Healthy Chocolate Pear Cake with Caramel Frosting Recipe (Gluten Free)

Healthy Chocolate Pear Layer Cake with Caramel Frosting

This Healthy Chocolate Pear Cake with Caramel Frosting is so delicious you'd never know it's guilt free, low sugar, low fat, high protein, and gluten free!

Just by looking, would you ever guess that this Chocolate Pear Cake is… dare I say… healthy?  *gasp!*

It’s true, it’s true.  I would never lie to you!

This Healthy Chocolate Pear Cake with Caramel Frosting is so delicious you'd never know it's guilt free, low sugar, low fat, high protein, and gluten free!

This Healthy Chocolate Pear Cake with Caramel Frosting is so delicious you'd never know it's guilt free, low sugar, low fat, high protein, and gluten free!

Most desserts are bad for your health, horrifically caloric and leave you feeling guilty.

The giant slice of Healthy Chocolate Pear Cake you see here is nutritious (especially for the chocolate monster inside you) and low calorie.  Even though it tastes like something damn unhealthy from a restaurant or bakery, it sure as H-E-double-hockey-sticks won’t leave you feeling like you threw your diet off track.

Life is good when this Healthy Chocolate Pear Cake is in front of your face  😉

This Healthy Chocolate Pear Cake with Caramel Frosting is so delicious you'd never know it's guilt free, low sugar, low fat, high protein, and gluten free!

This Healthy Chocolate Pear Cake is incredibly moist and insanely chocolatey.  The Caramel Frosting is sweet and creamy and pairs just right with the chocolate, pear and spices.  One bite and you’ll be hooked.

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Healthy Chocolate Pear Layer Cake with Caramel Frosting

Servings: 2 8" cake layers
Prep Time: 30 minutes
Cook Time: 45 minutes
Total Time: 1 hour 15 minutes
This Healthy Chocolate Pear Cake with Caramel Frosting is so delicious you'd never know it's guilt free, low sugar, low fat, high protein, and gluten free!

Ingredients

Cake:

  • 4 large Eggs
  • ½ cup + 2 tbs Egg Whites (fresh, not cartoned)
  • 1 tsp Vanilla Extract
  • 196g (1 cup + 2 tbs) Granulated Sweetener*
  • ¾ cup + 2 tbs Unsweetened Vanilla Almond Milk
  • 206g (¾ cup + 1 tbs) Pear Puree**
  • 1 tsp  Natural Caramel Flavor
  • 150g (1⅓ cups) Coconut Flour
  • 27g (⅓ cup ) Unsweetened Dark Cocoa Powder
  • 27g (⅓ cup) Unsweetened Natural Cocoa Powder
  • 2 tsp Apple Pie Spice
  • 1 tsp Double-Acting Baking Powder
  • 1 tsp Baking Soda
  • ½ tsp Salt

Frosting:

Instructions

For the Cake:

  • Preheat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit and generously spray two 8" cake pans with cooking spray (I also lined the pans with 8" parchment paper circles).
  • In a stand mixer bowl, add the eggs, egg whites, vanilla extract, granulated sweetener, almond milk, pear puree and caramel flavor. Stir on low while you complete the next steps.
  • In a medium-sized bowl, sift together the coconut flour, both cocoa powders, apple pie spice, baking powder, baking soda and salt.
  • Stand mixer still running, slowly add in the dry ingredients. After all is added in, mix on medium speed for ~20 seconds. Take bowl off mixer and scoop batter into the prepared pans, tap the pans on the counter to level the batter. Bake for ~45 minutes, or until surface springs back when tapped. Flip cakes onto a wire cooling rack and let cool completely before frosting.

For the Frosting:

  • In a microwave-safe bowl, add the shortening and almond milk and microwave at 20-second intervals, stirring between each one, until shortening is melted.
  • Stir in the extracts and salt.  Stir in the protein powder, then stir in the powdered erythritol. Frost cakes once completely cool. Refrigerate for ~10 minutes to firm up the icing, then slice and serve!

Recipe Notes

  • *I used ½ cup Coconut Sugar, ¼ cup Sucanat, and 6 tbs Granulated Erythritol
  • **I took two 15oz cans of pear halves packed in 100% juice, drained them and pureed them in a blender until smooth.
Nutrition Facts
Healthy Chocolate Pear Layer Cake with Caramel Frosting
Amount Per Serving (1 slice with frosting)
Calories 230 Calories from Fat 54
% Daily Value*
Fat 6g9%
Saturated Fat 3g19%
Cholesterol 85mg28%
Sodium 430mg19%
Carbohydrates 31g10%
Fiber 9g38%
Sugar 15g17%
Protein 17g34%
Vitamin A 200IU4%
Calcium 100mg10%
Iron 3.6mg20%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: Cake & Cupcakes

This Healthy Chocolate Pear Cake tastes completely unhealthy.  It tastes like it’s packed with sugar and butter, like I had slipped into a trance and bought it from Paula Deen a bakery.  With every bite I had to convince myself that what I was eating was actually healthy.  I reviewed the ingredient list over and over, wondering how something that tasted so rich and chocolatey could actually be nutritious.  I ended up calculating the nutrition facts, expecting each slice to have at least 300 calories and 15g of fat.  But I was so wrong…

I sat in my chair, confused, when I saw the results.  One slice with frosting has only 230 calories and 6g of fat?!  This is what I dream about.  Oh, and it has 9g of filling fiber and 17g of satiating protein?  Wow, I don’t feel guilty after all…  Well, onto the next bite I go!

This Healthy Chocolate Pear Cake with Caramel Frosting is so delicious you'd never know it's guilt free, low sugar, low fat, high protein, and gluten free!

This Healthy Chocolate Pear Cake with Caramel Frosting is so delicious you'd never know it's guilt free, low sugar, low fat, high protein, and gluten free!

Healthy Chocolate Pear Cake?  Nope, that’s not an oxymoron anymore!

.

With love and good eats,

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– Jess

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23 comments on “Healthy Chocolate Pear Layer Cake with Caramel Frosting”

  1. I used to read your recipe and this is my 1st time dropping comment. This cake really light and yet look delicious! Love your blog!

  2. Oh my gosh, this cake is just beautiful!! I’ve never had the pear chocolate combo but I can sense it would taste glorious!

    Happy holidays!

  3. Hi Jessica! I buy my protein powder in bulk, so I don’t have a scooper to know how much a scoop is. Could you give a cup estimate of about how much one scoop is?

    • For the protein powder I used, it should be around 3/4 cup PACKED. Once all the ingredients are together, it should look very similar to buttercream frosting. If it’s too thin, just add 2 tsp more protein powder or erythritol (depending on your taste, I like super sweet frostings, but you may not).
      Hope this helped, and I hope you like the frosting 🙂

  4. Hi Jessica!
    Bolo maravilhoso!! Amei a idéia!
    Muita luz e paz para o ano de 2013 , para você e sua família!

  5. I’ve recently made this, and every time I eat a slice I get all confused and have to take another look at the ingredients just to convince myself it really isn’t what it taste like. I honestly cannot believe this is all good for me.
    Outstanding, keep it up! 😀5 stars

  6. Wow!! I need a piece of this – such a unique idea but looks great! My name is Jessica too!

  7. Pingback: Desserts With Benefits» Blog Archive

  8. Looks too good to be true!

  9. Hi Jessica,
    I have a couple friends who are allergic to coconut, is there a good substitute for the coconut flour?

    • dessertswithbenefits

      I’m afraid the coconut flour is a very unique ingredient, and I have yet to find a replacement for it. Coconut flour absorbs A LOT of water and tends to be on the crumbly side, that’s why there are so many eggs in the recipe. In my experience, soy flour is similar to coconut flour in that it absorbs a lot of liquid, but I don’t think it would be a good replacement as it has an unpleasant flavor.
      If you are dead set on making this recipe without coconut flour, I would refer to this chart. 🙂

  10. Wow, can I just say that I’m in love with this cake? Actually, I’m in love with basically everything that’s in your web. Right now I’m in a super strict diet, but when I’ll finish it, I will make almost one of your recipes every week, I’ve always made super unhealthy cakes and I want to try something healthy AND tasty 🙂
    I have a little question… In your recipes, you say “granulated sweetener”, but if I don’t have any of the sweeteners that you name, can I use regular white sugar? I know it wouldn’t be as healthy, but would it turn out right?
    Thank you anyway, have a nice day! 🙂

  11. Hi Jessica:

    Can you please explain the sodium content? It is a concern? Is the amount normal for what is called for in the ingredient list? Thanks for your response in advance!

    • dessertswithbenefits

      I double checked the sodium content and it is correct… a little high but correct. I would not be concerned about the sodium unless you have high blood pressure or another related issue. Just FYI, eggs are naturally very high in sodium, and there is 1/4 tsp of salt in the frosting for that “salted caramel” taste. You can certainly omit the salt in the frosting, but it helps even out the flavor. It is also helpful to note that typical bakery desserts or restaurants desserts are extremely high in sodium (many chocolate cakes use 1 tsp of salt instead of 1/2 tsp, seen here in this recipe).

  12. Caitlin Northern

    This recipe looks amazing! I really like the look of a lot of your recipes but unfortunately I live in New Zealand, where you just can’t buy a lot of the special ingredients you use, like butter extract, caramel extract, and different flours like coconut flour and peanut flour 🙁

    • dessertswithbenefits

      Awww that’s too bad!! I encountered the same problem when I visited Canada, even though we are on the same continent 🙁
      Have you checked online? I buy most of my baking ingredients online because it is cheaper and easier, especially with Amazon.com, but I am not sure how shipping works when it comes to different countries. I also like websites like iHerb.com and netrition.com … maybe there are similar websites that ship to your country? I hope so!!
      -Jess

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  14. Hello,

    I made this recipe last month and I was told it was the best cake I had made! But as I couldn’t find most of the ingredients, i made a non healthy and probably full of fat version of it!

    I can’t find erythritol in Canada. What can i replace it with?

    Also, can I use any powdered protein and replace stevia with brown natural sugar? I’m not a fan of stevia at all.

    Thanks5 stars

    • That’s so impressive! Glad to hear the cake was such a hit!
      Erythritol can be replaced with almost any another dry sweetener… evaporated cane juice, sucanat, coconut sugar, maple sugar, date sugar, etc.
      The protein powder MAY be able to be replaced with another vegan protein powder (like soy protein, pea protein, etc.). I haven’t tried this so I can’t be sure. As for the stevia, I’m not sure if that can be replaced. 1 tsp of stevia is as sweet as ~1 cup of sugar, so that might throw off the dry:wet ratio.
      -Jess

  15. Pingback: Healthy Gluten-Free Pumpkin Cake with Butterscotch Frosting Recipe

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