Flourless Almond Cake with Raspberry Sauce
There is a particular kind of dessert that manages to feel simultaneously simple and special — the kind that looks beautiful on a plate, tastes genuinely refined, and yet requires no complicated technique or hard-to-find ingredients. This Flourless Almond Cake with Raspberry Sauce is exactly that. Ground almonds replace wheat flour entirely, producing a cake with a soft, moist, slightly dense crumb and a delicate nuttiness that wheat-based cakes can’t replicate. A quick raspberry sauce — bright, tangy, and deeply colored — goes over the top and provides the kind of vivid contrast that makes the whole dessert feel considerably more considered than the effort involved would suggest.
The result is naturally gluten-free without feeling like a compromise or a substitution. This isn’t a cake where almond flour is standing in for something better — the almond flour is the point. It’s what makes the texture rich and almost fudgy toward the center, what gives the surface a slightly crisp golden crust, and what pairs so well with the tartness of raspberries. Whether you’re serving it at a celebration dinner, bringing it to an afternoon gathering, or simply making something a little special on a weekend, this cake consistently earns its place at the table.
A Brief History
Flourless almond cakes have deep roots in Mediterranean and European baking traditions. In climates where almond trees thrive — across Spain, Italy, southern France, and North Africa — ground almonds became a natural and abundant baking ingredient long before refined wheat flour was widely available. The tradition of building pastry and cake from almonds rather than grain is an ancient one, and the results have remained popular not because they’re a dietary workaround but because they simply taste wonderful.
One of the most well-known examples of this tradition is Tarta de Santiago, the almond cake of Galicia in northwestern Spain, decorated with the Cross of Saint James and served for centuries as a regional specialty. Similar cakes appear throughout Italian and French patisserie tradition as well — often flavored with citrus zest, a touch of liqueur, or both. The raspberry sauce pairing is more modern and international in character, but it’s a natural complement: the acidity and brightness of raspberries cut through the richness of the almond cake in exactly the right way.
Why You’ll Love This Recipe
The most immediate appeal is that this cake requires almost no special skill or equipment. You don’t need a stand mixer, you don’t need to cream butter and sugar together for several minutes, and there’s no risk of over-developing gluten because there is no gluten to develop. The batter comes together in a single bowl in about ten minutes. From there, the oven does everything.
Beyond ease, the flavor and texture are genuinely excellent. The combination of almond flour, butter, eggs, and lemon zest produces a cake that is moist and tender through the center with a delicate, slightly golden crust on the surface. The lemon zest in particular is an important element — its brightness keeps the richness of the almonds from feeling heavy and adds a clean, aromatic quality to every bite. The raspberry sauce, with its deep red color and sweet-tart balance, adds both visual drama and the flavor contrast that makes the dessert feel complete rather than one-note.
It’s also naturally gluten-free, which means it works for a wider range of guests and dietary needs without requiring any modifications or alternative versions. One recipe, everyone can enjoy it.
Ingredient Notes
Almond flour is the structural and flavor foundation of this cake. Use finely ground, blanched almond flour rather than almond meal for best results. The distinction matters: almond flour made from blanched almonds (with the skins removed) is finer, lighter in color, and produces a smoother, more uniform cake texture. Almond meal made from whole almonds with skins included is coarser and speckled and will produce a denser, slightly grainier cake. Both are edible and delicious, but finely ground blanched almond flour is the right choice for the texture this recipe aims for.
Eggs perform multiple roles here. They bind the batter, contribute structure in the absence of gluten, and add richness. Three large eggs are the right quantity for a cake of this size — enough to set the batter firmly without making it rubbery. Use eggs at room temperature if possible; they incorporate more smoothly into the batter than cold eggs.
Unsalted butter, melted, provides richness and moisture. Unsalted gives you control over the total salt level. The butter should be melted and cooled slightly before adding it to the batter — adding hot butter directly to eggs can begin to cook them and affect the final texture.
Granulated sugar sweetens the cake and contributes to the slightly crisp surface crust. The quantity here produces a moderately sweet cake — appropriate for a dessert that will be served with a sweet-tart raspberry sauce on top. If you prefer a less sweet cake, you can reduce the sugar by a few tablespoons without significantly affecting the texture.
Lemon zest is a small addition with a disproportionate impact. It adds brightness, freshness, and a subtle citrus aromatics that keeps the richness of the almond and butter from feeling heavy. Use a microplane or fine grater and take only the outermost yellow layer of the peel — the white pith beneath is bitter. One teaspoon is the right amount for an 8-inch cake.
Vanilla extract rounds out the flavor and adds warmth. A small amount of almond extract can be added alongside the vanilla if you want a more pronounced, distinctly almond-forward flavor — a quarter teaspoon is sufficient, as almond extract is quite potent.
Baking powder provides a small amount of lift in the absence of gluten structure. Almond flour cakes are naturally denser than wheat flour cakes, and the half teaspoon of baking powder here creates a modest rise without making the cake feel artificially light or airy.
Raspberries — fresh or frozen — form the sauce. Fresh raspberries in season produce the brightest, most vibrant sauce. Frozen raspberries work equally well and are available year-round, making this sauce as practical as it is delicious. The sauce is essentially just raspberries, sugar, lemon juice, and water cooked briefly until the berries break down and the liquid reduces slightly — nothing complicated, and the result is far better than any store-bought raspberry sauce.
Ingredients
For the Almond Cake
2 cups (200g) fine blanched almond flour
¾ cup (150g) granulated sugar
3 large eggs, at room temperature
½ cup (115g) unsalted butter, melted and slightly cooled
1 tsp vanilla extract
¼ tsp almond extract (optional, for a stronger almond flavor)
1 tsp lemon zest
½ tsp baking powder
¼ tsp salt
For the Raspberry Sauce
1½ cups (190g) fresh or frozen raspberries
¼ cup (50g) granulated sugar
1 tbsp fresh lemon juice
2 tbsp water
Optional for Serving
Powdered sugar for dusting
Sliced almonds scattered on top before baking
Whipped cream or crème fraîche
Fresh raspberries or mint leaves for garnish
see continuation on next page
For Complete Cooking STEPS Please Head On Over To Next Page Or Open button (>) and don’t forget to SHARE with your Facebook friends.