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You are here: Home » Food Preparation » Recipes » Allergy Friendly » GAPS Recipes » A Primer: Baking With Coconut Flour

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A Primer: Baking With Coconut Flour

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A Primer: Baking With Coconut Flour | Coconut flour is the only low-oxalate, GAPS-friendly flour that is also very low in anti-nutrients, making soaking unnecessary. In this post, I'll help you discover what makes coconut flour unique and how to bake with coconut flour, plus some of our favorite recipes. | TraditionalCookingSchool.com

Did you know coconut is technically a fruit!?

This means it is very low in anti-nutrients and doesn’t require soaking, like all grains, nuts, and seeds.

What’s also special about coconut?

Coconut flour is the only low-oxalate, GAPS-friendly flour!

This is a major boon to my family! In addition to following GAPS, 2 of us are on a low-oxalate diet. As a result, we do most of our baking with coconut flour. And I have come to enjoy it more and more as I have healed.

Coconut Flour Is Unique

Unlike nut flours, it absorbs liquid well. And unlike glutinous flours, it is not sticky.

It is also fairly bland, albeit with a mild coconut flavor. People who don’t care for coconut still eat coconut flour baked goods without complaint.

It is made from the fiber leftover from making coconut milk. This is then ground to a powder. At this point, most of the oil is gone.

A Few Warnings

Coconut flour has a high fiber content. If you have an irritated gut, this can make constipation and diarrhea worse.

Although conventional wisdom touts fiber as an aid for constipation, many people experience the opposite problem. They keep increasing their fiber and wondering why their problems are getting worse! (Believe me, I know all about this.)

Also, keep in mind that coconuts are often processed with nuts, which can be an allergy concern.

And finally, if you’re on GAPS, remember that baked goods, fruit, and other “treats” should be kept to 20% or less of the diet. In other words, don’t get carried away! Continue to focus on the healing foods like broth, meats, veggies, and ferments. Add baked goods as an occasional treat.

Cooking & Baking With Coconut Flour

In many recipes that call for wheat flour, coconut flour works just as well! These can include coating fried chicken or browning a roast. Use it in the same ratio as the original recipe. You may have to accommodate a bit of extra sweetness to your recipe.

Although I don’t like to use coconut flour to thicken gravies and sauces (I think it makes a gritty texture), some people do. If you want to try it out, know that coconut flour is much more absorbent than wheat flour. Start with about 1/4 as much and work up from there.

When baking with it, use quite a bit of egg! I have yet to come across egg-free coconut flour recipes. The eggs bind the ingredients together and provide moisture.

Don’t cut back on fatty or liquid ingredients — such as coconut milk or yogurt — in baked good recipes. This will result in dry or crumbly baked goods.

Coconut flour absorbs more liquid than other flours — but not as quickly. It takes a few minutes. So, if making a recipe that seems too thin, give it 5 more minutes to thicken up before adding more flour. If you still need to add more flour, do so in very small amounts at a time. Remember, coconut flour is 4x more absorbent than wheat flour!

If you find the texture of coconut flour baked goods to be dry (as I do), try using dates as sweetener! My friends and family don’t notice the dry texture like I do, but dates help a lot, in my opinion.

Converting Recipes To Use Coconut Flour

Usually this is very hard to do. In most cases, it doesn’t work. Your best bet is to find recipes that call for coconut flour in the first place.

However, the ideal wheat flour recipe to convert is one that calls for a lot of eggs. Take out the wheat flour and replace it with coconut flour to 1/4 of the original amount of wheat flour. That may work!

Choosing Coconut Flour

There are several brands of coconut flour available. I have used the Coconut Secret, Tropical Traditions, and Wilderness Family Naturals. They have all worked equally well for me.

Although I have not used every brand in every recipe, they all seem to work interchangeably.

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My Favorite Coconut Flour Recipes

Here are some of my favorite coconut flour recipes.

  • Candida Diet Pancakes {made with coconut flour!}
  • Paleo Chocolate Chip Cookie Brownies
  • No-Bake Salted Caramel Cookie Dough Bites
  • Grain-Free Mixed Berry Cobbler
  • Grain-Free, Maple-Pumpkin Chocolate-Dipped Cake Pops
  • Grain-Free Salmon Patties with Lemon Sour Cream
  • Paleo Double Chocolate Chunk Cookies
  • Grain-Free Chocolate Cupcakes with Chocolate Buttercream Frosting

Do you know how to bake with coconut flour? What are your favorite coconut flour recipes? Let’s make the comments a great resource for finding recipes!

New to our GAPS series? Get up to speed by browsing past posts in this series or reading what the GAPS diet is. Also, check out our previous post A Primer: Baking With Almond Flour.

We only recommend products and services we wholeheartedly endorse. This post may contain special links through which we earn a small commission if you make a purchase (though your price is the same).

Posted in: Food Preparation GAPS Recipes GAPS Tips Health & Nutrition Recipes Trim Healthy Mama Tips

About Patty

Patty, a homeschooling mother of two girls, loves blogging about cooking and health. She passionately pursues healthy cooking to heal herself and her family. Her family began their healing journey with the GAPS diet in November of 2009 but her pursuit of health using holistic methods started long before that. Connect with Patty and read more about her journey at her blog Loving Our Guts or on her Facebook Page, Pinterest and Twitter.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. AmyM says

    October 24, 2012 at 12:40 pm

    Thanks for the article and recipe links! I’ve just started using coconut flour in the last year. This is my favorite recipe so far. I make it for church and even the non-health-food people love it! They have no idea how good for them it is. 🙂
    http://ournourishingroots.com/yellow-coconut-cake-with-cocoa-buttercream-frosting/

    Reply
    • Patty says

      October 24, 2012 at 7:00 pm

      I love how coconut flour baked goods taste good to everyone!

      Reply
      • Mike Morgan says

        August 27, 2018 at 1:06 pm

        Patty . . . .I saw site and raed ypur comment that “People who don’t care for coconut still eat coconut flour baked goods without complaint.” . . . .Sadly that everybody does not include me. I have tried making bread with coco flour and I just can not get over the sweet coco flavor. I have tried reducing the flour, adding in some flavors (herbs, garlic, onions etc) to negate the coconut but all I end up with is a bread that is flavored that with onion, garlic, rosemary etc still with an after taste of coconut. For some reason that flavor bugs me. If you gave me a coconut cream pie or a macaroon years ago I would have loved it but the flour in bread is just off putting to me. Any ideas or recommendations to get around this or am I just stuck ? I would prefer a less expensive alternative than almond flour so I can bake breads more often. Thanks

        Reply
        • Christie says

          May 23, 2019 at 8:08 am

          Have you tried mixing coconut flour and almond flour? I actually make some great Keto cookies and it calls for 3/4 cup coconut flour and 1/4 cup almond. I barely taste the coconut.

          Reply
        • Gayel Paterson says

          June 26, 2020 at 5:18 pm

          Are you aware that both dates and almonds are extremely high in oxalates? Caution needed!

          Reply
  2. Dianne says

    October 24, 2012 at 6:28 pm

    Thank you, Patty. My first attempt at baking with coconut flour was a disaster! I made banana bread and substituted the coconut flour measure for measure. It was SO DRY!! I made a vanilla pudding and poured it over the broken up pieces… This is just what I need.

    Reply
    • Patty says

      October 24, 2012 at 6:59 pm

      So glad it was helpful for you!

      Reply
      • MICHELE says

        February 25, 2018 at 5:09 pm

        HI PATTY. I BAKED A COUPLE OF CAKES WITH THE COCONUT FLOUR AND THEY WERE AWESOME…..UNTIL….I TOOK THE OUT OF THE OVEN. YOU GUESSED IT, THEY FLATTENED. I WAS DEVESTATED. HOW DO I KEEP MY CAKES FROM “FALLING” WITH THE COCONUT FLOUR??

        Reply
  3. Meghan says

    October 25, 2012 at 8:17 am

    Great post. I am sad that I don’t really use much coconut flour anymore since eggs started giving me awful stomach aches six months ago. Like you said, there are few egg-free coconut flour recipes!

    Reply
  4. Cherlynn says

    October 27, 2012 at 8:14 am

    Thanks for the primer on coconut flour. I will still use it mixed with other flours but I am so very allergic to gluten, dairy, and eggs so using only coconut flour won’t work for me. It was nice to read about having to use eggs to get it to work so I know where the problem lies for me.

    Reply
  5. Sally says

    November 14, 2012 at 10:59 am

    I was so sad to read that you haven’t come across any egg-free coconut flour recipes. I’m intolerant to eggs, currently on GAPS and low oxalate diets and was hoping for ideas for occasional treats. If you come across any egg-free coconut flour recipes, please post!
    Sally

    Reply
    • KC says

      January 18, 2013 at 1:25 pm

      I have found a few egg free coconut flour recipes…
      http://thecoconutmama.com/2012/08/coconut-flour-cookies/
      and http://paleoparents.com/featured/banana-pumpkin-pucks/

      are the first couple that come to mind… searching coconut flour and egg free recipes isn’t helping much sadly and I haven’t tried either recipe but looking for something to help me adjust as I start the autoimmune paleo protocol (though the second one has dates so a bit on the high sugar side for what I’m looking for)

      Reply
  6. Rachel says

    January 12, 2013 at 9:04 am

    Sorry to be coming late to the party, but I have a question I am hoping you can answer. My kids and I LOVE coconut flour muffins (among other coconut flour goodies) so I make them all the time. However, I can’t for the life of me figure out how to make them so they come out of the pan whole. I grease the pan, but the bottom third or so still sticks to the pan. Of course they still taste yummy, but I would be embarrassed to serve them to guests 😉 I prefer to be able to use the paper muffin cups for ease of clean-up, but when I use those I end up throwing half of the muffin with the paper. Can you help me? Thanks so much!

    Reply
    • PattyLA says

      January 16, 2013 at 7:10 pm

      Hi Rachel,
      You are right it does tend to stick. I personally use the papers. I’m not sure what you are greasing your muffin cups with but I personally find that lard and palm shortening work better than coconut oil. You could also try flouring them like you would for a cake. It may also depend on your muffin cups themselves. My cast iron ones stick terribly no matter what I do.

      Reply
    • Jeanmarie says

      February 11, 2013 at 11:22 pm

      Try silicone baking forms. The silicone muffin cups should work for you. I have made coconut break in a silicone loaf pan and didn’t have problems with it sticking.

      Reply
  7. Melissa N says

    January 26, 2013 at 2:56 am

    You can often use applesauce instead of egg.
    Here’s a helpful post: http://www.livingwithout.com/issues/4_7/cooking_with_coconut_flour-1955-1.html

    Reply
  8. Jen says

    March 21, 2013 at 7:48 pm

    I’m trying to cut back on grains in my diet. no health concerns, just thought i’d try it out. anyway, i’m doing some research for baking alternatives… i keep seeing that coconut flour needs eggs. I was wondering if anyone had tried substituting the eggs needed with a 1/3 cup of the oil of their choice, or a 1/3 cup applesauce for each egg that the recipe calls for. I’ve used both in a pinch in traditional wheat flour based recipes. thought i’d throw the suggestion out there for those with egg sensitivities.

    Reply
    • Cherlynn says

      March 22, 2013 at 7:39 am

      Coconut flour recipes really, really need eggs, not pureed beans, applesauce, egg substitutes. It really needs real eggs to work. I am allergic to eggs also and am trying to find and create bread substitutes with no flour of any kind. The cauliflower pizza crust is awesome and my normal family and friends love it so much they use it just because it taste great and is much healthier for us. I use cheddar cheese and triple garlic and spices it and we love the recipe. I have a gluten free pancake recipe that no one knows it’s not GF but bread has been a total disappointment so far. I’m using recipes that require no gluten at all for our main meals. It’s helping to just avoid the gluten issue. Where 1/3 of our family is GF and the rest love gluten and can have it. I have 43 no gluten recipes so far. We just have a few gluten recipes I have to adapt as they are family favorites.

      Reply
      • Jennifer says

        October 9, 2021 at 2:36 pm

        Can you share those recipes? Cauliflower crust?

        Reply
  9. Maria says

    May 26, 2013 at 9:50 pm

    I love coconut flour! I use it mostly in coconut flour pancakes! I can’t tolerate gluten 🙁 so using coconut flour instead of wheat flour is the perfect alternative 🙂

    Reply
  10. james d says

    May 30, 2013 at 8:43 am

    I find that excessive fiber is a problem when not enough liquids are consumed.

    Reply
  11. james d says

    May 30, 2013 at 8:44 am

    what a great site this is.

    Reply
  12. reds says

    July 24, 2013 at 8:41 pm

    Is it possible to use coconut flour for Doughnuts? Our main problem when we use coconut flour is its texture and the amount of fat absorbed after frying. Can you please help me?

    Reply
    • Cherlynn says

      July 25, 2013 at 5:28 am

      When using coconut flour you need to use eggs and lots of them. You might also blend in other flours with it but I’ve used it straight but doubled my eggs to get it to work. Good luck! I know how frustrating experimenting to get the right flour blends can be. I haven’t made my lovely yeasted donuts yet. Probably won’t until this Fall. Let us know how it works out and what is the winning combination for you donuts!

      Reply
      • james d says

        July 31, 2013 at 5:11 am

        dear cherlynn,

        I have a recipe for a flat bread which uses coconut flour, psyllium, coconut oil and hot water and not one egg. it rolls like a wrap and I cut it up into squares and toast it to enjoy with my eggs. if anyone wants the recipe without or with my modifications I would be pleased to share.
        regards,
        james

        Reply
        • L'raine Mead says

          May 1, 2015 at 4:08 pm

          Yes I would like your flat breads recipe & thank you for sharing it.

          Reply
        • jeanie says

          August 1, 2015 at 4:15 pm

          i would love the flat bread receipt i am also gluten free (newly)
          thanks

          Reply
        • Kim says

          October 23, 2015 at 11:50 am

          I am new to GF and would love your flat bread recipe.

          Reply
        • nasree johnson says

          October 25, 2015 at 9:19 am

          how can i get your flat bread recipe wuith cocanut flour and no eggs

          Reply
        • Barbara says

          November 8, 2016 at 4:27 pm

          how can i get your flat bread recipe wuith cocanut flour and no eggs

          Reply
      • Tabitha Teeter says

        January 22, 2016 at 5:28 pm

        Kerry Ann Foster and Brittany Angel have some great coconut flour doughnuts. No yeast needed, but you do need a donut shaped pan. I found this article searching for a better way to keep them from sticking. Right now I grease the heck out of the donut pan and use a rubber spatula to wiggle them loose.

        Reply
    • Jen says

      July 26, 2013 at 8:25 am

      have you tried almond flour? it gives more of a flakey crumbley consistancy than coconut flour does, which i find to be more moist and chewy. perhaps a blend of the two will give you your desired results.

      Reply
  13. Pancake Girl says

    July 29, 2013 at 4:25 am

    I love coconut flour! I like it better than other gluten free flours because it’s low in carbs and really healthy. It doesn’t have added chemicals like others contain 🙂 I love using it to make coconut flour pancakes, and muffins 😀 I recently used it to make pizza, and it’s like a whole new world! Ha! Great post, nice to know there are more people supporting the coconut flour community 🙂

    Reply
    • james d says

      July 31, 2013 at 5:07 am

      dear pancake girl,

      would you share your coconut flour pizza recipe?
      thanking you in advance,
      regards,
      james

      Reply
      • Pancake Girl says

        August 1, 2013 at 3:31 am

        Hey James! Just check out the link attached and you can find the complete recipe + instrcutions! 🙂

        Reply
        • james d says

          August 1, 2013 at 5:46 am

          dear pc,
          thanks, will try,
          james

          Reply
  14. terry says

    July 3, 2015 at 8:40 am

    I want to make suet dumplings with coconut flour does any one have a recipe or the ratio of suet to coconut flour. Wheat flour is two to one but I’m trying to stay low carb.

    Reply
    • Millie says

      July 6, 2015 at 7:26 am

      Hi Terry,
      We asked for recommendations on the Facebook page. You can follow the thread here: https://www.facebook.com/gnowfglins/posts/915205821851768

      Reply
  15. Marcia Emi says

    February 14, 2018 at 11:23 am

    Hi Wardee,

    I love your website and everything you are teaching at your School. I was just browsing through this page and thought you’d like to know that the links pointing to the recipes are broken (the pages are not found). I would love to have access to these recipes, they sound very yummy.
    Thanks a lot!

    Reply
    • Haniya Cherry says

      February 14, 2018 at 12:20 pm

      Thanks for pointing that out, Marcia! I’m afraid I can’t correct the original links — the website seems to have disappeared. However, I’ve linked to many more recipes calling for coconut flour here on Traditional Cooking School that you may find helpful. 🙂

      Haniya, TCS Team

      Reply
  16. Jo says

    June 20, 2019 at 3:28 pm

    I am trying to start a coconut flour sour dough starter.
    Any advice or successes?

    Reply

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