Chocolate
Chocolate Lava Mug Cake
A soft gluten-free chocolate cake with a warm spoonful of melted center.
Steps
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Stir almond flour, cocoa, sugar, baking powder, and salt in a mug. Break up almond flour clumps with the back of the fork.
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Add milk, egg yolk, and melted butter. Mix until the batter looks like thick hot cocoa.
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Push the chocolate chips into one mound in the middle, then spoon a little batter over them so they are covered.
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Microwave 65-75 seconds. The cake should rise around the edges while the very center stays slightly sunken.
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Wait 90 seconds before opening the center with a spoon; the lava is hottest right after cooking.
Tips from the test kitchen
Almond flour browns fast in the microwave. Pull this one earlier than wheat-flour cakes; the carryover heat is enough.
Success guide
Make it work the first time
Expected texture
Expect a soft, spoonable crumb rather than crisp edges. Chocolate mug cakes cook like tiny steamed cakes, so the best cue is a set edge with a slightly soft center.
Success tips
- Use a microwave-safe mug with visible headroom. If the batter fills more than about half the mug, move it to a larger mug before cooking.
- Start with the lower end of the microwave time in the steps. Add time in short bursts only if the center still looks wet.
- Let the cake rest before eating. The crumb keeps setting after the microwave stops, and the mug will be very hot.
- This recipe uses yolk for richness. Stir gently after it goes in so the cake stays tender instead of springy.
- Almond flour stays tender but can look less dry on top. Judge by set edges and rest time, not by browning.
Substitutions
- Milk
- Whole milk gives the softest crumb. Unsweetened oat or almond milk can work, but the cake may taste a little lighter.
- Fat
- Melted butter gives flavor. Neutral oil can make the crumb softer, but the cake will taste less buttery.
- Flour
- Keep the gluten-free flour or almond flour listed here; swapping back to wheat flour changes the liquid balance.
- Egg
- Use the yolk only when the recipe asks for it. A whole egg adds too much protein for one mug and can make the cake rubbery.
- Mix-ins
- Keep heavy mix-ins near the center of the batter. If they touch the mug wall, they can overheat before the cake finishes.
Troubleshooting
- Rubbery texture
- Usually caused by overmixing, overcooking, or too much egg for one mug. Mix only until no dry flour remains and stop at the first set-top cue.
- Dry crumb
- The cake likely cooked too long. Next time start at the low end of the time range and let rest instead of microwaving until fully dry.
- Overflow
- The mug was too small or too full. Use more headroom and set the mug on a paper towel if your microwave runs hot.
- Wet center
- Microwave in one short burst, then rest again. A slightly glossy center is fine; a puddle of batter needs more time.
Variations
- Add a pinch of instant espresso to make the cocoa taste deeper.
- Drop extra chocolate chips in the center for a softer spoonful.
- Scatter a few chips on top before cooking for a softer, glossier surface.
- Serve with whipped cream or yogurt if you want a softer finish.


