I admire anyone who has the patience to make Cake Pops. I really do.
I’m just not that patient when it comes to tediously decorating things that I want to stuff in my face.
The thought of dipping, sticking, balancing, and making intricate designs on a sticky ball of chocolate really doesn’t send me running to the kitchen. Cake balls, on the other hand, are an impatient girl’s best friend. You don’t need sticks, Styrofoam, or much patience at all.
Cake balls are traditionally made with just a few ingredients: a baked cake, a tub of frosting, and chocolate for dipping. You simply crumble up a baked cake, mix in frosting, shape into balls, and dip in chocolate. This, my friends, is a recipe that’s just begging to be played with!
I have a bit of a confession first though. This recipe actually started off as an actual cupcake recipe. My plan was to create gluten-free and vegan hostess cupcakes. I adapted my vegan chocolate cake recipe using an all-purpose gluten-free flour which was kindly sent to me by a Canadian GF flour company called Cuisine Soleil.
The GF cupcakes:
The GF flour worked quite well and tasted lovely, however the cupcakes were a tad bit delicate for what I was trying to do (stuff them with coconut whipped cream). I’d like to play around with my own gluten-free flour mix at some point, but that will probably take some development. Since I didn’t want to share a recipe with you that I wasn’t fully happy with, I decided to turn lemons into lemonade…
Enter cake balls. The perfect solution for any crumbly baking outcome!
With cake balls, we don’t need to worry too much about making the “perfect” cake since we’ll be crumbling it to pieces anyway. You can use almost any flour you wish without much worry. Instead of using frosting – which didn’t really appeal to me in an already sweet cake – I used full-fat coconut milk (the cream portion only) as the binding agent. By using coconut cream the sugar content is lowered greatly. [If you’d like a refresher on how to use coconut cream, see this post.]
Unlike baking a normal cake, no self control is required with cake balls because you can sample away and no one will be the wiser!
The amount of coconut cream you use will depend on how sticky your want your batter. My first batch had a bit too much coconut cream (and stuck to my hands a lot when rolling). I think I used about 1 cup of coconut cream in my first trial. For the second batch, I used 1/2-3/4 cup of coconut cream and it was the perfect consistency. The amount you need will likely vary based on what type of flour you use in your cupcakes. You’ll have to eye ball this one and just add a little bit at a time. Eric and I both preferred the trial using less coconut cream, so I suggest adding it slowly and only use just enough.
Mix the coconut cream into the crumbled cake with your hands and then roll it into balls. These two pictures below are from my first trial. As you can see the dough looks a bit too sticky. My second trial was much more crumbly/dry in texture.
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Now simply freeze the balls and then dip them into melted chocolate!
I wanted to naturally colour some shredded coconut, so I smashed a raspberry into a few tablespoons of coconut. It worked like a charm – no red food colouring needed. I also used chopped walnuts and natural sprinkles (the brand is Let’s Do…Sprinklez).
The texture of the cake ball is a bit like a truffle with a firm shell and a soft middle. Eric wasn’t a fan of the mushy texture in my first batch, but after I reduced the coconut cream in my second batch he enjoyed them a lot. You can play around with the amount to suit your own preferences.
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Vegan and Gluten Free Chocolate Cake Balls
Yield
24 cake balls
Prep time
Cook time
Total time
Ingredients
For the cake
- 1 cup almond milk
- 1 tbsp apple cider vinegar
- 1/3 cup grapeseed oil (or other light-tasting oil of choice)*
- 1/2 tbsp pure vanilla extract
- 1 cup organic cane sugar (or unrefined sugar like coconut sugar)
- 1.5 cups gluten-free all purpose flour (I used Cuisine Soleil) or flour of choice
- 1/3 cup cocoa powder, sifted
- 1 tsp baking soda
- 3/4 tsp fine grain sea salt
For the cake balls
- 1 can full-fat chilled coconut milk (do not use light coconut milk) (I only used 1/2-3/4 cup cream)
- 200-225 grams non-dairy semi-sweet chocolate chips or dark chocolate
- 1 tsp coconut oil, to thin out chocolate
- toppings: shredded coconut, chopped nuts, sprinkles, etc
Directions
- Chill can of coconut milk overnight in the fridge. Preheat oven to 350°F and spray a muffin tin with oil. You can also bake a whole cake instead of cupcakes, but the cooking time will likely be longer.
- In a large bowl, stir the milk with the apple cider vinegar. Let it sit for a few minutes to curdle – this makes vegan buttermilk.
- With an electric beater, beat in the oil, vanilla, and sugar into the almond milk mixture.
- Add the dry ingredients (gluten-free flour, cocoa powder, baking soda, salt). Beat mixture until smooth.
- Evenly distribute the batter among the cupcake tin. I like to use an ice cream scoop with a spring release button. Bake cake at 350°F for about 20-23 minutes, or until the cake springs back when touched.
- Cool cupcakes for 5 minutes in the tin and then carefully transfer to a cooling rack for another 10 minutes. Crumble cake into a large bowl.
- Scoop out coconut cream from the can (if you need a refresher, see this post). Add a little bit of cream at a time to the crumbled cake and mix it in with your hands. You will only need to use enough to make it come together (I used about 1/2 – 3/4 cup coconut cream) and you don’t want to oversaturate the cake with cream.
- Shape dough into 1-inch balls and freeze the balls for 30-60 minutes until firm.
- Melt chocolate and coconut oil in a small pot over lowest heat. When 2/3 of the chips are melted, remove from heat, and stir until chips are melted. Dip the balls into the chocolate with a fork and swirl around until fully coated. Tap off excess and transfer to a cooling rack so the chocolate can drip off (put paper towel underneath). Sprinkle with chopped nuts, coconut, or sprinkles. Transfer to fridge or freezer until the chocolate is set. Store in the fridge until ready to enjoy.
Tip:
Note: I imagine coconut oil or extra virgin olive oil both work fine as subs for grapeseed oil.
Nutrition Information
(click to expand)Moral of the story….when life gives you a crumbly cake or brownie, make cake balls!








These are beautimous!!!!!!!!!!!
Damn my low-carb vegan diet to hell, oh my gawd!
Wow wow fantastic
[I feel like if I walked by a plate of these, I’d attack them like how Cookie Monster eats cookies? So dignified and lady-like hahaha!:p]
I’m trying to absorb these from that last amazing photo through my laptop screen thing…come to me now chocolate beauties yess:p
These look so delicious! I did something similar last time my brownie recipe didn’t go as planned! I ended up with chocolate peanut butter bites! Sometimes oopsies can be the best creations!!
these are absolutely adorable and look delicious!
I will have to try these…they look so good. I made a batch of Chocolate Chip Cookies and your recipe is perfect! Everyone loved them.
I feel the same way about cake pops. I mean, if someone makes them for me I will happily eat them, but I so don’t have the patience to make them properly myself these, on the other had, do seem so much quicker and less fiddly. And, of course tasty!
I think you just put me over the top in deciding to do a vegan lent (which starts this coming Wednesday). I was a little worried about valentines day, which is a day after lent starts, but now you gave me a dessert for it. As usual, thank you!
Oh I love these! I love adding coconut milk to recipes and using raspberries for color? Awesome.
Yum! These look so fun and delicious for Valentine’s Day! Must try cake balls, as I am still a “cake pops” virgin. These seem better! No stick needed! :)
Haha, good moral! These look cute- and they’re better than cupcakes anyways because you can have more since they’re smaller…right? ;)
Chocolate covered is all I had to read, but the cake ball part doesn’t hurt, either. Such a simple recipe – and just begging to be made for Valentine’s day!
I love that the cake recipe is not complicated – and that all I have to do is squish it in a bal in case it turns out ugly! :)
I totally admire anyone who is able to make desserts that normally contain dairy, vegan. I am just not creative enough when it comes to vegan baking. Thank goodness people like you exist! ;)
These are the most delightful little creations! Perfect for Valentines Day ;) I’m a big Apple Cider Vinegar fan but didn’t realise you could use it in baking. What does the ACV do here exactly (what does it add to the recipe)?
Thanks Angela.
While everyone else can say they look delicious, and they do; I actually made these last night, and they are amazing! I love that they’re so pretty too; they really have that wow factor. I used a little more than half a cup of coconut cream, and they were perfection. The center was some sort of brownie-truffle-cake amalgamation. So good!
Hey Nichole, Oh Im so glad to hear that! Thanks for reporting back :)
These sound amazing!!!
This is the best gift you could have given me for my name day ;)! Thank you Angela! I’ll make these soon, I can’t wait! I’ve been wanting to make cake balls forever but I’m lactose and gluten intolerant so I had given up on them! Thank you! Valentina :)
Great idea! A good alternative to making a whole cake, and feeling like you have to eat it all within a few days! (Well, that’s how I feel, anyway!) I’m gonna make these for my birthday to share! :)
I love cake pops, they’re a great gift and/or party food but I agree, unless you’ve got a “ruined” cake, they’re a bother to make! :P
Ha ha! This is soooo similar to my vegan, gluten-free carrot cake cup recipe experience this week. I too was hope to make a mini gluten-free carrot cake cupcake for all of my “diet”/gluten-free colleagues at work for a monthly birthday party we celebrate on a monthly basis. My “cupcakes” turned acted the very same way and I ended up turning them into carrot cake balls with a white chocolate frosting. Gluten free flours are very hit and miss. It causes for a lot of improvisation, but there is always a win in the end!