This custard-like Blackberry Honey Clafoutis is made with gluten-free almond flour, oat flour, and sweet white rice flour and whipped together for ease in a blender. Drizzled with honey and loaded with blackberries, it is a clafoutis recipe you don't want to miss. Gluten-free, dairy-free.




I think the combination of blackberries and honey is a match made in heaven. Paired with the sweet baked custard, you won't miss the powdered stuff.


๐ Recipe

Blackberry Honey Clafoutis
Ingredients
- 1 cup unsweetened almond milk
- ยผ cup organic cane sugar
- ยผ cup coconut sugar
- ยผ cup plus 2 tablespoons honey
- 3 large eggs
- pinch salt
- ยพ teaspoon cinnamon
- โ cup almond flour
- ยผ cup gluten-free oat flour
- ยผ cup sweet white rice flour
- 2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract I use Rodelle
- 2 cups blackberries
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit. Grease a 9-inch cake pan with cooking spray or coconut oil.
- Add to a blender the almond milk, cane sugar, coconut sugar, ยผ cup honey, eggs, salt, cinnamon, flours, and vanilla extract. Blend on high speed until completely smooth.ย
- Pour batter into prepared pan. Arrange blackberries in an even pattern, spacing slightly in between each.ย
- Bake for 30 to 35 minutes or until a toothpick comes out clean and the edges start to pull away from sides of pan. The clafoutis may give the appearance of being undercooked even when a toothpick comes out clean. This is due to the custard-like quality.
- Allow to cool for a few minutes before drizzling remaining honey on top. Serve immediately; scoop out portions with a serving spoon and pair with whipped cream if desired. Store leftovers in the refrigerator.
Notes
Nutrition






Denisse | Le Petit Eats
This looks so delightfully simple and delicious, I'd love a slice with my cup of tea right about now!
Jerilyn
Thanks for the info; that helps!
Jerilyn
This sure is an attractive looking recipe. Can the rice flour be substituted for something else, like more oat flour? I don't have rice flour on hand. Thanks.
Tessa
Thanks, Jerilyn! You could try using tapioca starch in place of the sweet white rice flour. Either one of those works as a binder. I don't know what the outcome would be if you didn't replace it with another type of starch - it may not thicken as well as it should.
Abby @ Heart of a Baker
I'm still wondering how I haven't made one of these before! I have a bunch of summer berries hanging around, so I need to jump on making them into one of these gorgeous desserts!