This peanut flour cake is so good that no-one would think that it’s gluten free and low in carbs too.
I have seen tubs of peanut flour (powder) in various health food stores but since it is usually marketed as a powder to have with a smoothie, I walk past it. A couple of weeks ago, there was a large display of peanut flour in our version of Costco and the price was so good that I had to buy a tub to have a play around with it. Plus, when I saw the carb content it seemed rude not too! One serving (two tablespoons) has 5g total carbs, 2g fibre and 3g net carbs.
What is peanut flour used for?
So, what is peanut flour? How is it made? What can you use it for? Are there many recipes for peanut flour?
Peanut flour is simply peanuts that have been pressed to remove the oils and fats, then ground into a flour. Something for those of you who steer clear of peanut butter because of high fats or calories. Peanut powder is for you! I doubt that you could make this at home because if you grind up peanuts in your food processor, the heat and oils turns the peanuts into butter.
As a comparison, 2 tablespoons of peanut butter have 190 calories and 16g fat. Peanut powder/flour has 45 calories and 1.5g fat. However, I was lured by the low carbs and it being gluten free.
I have used peanut flour for a few peanut flour recipes. To date, I have made pancakes, coated chicken with it, added it to my iced coffee, baked muffins and best of all, this delicious peanut flour cake. Also, if you add water to the powder you get instant peanut butter! Very useful for when the dogs needed a treat. The pancakes are delicious and will eventually be published when I can take some decent photos. Or make some without the Chief Taster about, that way they will make it to a plate to be photographed!
The cake batter for this recipe is so good that I happily scrapped the bowl with a spoon and ate the batter remains with a fearless zeal, for I do not fear raw eggs when it’s cake batter! I never really do that but this is the best cake batter I’ve made for a while. I must now resist eating it all with a large spoon when I make it.
The sponge reminds me of a treacle pudding in texture. I've called it a cake but it's almost a pudding too and is just delicious served with a side of cream. I did make a version with two squares of chocolate pushed into the batter before baking but that upped the carbs. It was delicious though. If you were not watching the carbs a sliced banana at the bottom of this would be heavenly. After breaking the Chief Taster’s heart after chatting about how good it would be with bananas, but no, I was not going to use them, we had a debate about what berries would go with this instead. Since I didn’t have any in the fridge it was a waste of a debate but it diverted him from “banana-gate”. I think I’d like to try this with raspberries and must remember to get some on the next shopping jaunt. Any excuse to make this again.
I made this one Sunday and the chief taster ate both for what he called brunch. It’s his new pudding addiction. I’m not looking forward to the cold turkey ahead when the store sells out of these as it’s not normally a regular item there. You can purchase this from health stores or via Amazon though. Or direct from the suppliers. I shall be looking out for this around the island now.
More Peanut Flour Recipes
Try these other low carb recipes with peanut flour. The marble muffins rise like mountains!
Peanut Flour Cake
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Ingredients
- ½ cup (113g) Butter, unsalted softened
- ¼ cup (56g) erythritol or other sugar substitute
- 3 eggs
- ½ cup (60g) peanut flour/powder
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- ½ teaspoon baking powder
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 190C/385F degrees
- Butter your pudding dish (either two small ones, or one medium)
- Mix the butter and erythritol together.
- Add the eggs and blend thoroughly.
- Add the peanut flour, salt, baking powder and vanilla extract.
- Combine thoroughly.
- Pour the mixture into the pudding dishes.
- Bake for 30 minutes until firm and golden.
- Eat and enjoy!
Notes
The information shown is an estimate provided by an online nutrition calculator.
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Kaz
What is the capacity of the pudding dishes? How many ounces or milliliters does each hold?
Angela Coleby
I no longer have these dishes to double check but think it should be between a 6oz and 8oz. Time for me to revisit this recipe and check I think!
Nate
Really enjoyable and simple recipe. I poured some table cream on top, giving it an extra little smoothness. I did use regular white sugar and it turned out smooth and velvety, I'm sure it works just as well with the substitute.
Angela Coleby
Delighted you enjoyed this. Love the addition of cream!
Anna
I am Diabetic so adjusted it a bit. Splenda instead of sugar, oil instead of butter. I added two heaping tablespoons of peanut butter. Baked in 8x8 pan for about 22 minutes in convection oven. Right out of the oven I added sugar free chocolate chips and cover d it for them to melt. Once melted I spread them like frosting.
Enjoy.
I’ll refrigerate and have as my lunch dessert
Angela Coleby
Love the tweaks! Adding peanut butter sounds great!
Jewell
Can you give me an idea of how big pudding dish is. I’m unfamiliar with this term.
Angela Coleby
They were 4 inches. Ramekins would work.
Rosalie
By the way, to make peanut flour, the peanuts are crushed to extract the oil, then the remainder is ground to make the flour. That's why it's flour, not butter, and why it's so low fat.
Rosalie
Quadrupled the recipe and put it in a 9x13 pan for my 60th birthday cake. Came out great!
Angela Coleby
Great idea and happy birthday!
Sandra
I had much better results mixing in the peanut flour before beating in the eggs. I also increased the sweetener to 1/3 cup and added 1/4 tsp. each cinnamon and ginger. It was delicious.
Sandra
I like to slice the cake into thin slices and bake on low, turning it over and cooking it until it's crisp, sort of like biscotti.
Angela Coleby
That sounds fantastic!
Jenny C.
Hi: I'm having a bit of a challenge with what seems to be different keto "rules". I just don't want to deprive myself of everything I love to the point where I'll feel like giving up. Marie Emmerich advises not to count "net carbs". Just count the carbs; don't subtract the fibre. Then there is "clean keto" where you don't have any dairy. I know it's likely a personal thing, so I'm just wondering what your thoughts/experience is when counting carbs that way.
I love the sounds of this peanut butter cake recipe and have peanut flour on my list next time I exit my door. I hope I can find it. I believe I have seen it in pint sized jars. Thank you for your generous sharing of time and recipes.
Angela Coleby
Good question. It can be such a personal thing. I count my net carbs but on weekends relax it a bit and just make sure that I eat low carb foods without the counting. The simplest start is just to keep away from bread, rice and high carb vegetables. Eat plenty of natural ingredients, meat, fish, eggs and vegetables! Hope you enjoy the cake!
Ravneet
Ine of the best keto cakes I've made. Not eggy and beautiful texture!! Thank you 🙏
Angela Coleby
Thank you. I love baking with peanut flour as it never dissapoints!
ASL4U
Can I just use sugar? and would I use the same amount?
Angela Coleby
Yes you can and the amount would be the same.
T Sallee
Mine are still in the oven, but I am thinking it might work in a muffin tin with papers.
Angela Coleby
Definitely!
Candra
Can I sub any nut flour?
Angela Coleby
Yes you could.
Cheryl
I purchased some peanut flour with no particular recipe in mind but found this and made them today in 4 ramekins. I used Truvia baking sugar which made the carb count more like 10.5 net carbs each (not good). Otherwise the taste was nice with a whip cream topping and the smaller serving size was just the right amount without feeling like I've over-indulged. Thanks for posting this recipe!
Angela Coleby
Glad you enjoyed it!
April
What can you sub for the eggs? We have extreme egg allergies here...
Angela Coleby
Perhaps a chia egg gel?
Angela Coleby
Perhaps a Chia Seed gel?