Recipe: The Easiest Gluten Free & Vegan Fruit Cake with No Added Sugar (2024)

Recipe: The Easiest Gluten Free & Vegan Fruit Cake with No Added Sugar (1)


Every year, for as long as I can remember, I've watched my Mum make her Christmas pudding.

The fruit soaks for weeks in a mix of brandy and sherry in her white two piece tupperware container that she's had since she was married. It's the perfect size to hold the mix of sultanas and mixed fruit that's left to soak up the alcohol and plump to perfection.

After the fruit soaked, the pudding process began. First the cloth is boiled in her big metal pudding pot that's only used once a year. The mixer is filled with butter and bread crumbs and sugar and flour and then finally the fruit mixture is added. Once the pudding cloth is boiled, she lays it out on the bench top and sprinkles it with flour, dumping the pudding mixture out of the mixer bowl and into the centre of the cloth ready to wrap it.

When I was about 8, I became the helper. Mum would wrap the pudding up, twisting and tying it until it was just rightand my little hands would grasp the cloth, holding it in place to Mum could carefully tie it with twine. As a child, this was the bestjob because it meant I "helped" to create everyone's favourite pudding.

Mum's pudding would them boil away for a few hours before being hung to dry on the coat hook in our laundry (weird place, possibly, but it's probably the safest and where she's always hung it!) where it would dry out and mature until Christmas day before being boiled for a few hours once again on Christmas day.

It's a classic recipe - but one that involved waaaaaaaaaytoo many steps and processes for me - so this recipe is wayeasier than that!

Recipe: The Easiest Gluten Free & Vegan Fruit Cake with No Added Sugar (3)

Four years ago, when I had my first gluten free Christmas, I wasdevastatedthat I couldn't eat myMum's Christmas Pudding. At the time, I couldn't even find gluten free bread crumbs in the shops and there was no way I wanted to make a giant pudding for just myself - so I got to experimenting.

I decided rather than a boiled pudding, I was going to go with a fruit cake - so for the last four years I've been perfecting that recipe. The ingredients have always been the same, but it's the ratios that I've changed - and this year, I've come up with the perfectratio.

You see, Jesse doesn't like my Mum's Christmas Pudding (but we try not to mention that :P) or any other Christmas Cakes/Fruit Cakes - but this year, he decided to try my fruit cake after seeing so much of it cooling in the kitchen....

And then an entire mini fruit cake disappeared.

This fruit cake is soeasy and so delicious that even my fruit cake hating husband lovesit - and did I mention it has just threeingredients?

But let me give you the recipe so that you can make it yourself! >>

Recipe: The Easiest Gluten Free & Vegan Fruit Cake with No Added Sugar (5)

The Easiest Gluten Free & Vegan Fruit Cake with No Added Sugar

recipe makes 1 large thick fruit cake or 6-8x 6" individual fruit cakes (see notes for smaller batches)

no added sugar, low fat/no added fat, gluten free, vegan, egg free, dairy free

1kg mixed fruit ordried fruit of your choice (see notes)

3 cups boiling water

3 cups (360g) gluten free self raising flour

  • Soak your fruit in your boiling water either overnight or for a few hours, covering your boil/container to trap the steam. If I forget to soak mine overnight, I'll simply start soaking it in the morning and make the fruit cake that afternoon.
  • Once your fruit has soaked, preheat your oven to 125C/260F.
  • Grease and/or line a large (~9-10") cake tin or 6-8 individual cake tins (we used small 5-6" cake tins so that we could share them with friends) and set aside.
  • Mix your soaked fruit mixture with your flour, mixing until just combined.
  • Pour your cake mixture into your tin(s), smoothing the surface with a spoon or spatula.
  • Bake for 1 hour (for individual cakes) to 2 1/2 hours (for one larger cake) or until golden and a skewer inserted into the middle of the cake removes clean.
  • Leave to cool completely before storing in an airtight container. The cake will keep for 3-4 weeks at room temperature, however, we always store ours in the fridge just to be safe.

Notes:

  • I can't eat citrus so mixed fruit is a no-no for me. In my fruit cake I used 500g chopped dried dates, 250g currants and 250g raisins.
  • You may substitute some of the water with alcohol if you want a more traditional fruit cake!
  • Smaller batches
    To make one regular sized cake: 500g mixed fruit/dried fruit of your choice, 1 1/2 cups water and 1 1/2 cups (180g) gluten free self raising flour

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Chocolate desserts more your style? Click here for my 4 Ingredient Chocolate Fruit Cake Recipe.

--

But tell me, does your family have any Christmas food traditions?

What's your favourite Christmas dessert?

Recipe: The Easiest Gluten Free & Vegan Fruit Cake with No Added Sugar (7)Recipe: The Easiest Gluten Free & Vegan Fruit Cake with No Added Sugar (8)Recipe: The Easiest Gluten Free & Vegan Fruit Cake with No Added Sugar (9)

Recipe: The Easiest Gluten Free & Vegan Fruit Cake with No Added Sugar (10)Recipe: The Easiest Gluten Free & Vegan Fruit Cake with No Added Sugar (11)Recipe: The Easiest Gluten Free & Vegan Fruit Cake with No Added Sugar (12) Recipe: The Easiest Gluten Free & Vegan Fruit Cake with No Added Sugar (13)Recipe: The Easiest Gluten Free & Vegan Fruit Cake with No Added Sugar (14)

Recipe: The Easiest Gluten Free & Vegan Fruit Cake with No Added Sugar (2024)

FAQs

How to keep gluten-free cake moist? ›

Add extra liquid: Gluten-free flours tend to absorb more liquid than regular flour, so you may need to add more liquid to your recipes to compensate. This can help to keep your baked goods moist and prevent them from becoming dry and crumbly.

Should I let my gluten-free cake batter rest before baking? ›

We recommend covering your batters and doughs and letting them rest for at least half an hour.

How do you make gluten-free cake rise? ›

2 teaspoons of baking powder per cup of gluten-free flour is necessary to ensure proper leavening. Baking soda and buttermilk can be used to leaven instead of baking powder, but 1-1/8 teaspoon of cream of tartar should be added for each 1/2 teaspoon baking soda used.

How to make gluten-free cake less crumbly? ›

If the flour you are using doesn't already contain xanthan gum, combining quarter of a teaspoon to every 200g/7oz of gluten-free flour will help to improve the crumb structure of your bake. You can also use guar gum or a combination of the two.

What is the trick to baking with gluten-free flour? ›

Gluten-free flours often contain fine starches, so they absorb more liquid than conventional flour. To address this, gluten-free recipes usually call for more liquid and produce looser batters. They may also call for a larger quantity of leavening, like baking powder, to help add volume and lighten the texture.

What liquid keeps cakes moist? ›

By easy, I mean easy: Poke your loaf cake or layer cake (with a skewer, cake tester, or toothpick), then use a pastry brush to coat it generously with simple syrup, which will soak into the crumb through the channels you just created. That's it: You've successfully completed a “cake soak.”

Which flour is best for gluten-free cakes? ›

Sorghum flour: great for cakes

Because sorghum is often processed on shared equipment with wheat products, you need to be careful about finding a product that is certified gluten free. Sorghum flour is a great option for cookies and cakes, but it is best combined with other gluten free flours because it is so heavy.

What to avoid for gluten free baking? ›

Some baking ingredients that contain gluten (and thus are not suitable for a gluten-free diet) include:
  • Wheat.
  • Semolina.
  • Spelt.
  • Durum.
  • Emmer.
  • Einkorn.
  • Rye, sometimes referred to as pumpernickel.
  • Barley.
Mar 29, 2021

What is the best oil for gluten free baking? ›

Examples of gluten-free oils include canola oil, sunflower oil, olive oil and vegetable oil.

How to tell when gluten-free cake is done? ›

Traditional cakes are more obviously “done” as you can usually rely on a tester to tell you if the center is fully baked. Gluten-free cakes need a little more than the tester check, including lightly pressing on the surface of the cake. It should be firm and slightly come back when pressed.

What tenderizes the gluten in a cake? ›

Fat tenderizes the gluten. Examples of fat are butter, margarine, hydrogenated vegetable shortening, or oil. Leavening agents are added to most shortened cakes to make the cakes rise and become porous and light.

Can you overbeat a gluten-free cake? ›

More mixing produces a tougher colloid. As many gluten-free recipes use xanthan gum as a binder, this will indeed be a problem with overmixing. If you are using a pre-made gluten free flour, you have to read the ingredients. If these are pure starches only, you can't overmix.

Why are my gluten-free cakes so dry? ›

Some gluten free flours will produce a cake which is on the dry side. This might be due to the lack of gluten but can be for many other reasons. Lots of gluten free flour is rice based and this can result in a dry and slightly gritty texture.

How do you make gluten-free baked goods not dry? ›

Add more fat or liquid: It might just be that you need a bit more moisture in your recipe, especially if you're converting a regular “gluten-ful” recipe to gluten-free. Try adding anywhere from ¼ to ½ cup of liquid or fat to the recipe and see if that helps.

Why is my gluten free cake gooey? ›

One of the biggest reasons for a too moist cake is if you didn't bake the cake long enough. Bake the cake until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean. Too much liquid. Be sure to measure your ingredients accurately and not use too much liquid.

What can I put on my cake to keep it moist? ›

The simplest version of simple syrup, or soak, is nothing more than equal parts granulated sugar dissolved into water. The basic soak alone will do great things for your cake, especially in terms of moisture.

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