These Vegan Chocolate Cupcakes have a moist, fudgy chocolate texture and delicious dairy-free silky chocolate frosting.
You can find the full recipe, including tips, step-by-step photos, video, storage instructions, detailed allergy swaps, FAQ, and save at: https://www.theconsciousplantkitchen.com/vegan-chocolate-cupcakes/ or scan the QR code here ➡️
Preheat oven to 350°F (180°C). Line a cupcake tray with a paper liner. Lightly spray oil on the paper to prevent the cupcakes from sticking to them.
In a large mixing bowl, whisk milk and apple cider vinegar. Set aside for 5 minutes until it curdles - this is what we call the vegan 'buttermilk'.
In another bowl, stir all the dry ingredients together: flour, cocoa powder, sugar, baking powder, baking soda, and salt. Set aside.
In the bowl with the milk, stir in applesauce, oil, and vanilla extract.
Stir in the dry ingredients into the wet ingredients in three addition to avoid lumps. Stir well between each addition. The batter should be fairly liquid by smooth with no lumps.
Fill each cupcake liner up to 3/4 level.
Bake on the center rack of your oven for 20 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center of the cupcakes comes out clean.
Cool them down on a cooling rack for 2 hours before frosting. Don't frost if the cupcakes are hot, or the vegan chocolate frosting will melt.
Storage
Store for up to 3 days in the fridge in an airtight cake box, or freeze for later.
Notes
Flour Swaps: One of the most common questions I get for vegan cupcake recipes is whether a type of flour can be swapped for another. Unfortunately, you can’t swap all-purpose flour with low-starch flour like almond flour, oat flour, or coconut flour. The only flour swap that works as a 1:1 replacement with these vegan chocolate cupcakes are:
Spelt flour
All-purpose gluten-free flour
Sweeteners: The next question is often about sweeteners. Here, you can replace the sugar with any other crystal sweetener like:
Erythritol, allulose, xylitol – these are sugar-free options. I would recommend cutting down to 1/2 cup because they tend to be sweetener and slightly minty.
Coconut sugar – for a low-GI healthier sugar.
Sugar – white sugar or soft brown sugar works just fine.
Remember that you can’t replace a crystal sweetener with a liquid sweeter, or the cupcakes end up gummy. Don’t use maple syrup, agave syrup, or any liquid sweetener to replace sugar.Oil Swaps: I tested this recipe with many oils, and the best results for alight and fluffy vegan cupcakes are:
Canola oil
Light olive oil
Almond oil
Melted vegan butter, avocado oil, and coconut oil make the cupcakes slightly dense, and the last two options add a light aftertaste.
As a result, these three are not my first recommendation, but if it’s what you have at home, it will work.