Blueberry, Lemon & Almond Cake

Hooray, the Swedish forests are down with the blues again! You can literally just take three steps from the porch of our summer house and stand completely surrounded by an ocean of blue gems. It’s an August luxury when you live in Sweden. Even Elsa sneaks away on short blueberry foraging tours. You can easily tell where she has been just by looking at her blue stained hands, mouth, knees and … dress. And of course by the big grin on her face when she says: “I found bueblerries!”.

We mentioned earlier that we have been baking and eating bueblerries, ehm, blueberries in lots of different ways these last weeks. They have of course been thrown into smoothies, used in tarts, gobbled down by the handfull and sprinkled over our breakfast yogurt. But one of the most fun thing we did was Mini Calzones with ricotta, maple syrup, lime & blueberries. We made this dough, divided it in small cirkles that we filled it with blueberries, lime juice, maple syrup and ricotta cheese, and wrapped them up like calzones. Super cute and delicious. We did half the batch with normal savory filling and half with the sweet blueberry filling. That way, our dinner seamlessly turned into dessert. But now we’re loosing ourselves in the calzones when we should really talk about this cake.

We have baked a couple of different gluten free cakes before, but until this day we had never made an almond cake. Today we made three. Think of this cake as a distant relative to a sponge cake, although grain free, dairy free (well, that depends on what you glaze it with), possibly vegan, and much tastier. We filled it with lemon to give a sour twang to the richness of the almond flour, poppy seeds because they are so fun to chew on, and blueberries because it would be stupid using any other fruit this month.

Blueberry, Lemon, Poppy Seed & Almond Cake
Serves 8-10

Inspired by Coco’s and Elana’s almond cakes.

4 cups (400 g) almond flour
3 tbsp poppy seeds
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/2 cup (120 ml) rapeseed oil or ghee
1/2 cup (120 ml) honey or maple syrup
2 small organic lemons
3 large eggs (replace with chia seeds* if you are vegan)
2 cups (300 g) blueberries (save half for topping)

Glazing
1 cup/240 ml (250 g) Turkish yogurt, drained (use vegan cream cheese if you are vegan)

2 tbsp honey or maple syrup
1 tsp vanilla extract

Preheat oven to 350°F / 180°C. Combine almond flour, poppy seeds, salt, baking powder and baking soda in a large bowl and set aside. Heat oil and honey in a sauce pan on very low heat until combined. Grate the zest from the 2 lemons and add it to the honey/oil batter. Divide them in half and squeeze the juice from three of the halves into the mixture, saving one half for the glazing. Add the batter to the bowl with the dry ingredients. Beat the eggs and then fold them into the batter together with 1 cup of the blueberries. Stir gently around with a wooden spoon until combined. Grease a 8-inch spring form cake tin, and add the batter to it.

Bake for about 40-50 minutes (depending on size of the pan and oven), or until golden on the outside and baked all way through (you can cover the cake with tin foil during the last 15 minutes of the baking time, if it starts looking burned) . Remove from oven and let cool for at least 30 minutes before removing the sides. Meanwhile, start making the glazing. Drain yogurt in a milk cloth or coffee filter for about 10 minutes. This is to make the yogurt less runny. Discard the water and combine the thick yogurt with honey vanilla extract and the juice from the remaining lemon half. Leave to chill in the fridge. When the cake has cooled completely, cover it with glazing, top with the remaining blueberries and serve. You could also just serve the cake with blueberries and yogurt on the side.

* You can replace three eggs with 3 tbsp chia seeds and 9 tbsp water that you combine and let sit for 15 minutes.

148 Comments

  • Liz
    I made the cake for my husband's birthday amd it was amazing! I opted for the vegan version and didn't use poppy seeds and we were fighting for the last piece! I'd like to recomend that you include the "egg to chia seed conversion" in your instructions though. If you opt for vegan make sure you prepare 1 TBSP of Chia Seeds + 3 TBSP water for EACH egg needed; stir well and let sit for 5 min. before folding it in to the batter. For this recipe you would need 3 TBSP of Chia Seeds + 9 TBSP water. Cheers, LiZ
  • I made a lot of friends happy with this beautiful cake! Even after 3 days in the fridge, it was still delicious and moist. Loved it! I used a mixture of fresh berries and frozen ones (the frozen ones for the batter, the fresh ones for the topping) because here in Belgium, they don't grow that easily ;) But it worked perfectly! Thanks for the recipe! Kisses from Karolien Ghent, Belgium
  • Sloane
    Can coconut oil be used for this recipe?
  • Bonjour, C'est Magnifique ! Je viens de tester votre recette. Merci
  • Kine
    This looks super yummy! Instead of chia seeds, do you think I could use egg substitute like "No egg"?
  • Kate
    Lovely cake! I used coconut oil instead of the ghee. As it was still a bit warm, I drizzled the yogurt on top as I served it. The birthday girl was very pleased :-)
  • Andrew
    Hi there David and Luisa, I made this cake with coconut oil and it was divine! Instead of using the yoghurt icing, I did my own avocado-cacao icing which complemented the cake beautifully! thank you for the recipe! :-)
  • Laurel
    This was so delicious!! And my first successful paleo baking experience. :) Thank you for a wonderful recipe!
  • Kate
    Could the almond flour be substituted for Coconut? I want to bake this for my aunt but she's sensitive to too much nut, however I know that coconut flour is safe for her. Would it be ok?
  • Addie
    This is my favorite cake. I've been making it since the recipe was originally published, and I just keep coming back for it. Thank you so much!
  • I made this for my birthday and it recieved rave reviews - thank you for the deliciousness! Also heard the feature about your cookbook on BBC Radio 4 the other day and thought I couldn't agree more. Your recipes are fantastic.
  • Roxanne
    I made this tonight with the vegan variation, except I didnt bother with the cream cheese frosting. It is sweet enough for me so I will just have it with a bit of coconut icecream. I used coconut oil and flax seed with good success. The flax isnt as good as a binder as eggs but the cake holds together when sliced which is more than I can say for other vegan recipes :) 40min was too long so next time I would check it after 30min and definitely put foil on as suggested. Overall great cake and a good use of my home made almond meal (surplus from making almond milk). Thanks!
  • Greta
    Do you think frozen blueberries would work well? I picked a lot over the summer but the fresh organic ones in the grocery store are expensive!
  • smita sangani
    This recipe turned out so good can't wait all my family to try it, i made it with chia seed as egg replacer, and it tastes amazing! Thank you for sharing. Just ordered your book on my kindle. can't wait to try some more recipes. smita.
  • Christine
    This recipe was delicious! For our oven the time was a tad too long but we were good about checking on it every so often. Thank you for sharing!
  • Elda
    Hello! Although I have read comments about the baking, I would appreciate some advice. The taste was lovely, but somehow, it did not feel as if it was totally baked through and yet was ... well, perhaps not burned but almost you could say. I am concerned about the quantity of oil, if I used too much. Perhaps a combination of 1. Too much oil? 2. Not a 'heavy' enough baking pan 3. Too hot an oven? (which would mean perhaps less than 175 - cook longer. Quite sad actually I mean the ingredients are quite expensive. Blueberries are around but depending on the store perhaps 24.90 swedish crowns for 125g. Almond flour is not cheap either! So the oil, is 120 ml correct? - that is 1 dl and a a tad more ....? Would really like to get this to a 'perfection' Thanking you for any help you can think of.
    • Hi Elda, I don't think you have used too much oil, but you should be aware that almond flour is different to bake with than normal wheat flour. It is normal that the cake is a bit more moist towards the center, but it shouldn't be completely unbaked. If it is unbaked, it needs more time in the oven. Check it by inserting a tooth pick – the cake is ready when it comes out clean. The top might look a bit burnt but it's only natural and won't affect the flavor. Because of how moist the cake is, it will also taste great one or two days after it is baked. This is one of the things that I really appreciate with almond flour cakes. If you are not allergic to gluten, you can also replace half of the almond flour with spelt flour. If you are looking for other ways to use almond flour in cakes, you can check out our Chocolate & Banana cake and our Rhubarb Cake. We have mixed the almond flour with buckwheat in those cakes and they will therefore have a firmer consistency. I agree that blueberries can be expensive, so I recommend using frozen when they are not in season. But if you buy them right now (in August), they are a lot cheaper than any other time of the year. Just make sure you buy Swedish forest blueberries and not the larger foreign version. Swedish blueberries are cheaper and a lot healthier. And you can of course also find them in the Swedish forests for free ;) /David
  • Anjali
    It came out wonderful ..I used 200gm of almond meal,100gm of coconut flour and 100 gm of All purpose flor...coconut complements the berries perfectly. Thanks
  • Anjali
    Hi tried this one today..I fact still in the oven..:) Have replaced part of almond flour with coconut flour..it smells amazing..can't wait to see final product. Thanks for the recipe
  • I can't wait to try this! Going to use the sugar free maple syrup to make it low carb. (May have to use a whip cream or cream cheese style drizzle or icing.) :D
    • I had a chance to make this, with just a couple low carb tweaks, and I have to say its one of the best low carb desserts I've had. Worthy of serving to guests! http://cookingislikelove.com/wp/?p=829
  • Sarah and Jesse
    We made it but with apricots instead of blueberries, nooppyseeds, and equal parts almond flour, polenta, and buckwheat flour instead of all almond flour, and it was FABULOUS, thanks for the recipe!
  • I made this cake last night for our family Passover feast and it was a success! I used coconut oil and used strawberries instead of blueberries inside. it was AMAZING! for a family that steers clear of refined sugar and sweets, it was delightful. The yoghurt topping was delicious change to horrible frostings and creams on normal cakes. So easy to make and minimal ingredients, which is really important for people who aren't the most competent bakers like myself. thank you!!
  • I cannot wait to eat an entire one of these delicious cakes! http://herbalparenting.blogspot.com/
  • Jurate
    I baked this yesterday, now just waiting to be decorated. Bit confused mixing oil/honey+lemon mixture with yoghurt for glazing or I just misunderstood something? :/
  • Victoria Rechner
    Testing.
  • Jayde
    Hi Guys, thank you so much for sharing this beautiful recipe! I made it for my family this afternoon and everyone absolutely loved it!!! I replaced the ghee/rapeseed oil with coconut oil and it was delicious! Your website is amazing!! So inspiring and you can really notice how much care, passion and love you put into baking, photography, presentation of food...keep up the great work!! Can't wait to purchase your cookbooks! Jayde xx
  • Holly
    Hi, I made this cake for a birthday a couple of months ago and it was a huge success. I wondered if I can use this same recipe to make individual cupcakes? Have you tried this? And would you have any idea how long they would take to bake or need to adjust temperature? Thanks
    • Lauren
      Did anyone ever find out if this would work as cupcakes? If so, cook for how long at what heat? Thanks!
  • C
    This might sound like a stupid question, but is the lemon flavor very strong? I'm trying to make a cake for something and love the idea of this cake but I would alter it with a different "frosting" to suite what I need but if the cake is a very strong lemon flavor than it wouldn't work. But I assume cutting back on the lemon juice would change the texture. Also the vegan version you made, was the texture drastically different? Sorry for all of the questions, I normally would experiment myself but am searching for something that I know already works because I don't have time to make a cake that may "fail", you know? Thank you so much!
  • Kate
    That was a lovely cake thank you. I switched some things around though and made an raspberry, pink grapefruit and almond cake- with mint instead of poppy seads. All quantities the same, it was a delightful combination :-)
  • Sue
    Thank you so much for this wonderful recipe. I so rarely have cakes as I am gluten-free and sugar-free! This was the most beautiful cake which we made for my birthday. I halved the ingredients in a smaller baking tin and used the tin foil trick for the last 10 minutes. My husband adores cakes and was very impressed with this one ….
  • Jesse
    Hi there! I'm planning to make this for my birthday and was wondering how long in advance I can make the cake. For example, if I make it tomorrow evening and serve it Sunday afternoon, would that be alright? Would you leave it out overnight or keep it in the fridge? Thanks!

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