Boston Cream Pie gets a keto makeover! I recently updated this low carb recipe and now it’s even better than before, with fewer carbs. Tender almond flour cake filled with sugar free vanilla pastry cream and a rich low carb chocolate glaze.
I lived in the Boston area for over 11 years and the first time I ever tried this classic cake was when I made my own low carb version, way back in October of 2011. Given that it’s the city’s official dessert (according to the ever reliable Wikipedia), it’s quite astonishing that I never gave this delicious dessert the time of day. Don’t make the same mistake I did, my friends! Make this Boston Cream Pie recipe as soon as you can and you will be ever so glad you did.
Is it a pie or a cake?
If you’ve ever been to Boston, you will know just how confusing that city it, with its meandering avenues and lack of good street signs. Possibly you even asked someone for directions and got quite turned around, trying to make sense of their multi-step instructions. Believe me when I say that driving around that town is not for the faint of heart. Any of you who have ever driven on Storrow Drive know exactly what I am talking about!
Well, in keeping with the Bostonian way of making things confusing, Boston Cream Pie isn’t a pie at all, but really a cake. A cake filled with vanilla pastry cream and topped with chocolate. Okay, so it may seem like they are deliberately trying to confound outsiders with improper names and poor street signage, but when it comes to dessert, Bostonians aren’t messing around! You can’t really go wrong with a custard-filled cake topped with luscious chocolate ganache. Now that I’ve made my own and tasted it, it’s quite shocking I never did it before.
Updated Boston Cream Pie Recipe
My original low carb recipe was at the request of a reader, wayyyyyyy back in 2011. Boy that seems like a long long time ago! Even back then, I was pretty deft at low carb baking and it was relatively easy to figure out how to make over this classic cake and reduce the sugar and carbs. But over the past 7 years, I have honed my keto baking skills , so it was time to tackle a little update.
For one thing, the cornstarch in the vanilla pastry cream had to go. That is not something I use at all anymore and I’ve found that xanthan gum or glucomannan work much better as a keto thickener. I also added an extra egg yolk to help thicken the cream filling.
But I still found it a bit on the goopy side so I whisked in just a touch of coconut flour so that it didn’t ooze out too much between my cake layers. You may find you don’t need it, depending on how well your pastry cream thickens up.
I reduced the carbs in the cake layers as well, by using my standard vanilla cake recipe but by subbing out one of the cups of almond flour for a ⅓ cup of coconut flour.
Next up I tackled the glaze. I used to make a chocolate glaze that was based in butter but I’ve found that I can actually make a really good keto chocolate ganache the traditional way, by simmering cream and then melting the chocolate in the cream. Of course I can’t use chocolate with sugar, so I use unsweetened chocolate and whisk in a little sweetener at the end.
The thickness of your chocolate glaze will depend a little on the brand of cocoa powder you use (I used Rodelle). This is why I’ve also added instructions for thinning or thickening the glaze as necessary.
The Results
The truth is that the updated Boston Cream Pie recipe and the old version are both really good and they taste about the same. They both have a creamy center and a rich chocolate glaze. And oh, is there anything prettier than chocolate ganache dripping down the sides of a cake? I think not! But this new recipe is simpler and more straightforward. And it skips the icky ingredients like cornstarch, so you know this will fit in well with your keto diet.
I took this to a friend’s house for an end-of-summer barbecue and it was devoured by everyone! You know it’s good when even the non-low carbers give it rave reviews.
Looking for more delicious keto cake recipes? Check out my page of Keto Desserts here!
Low Carb Boston Cream Pie
Ingredients
Pastry Cream: (make this first and let it chill while making the other parts)
- 1 ¼ cups heavy whipping cream
- 4 egg yolks
- 6 tablespoon powdered Swerve Sweetener
- pinch salt
- 2 tablespoon butter cut into two pieces
- 1 ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
- ½ teaspoon xanthan gum
- 2 teaspoon coconut flour, sifted (only if you need it!)
Cake:
- 2 cups almond flour (about 210g)
- ¾ cup Swerve Sweetener
- ¼ cup coconut flour
- ¼ cup unflavored whey protein powder
- 2 teaspoon baking powder
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- 3 large eggs
- ½ cup butter melted
- ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
- ½ cup water
Chocolate Glaze:
- ⅔ cup heavy whipping cream
- 2 oz unsweetened chocolate chopped
- ¼ cup powdered Swerve Sweetener
- 1 tablespoon cocoa powder
- ½ tsp vanilla extract
Instructions
Pastry Cream
- Bring the whipping cream to a simmer in a medium saucepan over medium heat. In a medium bowl, whisk the egg yolks with the sweetener and salt until well combined.
- Slowly whisk about half of the hot cream into the yolks to temper, then slowly return the yolk/cream mixture back to the saucepan and cook until thickened, about 4 to 5 minutes, whisking continuously. It thickens up very suddenly and quickly, so watch it carefully!
- Remove from heat and whisk in the butter and vanilla extract. Sprinkle the surface with xanthan gum, whisking as you go, to combine well. Let cool to room temperature and then refrigerate at least 3 hours.
Cake
- For the cake, preheat the oven to 350F. Grease 2 (two) 8-inch round cake pans and line with parchment paper. Then grease the paper as well.
- In a medium bowl, whisk together the almond flour, sweetener, coconut flour, protein powder, baking powder, and salt, breaking up any clumps with the back of a fork.
- Stir in the eggs, melted butter, and vanilla extract until well combined. Stir in just enough water so that the batter is spreadable but not pourable. Divide the batter evenly between the prepared baking pans and spread to the edges.
- Bake 20 to 25 minutes minutes or until edges are golden brown and the top is just firm to the touch. Cool in the pan 10 minutes and then flip out onto a wire rack to cool completely.
Chocolate Ganache
- In a small saucepan over medium heat, bring the whipping cream to a simmer. Remove from heat and add the chopped chocolate. Let sit 3 to 4 minutes to melt.
- Add the powdered sweetener, cocoa powder, and vanilla and whisk until smooth. Let cool 5 to 10 minutes, while assembling cake, until the glaze is thicker but still pourable. If it's too thick, gently re-warm with an additional tablespoon or two of cream. If it's too thin, whisk in another tablespoon of cocoa powder until smooth.
To Assemble
- Whisk the chilled pastry cream briskly to remove any clumps. If you find it's very gooey and likely to ooze out between the layers of cake, whisk in a bit of sifted coconut flour to help thicken it.
- Place one layer of cake on serving dish and spread with the pastry cream. Gently top with the second layer. Pour the chocolate glaze over the top of the cake and spread with a knife or offset spatula, pushing to the edges and letting it drip down over the sides.
- Pour the chocolate glaze over the top of the cake and spread with a knife or offset spatula, pushing to the edges and letting it drip down over the sides. Refrigerate the cake 1 hour before serving.
Judy says
As far as I know….in trying to reduce my levels of inflammation (just doing low carb/gluten free wasn’t doing it. No surprise, since I reacted highly to almonds, & I’d been doing almond milk, flour…) I’m doing a pretty regimented food testing process. Every now & then I take a day off & thought this looked soooo good. I haven’t tested hazelnuts yet. I will do them soon now! Thanks!!
Carolyn says
Check out this cake for hazelnut meal. I also hear sunflower seed flour works well. https://alldayidreamaboutfood.com/2012/10/hazelnut-chocolate-chip-bundt-cake.html
Judy says
So many low carb recipes use almond flour, but I’m allergic to almonds…..what would you suggest as a substitution? I know it would be an entirely different recipe to swap coconut flour, but how about another nut flour, or sunflower seeds? This looks heavenly!!
Carolyn says
Is it only almonds you are allergic to? I have a great cake that is made with hazelnut meal…you could try that although you’d probably still taste the hazelnuts a bit.
leslie says
Hi !!!! i’ going to make the cake but with lemon curd and italian meringue for tomorrow!!!
i was wondering if I can replace whey proteine by more almonde flour????
Thanks
Carolyn says
The whey protein makes up for the lack of gluten (which is a protein). More almond flour won’t necessarily make it rise properly, but you can certainly try.
Leslie says
Thank !!!! What can I use instead of protein ??? Corn starch or arrow-root or potatoe starch or coconut????
Carolyn says
I am not sure any starches will help it rise. Try a bit of one of them (maybe a tbsp) and then add some extra leavening agent…maybe another tsp of baking powder? I can’t guarantee it!
Erica says
Almost two years late, but I just made this bad boy tonight. Holeeeeey crap this is GOOD! The cake was moist and perfect, but it was that pastry cream that seals the deal! I think I could eat it by the bucketful 😉
Carolyn says
Better late than never!
Erica says
Just following up! I made almond flour pancakes this morning, and layered them with this pastry cream and chocolate ganache. UMM YES! I highly recommend trying it!
Carolyn says
Whoa! Sounds amazing!
Lia says
I have the same question about replacing the corn starch- would “thick it up” work? It is a mix of gums. Thanks!
Carolyn says
Oh boy, no idea. YOu’d have to experiment. Is it a mix of xanthan and guar gum? If so, make the custard the normal way and then put in a 1/4 tsp of the gum, whisk briskly to mix and let cool a bit. If it’s not quite thick enough, you’d need to add more, maybe 1/8 tsp at a time.
Kelly says
Do you think you could use something other than corn starch in the pastry cream? Would xantham gum work?
Catherine H. says
I chose this for my two year-old’s birthday, and It. Was. Amazing. I have never liked Boston Cream Pie, so I thought making this would help to keep me from polishing it off after everybody went to bed, but not really. I didn’t bargain on how delicious it would be. (I’m still sticking to my diet, but it’s now torture instead of easy–at least until my husband finises the third left in the fridge. He declared this “Winner, winner, chicken dinner,” which is an accolade really difficult to get from him. I liked it warm (the pastry cream, another thing I never thought I liked, is to die for), but the glaze was a little overwhelming. Cold, however, the chocolate flavor calms down and stops crowding out the lovely cream and mildly sweet vanilla cake. It’s like a giant donut, and I’m in love. Thank you. Now my second son is turning four in December–wonder what I’ll make for him . . .?
Carolyn says
LOL, winner winner, chicken dinner! That gave me a good giggle. Thank you!
Stacy Wade says
Carolyn – Thank you. We have tried 7 recipes this week in anticipation of my son’s upcoming birthday, and this is by far the best yellow cake recipe. I have a question, though. Have you ever tried replacing the yogurt with sour cream? Just wondering since that would lower carb counts a smidge. With the baking soda, I read that it tempers the “sour” of the sour cream, so I do not think it would alter the taste much.
Carolyn says
I think sour cream would do just fine. What’s the protein count on the same amount of sour cream as the yogurt? Perhaps a little lower, but I think it would still give it good structure.
Stacy Wade says
I decided not to mess with a good thing. 🙂
Carolyn says
Wow, okay, I am not sure. yes, 1 teaspoon xanthan is correct and that's definitely not the issue here, because that's what I use in ALL my cake recipes and I've never had this issue. Did you alternate adding half the almond flour with the almond milk, and then add the second half? Something seems off here, like you had too much dry ingredients to wet, because the batter should not be that thick, but I don't know why. It just makes me think that some wet ingredient was missing.
What kind of almond flour did you use? And if this happens again, add more almond milk, by the tablespoon, until you have a more spreadable batter.
Jenn says
My bubbie made this for me today for my b’day and he had similar problems. I think it’s the variation in flours. Some are higher in fibre to total carb ratio that others and that seems to make a huge difference in how quickly the moisture gets taken up. Higher fibre, lower net carb, but also takes up the moisture like a wick. He also had a hard time spreading the batter. But the custard is amazing and while the cake fell when taken out of the over, so it is very very dense, it is also very very tasty! I’d change up the ganache in the future as I found it bitter and heavy, and am thinking I would probably add more sweetener and some heavy cream to thin it out(?) for the next time I make this. Yes, even though there were woes in making, it IS a wonderful cake and we WILL be making this again! Just a bit of a learning curve to low carb baking 😉 Thanks for the wonderful recipes and all your hard work, Carolyn!
Anonymous says
Hello Carolyn, I need help!!!! I tried to make the cake. It turned out like a heavy semisweet bread with a gummy texture. Is the amount of xantham gum correct at 1 tsp.? As soon as it hit the other ingredients, the batter crawled up the beaters and almost out of my bowl!! The batter was very hard to spread into the baking dish and turned out ugly and lumpy on top. I've messed this up somewhere. Can you think of what I've done wrong?
Gursahiba says
Your Pie looks utterly delicious. Its great to have found your blog.
renate says
hi there:) just wanted to let you know that I will put you on my list of pages and blogs worth reading! -on my new food blog:) And off course Im a new follower of yours as well all the way from Norway actually- loving your blog and the way you write! Would love for you to stop by my new blog if you feel like it
http://projectasteit.blogspot.com/
big hugs r
Christine knapkins_com says
Congrats, Carolyn! Your Boston Cream Pie made this week's "Top 10 Most Popular as voted by the Knapkins Community" Let's eat some Pie!!
Cheers
Christine
Visit the Top 10 at http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=296775697016023&set=a.296775607016032.92095.245176548842605&type=3&theater
Ana Helena says
Absolutely delicious! Thanks for sharing.
Jennifer says
That looks so naughty … but nice!! I can see how the family would all like it so much. Don't worry it took a while before my sons warmed up to low-carb baking. I think they prefer my low-carb and gluten-free baking actually. 🙂
Luana says
The cake recipe is similar to what I use to make shortcake, so I bet it's good.
This is sure something I want to try!
Tiffany says
Action shots of dripping chocolate = the perfect way for me to start my weekend! Viva la Boston Cream! 😀
Alida says
This looks amazing!! I love Boston Cream Pie – delicious and elegant. Beautiful photos!
Lindsey @ Gingerbread Bagels says
I LOOOVVEE Boston Cream Pie and yours looks so incredible! I would gladly eat the entire cake for you. 🙂
marla says
What a fun & fancy pie! That dripping chocolate is fabulous!