This simple and delicious Berry Snack Cake is the perfect back-to-school paleo and gluten-free treat! Both kids and adults love this snack cake because you can eat it without utensils and no one will suspect that it’s free of grains and refined sugar!

A closeup shot of a slice of berry snack cake topped with keto confectioners sugar on a white plate. The red banner on the bottom says paleo, gluten-free, and grain-free.

The best berry snack cake!

This berry snack cake has a tender crumb dotted with tangy berries and just the right amount of sweetness from maple or coconut sugar! Also, it passed the test with my picky gluten-eating in-laws, so you know this snacking cake is a winner!

It’s Paleo, Gluten-Free, and Grain-Free!

I don’t make paleo desserts often, but when I do, I make sure they are worth all of the testing. This berry snack cake tastes amazing and the only flours used are almond flour and cassava flour. As I’ve told you in the past, I’m not a paleo baking expert, so I’m not sure if you can use an egg substitute or use another flour in place of the two used in this recipe. Please let me know in the comments section below if you have success with any ingredient substitutions!

An overhead shot of paleo and gluten free berry snack cake right out of the oven.

Can you make a low carb snack cake?

Yes! I recently tested this cake out with allulose and it turned out great! Because allulose is not as sweet as maple sugar, you need to increase the amount of sweetener to 1 cup. Also, because allulose browns quickly, you should keep an eye on it during the last 10 minutes and lightly place a piece of foil on top so it doesn’t get too dark before the center is fully cooked.

You can probably use mostly almond flour to decrease the carbs as well. However, I’m not sure of the exact proportions so if you do try it, please let folks know in the comments below how it turns out!

Can you use other fruit?

Definitely! You can substitute the berries with almost any other sliced up fruit. Peaches, nectarines, plums, mango, or canned pineapple work great! If you’re using a hard fruit, like an apple, slice it thin so it can cook in the time the batter sets up. Frozen fruit will also work but it will take longer to bake and the finished cake will be wetter.

Ingredients

  • Avocado oil spray or ghee
  • Finely ground almond flour
  • Cassava flour (I use Otto’s cassava flour)
  • Ground cinnamon
  • Baking soda
  • Diamond Crystal kosher salt
  • Ground cardamom
  • Ghee or coconut oil, softened
  • Maple sugar or coconut sugar or granulated allulose (for low carb)
  • Large eggs
  • Full-fat coconut milk
  • Grated lime zest
  • Lime juice
  • Vanilla extract
  • Blackberries, blueberries, strawberries, and/or raspberries
  • keto confectioners sugar (optional)

How to make a gluten-free berry snack cake

Heat oven to 350°F with the rack in the middle. Lightly grease the sides and bottom of an 8-­inch square metal baking pan with avocado oil or ghee. Make a sling out of parchment paper to line the bottom and hang over the sides.

Someone placing a parchment paper sling in a greased 8 by 8 inch square metal baking cake pan.

In medium bowl, whisk together flours, cinnamon, baking soda, salt, and cardamom. Set aside.

Whisking the dry ingredients for a paleo and gluten free berry snack cake.

Plop the softened ghee and maple sugar in the bowl of a stand mixer (or in a large bowl if you are using a hand mixer).

A stand mixer bowl has ghee and maple sugar in it, along with the paddle attachment.

Use the paddle attachment to blend the mixture on medium-high speed for 3 to 5 minutes or until lighter in color and fluffy.

The creamed ghee and maple sugar is now a pale yellow color in the inside of a bowl of a stand mixer.

Scrape down the sides of the bowl and add the eggs, coconut milk, lime zest and juice, and vanilla.

Adding lime juice and vanilla to the wet ingredients in the stand mixer.

Beat the mixture on medium speed for 30 seconds or until combined. Next, add half the flour mixture and beat on low speed until combined.

On the left is the wet ingredients in the stand mixer. On the right, someone is adding half the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients in the mixer.

Slowly add the rest of the flour and mix until incorporated.

The berry snack cake batter is ready to mix in the berries.

Scrape down the sides of the bowl and mix in any dry flour with a spatula. Pour in the berries…

Adding blueberries and raspberries to a mixing bowl to make paleo berry snack cake.

…and carefully fold them in the thick batter.

A red silicone spatula is folding in the berries in the berry snack cake batter.

Transfer the batter to the parchment-lined baking pan and smooth the top.

A red silicone spatula is smoothing the top of berry snack cake batter in a parchment lined square metal pan.

Pop the pan in the oven and bake until the cake is golden brown and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean, about 30-35 minutes.

A golden brown berry snack cake is being removed out of the oven.

Cool the cake in the pan on a cooling rack. Cut the cake into nine squares…

Someone cutting a paleo and gluten-free berry snack cake into nine evenly sized pieces.

…and top with keto confectioner’s sugar if desired.

Someone adding sifted keto confectioners sugar onto the paleo berry snack cakes

How to store leftovers

Store leftover cake in a sealed airtight container or wrapped in plastic wrap in the fridge for up to 4 days or in the freezer for up to 4 months.

Someone holding a square slice of paleo and gluten-free berry snack cake.

But something tells me you won’t have very many leftovers!

More grab-and-go paleo dessert ideas!

If you’re looking for more portable paleo dessert recipes, here are some of my favorites:


Looking for more recipe ideas? Head on over to my Recipe Index. You’ll also find exclusive recipes in my cookbooks, Nom Nom Paleo: Food for Humans (Andrews McMeel Publishing 2013), Ready or Not! (Andrews McMeel Publishing 2017), and Nom Nom Paleo: Let’s Go! (Andrews McMeel Publishing 2022).


 PRINTER-FRIENDLY RECIPE CARD

Berry Snack Cake (Paleo, Gluten Free)

4.77 from 42 votes
Prep Time15 minutes
Cook Time35 minutes
Cooling time2 hours
Total Time2 hours 50 minutes
Servings 9
This simple and delicious Berry Snack Cake is the perfect back-to-school paleo and gluten-free treat! Both kids and adults love this snack cake because you can eat it without utensils and no one will suspect that it’s free of grains and refined sugar!

Ingredients 
 

Want to Save this Recipe?
Enter your email below and we’ll send the recipe straight to your inbox!

Instructions 

  • Heat oven to 350°F with the rack in the middle. Lightly grease the sides and bottom of an 8-­inch square metal baking pan with avocado oil or ghee. Make a sling out of parchment paper to line the bottom and hang over the sides.
  • In medium bowl, whisk together flours, cinnamon, baking soda, salt, and cardamom. Set aside.
  • Plop the softened ghee and maple sugar in the bowl of a stand mixer (or in a large bowl if you are using a hand mixer). Use the paddle attachment to blend the mixture on medium-high speed for 3 to 5 minutes or until lighter in color and fluffy.
  • Scrape down the sides of the bowl and add the eggs, coconut milk, lime zest and juice, and vanilla. Beat the mixture on medium speed for 30 seconds or until combined.
  • Next, add half the flour mixture and beat on low speed until combined. Slowly add the rest of the flour and mix until incorporated. Scrape down the sides of the bowl and mix in any dry flour with a spatula.
  • Carefully fold the berries into the batter.
  • Transfer the batter to the parchment-lined baking pan and smooth the top.
  • Pop the pan in the oven and bake until the cake is golden brown and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean, about 30-35 minutes. (If you’re using allulose, you may need to cover the cake lightly with foil during the last 10 minutes to prevent it from browning too much.)
  • Cool the cake in the pan on a cooling rack. Cut the cake into nine squares and serve as is or top with keto confectioners sugar.

Video

Notes

Store leftover cake in a sealed container or wrapped in plastic wrap in the fridge for up to 4 days or in the freezer for up to 4 months.
*Nutrition facts if using allulose per serving:
Calories: 230kcal | Carbohydrates: 30g | Protein: 3g | Fat: 18g | Fiber: 3g
Net carbs: 11 grams (Total carbs 30g – Fiber 3g – Allulose 16g= 11 g Net carbs)

Nutrition

Calories: 301kcal | Carbohydrates: 31g | Protein: 4g | Fat: 19g | Fiber: 2g | Sugar: 18g

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Like this? Leave a comment below!

About Michelle Tam

Hello! My name is Michelle Tam, and I love to eat. I think about food all the time. It borders on obsession. I’ve always loved the sights and smells of the kitchen. My mother was (and is) an excellent cook, and as a kid, I was her little shadow as she prepared supper each night. From her, I gained a deep, abiding love for magically transforming pantry items into mouth-watering family meals.

Other Recipes You May Like

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




44 Comments

  1. How could this not come out super yummy? So good!

    I did not follow the directions well (LOL) and it is still delicious. I get a D- for reading comprehension! So FYI cassava flour and tapioca flour aren’t the same thing; maple sugar and maple syrup are also not equivalent. Oops!

    The recipe is pretty forgiving. The toothpick still came out clean after ~30 minutes. It just wasn’t very cakey: more like a mochi/boba berry pudding. I also did not have the patience to let it cool, so maybe it will become more cakey over the next few hours? If not, I will be happy to serve it over ice cream.The cardamom and berry flavor is on point!

    Next time (because I will tots make this again), I’ll follow the directions and use the listed ingredients! Ha, thanks again!

  2. 5 stars
    This snack cake is the best! Easy to make and bakes beautifully. (Tough to let it cool) The “crumb”/texture was particularly pleasing! I used plums and almond milk since both were on hand. Pears with 5-spice are next since the tree is so prolific right now 🙂

  3. 5 stars
    My family devoured this cake! Thank you, Love baking with cassava flour!
    My two only substitutions were, I used only one cup of frozen wild organic Blueberries, instead of a combo of berries. And only used 1/2 cup of coconut sugar.
    It was delightfully tasty! Next week I will attempt a chocolate chip version of this same cake, Yay 🙂

  4. I realized I didn’t have berries and used 1 cup of pineapple instead and this still came out absolutely delicious. Great recipe!

  5. 5 stars
    Wow, get this: I managed to successfully bake this in an air fryer in a 7″ bundt pan. (The air fryer – actually an air fryer lid on an Instant Pot! – is currently my only oven.) And it worked! Very yummy cake with a great texture. Next, I’ll try it with pineapple as suggested in the comments .

      1. I used the exact temp and time in your recipe. Covered the little bundt pan with foil for the whole time and the top got browned!
        Almost always, I adjust both time and temp down for air fryer lid cooking. But I thought, “let’s live dangerously”.

  6. I have I.B.S. and cannot have stone fruit at all! It’s terrible. My body just won’t process them, and I adore apples. Strawberries are just not the same thing. I can eat cantaloupe and other melons and pineapple. It’s pretty bleak. Can I just skip the fruit?