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Apple Blueberry Maple Cake is refined sugar-free and gluten-free and so full of flavour. Filled with a blueberry chia jam and covered in a maple swiss meringue buttercream.
If you had a slice of this cake with no pre-amble or forewarning I guarantee you would be shocked to discover that this Apple Blueberry Maple Cake is made with absolutely no refined sugar. There is sweetness, of course, this is still cake. The sweetness comes from:
- medjool dates
- unsweetened apple sauce
- just a splash of maple syrup
These three sources of ‘sugar’ are not just chosen for sweetness but for flavour too. The tanginess of the apples combined with the rich dates and mellow maple syrup give a complexity to the cake which you just don’t get with regular old caster sugar. Plus it is a healthier choice. Although, this is no health food as again, cake is cake. It is a treat, but perhaps a more justifiable one if you are enjoying a ‘sugar-free’ January.
Blueberry Chia Jam
The Blueberry Chia Jam which sandwiches the two cake layers together is also refined sugar-free and is freshly made. I adore blueberry jam and I think actually this may be my favourite way to have it as it’s beautifully soft, not tooth-achingly sweet. The ground chia seeds are used to set the jam so you only need a minimal amount of maple syrup just to bring out the flavour of the blueberries.
Maple Swiss Meringue Buttercream
Now, the Maple Swiss Meringue Buttercream, I am not going to kid you, is a little more tricky than regular old swiss meringue buttercream. It’s worth cracking though because the results are sublime. You shouldn’t have any problems if you stick to the exact method I’ve outlined in the recipe but you do really need a sugar thermometer to ensure the temperature of your meringue is correct.
Maple syrup is a little more unstable than refined sugar so your buttercream may veer a little off piste if you’re not careful. However, swiss meringue buttercream is incredibly forgiving and it can always be rescued even if you think your buttercream is too soupy or if it is too greasy and the buttercream is just not coming together.
Pro Tips:
- My swiss meringue buttercream is too soupy - This means that the butter was too warm when you added it or your meringue hadn’t cooled properly to the right temperature before adding your butter. If this is the case then place your mixing bowl in the fridge for 10-15 minutes to chill. Bring out and beat again until smooth.
- My swiss meringue buttercream is curdled or greasy - Your butter might have been too cold when you added it. You can either keep on mixing and hopefully the butter will warm up and start emulsifying with the meringue. If not then warm the sides of the mixing bowl by placing over the top of a saucepan of warm water. The butter should melt slightly around the edges of the mixing bowl. Remove from the heat and beat again, hopefully your buttercream will come together.
- Most importantly with any swiss meringue buttercream, be patient and don’t get spooked by a curdled looking buttercream. You have probably done nothing wrong and just may need to keep on beating until it comes together and forms the most delicious smooth and fluffy buttercream.
Gluten-Free Flours
The other great thing about this cake is that it is also gluten-free:
- Oat flour - its unsurpassable butterscotch flavour which goes so perfectly with this cake but if you find oats don’t agree with you then you can substitute for sorghum flour. The taste of the cake will be different but still delicious.
- Sweet Rice Flour binds the cake together, mimicking the gluten-effects of wheat and gives the cake bounce.
- Potato starch is used to give the cake structure and lightness.
- Tapioca flour is used for fluffiness and extra binding.
SHOP THE RECIPE
- Gluten-free sweet rice flour
- Gluten-Free-Oat flour
- Gluten-Free Tapioca Flour
- Gluten-Free Potato Starch
- Ground chia seeds
- 8" round cake tins
- Sugar thermometer
- Tilting Turntable
If you make Apple Blueberry Maple Cake then please leave a comment below and give the recipe a rating which helps others find the recipe on Google. If you then go on to use this recipe as a launch pad for your own baking creation then I’d also love it if you’d share it and tag me on Instagram. It is so lovely for me to see your versions and variations of my recipes.
If you like this recipe then you may like…
- Best Gluten-Free Vanilla Cake {without xanthan gum}
- Healthy Banana Flapjacks {refined sugar-free}
- Sweet Potato Chocolate Truffle Torte {refined sugar-free}
Apple Blueberry Maple Cake {refined sugar-free, gluten-free}
Ingredients
- 200 g gluten-free oat flour
- 160 g sweet rice flour
- 45 g potato starch
- 45 g tapioca flour
- 3 teaspoons baking powder
- 1 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
- ½ teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
- 240 g medjool dates - about 16, pitted and roughly chopped
- 120 ml boiling water
- 300 g unsweetened apple sauce*
- 120 ml olive oil
- 4 tablespoons maple syrup
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- 4 eggs
Blueberry Chia Jam
- 200 g blueberries + extra for decorating
- 1 tablespoon lemon juice
- 1 tablespoon maple syrup
- 1 tablespoon ground chia seeds
Maple Swiss Meringue Buttercream
- 8 egg whites - 240g
- 400 g maple syrup
- 500 g unsalted butter - at room temperature, cubed
- A pinch of salt
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
- Pre-heat oven to 180°C/160°C fan/gas mark 4. Grease and line two 8 inch round cake tins.
- In a medium bowl, whisk together the oat flour, sweet rice flour, tapioca flour and potato starch, baking powder, baking soda, salt, and cinnamon then set aside.
- Place the dates and the boiling water in a small food processor or mini blender and blitz until completely smooth, scraping down the sides as and when you need to.
- Pour the apple sauce, olive oil, maple syrup, vanilla extract and date paste into a large separate mixing bowl or stand mixer and beat until completely combined.
- Add the eggs one at a time, beating well after every addition.
- Mix in the dry ingredients, one third at a time to ensure it has all mixed in evenly.
- Divide the mixture between the two cake tins and bake in the oven for 30 minutes or until an inserted cocktail stick comes out clean.
- Turn out the cakes and cool on wire racks before filling with the jam and covering with buttercream.
Blueberry Chia Jam
- Place all the ingredients, except for the chia seeds in a small saucepan and cook on a low heat for 5-10 minutes until the blueberries have broken down.
- Blend the blueberry mixture a little bit, you don’t want it too smooth but a little bit pulpy.
- Pour the blueberries into a small bowl and stir in the chia seeds until combined. Place in the fridge for an hour to set.
Maple Swiss Meringue Buttercream
- Heat the egg whites and maple syrup in a bain marie, stirring constantly until the temperature has reached 71°C.
- Remove from the heat and pour into a stand mixer with a whisk attachment. Whisk until the mixture forms stiff peaks and the temperature has reduced to about 32°C.
- Change the attachment to a paddle attachment. On a low speed add the butter slowly cube by cube. When you have almost added all the butter the mixture will look curdled. Do not fret – this is supposed to happen and just means you are nearly done, just continue to add all the butter. Once the butter is totally incorporated the buttercream will miraculously become a smooth velvety consistency.
- Add the salt, and vanilla extract and mix until thoroughly combined.
Assembly
- The sponges often come out of the oven slightly domed and so to make the cake assembly easier I often trim the very top of the dome off each layer so they have a flatter surface to work on. Don’t trim too much or you will lose a lot of cake.
- Place one of the sponge layers on an 8 inch cake board and pipe a circle of buttercream at the very edge of the surface of the cake to act like a dam for the blueberry jam.
- Spread three-quarters of the blueberry jam on top of the sponge, right to the edges of the buttercream dam.
- Place the second sponge layer on top and cover the top and the sides of the cake with the buttercream.
- Reserve a little of the buttercream to mix with the leftover blueberry jam to pipe around the top of the cake for decoration.*
- Decorate with extra blueberries.
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