All your questions on baking with almond flour answered here! This instructional article takes the guesswork out of how to bake with almond flour, so you can indulge in low carb treats all year long. Take it from this self-proclaimed Almond Flour Wizard!
I’ve updated this post on how to bake with almond flour, as I’ve got a lot more good information to add!
I’ve been baking with almond flour for more than 8 years now and I have to say, I have gotten pretty good at it. I’ve been called The Keto Baking Queen by many people and it’s a title I’ve earned through many years of trial and error. I am proud of my low carb baking skills, and I find myself improving and growing on almost a daily basis. So I decided it was high time to update this article on How To Bake with Almond Flour so you can benefit from my experience!
Because almond flour is the basis of many of my keto recipes, I am highly comfortable with it. It’s perhaps one of the most versatile of the low carb flours, and works well in low carb cookies, cakes, and breads. It’s great for low carb pie crust too! You just have to know how to treat it, what to look for, and how to adjust if it doesn’t work quite as you expect.
So let’s get started. Answering your burning questions about baking with almond flour, right here, right now.
Almond Meal vs. Almond Flour – What’s the difference?
Let’s clear up any misconceptions right now that all almond flour is created equal. I get this question a lot, and the answer is a resounding NO! Sure, they are both made from ground almonds, but anything that calls itself almond “flour” should be finely enough ground that you can make fine-textured cakes and bread that rival their wheat-based counterparts.
It should also be blanched almond flour, so that you get no little dark bits of skin. There are several really good brands of finely ground almond flour, including Honeyville, WellBee, and Anthony’s. My favourite is Bob’s Red Mill Super Fine Blanched Almond Flour. Costco also sells good almond flour at a reasonable price, under their Kirkland brand, which I believe it actually produced by Honeyville.
Almond meal is much more coarsely ground and if you place the two side by side, you can really see the difference. It’s still often good enough for baked goods where texture doesn’t matter quite as much, like low carb muffins or crackers. It can be both blanched (skins removed) and un-blanched (skins left on). And since it’s often less expensive, it may be preferable to almond flour at times. You don’t even have to buy almond meal, you can make it yourself if you have a good food processor.
So, if you’ve ever made an almond flour recipe and had issues with the final product holding together, leaching out the oils or butter, or not rising properly and holding its shape, a likely culprit is that you are using the coarser almond meal, instead of almond flour. The larger particles mean less cohesiveness for the finished product. For some things, it may not matter but for cakes and fine-textured items, it most certainly does. I don’t even keep almond meal around anymore, I use almond flour for everything.
Subbing Almond Flour for Wheat Flour
You’re going to hate me for saying this, but there is no easy formula here. It all depends on what you are trying to make. Cookies are dense and crunchy whereas cakes should be light and fluffy, and they are going to take very different ratios of almond flour to other ingredients.
I wish I could tell you it was as simple as swapping almond flour for wheat flour at a 1:1 ratio. But it’s not and when you think about it, you can see why. Almond flour is basically ground nuts, full of fat and moisture, entirely without gluten and not nearly as powdery, fine and dry as wheat flour. So there are a whole range of factors you need to account for when adapting a wheat-based recipe to low carb and gluten-free. You need to consider the texture, density, and moisture content of the baked good you want to make over.
A cup of almond flour also differs significantly in weight from a cup of wheat flour. Out of curiosity, I just went and measured the two (literally right now, as I am writing this) and a cup of wheat flour came to 5 oz, while a cup of Bob’s Red Mill blanched almond flour came to 3.75 oz. That’s more than a full ounce difference!
If you are a total beginner with almond flour, I’d actually suggest you stick to some tried and true recipes to get a feel for how it behaves and the overall proportions. That’s certainly how I started, 2 and ½ years ago. Once you have a good sense for almond flour recipes, you will find it easier to strike out on your own and adapt some family favourites.
Let me tell you what I do, when I start making over a recipe. Take, for example, my Almond Crusted Butter Cake. The original wheat-based recipe took about 50% more butter and 50% less flour. Knowing that almond flour has a higher fat content but is less dense than wheat flour, I basically switched this ratio around. Then I doubled the baking powder and added in whey protein to make up for the lack of gluten and to give the end result more structure. Then I crossed my finger, said a little prayer, and popped it in the oven. And it has since become one of my all-time favourite keto cake recipes!
You can also increase the eggs for more protein and structure, but too many eggs can give the final result a rubbery texture or make it too “wet” and gummy in the center. I usually start with one more egg, and then add another closer to the end if the batter seems too heavy and thick.
One important thing to note when adapting wheat flour recipes is that your almond flour batter will almost always be thicker. Don’t expect it to look exactly like a wheat-based batter and resist the urge to thin it out with liquids, or you will likely end up with a soggy mess.
Other Nut Flours and Meals
People often ask me if they can use other nut flours and meals instead. I give the answer to this question as a tentative “yes”, with several caveats.
First off, I don’t know of too many other nut “flours” that are as finely ground as true blanched almond flour, so if texture and consistency of the end result is dependent on the grind, then you may have some difficulty. Some keto muffins, scone and cookie recipes lend themselves admirably to a simple swap of one nut flour/meal for another. Several of my biscotti recipes could be made with hazelnut meal instead of almond flour, as could some cracker and cookie recipes. And my Hazelnut Chocolate Chip Bundt Cake could easily be made with another nut meal of choice (walnut, almond, pecan…all of those would do well).
But finer cakes and cupcakes might become too crumbly, to coarse and possibly leach out oil during baking if you attempt it with anything but the most finely ground flours. If you want a fine crumb on your cake so that no one can guess it’s low carb, then you want finely ground almond flour.
Sunflower Seed Flour
This is, in my opinion, the best nut-free substitute for almond flour, because it can be ground quite finely. You can even make your own sunflower seed flour easily at home. Check out How To Make Sunflower Seed Flour here.
The funny thing about sunflower seed flour, though, is how it can turn green when it’s baked. This is a reaction with the leavening agents like baking powder and baking soda and it doesn’t mean the baked good has gone bad. To offset this reaction, you need about 1 tablespoon of acid like apple cider vinegar or lemon juice. In chocolate recipes, the brown colour covers the green and you don’t really need to worry about it.
Coconut Flour vs. Almond Flour
Inevitably when I make a keto recipe with almond flour, someone comes along and asks if they can make it with coconut flour. And vice versa. Here’s the deal:
You cannot sub coconut flour for almond flour as a direct 1:1 substitution. I cannot state this more strongly. Don’t even think about trying it or you will end up with hard, inedible thing that is only good for using as a hockey puck. Check out my article on Baking with Coconut Flour for more information.
Coconut flour is an entirely different creature than any flour based on tree nuts. It’s fine, powdery, dense and soaks up liquids like nobody’s business. It also requires more eggs and sometimes more other “binders” like xanthan gum, to keep the final product together. And you want to use WAY less coconut flour for a recipe than you would almond flour, sometimes as little as ⅓ to ¼. In essence, if you choose to make a recipe based on almond flour with coconut flour, you will need to restructure the whole thing.
If I were to take one of my basic almond flour recipes and rework it for coconut flour, I would start with about ⅓ the amount of flour, twice the eggs, some xanthan gum, a little more leavening agent like baking powder, and then I would add my liquids like coconut or almond milk last and not all at once. I would add some liquid, work it in and see how thick the batter was, then add a bit more and a bit more until it felt right to me. Again, “right” in this case is likely be a thicker batter than anything wheat-based, so it take some experimenting to get it right.
One good thing about working with coconut flour (and almond flour) is that they don’t contain gluten so over-mixing is usually not an issue. On occasion, I’ve been making a coconut flour recipe and suddenly thought it needs another egg or two. I’ve added it at the very end and had no problems with the end result. In this sense, at least, coconut and almond flours can be very forgiving.
Peanut Flour vs Almond Flour
The best answer I can give you here is: maybe. Peanut flour comes in a variety of forms, including roasted (light and dark), unroasted, partially defatted and full-fat. I ordered some peanut flour once that was essentially just ground peanuts and it did well as a sub for almond flour in several recipes. But the defatted ones are a little bit like coconut flour, they are very fine and powdery and soak up a lot of liquid. So they are going to require some reworking of the basic recipe in some of the same ways as coconut flour, although to a lesser extent.
How to Measure Almond Flour
Always use the scoop and level method, unless the recipe indicates otherwise.
I always simply scoop the almond flour from the bag or the canister, and level it off with a knife or sometimes with my hand. I never try to jam pack my cups to get more almond in there, so all of my recipes will be written assuming you simply measure an unpacked scoop. A well-written recipe should specify if you should pack the ingredients, so assume not if it doesn’t say. Sadly, not all recipes are that well written these days.
Many gluten-free recipes are done by weight, not volume, because gluten-free ingredients can differ significantly by brand. I am making an effort to do this more often now, especially when the recipe is on the tricky side and precise measurements matter. I would suggest investing in a small kitchen scale if you want to be more accurate. I will always give measurements by volume, however, since I want my recipes to be as accessible to as many people as possible. Weight measurements are more accurate overall, but it doesn’t do me any good if the reader doesn’t own a kitchen scale!
How to make Almond Flour Bread
Looking for a firmer bread you can toast and slather with peanut butter? Yeah, me too. Almond flour is by nature moist so if you use it on its own, your end result can be more cake-y than you want it to be.
I find that adding a little bit of a denser flour, like coconut flour or oat fiber, can help stiffen the batter and thus firm up the bread. I used coconut flour successfully in my Low Carb Panini Bread Recipe. The trick is to not increase the other wet ingredients, so the addition of this flour helps dry out the consistency of your bread.
You can also try using a little oat fiber, which is made from the husk, or the “bran” of the grain and not the grain itself. However, it may contain a little gluten so it’s not idea for people with a gluten intolerance.
Many people add psyllium husk to low carb bread recipes as well, which can give it more of a yeast-bread like texture. But depending on the brand of it can also make it gummy and sometimes it has a purplish hue.
Using Protein Powder in Low Carb Baking
Why do I often use whey protein or egg white protein in my keto cakes and other baked goods? It isn’t, as some people think, to get more protein into my diet. I am an unabashed carnivore and consume plenty of protein.
It all comes down to the science of baking. Gluten is a protein and it’s part of what gives wheat-based baked goods structure, allowing them to rise and hold their shape. In gluten-free baking, adding in a dry protein can help make up for this. You can’t just add more egg whites because that will throw off the liquid to dry ratios. But you can easily swap out the whey for your protein powder of choice (hemp, soy, even egg white powder). The results may vary a little depending on the protein content per serving.
Freezing Almond Flour Baked Goods
With only a few exceptions, I would say yes, most almond flour baked goods are indeed freezer-friendly.
I have successfully frozen cakes, muffins, cookies, scones, and even some almond flour pie crust. I usually freeze after baking, and I freeze before I glaze or frost the baked good in question.
However, you can also freeze some unbaked items and then thaw before baking. I’ve done this successfully with almond flour cookies like my Butter Pecan Cookies and Chewy Ginger Cookies. The trick here is to roll them into balls and flash freeze on a cookie sheet. Then you can put them in a container or plastic bag and they can be frozen for months. Thaw fully before baking.
How to Store Almond Flour
I keep my unopened bags of almond flour in my cellar, which is quite cool year round. Once a bag is opened, I transfer half of the almond flour to an airtight container and keep it on my counter. The rest is frozen or refrigerated to keep help it keep. I don’t recommend trying to bake with the almond flour straight out of the freezer. The high moisture and fat content will make it very clumpy and hard to work with.
More Almond Flour Baking Tips
- Let your almond flour baked goods cool completely. My friends, I can’t emphasize this enough.It can be tempting to start cutting them up soon after they are baked, but try to resist or you may wind up with a heap of crumbs. The texture and cohesiveness of low carb baked goods always improves upon cooling and sitting. Crackers, cookies and tart crusts will crisp up better and breads and muffins will hold together better when left to sit for an hour or two.
- Room temperature ingredients. Make sure your eggs, butter, and cream or almond milk are at room temperature, unless otherwise specified by the recipe. If they are cold, your batter will clump up.
- Grease that pan well! Low carb goodies can stick more than conventional ones, so really work that butter or oil into the corners of your pan.
- Watch it carefully. Almond flour baked goods can also brown more quickly than wheat flour recipes. If I am adapting a wheat-flour recipe, I almost always lower my oven temperature by 25 degrees F, and I watch it carefully. If the top and sides are browning too quickly, I cover the pan with aluminum foil.
- Baking times are only a guide. Oven temperatures can vary tremendously so please only ever use baking times as a rough guideline. What takes 20 minutes in my oven may take 25 in yours. Or yours may be done faster. You should always set your timer for 5 minutes LESS than the baking time says, and then check on it every 5 minutes after that.
Ready to become an almond flour baking expert?
I hope that helped answer some of your most pressing almond flour baking questions. If you can think of anything I didn’t cover here, or you have some tips of your own you’d like to share, please leave a comment or send me an email. I’d be more than happy to update this little (long) treatise to cover more ground!
Patricia Gates says
Very interesting and helpful. Thanks!
Kathy says
I have made several recipes with almond flour and it seems like the cake or muffins are too moist or wet, if that makes sense. What am I doing wrong?
Carolyn says
Are you making my recipes? The fault in most recipes is that they try to treat almond flour just like regular flour so they get the amounts of other ingredients wrong.
Try some of my muffin recipes: https://alldayidreamaboutfood.com/category/muffins-scones/
April Medrano says
Thank you for your guidance. I am new to keto baking and have some success with recipes for cookies, cupcakes and muffins but cakes seem to be my nemesis. The cakes I have made seem to dense and my buttercream is too sweet. Once I have frosted my cake and placed in the fridge in a airtight container it never fails the cake and buttercream become to stiff. Not sure what I am doing wrong. Baking gives me so much pleasure and I have done traditional wheat flour baking all my life but within the past year I have took up keto baking.
Carolyn says
Sounds like you haven’t made one of my recipes. You need protein powder for light cakes and my sugar free Swiss Meringue Buttercream is perfection – not too sweet! Also… let your cakes come back to room temperature before serving. Even conventional cakes get pretty firm in the fridge.
WAYNE OSTLER says
Hello
Thanks for your good guide about almond flour. I find that the floor is very’ heavy’- the cakes it make s are not light, and or a nice crumb. Is it worth shifting flour and creating eggs for’ light’ texture??
Carolyn says
Did you read the part about protein powder? That’s the trick and that’s why my cakes are not dense and heavy.
April Medrano says
Thank you Carolyn for your time. You are right I have yet to try one our cake recipes but have enjoyed watching your videos. I am planning on doing the Swerve chocolate/ ding doing cake. I look forward to using your helpful advice. I just think I’m hard on myself because I have so much success baking the conventional way. Thank you!
Carolyn says
It’s honestly like learning EVERYTHING all over again!
Kelly says
Hi Carolyn
How would you substitute defatted almond flour in your recipes. I’m trying to
Increase protein and decrease fat.
Thank you!!
Carolyn says
I’m sorry, I don’t really use it because it’s not readily accessible by most people. You will need to experiment. It will likely take more eggs and more liquids.
Liana says
This article came in at a perfect time because I was about to flip a regular recipe for Blueberry Coffee Cake to a Keto version 1:1 for my son’s birthday. That would have been a disaster. I learned so much.
Billie says
Wow! I’ve learned so much already. Thank you
Sandy says
Lots of info thank you! I have used skim milk forever, can I use skim milk in your recipes in place of almond or soy milk?
Carolyn says
Sure!
Chloe says
Hi there, I’ve just started baking with almond flour and I’m finding that the almond flavour is overpowering some of the savoury recipes (eg cheese biscuits / pizza bases). This is probably a silly question but is this normal? For sweet recipes or savoury recipes with a lot of additional flavour it’s fine because the flavour is masked but for less flavour-heavy recipes it’s a bit of a problem, particularly for savoury food where the almond taste doesn’t fit. Is there a good flour alternative that won’t overpower in blander recipes?
Carolyn says
I don’t ever taste the almond flour but we are all different. What brand are you using?
Sylvia says
I love how you described the use of Oat Fiber that can help in the baking products with Almond Flour. I have looked at different recipes that use Oat Fiber, but there is no consistency in the ratio for Almond Flour to Oat Fiber. Sometimes is 1 : 0.3, or 1 : 0.16. May I ask you for some tips as to how much Oat Fiber to add each time? Thank you!
Carolyn says
It really depends on the recipe, I guess. I’d probably do about 1/4 cup to ever 2 cups of almond flour.
Jayme Simms says
I am reading about “defatted” almond flour. I use the Kirkland brand. Which brands are “defatted”?
Carolyn says
I don’t know what brands they are, to be honest. I don’t use that kind of flour… you can tell instantly as it’s very powdery and fine. I do know that Sukrin makes one…
Mike says
Hi Carolyn! Your Baking with Almond Flour resource is fantastic. I have had several questions answered and so many things to try. Thank you for sharing your wealth of knowledge! I also have a question for you. I am on a LC/Keto lifestyle and have been for some time. I am becoming tired of the taste of almonds with the almond flour. Those recipes that contain allot of chocolate or cinnamon aren’t so bad. On top of that I am not really a fan of coconut. Is there anything that I can do or add to recipes to “mask” the almond flavor? TIA for your help.
Carolyn says
I wish I could advise but I don’t get an almond taste from almond flour when baked in a cake or in muffins, unless I add almond extract. What brand are you using?
Mike says
Hi Carolyn, I have been using Nature’s Eats Blanched Almond Flour.
Irene Stewart says
I notice that you bake your cakes at a slow oven 325. Is there a reason for this ?
Carolyn says
Helps them rise better without holes, and also sometimes almond flour cakes over-brown at 350F. Depends on the recipe.
Irene Stewart says
I am a pretty good conventional baker and I bake for younger women who struggle….pies, cinnamon rolls, butter tarts. I am 76 years old and need to loose weight so I am very excited to learn these new methods with new ingredients. Pork Rinds, wow !! I haven’t seen any of your recipes with Lupin Flour. I will keep my eye out for them. You are such an interesting person and I understand you. I raised one daughter and three sons. I found you because of your victory in the doughnut competition !
Donna says
How can I make almond pancakes more moist? I’ve used almond flour, protein powder, water and eggs but it’s just so dry! I mean, I want to drink 3L of water during. I was thinking about adding chia gel. Thoughts? Ty in advance!
Carolyn says
Try this recipe: https://alldayidreamaboutfood.com/keto-almond-flour-pancakes/
Norma B Dempsey says
Thank you so much for the info on baking with almond flour! I so needed this! Now I am ready to be more confident baking knowing what to buy and how to measure! I’m excited! I will probably still have failures, but, feeling a lot better!
April says
Excellent information…much needed!!! I get so tired of reading comments of people that do not do what they should and then bash the recipe/blog writer because it is a failure…even to the point of saying “I had to throw it away”. Disgusting. Then there are people that do not read and ask the same questions over and over!! I’ve wanted to say these things many times; and this was my chance! I’ve read your blog for a long time. Thanks for some great recipes and your hard work getting information like this out.
Amanda H says
Thank you for this post! I am a very novice keto baker. I have found that all this timgs I’ve baked so far…breads, muffins even bagels all kind of have the same flavor. I’m guessing its the almond flour. I’m excited to learn how change this and be a better baker!
pat says
just wanted to say thank you for
the tips on low carb baking.
pat.
Karen Teeling says
Some recipes I see ask for almond flour AND a little coconut flour. I really dislike the taste of coconut flour – is it necessary to use it in the recipe or can I just add more almond flour? Is there a reason 1 Tablespoon of coconut flour is necessary?
Carolyn says
Yes it’s necessary. It will give you a better texture, with NO coconut flavour.