Mocha

Mocha Hazelnut Mug Cake

Gluten-free mocha cake with toasted hazelnuts and a soft cocoa crumb.

  • Prep 3 min
  • Cook 1m 20s
  • Total 5 min
  • Difficulty Medium
  • Gluten-Free
  • Eggless
Gluten-free mocha hazelnut mug cake topped with toasted hazelnuts

Steps

  1. Whisk almond flour, cocoa, sugar, espresso powder, baking powder, and salt. Almond flour needs extra mixing to break up pockets.

  2. Stir in milk and melted butter until the batter looks thick and shiny.

  3. Fold in half the hazelnuts and sprinkle the rest over the top.

  4. Microwave 70-80 seconds. Pull it when the edge is set and the center still looks slightly tender.

  5. Cool one minute so the hazelnuts regain crunch and the crumb settles.

Tips from the test kitchen

If your hazelnuts still have skins, rub them in a towel after toasting. Loose skins taste bitter in a small mug cake.

Success guide

Make it work the first time

Expected texture

Expect a chocolatey cake with a warm coffee note. Mocha cakes are best when the center stays slightly tender after resting.

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 avoids a whole egg, which helps prevent the bouncy texture people often dislike in small mug cakes.
  • 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.

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 chopped toasted nuts for a coffee-shop style crunch.
  • Use dark chocolate chips if you want the cake less sweet.
  • Serve with whipped cream or yogurt if you want a softer finish.