Light and airy, this low carb pumpkin cake roll is a delicious fall dessert. With only 3g net carbs per serving, it’s a perfect grain-free, keto treat!
Pumpkin Roll with Coffee Cream
Ingredients
Cake:
- 1 cup almond flour
- 3 tablespoon coconut flour
- 1 ½ teaspoon baking powder
- 1 teaspoon xanthan gum
- 1 teaspoon cinnamon
- ½ teaspoon ginger
- ⅛ teaspoon salt
- 4 large eggs separated
- ¾ cup Swerve Sweetener divided
- ¾ cup canned pumpkin puree
- ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
Filling:
- 1 ¼ cups whipping cream
- ⅓ cup powdered Swerve Sweetener
- 1 ½ teaspoon instant coffee
- ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
- More powdered Swerve Sweetener for dusting
Instructions
Cake:
- Preheat oven to 350F and line an 11x17 inch baking sheet with parchment paper. Grease the paper very well.
- In a medium bowl, whisk together the almond flour, coconut flour, baking powder, xanthan gum, cinnamon, ginger and salt. Set aside.
- In a medium bowl, beat egg yolks on high with ¼ cup of the sweetener, until they become pale yellow and thickened. Beat in pumpkin puree and vanilla extract.
- In large bowl, beat the egg whites until soft peaks form. Slowly add remaining sweetener, beating until stiff peaks form.
- Fold egg yolk mixture into egg white mixture, then gently fold in the almond almond flour mixture until well combined. Spread into prepared baking pan and bake 15 to 18 minutes, or until cake just springs back when touched.
- Remove and let cool 10 to 15 minutes, then cover with another sheet of parchment and a large cutting board or another large baking sheet. Flip everything upside down and remove the top baking sheet. Very gently peel off the parchment paper on which the cake was baked.
- Keep the cake covered with parchment and a tea towel to keep in moisture as it cools. Let cool but don't leave too long before filling and rolling (should just be barely warm still, to avoid cracking, but too warm and it will melt the filling).
Filling:
- Whip cream with powdered sweetener, instant coffee and vanilla extract until stiff peaks form. Do not overbeat.
- Spread cake evenly with filling, leaving a ½ inch border. Gently roll from a short side, using the bottom parchment to lift the cake to avoid cracking as much as possible.
- Cover and freeze until firm. Remove from freezer 15 minutes prior to serving. Dust with powdered sweetener. Return any leftover cake to the freezer.
Notes
Saturated fatty acids: 8.18g
Total fat: 18.08g
Calories from fat: 162
Cholesterol: 115mg
Carbohydrate: 5.17g
Total dietary fiber: 2.10g
Protein: 5.87g
Sodium: 150mg
vicki says
https://twitter.com/vickibishop53/status/532520927007735808 . for some reason wouldnt let me add the #SweepstakesEntry” to mt Tweet.
vicki says
Printed and making for Thanksgiving. Love our animals
Christina Heggins says
So anything pumpkin currently has my heart! These look awesome love that they’re wheat free as well.
Edward says
Eggs are a staple in my diet.
Linda Biggs says
Being kind is important because how we treat others (human and animal) tells others what kind of a person we really are. As far as food producing animals go, even if they are destined to be our dinner, they still deserve humane treatment through their whole life, including the end.
Sherrie Lee says
Being kind is good for everyone and everything. I think that being kind to chickens makes for better tasting and more nutritional eggs. Happy chickens = happy eggs! 🙂
Hi Carolyn!
I have a question- in making “jelly roll” type filled cakes in the past, I’ve rolled them up to cool and then unrolled to fill and re-rolled – does being gluten free make it so the cake won’t hold up to the unrolling once cooled and re-rolling once filled? Or is it that this pumpkin roll is lighter and not cake like?
I’m just trying to learn about this new way of cooking and understanding so I might adapt some recipes that I miss.
Thank you,
Sherrie Lee
Carolyn says
The pre-rolling caused my cake to crack even more (in the absence of gluten) so I found it easier to just keep it wrapped up until mostly cool, then roll it once the filling was in it. It will still crack some, though.
Sherrie Lee says
Thank you!
Dale says
Do you think maybe it would crack less if I used a powdered sweetener instead of granular? I know granular swerve/erythritol has a tendency to crystallize when cooling, maybe the powdered form would help? I think I may try that out
Carolyn says
Not sure it will help much, the fact is that without gluten, these things are simply more prone to cracks.
Jordan D says
It’s cool to be kind because it’s a domino effect. One kind act inspires another. Who doesn’t want to inspire happiness?
April says
When we are kind to others they will often pay it forward spreading love, joy and good nature.
heather says
It is cool to be kind because doing good for others makes you feel good.
Deborah says
Kindness eggs others on to greatness!
steve weber says
It’s cool to be kind because you want to be treated kindly.
Kelly D says
tweet
https://twitter.com/Kellydpa/status/532327763663806464
Kelly D says
It’s cool to be kind, because you have more friends when you are nice to others.
Mami2jcn says
tweet–https://twitter.com/mami2jcn/status/532324535681314817
Mary says
I’m not a fan of coffee, can I just omit it … Or can a replace it with something else. By the way , I LOVE your recipes!!!! Thanks
Carolyn says
YOu can just leave it out.
Mami2jcn says
It’s cool to be kind because it makes someone’s day.
Lisa says
It’s good to be kind because there’s no reason to treat people badly! It just makes things worse
Amanda says
I can’t wait to try this!
Nicole Dz says
Tweeted here: https://twitter.com/lil_lady_dz/status/532312298967138304
Nicole Dz says
Being kind is good cause it can be so rewarding to yourself and others around you. Kindness is the road to take to bring happiness all around you.
Lisa A. says
It’s cool to be kind, because thankfully people are a bit more aware of their fellow creatures these days!