Teff Carrot Cake

Teff Carrot Cake
Elizabeth D. Herman for The New York Times
Total Time
1½ hours, plus cooling
Rating
4(334)
Comments
Read comments

This deeply spiced carrot cake is studded with toasted walnuts and coconut, and sandwiched with a tangy mix of cream cheese and butter. It's also gluten-free, and festive enough to prepare for a special occasion. The cake comes from the San Francisco pastry chef Elisabeth Prueitt, whose interest in baking with alternative flours has led to many exceptional wheat-free creations. Made with teff flour and sweetened with a mix of coconut sugar and granulated sugar, it results in a tender, moist crumb and irresistible texture. —Tejal Rao

Featured in: Behind the Famed Tartine Bakery, a Gluten-Free Talent

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Ingredients

Yield:8 to 12 servings

    For the Cake

    • Unsalted butter, for greasing pans
    • 1cup/200 grams granulated sugar
    • 1cup/140 grams coconut sugar
    • 3large eggs
    • ½cup/125 grams applesauce
    • 1pound/455 grams carrots, peeled and grated
    • 1cup/236 milliliters coconut oil, warmed to liquid
    • Juice of 1 lemon
    • cups/170 grams teff flour
    • ½cup/70 grams sweet rice flour
    • ½cup/60 grams oat flour
    • teaspoons cinnamon
    • ½teaspoon ground nutmeg
    • ¼teaspoon ground cloves
    • 2teaspoons baking soda
    • ¾teaspoon fine sea salt
    • ½cup/45 grams unsweetened shredded coconut
    • cups/180 grams toasted walnuts, chopped

    For the Frosting

    • 8ounces/225 grams/1 cup cream cheese, at room temperature
    • 6tablespoons/85 grams unsalted butter, at cool room temperature
    • 3cups/360 grams confectioners’ sugar, sifted
    • Juice of 1 lemon
    • ¼teaspoon fine sea salt
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (10 servings)

942 calories; 57 grams fat; 33 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 9 grams monounsaturated fat; 10 grams polyunsaturated fat; 105 grams carbohydrates; 6 grams dietary fiber; 75 grams sugars; 11 grams protein; 624 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Prepare the cake: Heat oven to 350 degrees. Use butter to grease two 9-inch cake pans, line each with a round of parchment paper, and grease paper as well.

  2. Step 2

    Using electric beaters or a stand mixer fitted with the whisk attachment, whip granulated sugar, coconut sugar and eggs until thick and light in color, about 4 minutes on medium speed. When you lift up the whisk, the beaten egg mixture should fall back into the bowl in a ribbon. Add applesauce, carrots, coconut oil and lemon juice, and mix well to combine.

  3. Step 3

    In a separate bowl, whisk together teff flour, sweet rice flour, oat flour, cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves, baking soda and salt. Add to egg mixture, using a rubber spatula to fold just until combined. Gently fold coconut and walnuts into batter.

  4. Step 4

    Divide batter evenly between the prepared pans. Bake until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean, 35 to 40 minutes. Let cool in the pans on a wire rack for about 10 minutes, then run a knife around the edges of each pan and invert cakes onto a wire rack. Let cool completely.

  5. Step 5

    Make the frosting: In a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, beat cream cheese and butter on medium-high speed until fluffy and light, about 3 minutes. Add confectioners’ sugar, lemon juice and salt and mix until smooth.

  6. Step 6

    Place one cooled cake on a serving platter. Spread about half the frosting evenly across the cake, place the second cake layer on top and spread the remaining frosting. Decorate with clean, seasonal flowers, or leave plain and smooth with a palette knife. Cut into slices and serve.

Ratings

4 out of 5
334 user ratings
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Comments

Did you read the article? The whole point is about making non-wheat pastry, which naturally requires some extra work and special ingredients to get good flavor and texture.

Fabulous cake! Mine completed baking in 27 minutes. Made unsweetened applesauce for cake. Actually made it ahead and prefroze it whole overnight. Next day wrapped tightly in saran and aluminum foil in freezer. Day before ready to use, took off wrappings and defrosted in fridge several hours and then put out an hour before serving. The spicyness mixed with the toasted walnuts and coconut was exceptional. The cake was devoured at a Chanukah party! Definitely a special occasion cake.

Teff is a very, very tiny grain. It's a staple food in Ethiopia, where it is ground into flour and made into a sourdough batter that is cooked into a thin, spongy flatbread called injera, which is served alongside stews and vegetable dishes. Bob's Red Mill makes a packaged whole grain teff flour; you can order it directly from them, or ask your local supermarket/specialty grocer to stock it.

Baked this in cupcake tins for 20 mins and it came out great. The cake batter is very dense and not at all pourable. It was more of a dough like consistency. I also used 1 cup sugar in the raw, and 1/2 cup brown sugar. The sweetness is just right. Made a coconut oil buttercream to go on top to be dairy free as well.

Not sure where I went wrong. I tried to reduce the sugar in the cake and didn’t add coconut sugar because I didn’t have any. Just used a few squirts of date syrup along with the granulated sugar. I have a chopper that shaved the carrots nicely, almost like a lathe. It left a decorative looking carrot stick, so I thought I could put it on the top to show off. I also decided to just use a 9 by 13 casserole dish because it seemed like it would work. I was mistaken. The center of the cake where I had placed the lather carrots was a complete soup. I had a failed frosting that tasted good but was more of a sweet lemon juice with cream cheese lumps. (Couldn’t find my immersion blender. ). Anyway, ended up scrambling the cake and the juicy frosting, cooking low and slow at 300 degrees for forty more minutes. Now it tastes good but is sort of a pudding and still too sweet

Wondering if sweet rice flour is the same as Mochiko flour

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Credits

Adapted from Elisabeth Prueitt

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