showstopper dessert

Vegan Chocolate Bundt Cake

vegan chocolate bundt cake

This Vegan Chocolate Bundt Cake is a decadent dessert that’s perfect for chocolate lovers. Not only is it completely dairy-free and eggless, but it also delivers a rich, moist texture with an intense chocolate flavor. In addition, it’s simple to make using everyday ingredients, making it ideal for both beginners and experienced bakers.

Ingredients

For the Cake:

  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1½ cups sugar
  • ¾ cup cocoa powder
  • 2 tsp baking soda
  • ½ tsp salt
  • 1½ cups plant-based milk (almond, soy, or oat)
  • ½ cup vegetable oil
  • 1 tbsp apple cider vinegar
  • 2 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1 cup hot coffee (or hot water, for enhanced chocolate flavor)

For the Chocolate Glaze:

  • 1 cup powdered sugar
  • 3 tbsp cocoa powder
  • 2–4 tbsp plant-based milk
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract

Instructions

1. Preheat the Oven

First, preheat your oven to 350°F (175°C). Then, generously grease a bundt pan to prevent sticking.


2. Mix the Dry Ingredients

Next, in a large bowl, whisk together flour, sugar, cocoa powder, baking soda, and salt. This ensures even distribution.


3. Combine the Wet Ingredients

Meanwhile, in another bowl, mix plant-based milk, oil, apple cider vinegar, and vanilla extract. Stir until well combined.


4. Make the Batter

Now, pour the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients.
Then, mix until just combined. However, do not overmix.
Afterward, slowly add the hot coffee and stir until the batter becomes smooth and slightly thin.


5. Bake the Cake

Next, pour the batter evenly into the prepared bundt pan.
Bake for 40–50 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted comes out clean.
Then, allow the cake to cool in the pan for 10–15 minutes before turning it out onto a wire rack.


6. Prepare the Glaze

Meanwhile, in a bowl, whisk together powdered sugar, cocoa powder, plant-based milk, and vanilla extract until smooth. Adjust consistency as needed.


7. Glaze and Serve

Finally, once the cake has completely cooled, drizzle the chocolate glaze over the top.
Allow it to set slightly before slicing and serving.


Tips for Best Results

  • For deeper flavor, always use hot coffee instead of water.
  • Additionally, make sure to grease the bundt pan thoroughly to avoid sticking.
  • For variation, you can add chocolate chips or chopped nuts to the batter.

Why You’ll Love This Cake

This cake is rich, moist, and incredibly satisfying. Moreover, it’s perfect for celebrations, gatherings, or simply as a treat with coffee or tea.

Tried this recipe? Leave a comment below and let us know how it turned out! Browse all our vegan recipes to keep enjoying ultimate delicious and healthy lifestyle.

BANANA PUDDING

banana pudding

There are desserts that take you back to a specific moment — a grandmother’s kitchen, a summer barbecue, a Sunday afternoon that smelled of vanilla and ripe bananas. And then there are desserts like this Vegan Banana Pudding — the kind that captures every single one of those feelings and delivers them in a bowl so beautiful, so deeply nostalgic, and so profoundly satisfying that people go quiet for a moment on the first spoonful and then immediately ask for the recipe. This is that dessert. The one that tastes like a memory. The one that is simultaneously the most comforting and the most elegant thing on the dessert table. The one that makes people stop and say — with genuine, unreserved disbelief — that this is entirely plant-based.

This is a banana pudding of extraordinary classical beauty — layers of silky, vanilla-scented custard pudding made from scratch with oat milk and coconut cream, alternating with crisp vanilla wafer cookies that soften slowly into the pudding into something that is neither quite cookie nor quite cake but something entirely and magnificently its own, and generous slices of ripe, fragrant banana that perfume every layer with their sweet, tropical presence, all crowned with a cloud of whipped coconut cream so light and so voluminous that it trembles when the dish is set on the table. It is stunning to look at. It is extraordinary to eat. And it takes thirty minutes to make.

What makes this pudding so genuinely outstanding is the from-scratch vanilla custard. Unlike instant pudding mixes — which rely on artificial flavors, colorings, and stabilizers to achieve their characteristic texture — this custard is made the classical way: oat milk warmed with vanilla bean, enriched with coconut cream, thickened with cornstarch and a touch of agar agar into a pudding of such extraordinary silkiness and depth of flavor that it is in a completely different category from anything that comes from a packet. The flavor is clean, pure, and deeply vanilla — with a richness from the coconut cream that makes every spoonful feel genuinely indulgent.

This recipe is 100% vegan, naturally gluten-free when made with gluten-free vanilla wafers, made without refined sugar in the custard, ready in just 30 minutes of active preparation plus chilling time, and absolutely, completely, magnificently worth every moment it requires.


Recipe Information

Prep TimeCook TimeChill TimeServingsCalories
15 mins15 mins4 hours6~420 kcal

Ingredients

For the Vanilla Custard Pudding

  • 3 cups (720ml) unsweetened oat milk
  • 1 cup (240ml) full-fat coconut cream
  • ½ cup (100g) cane sugar or coconut sugar
  • 4 tbsp cornstarch
  • 1 tsp agar agar powder (for additional firmness — optional but recommended)
  • 2 tsp pure vanilla extract or seeds from 1 vanilla bean
  • ¼ tsp turmeric (purely for the classic yellow color — adds no flavor)
  • Pinch of salt
  • 2 tbsp vegan butter (stirred in at the very end for extraordinary richness)

For the Whipped Coconut Cream

  • 2 cans (800ml total) full-fat coconut cream, refrigerated overnight
  • 3 tbsp powdered sugar
  • 1½ tsp pure vanilla extract
  • Pinch of salt

For Assembly

  • 4–5 ripe but firm bananas, sliced into coins approximately 1cm thick
  • 200g vegan vanilla wafer cookies (Nilla wafers style — check for vegan varieties)
  • 1 tbsp lemon juice (toss with banana slices to prevent browning)

For Topping

  • Additional banana slices for decoration
  • Crushed vanilla wafer cookies
  • Extra whipped coconut cream
  • Fresh mint leaves
  • A light dusting of cinnamon or nutmeg
  • Vegan caramel drizzle (optional but extraordinary)

Instructions

  1. Refrigerate the coconut cream overnight. Place both cans of full-fat coconut cream in the coldest part of the refrigerator for a minimum of 8 hours — ideally 24 hours. The cold separates the solid coconut fat from the liquid, making it possible to whip it into the light, stable cream that crowns this pudding. This is the one step that cannot be rushed — plan ahead.
  2. Make the vanilla custard. In a medium heavy-bottomed saucepan whisk together the oat milk, coconut cream, sugar, cornstarch, agar agar if using, turmeric, and salt until the cornstarch is completely dissolved with no lumps remaining — this pre-whisking before heat is applied prevents lumps from forming during cooking. Place over medium heat and cook, whisking continuously and reaching every corner of the pan, until the mixture thickens to a pudding consistency — approximately 8–10 minutes. The pudding is ready when it coats the back of a spoon thickly and a line drawn through it with a finger holds its shape cleanly.
  3. Finish the custard. Remove from heat immediately and stir in the vanilla extract and vegan butter until completely incorporated. The butter adds a richness and gloss to the finished pudding that makes it feel genuinely luxurious. Pour through a fine mesh sieve into a clean bowl to remove any lumps and produce a perfectly smooth custard. Press a sheet of plastic wrap directly onto the surface of the custard — preventing a skin from forming — and allow to cool for 15 minutes before using while still slightly warm.
  4. Prepare the banana slices. Slice the bananas into coins approximately 1cm thick and toss immediately with the lemon juice in a bowl — the acid prevents the banana from oxidizing and turning brown, keeping the slices fresh and visually beautiful throughout the chilling time. The lemon flavor is completely undetectable in the finished pudding.
  5. Whip the coconut cream. Open the refrigerated coconut cream cans without shaking. Scoop only the solid white coconut fat from the top of each can into a large cold mixing bowl — discard or save the liquid at the bottom for smoothies. Whip on high speed with a hand mixer or stand mixer for 2–3 minutes until light, fluffy, and holding soft peaks. Add the powdered sugar, vanilla extract, and salt and whip for a further 60 seconds until the cream is thick, stable, and gloriously voluminous. Refrigerate until assembly.
  6. Assemble the pudding. Use a large trifle bowl, deep rectangular dish, or individual serving glasses — clear vessels show the beautiful layers most dramatically. Begin with a layer of vanilla wafer cookies covering the entire base. Add a layer of banana slices arranged in a single, even layer over the cookies. Pour or ladle a generous layer of the warm custard over the bananas — enough to fill between the banana slices and come just above them. Repeat the layers — cookies, bananas, custard — until all ingredients are used finishing with a final layer of custard on top.
  7. Add the whipped coconut cream. Spoon or pipe the whipped coconut cream over the top of the assembled pudding in generous, billowing clouds. Use the back of a spoon to create beautiful swoops and peaks in the cream for the most visually spectacular presentation. Alternatively pipe the cream using a large star tip for a more elegant, decorated finish.
  8. Decorate and chill. Arrange additional banana slices decoratively over the whipped cream. Scatter crushed vanilla wafer crumbs over the entire surface. Add fresh mint leaves for color and a light dusting of cinnamon or nutmeg. Drizzle with vegan caramel if using. Cover loosely and refrigerate for a minimum of 4 hours — ideally overnight. During this chilling time the custard sets completely, the cookies soften into the custard into something magnificently between cookie and cake, and the flavors meld into the extraordinary unified whole that makes banana pudding so deeply satisfying.
  9. Serve beautifully. Serve directly from the refrigerator — banana pudding is at its finest when cold, when the custard is perfectly set, the cream is at its firmest, and the cookies have softened to their ideal texture. Scoop generous portions ensuring every serving contains all layers — cookie, banana, custard, and cream — in every spoonful.

Pro Tips for the Most Extraordinary Vegan Banana Pudding

  • Whisk the custard continuously and without stopping. The moment you stop whisking a custard cooking over direct heat is the moment lumps begin to form. Whisk continuously — reaching every corner and edge of the pan — from the moment the pan goes on the heat until the moment it comes off. A silicone whisk that conforms to the curved bottom of the saucepan is the ideal tool for this application.
  • Use ripe but firm bananas. The ideal banana for pudding is fully yellow with just the beginning of brown spots — ripe enough to be sweet and fragrant but firm enough to hold its shape during assembly and chilling rather than turning mushy. Underripe bananas lack sweetness. Overripe bananas collapse during chilling and produce an unappetizing texture.
  • Press plastic wrap directly onto the custard surface. This simple step — placing the plastic wrap in direct contact with the custard surface rather than over the top of the bowl — prevents the custard skin that forms when custard cools exposed to air. A skin-free custard produces a perfectly smooth, silky pudding layer that is visually and texturally superior in every respect.
  • Chill for the full 4 hours minimum — overnight is better. The transformation that happens during the chilling period is one of the most remarkable in all of dessert making — the cookies absorb moisture from the custard and soften from crispy wafers into something that is simultaneously yielding and substantial — and this transformation requires sufficient time to complete fully. A pudding chilled for only 1–2 hours will have crunchy cookies and a looser custard. A pudding chilled overnight will have perfectly softened cookies and a firmly set, magnificently silky custard.
  • Assemble in a clear vessel always. The layered beauty of banana pudding — the alternating ivory custard, golden banana, and pale cookie layers — is one of its most appealing qualities and can only be appreciated through a clear glass or bowl. A trifle bowl is the most spectacular presentation. Individual mason jars or clear glasses are beautiful for individual servings and particularly elegant for dinner party desserts.
  • Add the decorated banana slices to the top immediately before serving. Banana slices used for decoration on the very top of the pudding will begin to brown during the chilling period despite the lemon juice treatment — add the decorative top banana slices in the final 30 minutes before serving for the most visually beautiful presentation.

The Timeless Appeal of Banana Pudding

Banana pudding is one of the most beloved desserts in American culinary history — a preparation so deeply embedded in Southern food culture in particular that it has transcended its regional origins to become one of the most universally recognized and requested desserts across the entire country. Its origins trace to the late nineteenth century when vanilla custard pudding — a staple of American home cooking — began to be layered with the increasingly available and affordable banana, creating a combination that proved so immediately and universally appealing that it became a classic almost instantaneously.

The genius of banana pudding lies in its textural evolution during the chilling period. When first assembled the dessert has three distinct textures — crispy cookies, silky custard, and firm banana. After four hours of chilling these three textures have begun to meld and transform — the cookies have absorbed custard moisture and softened into something halfway between a cookie and a cake, the custard has set to a firm, sliceable consistency, and the bananas have released some of their natural sugars into the surrounding custard, perfuming every layer with their characteristic sweetness. After overnight chilling the transformation is complete — the pudding has become a unified whole that is entirely different from and entirely more extraordinary than the sum of its assembled parts.

This vegan version honors every element of the classical preparation while replacing the dairy custard with an oat milk and coconut cream custard that is — in the context of a layered, chilled pudding — indistinguishable from its dairy counterpart in richness, silkiness, and depth of vanilla flavor. The whipped coconut cream replaces whipped dairy cream with a result so similar in texture and flavor that blind tasters consistently identify it as dairy. The vegan vanilla wafers provide the same textural journey from crispy to softened that makes banana pudding so uniquely satisfying.

This is not a lesser version of a great dessert. It is a great dessert. The bananas are real. The vanilla is real. The joy is completely, entirely real.


Flavor Variations

  • Chocolate Banana Pudding: Replace one cup of the oat milk with chocolate oat milk and add 3 tablespoons of raw cacao powder to the custard for a deeply chocolate version that is particularly spectacular with a layer of vegan chocolate ganache between the custard and whipped cream layers.
  • Caramel Banana Pudding: Replace the vanilla custard with a caramel custard made by cooking the sugar until it caramelizes to a deep amber before adding the oat milk — creating a butterscotch-flavored custard that pairs magnificently with the banana and whipped cream for an extraordinarily indulgent caramel banana experience.
  • Tropical Banana Pudding: Add a layer of diced mango and toasted coconut between the banana and custard layers and replace the vanilla wafers with coconut shortbread cookies for a tropical-inspired version that is particularly spectacular in summer and pairs beautifully with a passion fruit drizzle over the whipped cream.
  • Peanut Butter Banana Pudding: Swirl 3 tablespoons of natural peanut butter into the warm custard before assembling and add a layer of chopped roasted peanuts between the banana and custard layers for a version inspired by the classic Elvis combination of peanut butter and banana that is one of the most addictive dessert flavors imaginable.

Nutritional Highlights (Per Serving)

CaloriesProteinCarbsFiberFat
~420 kcal5g62g3g18g

At 420 calories per serving this pudding delivers the genuine indulgence of a classic dessert alongside meaningful nutrition from its whole food ingredients. The bananas provide potassium — one of the most important minerals for cardiovascular and muscle function — alongside Vitamins B6 and C, manganese, and prebiotic fiber that feeds beneficial gut bacteria. The oat milk base contributes beta-glucan fiber with well-documented cholesterol-lowering properties and meaningful amounts of iron and B vitamins. The coconut cream provides medium-chain triglycerides that support metabolic health and rapid energy availability. The vanilla — used generously in this recipe — contributes vanillin, a powerful antioxidant compound with anti-inflammatory properties that has been studied for neuroprotective effects.


Storage

  • Assembled pudding: Cover tightly with plastic wrap and store in the refrigerator for up to 3 days. The pudding actually improves for the first 24 hours as the cookies continue to soften and the flavors deepen and meld. Beyond 3 days the banana slices begin to brown noticeably and the cookie layers become too soft — the pudding is best consumed within 3 days of assembly.
  • Custard separately: The vanilla custard stores in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 5 days — press plastic wrap directly onto the surface to prevent a skin from forming. Reheat gently in a saucepan over low heat with a splash of oat milk, whisking continuously, if you wish to use it warm for another application.
  • Whipped coconut cream: Store in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 3 days. It will firm considerably during storage — allow to sit at room temperature for 5 minutes and whisk briefly to restore its original lightness before using.
  • Individual servings: Assembled individual puddings in sealed mason jars or glasses keep beautifully in the refrigerator for up to 3 days — making them an outstanding make-ahead dessert for dinner parties, meal prep, or packed lunches. Add the decorative banana slices and cookie crumb topping in the final 30 minutes before serving.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why did my custard turn out lumpy?

Lumpy custard is almost always caused by one of two things — the cornstarch was not fully dissolved in the cold milk before heating, or the custard was not stirred continuously during cooking. Whisk the cornstarch and cold milk together very thoroughly before applying heat and whisk continuously and without stopping throughout the entire cooking process. If lumps do form despite continuous stirring strain the finished custard through a fine mesh sieve while still warm — this removes virtually all lumps and produces a perfectly smooth result.

How ripe should the bananas be for banana pudding?

Fully yellow bananas with just the beginning of brown spots are ideal — they are sweet enough to contribute genuine banana flavor to the pudding, firm enough to hold their shape during the chilling period, and fragrant enough to perfume the surrounding custard with their characteristic aroma. Avoid very green bananas which are starchy and flavorless, and very overripe bananas which will turn mushy and brown quickly during the chilling period.

Can I make this pudding without coconut cream?

Yes — replace the coconut cream in the custard with additional oat milk and add 2 tablespoons of cashew butter for richness. For the whipped topping use a commercial vegan whipped cream from a can, aquafaba whipped with cream of tartar and powdered sugar, or a whipped cashew cream made from blended soaked cashews with vanilla and powdered sugar. The coconut cream version is the most consistently successful and most similar to dairy whipped cream but these alternatives are all viable.

Can I use instant vegan pudding mix instead of making the custard from scratch?

Yes — a good quality vegan instant pudding mix prepared with oat milk produces a perfectly acceptable custard layer that saves significant time and effort. The from-scratch custard in this recipe is superior in flavor depth and texture but the instant version is an excellent shortcut for occasions when time is limited. Add a teaspoon of vanilla extract and a tablespoon of coconut cream to the instant pudding mixture for a richer, more flavorful result.

What vegan vanilla wafers should I use?

Several brands produce vegan vanilla wafer cookies that perform beautifully in banana pudding. Check the ingredients list for any dairy, eggs, or honey — many standard vanilla wafer cookies are accidentally vegan. If dedicated vegan vanilla wafers are unavailable in your area substitute with vegan shortbread cookies, vegan digestive biscuits, or vegan graham crackers — all produce excellent results with a slightly different but equally delicious character in the finished pudding.

Can I serve this pudding warm?

Traditional banana pudding is served chilled — the chilling period is essential for the cookie softening and custard setting that define the dessert. However the warm custard alone served immediately after cooking over sliced bananas and vanilla wafers with whipped coconut cream on top produces a delicious warm banana pudding trifle that is a completely different but equally wonderful dessert experience — particularly spectacular served warm in winter with the cold whipped coconut cream providing an extraordinary temperature contrast.


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 dreamy, indulgent vegan dessert recipes? Browse all recipes on Easy Vegan Recipes — new recipes posted every single week!

Vegan Strawberry Pudding Cake — The Most Magical Plant-Based Dessert You Will Make All Summer

vegan strawberry pudding cake

There are desserts that look ordinary going into the oven and come out as something genuinely surprising. And then there are desserts like this Vegan Strawberry Pudding Cake — the kind that bakes into a single dish that separates all by itself into a soft, cakey top layer and a warm, luscious strawberry pudding sauce beneath it, with no effort or technique beyond simply pouring the batter into a dish and letting the oven do something almost magical. This is that dessert. The one that makes people ask how you got two distinct layers from one pour. The one that comes out bubbling with jammy strawberry sauce beneath a tender, golden sponge and tastes like the best summer dessert imaginable.

A pudding cake is one of the most wonderfully deceptive preparations in baking — a single batter, poured into a dish with boiling water poured over the top, that separates during baking into a cakey layer above and a glossy, saucy pudding below. This strawberry version builds on that technique with fresh or frozen strawberries, a light vanilla sponge batter, and a strawberry sugar layer that dissolves into the sauce as the cake bakes.

What makes this pudding cake so outstanding is the textural contrast between the layers — a slightly crisp, cakey top giving way to the soft interior of the sponge, and then the warm, glossy, intensely strawberry sauce beneath that pools in the spoon when served and turns a simple bowl of cake into something genuinely special.

This recipe is 100% vegan, ready in just 45 minutes, and absolutely magnificent served warm with a scoop of vegan vanilla ice cream that melts into the hot strawberry sauce in the most extraordinary way.


Recipe Information

Prep TimeCook TimeTotal TimeServingsCalories
15 mins30 mins45 mins6~290 kcal

Ingredients

For the Cake Batter

  • 1 cup (120g) all-purpose flour
  • ½ cup (100g) cane sugar
  • 1½ tsp baking powder
  • ¼ tsp fine salt
  • ½ cup (120ml) plant milk
  • 3 tbsp melted coconut oil or neutral vegetable oil
  • 1 tsp pure vanilla extract
  • 1 cup (150g) fresh or frozen strawberries, hulled and halved

For the Pudding Layer

  • ½ cup (100g) cane sugar
  • 1 tbsp cornstarch
  • 1 cup (240ml) boiling water
  • 1 tbsp strawberry jam or preserves

To Serve

  • Vegan vanilla ice cream
  • Extra fresh strawberries
  • A dusting of powdered sugar

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven. Preheat the oven to 350°F (175°C). Lightly grease a deep 20cm (8-inch) square or round baking dish.
  2. Arrange the strawberries. Scatter the halved strawberries evenly across the base of the prepared baking dish.
  3. Make the cake batter. In a bowl whisk together the flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt. Add the plant milk, melted oil, and vanilla extract and stir until just combined into a smooth batter. Pour the batter evenly over the strawberries in the baking dish.
  4. Make the pudding layer. In a small bowl combine the sugar and cornstarch. Scatter this mixture evenly over the top of the batter — do not stir. Dot the strawberry jam over the surface. Then carefully pour the boiling water evenly over the entire surface — again, do not stir. This is the step that looks wrong but is correct.
  5. Bake. Place in the preheated oven and bake for 28–32 minutes until the top is set and lightly golden and the sauce is visibly bubbling around the edges.
  6. Rest and serve. Let rest for 5 minutes before serving. Spoon into bowls ensuring each serving gets both the cakey top and the strawberry pudding sauce from beneath. Serve warm with vegan vanilla ice cream.

Pro Tips

  • Do not stir after adding the boiling water — the separation into two distinct layers depends entirely on leaving the layers undisturbed so they can separate properly during baking.
  • Use ripe, sweet strawberries for the most vibrant sauce — if your strawberries are slightly tart, increase the pudding layer sugar by a tablespoon.
  • Serve immediately after the brief rest, as the pudding sauce is at its most fluid and abundant while hot — it absorbs more into the cake layer as it cools.
  • A deep dish is important — the pudding layer bubbles vigorously during baking and needs room to expand without overflowing.

The Science Behind the Magic

The “magic” of a pudding cake is actually a straightforward application of density and heat. The boiling water dissolves the sugar layer on top and creates a liquid that sinks through the batter during baking because it is denser than the unbaked sponge. Meanwhile the batter, which contains baking powder, rises upward and sets into the cakey layer as it bakes. The result is a self-separating dessert that looks effortful and produces two genuinely different textures from a single preparation.


Flavor Variations

  • Blueberry Pudding Cake: Replace the strawberries with fresh or frozen blueberries and add a pinch of cinnamon to the batter.
  • Lemon Strawberry Pudding Cake: Add the zest of a lemon to the batter and a tablespoon of lemon juice to the boiling water for a brighter, citrus-forward version.
  • Mixed Berry Pudding Cake: Use a mixture of strawberries, raspberries, and blackberries for a more complex, layered berry flavor.

Nutritional Highlights (Per Serving)

CaloriesProteinCarbsFiberFat
~290 kcal3g52g2g7g

Storage

  • Best fresh: This dessert is at its best served warm, straight from the oven, when the pudding sauce is at its most fluid and abundant.
  • Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 3 days. Reheat individual portions in the microwave for 60–90 seconds before serving; the pudding sauce will loosen again when warmed.
  • Freezer: Not recommended, as the pudding layer does not freeze and thaw well.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why didn’t my cake separate into two layers?

This is almost always caused by stirring after adding the boiling water, using a dish that is too shallow, or underbaking. Do not stir at any point after adding the water, use a deep dish, and bake until the top is properly set and the edges are visibly bubbling.

Can I use frozen strawberries?

Yes — add directly from frozen without thawing. The cake may need an extra 3–5 minutes of baking time since the frozen fruit releases more liquid.

Can I make this gluten-free?

Yes — use a 1:1 gluten-free flour blend in the batter. The pudding layer is already gluten-free.


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 magical vegan dessert recipes? Browse all recipes on Easy Vegan Recipes — new recipes posted every single week!

Vegan Chocolate Tart

vegan chocolate tart

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 TimeCook TimeChill TimeServingsCalories
20 mins12 mins2 hours8~380 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

  1. 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.
  2. 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.
  3. 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.
  4. 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.
  5. 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.
  6. 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.
  7. 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.
  8. 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.
  9. 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)

CaloriesProteinCarbsFiberFat
~380 kcal7g28g5g28g

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.


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 stunning vegan dessert recipes? Browse all recipes on Easy Vegan Recipes — new recipes posted every single week!

Vegan Chocolate Peanut Butter Brownie Bars

vegan chocolate peanut butter brownie bars

There are brownies you bake because something chocolatey is needed. And then there are brownies like these Vegan Chocolate Peanut Butter Brownie Bars — the kind that come out of the oven dense and fudgy and glossy on top, sliced to reveal a thick layer of creamy peanut butter rippling through the center of each bar, finished with a thin chocolate ganache that sets to a barely-there sheen over the entire surface. This is that brownie. The one that combines two of the most universally beloved flavors on the planet in a single bar so deeply satisfying that one piece is never quite enough. The one that disappears from the tin before it has properly cooled.

These bars layer a rich, fudgy vegan chocolate brownie batter with a thick peanut butter filling that sets into a distinct, creamy layer during baking, all finished with a glossy chocolate ganache topping. The result is a bar that delivers three genuinely distinct layers — fudgy brownie, creamy peanut butter, and glossy ganache — in every single bite.

What makes these bars so outstanding is the peanut butter layer — thickened with powdered sugar and a touch of coconut oil into a consistency that holds its shape as a distinct layer during baking rather than sinking into the brownie batter, ensuring that every single square has a generous, visible stripe of peanut butter throughout.

This recipe is 100% vegan, ready in just 45 minutes, naturally dairy-free and egg-free, and absolutely magnificent eaten at room temperature when the layers are at their most distinct and the ganache has set to a perfectly glossy finish.


Recipe Information

Prep TimeCook TimeChill TimeTotal TimeServingsCalories
20 mins25 mins30 mins75 mins16~290 kcal

Ingredients

For the Brownie Batter

  • 1 cup (120g) all-purpose flour
  • ½ cup (45g) cocoa powder
  • 1 cup (200g) cane sugar
  • ½ tsp baking powder
  • ¼ tsp fine salt
  • ½ cup (120ml) neutral vegetable oil
  • ½ cup (120ml) plant milk
  • 1 tsp pure vanilla extract
  • 1 tsp apple cider vinegar
  • ½ cup (85g) vegan chocolate chips

For the Peanut Butter Layer

  • 1 cup (260g) natural smooth peanut butter
  • ½ cup (60g) powdered sugar
  • 2 tbsp coconut oil, melted
  • ½ tsp vanilla extract
  • Pinch of salt

For the Chocolate Ganache Topping

  • 150g vegan dark chocolate, finely chopped
  • ½ cup (120ml) full-fat coconut cream
  • 1 tbsp maple syrup

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven and prepare the pan. Preheat the oven to 350°F (175°C). Line a 20cm (8-inch) square baking pan with parchment paper, leaving overhang on the sides for easy removal.
  2. Make the brownie batter. In a large bowl whisk together the flour, cocoa powder, sugar, baking powder, and salt. Add the oil, plant milk, vanilla extract, and apple cider vinegar. Stir until just combined and smooth. Fold in the chocolate chips.
  3. Make the peanut butter layer. In a bowl combine the peanut butter, powdered sugar, melted coconut oil, vanilla extract, and salt. Mix until smooth and thick — the mixture should be firm enough to spread without sinking into the brownie batter.
  4. Assemble the bars. Pour the brownie batter into the prepared pan and spread evenly. Drop the peanut butter mixture in large spoonfuls across the surface of the brownie batter, then spread gently into an even layer using an offset spatula or the back of a spoon, being careful not to mix the layers together.
  5. Bake. Bake for 22–26 minutes until the edges are set and a toothpick inserted in the brownie layer (avoiding the peanut butter) comes out with just a few moist crumbs. Do not overbake — the bars firm up considerably as they cool.
  6. Make the ganache. While the bars cool, heat the coconut cream in a small saucepan until just simmering. Remove from heat, add the chopped chocolate, and let sit for 2 minutes undisturbed. Stir gently from the center outward until completely smooth and glossy. Stir in the maple syrup.
  7. Top and chill. Pour the ganache over the cooled bars and spread to the edges. Refrigerate for 30 minutes until the ganache has set.
  8. Slice and serve. Lift the bars out using the parchment overhang and slice into 16 squares with a sharp knife dipped in hot water between cuts.

Pro Tips

  • Do not overbake the brownie layer — remove when the edges are set but the center still looks slightly underdone, as the bars continue to firm during cooling and chilling.
  • Make the peanut butter layer thick enough to hold its shape — if it seems too soft, add additional powdered sugar one tablespoon at a time.
  • Spread the peanut butter layer gently to avoid mixing it into the brownie batter — keep the layers distinct for the most dramatic visual and textural result.
  • Dip the knife in hot water and wipe between slices for the cleanest, most professional cuts through the ganache layer.

Why Peanut Butter and Chocolate Work So Well Together

As with all peanut butter and chocolate combinations, the appeal lies in the complementary balance of flavors — the bitterness of dark chocolate balanced by the sweetness of the brownie, against the rich, slightly salty, intensely nutty peanut butter that provides depth, texture, and the specific sweet-salty contrast that makes this pairing so universally addictive.


Flavor Variations

  • Almond Butter Brownie Bars: Replace the peanut butter with almond butter for a subtler, more delicate nut flavor.
  • Salted Caramel Brownie Bars: Replace the peanut butter layer with a thick salted date caramel for a different but equally indulgent variation.
  • Raspberry Brownie Bars: Replace the peanut butter layer with a thick raspberry jam spread for a chocolate-raspberry combination.

Nutritional Highlights (Per Bar)

CaloriesProteinCarbsFiberFat
~290 kcal6g30g3g17g

Storage

  • Room temperature: Store in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The ganache remains set at cool room temperature.
  • Refrigerator: Keeps for up to 1 week; bring to room temperature for 10 minutes before serving for the best texture.
  • Freezer: Freeze individually wrapped bars for up to 2 months. Thaw in the refrigerator overnight before serving.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I make these bars gluten-free?

Yes — use a 1:1 gluten-free flour blend in the brownie batter. The other layers are naturally gluten-free.

Why is my peanut butter layer sinking into the brownie?

This is caused by a peanut butter mixture that is too soft or a brownie batter that is too thin. Ensure the peanut butter layer is thick and firm before spreading, and add extra powdered sugar if needed to stiffen it.

Can I skip the ganache topping?

Yes — the bars are delicious without the ganache, though it adds a professional finish and an extra layer of chocolate indulgence.


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 brownie and dessert bar recipes? Browse all recipes on Easy Vegan Recipes — new recipes posted every single week!

Vegan Italian Cream Pound Cake

vegan italian cream pound cake

There are cakes that exist simply to be sweet. And then there are cakes like this Vegan Italian Cream Pound Cake — the kind that comes out of the oven dense, golden, and impossibly tender, studded throughout with toasted coconut and pecans, and finished with a tangy cream cheese frosting so rich and smooth that the first bite stops conversation completely. This is that cake. The one that turns an ordinary Sunday into an occasion. The one that makes people ask, twice, whether it could really be entirely plant-based.

Italian cream cake is a beloved Southern American dessert known for its incredibly moist, tender crumb studded with coconut and pecans, traditionally finished with a cream cheese frosting. This pound cake adaptation takes the same beloved flavor profile — coconut, pecans, vanilla, and tangy cream cheese — and bakes it into a dense, rich, buttery pound cake format that slices beautifully and keeps even better than a layer cake.

What makes this cake so outstanding is the crumb. Buttermilk-style plant milk, vegan butter, and a careful balance of leavening produce a pound cake that is dense without being heavy, rich without being greasy, and tender enough to almost melt on the tongue, while toasted coconut and pecans folded through the batter add texture and flavor in every single slice.

This recipe is 100% vegan, ready in about 90 minutes including baking and cooling, and absolutely stunning served sliced with a generous swipe of cream cheese frosting and an extra scattering of toasted coconut.


Recipe Information

Prep TimeCook TimeTotal TimeServingsCalories
20 mins65 mins90 mins12~460 kcal

Ingredients

For the Cake

  • 3 cups (360g) all-purpose flour
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • ½ tsp baking soda
  • ½ tsp fine salt
  • 1 cup (225g) vegan butter, softened
  • 1¾ cups (350g) cane sugar
  • 1 cup (240ml) plant milk
  • 1 tbsp apple cider vinegar
  • 2 tsp pure vanilla extract
  • 1 cup (85g) shredded coconut, toasted
  • 1 cup (110g) pecans, toasted and roughly chopped

For the Cream Cheese Frosting

  • 250g vegan cream cheese, softened
  • ½ cup (115g) vegan butter, softened
  • 3 cups (360g) powdered sugar, sifted
  • 1½ tsp pure vanilla extract
  • Pinch of salt

For Garnish

  • Extra toasted coconut
  • Extra toasted pecans, chopped

Instructions

  1. Toast the coconut and pecans. Spread the shredded coconut and chopped pecans separately on a baking sheet and toast at 325°F (160°C) for 5–7 minutes, watching closely, until lightly golden and fragrant. Set aside to cool.
  2. Make the plant buttermilk. Combine the plant milk and apple cider vinegar in a small bowl and let sit for 5 minutes until slightly thickened.
  3. Preheat and prepare the pan. Preheat the oven to 325°F (160°C). Grease a 10-inch bundt or tube pan thoroughly, including all crevices.
  4. Mix dry ingredients. In a bowl whisk together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt.
  5. Cream butter and sugar. In a large bowl beat the vegan butter and sugar together for 3–4 minutes until pale and fluffy.
  6. Combine wet and dry. Add the vanilla extract and plant buttermilk to the butter mixture and mix briefly. Add the flour mixture in two additions, folding gently until just combined — do not overmix.
  7. Fold in coconut and pecans. Gently fold in the toasted coconut and pecans until evenly distributed throughout the batter.
  8. Bake. Pour the batter into the prepared pan and smooth the top. Bake for 60–70 minutes until a skewer inserted in the center comes out clean and the top is deeply golden. Cool in the pan for 15 minutes before turning out onto a wire rack to cool completely.
  9. Make the frosting. Beat the vegan cream cheese and vegan butter together until smooth. Add the powdered sugar gradually, beating between additions, then add the vanilla extract and salt. Beat until light and fluffy.
  10. Frost and garnish. Once the cake is completely cool, spread or drizzle the cream cheese frosting generously over the top, allowing it to drip down the sides. Scatter with extra toasted coconut and pecans before slicing.

Pro Tips

  • Toast the coconut and pecans before adding to the batter — this dramatically deepens their flavor compared to using them raw.
  • Do not overmix the batter once the flour is added, or the dense, tender pound cake texture will become tough.
  • Cool the cake completely before frosting, or the frosting will melt and slide off.
  • Use room temperature butter and cream cheese for the smoothest, lump-free frosting.

The Story Behind Italian Cream Cake

Despite its name, Italian cream cake is widely believed to have Southern American origins rather than Italian ones, becoming a beloved celebration cake across the American South in the mid-twentieth century. Its signature combination of coconut, pecans, and tangy cream cheese frosting has made it a staple at birthdays, holidays, and potlucks ever since. This pound cake version brings the same beloved flavor combination into a denser, easier-to-slice, easier-to-store format.


Flavor Variations

  • Lemon Italian Cream Cake: Add lemon zest to the batter and frosting for a brighter, citrus-forward version.
  • Chocolate Drizzle: Drizzle melted vegan chocolate over the finished cake alongside the cream cheese frosting.
  • Spiced Version: Add a pinch of cinnamon and nutmeg to the batter for a warmer, more autumnal flavor.

Nutritional Highlights (Per Serving)

CaloriesProteinCarbsFiberFat
~460 kcal5g56g2g24g

Storage

  • Room temperature: Unfrosted cake keeps in an airtight container for up to 3 days.
  • Refrigerator: Frosted cake should be refrigerated and keeps for up to 5 days; bring to room temperature before serving for the best texture.
  • Freezer: Freeze unfrosted cake, well wrapped, for up to 2 months. Thaw completely before frosting.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I make this as a layer cake instead?

Yes — divide the batter between two 9-inch round pans and bake for 30–35 minutes, then frost between layers and on top.

Can I make this gluten-free?

Yes, using a 1:1 gluten-free flour blend, though the crumb may be slightly more delicate.

Can I omit the pecans for a nut-free version?

Yes — simply omit the pecans or replace with sunflower seeds for crunch without nuts.


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 cake and dessert recipes? Browse all recipes on Easy Vegan Recipes — new recipes posted every single week!

Vegan German Chocolate Loaf Cake

vegan german chocolate loaf cake

There are chocolate cakes that simply satisfy a craving. And then there are cakes like this Vegan German Chocolate Loaf Cake — the kind that comes out of the oven deeply dark and tender, sliced into thick, generous pieces and topped with a sticky, caramelized coconut pecan frosting so rich and so deeply flavored that it threatens to steal the show from the chocolate cake beneath it. This is that cake. The one that turns a humble loaf pan into something genuinely celebratory. The one where every single bite delivers chocolate, caramel, toasted coconut, and pecans all at once.

German chocolate cake is a beloved American dessert known for its signature coconut pecan frosting — a cooked caramel-style topping studded with toasted coconut and pecans — layered over a tender, deeply chocolate cake. This loaf cake version takes the same iconic flavor combination and bakes it in a simple, easy-to-slice loaf format, finished with a generous spread of that same unmistakable frosting on top.

What makes this cake so outstanding is the coconut pecan frosting — a slow-cooked mixture of coconut sugar or brown sugar, plant milk, and vegan butter, simmered until thickened and caramel-like before toasted coconut and pecans are stirred in, producing a topping that is sticky, chewy, nutty, and deeply caramelized in a way that no simple buttercream could ever replicate.

This recipe is 100% vegan, ready in about 90 minutes including baking and cooling, and absolutely magnificent sliced thick and served with a strong cup of coffee.


Recipe Information

Prep TimeCook TimeTotal TimeServingsCalories
20 mins55 mins90 mins10~440 kcal

Ingredients

For the Chocolate Loaf Cake

  • 1¾ cups (210g) all-purpose flour
  • ¾ cup (65g) cocoa powder
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • ½ tsp baking powder
  • ½ tsp fine salt
  • 1¼ cups (250g) cane sugar
  • 1 cup (240ml) plant milk
  • 1 tbsp apple cider vinegar
  • ½ cup (120ml) neutral vegetable oil
  • 1 tsp pure vanilla extract
  • ½ cup (120ml) hot strong coffee or hot water

For the Coconut Pecan Frosting

  • 1 cup (200g) coconut sugar or brown sugar
  • 1 cup (240ml) full-fat coconut cream
  • ¼ cup (55g) vegan butter
  • 1 tsp pure vanilla extract
  • Pinch of salt
  • 1½ cups (130g) shredded coconut, toasted
  • 1 cup (110g) pecans, toasted and roughly chopped

Instructions

  1. Preheat and prepare the pan. Preheat the oven to 350°F (175°C). Grease and line a 23 x 13cm (9 x 5 inch) loaf pan with parchment paper.
  2. Make the plant buttermilk. Combine the plant milk and apple cider vinegar in a small bowl and let sit for 5 minutes.
  3. Mix dry ingredients. In a large bowl whisk together the flour, cocoa powder, baking soda, baking powder, salt, and sugar.
  4. Combine wet ingredients. Add the plant buttermilk, oil, and vanilla extract to the dry ingredients and whisk until mostly combined. Slowly pour in the hot coffee or water, whisking until the batter is smooth — it will be quite thin, which is correct.
  5. Bake. Pour the batter into the prepared pan. Bake for 50–58 minutes until a skewer inserted in the center comes out clean or with just a few moist crumbs. Cool in the pan for 15 minutes before turning out onto a wire rack to cool completely.
  6. Make the frosting. While the cake cools, combine the coconut sugar, coconut cream, vegan butter, and salt in a saucepan over medium heat. Bring to a gentle simmer, stirring frequently, and cook for 8–10 minutes until thickened and darkened to a caramel color. Remove from heat and stir in the vanilla extract, toasted coconut, and toasted pecans. Let cool for 10–15 minutes until thickened to a spreadable consistency.
  7. Frost and serve. Once the cake is completely cool, spread the coconut pecan frosting generously over the top, letting some drip down the sides. Slice thick and serve.

Pro Tips

  • Use hot coffee rather than water if possible — it intensifies the chocolate flavor noticeably without adding a coffee taste to the finished cake.
  • Cook the frosting until properly thickened and caramel-colored; an undercooked frosting will be loose and slide off the cake rather than holding its shape.
  • Toast the coconut and pecans before adding to the frosting for maximum flavor depth.
  • Let the cake cool completely before frosting to prevent the topping from melting and sliding off.

The Story Behind German Chocolate Cake

Despite the name, German chocolate cake did not originate in Germany. It is named after Samuel German, an American baker who developed a type of dark baking chocolate in the 1850s. A century later, a Texas homemaker’s recipe using “German’s Chocolate” was published in a newspaper, and the cake — with its now-iconic coconut pecan frosting — became a beloved American classic almost overnight. This loaf version brings that same nostalgic flavor combination into an easier, more everyday format.


Flavor Variations

  • Espresso Chocolate Loaf: Increase the coffee for a more pronounced mocha flavor throughout the cake.
  • Extra Chocolate Version: Fold vegan chocolate chips into the batter before baking for an even richer chocolate experience.
  • Salted Caramel Pecan: Add an extra pinch of flaky sea salt to the finished frosting for a more pronounced salted caramel character.

Nutritional Highlights (Per Serving)

CaloriesProteinCarbsFiberFat
~440 kcal5g54g4g23g

Storage

  • Room temperature: Store frosted cake in an airtight container for up to 2 days.
  • Refrigerator: Keeps well for up to 5 days; bring to room temperature before serving for the best texture.
  • Freezer: Freeze unfrosted cake, well wrapped, for up to 2 months. Thaw completely before frosting.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I make this as a round layer cake instead?

Yes — divide the batter between two 8-inch round pans and bake for 28–32 minutes, then frost between layers and on top.

Why is my frosting too thin?

The frosting needs to cook long enough to reach a true caramel consistency. If it remains thin after 10 minutes, continue simmering for a few more minutes, stirring constantly, until properly thickened.

Can I make this nut-free?

Yes — omit the pecans from the frosting or replace with sunflower seeds for crunch without nuts.


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 decadent vegan cake and dessert recipes? Browse all recipes on Easy Vegan Recipes — new recipes posted every single week!