark chocolate filling provides an extraordinary concentration of flavonoid antioxidants — particularly epicatechin and catechin — that have been studied for cardiovascular protective properties, blood pressure reduction, and mood enhancement through serotonin stimulation. The coconut cream contributes medium-chain triglycerides alongside the richness that makes this tart so deeply satisfying.
Storage
- Refrigerator: Store the tart covered loosely with plastic wrap in the refrigerator for up to 5 days. Remove 15 minutes before serving to allow the ganache to soften slightly to the perfect texture. The tart actually improves on day 2 as the flavors deepen and the ganache reaches its ideal texture.
- Freezer: This tart freezes beautifully for up to 2 months. Freeze without toppings — add fresh toppings after thawing. Freeze sliced or whole on a baking sheet until solid then wrap tightly in plastic wrap and foil. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator.
- Room temperature: The tart can be kept at cool room temperature for up to 4 hours for serving at a dinner party — the ganache softens to an extraordinarily luxurious, almost mousse-like texture at room temperature that is in some ways even more spectacular than the firmer refrigerator version.
- Individual slices: Slice the tart before storing for the most convenient serving system — individual slices wrapped in parchment paper keep perfectly in the refrigerator for up to 5 days and make an extraordinary make-ahead dessert for dinner parties or special occasions.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I make this tart without a tart tin?
Yes — a springform cake tin of similar diameter works well as an alternative. The sides will be straight rather than fluted but the tart will be equally delicious. Individual tart tins — 8–10cm diameter — produce beautiful personal-sized tarts that are particularly elegant for dinner party desserts.
Why did my ganache turn grainy?
A grainy ganache is caused by one of three things — the cream was too hot when poured over the chocolate causing the cocoa butter to separate, the mixture was stirred too vigorously incorporating air and disrupting the emulsion, or the cream and chocolate were not at compatible temperatures when combined. If the ganache seizes or turns grainy add a tablespoon of warm coconut cream and stir gently from the center — this usually rescues the emulsion and restores smoothness.
Can I use milk chocolate instead of dark?
Yes — vegan milk chocolate produces a sweeter, creamier, less intense ganache that is particularly appealing to anyone who finds dark chocolate too bitter. Reduce the maple syrup to one tablespoon as milk chocolate is significantly sweeter than dark. The finished tart will be lighter in color and flavor with a more approachable, crowd-pleasing character.
How do I know when the tart shell is properly baked?
The shell is properly baked when it is set and dry to the touch, the edges have pulled very slightly away from the sides of the tin, and the kitchen smells of toasted chocolate and almond. It should feel firm when very gently pressed in the center but not hard or brittle. Remember it will firm further as it cools — a shell that feels slightly soft when hot will be perfectly crisp when cool.
Can I make this tart nut-free?
Yes — replace the almond flour with oat flour made from blending rolled oats to a fine powder in a food processor. Add an additional tablespoon of coconut oil to compensate for the lower fat content of oat flour. The shell will be slightly less rich than the almond flour version but still delicious and completely nut-free.
Can I make the ganache without coconut cream?
Yes — any high-fat plant milk works in ganache making though the results vary. Oat cream produces a good result with a neutral flavor. Cashew cream — made from blended soaked cashews with water — produces an extraordinarily rich, neutral-tasting ganache that many consider superior to the coconut cream version. Avoid low-fat plant milks which do not contain sufficient fat to properly emulsify with the chocolate.
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