Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Snack Cake {One-Bowl + Whole Grain}
This easy one-bowl pumpkin chocolate chip snack cake is healthy (packed with whole grains and no butter or oil) and still VERY moist, fluffy and delicious! The perfect fall snack!
Pumpkin baked goods are all over the place this time of year. I’m not complaining! I’m the girl over here who hoards canned pumpkin and makes pumpkin chocolate chip cookies (only this best-ever recipe) all year long.
I love the pumpkin + chocolate chip combo. But sometimes, even I’m longing for a slightly healthier pumpkin treat.
Enter this pumpkin chocolate chip snack cake. Even with 100% whole grains and no butter/oil, it still manages to be super fluffy and so, so delicious. Also…it’s ridiculously easy (one bowl!).
The heartiness of the whole wheat flour plays really nicely with the pumpkin flavors giving this snacky cake a delicious nutty, wholesome flavor. I absolutely love it.
Even for someone who bakes a lot with whole wheat flour, I was pleasantly surprised (ok, actually really excited) at how fantastic this cake is with the healthier changes. I didn’t even feel remotely guilty for snitching piece after piece after piece.
Because it’s a one-bowl recipe, it comes together so fast!
After the wet ingredients (pumpkin, applesauce, sugars, eggs) are mixed together until smooth, I throw in the dry ingredients (no need to mix them on their own first).
I add the chocolate chips right in there, too – mixing them with the dry ingredients helps prevent them from sinking while baking.
Whole Wheat Flour (and Substitutions)
I prefer using white whole wheat flour. It is lighter in texture and flavor than red whole wheat flour, but either can be used*. Kamut or Einkhorn flour can also be used. But don’t worry, if you don’t have whole wheat flour on hand, you can sub in the same amount of all-purpose flour.
*Here’s a post I published a while back about the different types of wheat and wheat flour.
Just like a good quick bread or muffin recipe, you don’t want to over mix the batter or else the baked cake may be tough and dry instead of fluffy and moist.
I mix just until no dry streaks remain.
This batter, once mixed, may appear slightly grainy and may even have a little bit of a curdled texture. It’s ok! It’ll all work out in the oven. Promise.
Spread the batter evenly in an 8X8- or 9X9-inch pan and bake until the top springs back lightly to the touch and a toothpick comes out clean. You can see the cake will pull away from the sides of the pan just a bit.
Can I double the recipe?
I haven’t tried that – usually a recipe for this size of pan will double fine for a 9X13-inch pan. My only hesitation recommending that is this cake is already quite thick and I don’t know that a full doubled batch will fit in a 9X13-inch pan.
I know the temptation will be there to double so you can use the whole blasted can of pumpkin, but just make sure it doesn’t overfill the larger pan or you’ll be hating my guts if/when it overflows in the oven.
Some could argue that the world (and even my blog) really doesn’t need another pumpkin chocolate chip recipe, but one taste of this hearty, wholesome, DELICIOUS pumpkin chocolate chip snack cake and I bet you’ll beg to differ just like me.
This is a guilt-free way to enjoy the tasty pumpkin + choc chip flavors. It makes a perfect after school snack (and is yummy enough no one will know the difference if you serve it for dessert!).
One bowl and one hour…that’s about all you need! I’ve found with other pumpkin baked goods that the flavor often gets better with time. You can definitely dig into this warm, but we prefer it cooled…and it’s really delicious the next day, too!
One Year Ago: Ultimate Beef Stroganoff {Slow Cooker or Instant Pot}
Two Years Ago: Philly Cheesesteak Sloppy Joes {30-Minute Meal}
Three Years Ago: Amazing Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cookies
Four Years Ago: Quick and Easy Quinoa Enchilada Skillet Meal
Five Years Ago: Easy 10-Minute Caramel Sauce
Six Years Ago: Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough Ice Cream Sandwiches
Seven Years Ago: Little Quinoa Patties
Eight Years Ago: Pumpkin-Maple Hazelnut Bread
Whole Grain Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Snack Cake
Ingredients
- 1 cup (227 g) canned pumpkin puree
- ½ cup (106 g) granulated sugar
- ½ cup (106 g) light brown sugar
- ½ cup (113 g) unsweetened applesauce
- 2 large eggs
- 1 ¼ cups (178 g) whole wheat flour (see note)
- 1 ½ teaspoons ground cinnamon
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- ¾ teaspoon ground ginger
- ½ teaspoon ground nutmeg
- ½ teaspoon baking soda
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- ⅛ teaspoon allspice or cloves
- ½ cup (85 g) miniature chocolate chips
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Lightly grease an 8X8- or 9X9-inch square baking pan (I prefer metal; if using glass, decrease oven temperature to 325 degrees).
- In a large bowl, whisk together the pumpkin, granulated sugar, brown sugar, applesauce and eggs until well combined.
- Add the flour, cinnamon, baking powder, ginger, nutmeg, baking soda, salt, allspice (or cloves), and chocolate chips. Stir until no dry streaks remain (don’t overmix or the cake may be tough and dry instead of soft and moist).
- Spread the batter evenly in the prepared pan. Bake for 25-30 minutes (40-45 minutes for a glass pan) until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean and the top of the batter springs back lightly to the touch.
- Let the cake cool before cutting into squares.
Notes
Recommended Products
Recipe Source: Mel’s Kitchen Cafe (adapted from a recipe in Cook’s Country – replaced all-purpose flour with whole wheat flour, added weight measures, subbed out oil for applesauce, used different spices, etc)
Great Recipe! The Cake is light, with amazing flavor, and rises beautifully Thank You So Very Much for a recipe that’s easy to follow, and quick to make!
A Snack Cake that Everyone Loves….Including the Baker…(me) !
These are delicious! And I love the quick one-bowl method. I didn’t have a square metal baking dish, so I decided to make these as muffins. I cooked them for 24 min. and they turned out perfectly. Next time I think I’ll try making them into mini-muffins. I also didn’t have mini-chocolate chips, but regular sized ones worked great too.
Could these be made into muffins?
I haven’t tried, but it’s definitely worth a try!
I made them into muffins and they worked out great.
So delicious!
This was so good!!! I cut the sugar in half and it was still sweet enough for us. Can’t have too many pumpkin recipes. I hoard Trader Joe’s organic canned pumpkin every fall when they stock it(sheepishly buying 10 cans or so every time I shop till they run out) and make pumpkin applesauce muffins all year.
I also doubled it in a metal 9×13 pan and it worked great.
Haha, I stock up on TJ’s canned pumpkin, too! Thanks for checking in to let me know what you thought of this recipe!
Great recipe!!!
Second time I made it using mini-cinnamon chips. Everyone loved it. So very moist.
I like that idea!
I used an 8×8 glass pan and cooked it for 40 minutes. It needed an additional 10. It is very tasty! I’d like to try it in a metal pan next time, so I don’t have to wait as long to eat it!
Thanks for letting me know what you thought!
After spending an embarrassing amount of time looking at pumpkin recipes i finally decided to make this one! It was quick to prep and bake, few dishes dirty, and tastes so good! Gives me the taste of fall i was craving! Thank you!
So happy to hear that, Carmen! Thank you!
Do you think I could do half oat flour (made from food processing oatmeal into flour) and half all purpose? I don’t have whole wheat flour but want to make it heartier/healthier than just subbing all the flour for all purpose!
Definitely worth a try!
I made this recipe this morning and it’s delicious!!! I paired it with a bowl of yogurt and called it lunch (you know whole grain and all ) So good! Thank you for always having trust worthy recipes!
Thanks, Jessie! So glad you loved this (and I love the idea of eating it with yogurt – yum!)
My family goes crazy over your “amazing gluten free chocolate cake” that is made with quinoa. I think I will try this recipe using cooked quinoa instead of flour and I will let you know. No one in my family needs to eat gluten free it just seems like a healthier alternative to flour. I’m telling you, that cake is amazingly delicious! Thanks Mel!!!
That’s such a great idea, Nicole – let me know how it goes!
Long time fan – thank you for your lovely recipes! I just had a tip for anyone out there who also modifies the recipe for a gluten, egg, and milk allergy (I know). Since there’s no real egg or gluten, it likely won’t rise as nicely if you bake in a square/rec pan. Instead, use a mini muffin tin and you’ll end up with yummy little dense pumpkin bites! 🙂
Thanks for the tip, Laurie!
hi Mel! I haven’t been able to find your meatballs and white sauce recipe on your blog. Did you take it off? Thanks for the wonderful recipes!
Found it sorry! It was cream sauce!
Any ideas on a gluten free option?
You could try subbing in a cup-for-cup type gluten free flour for the whole wheat flour.
I love choco chip.whenever my mom makes the cake, I am eaten all choco chip and for this fighting with my brother. I loved it. I am excited to make it and mix lots of choco chip.yummyyyyyyyyyy………
Had a craving for dessert for Thursday Night Football and found this 1 bowl recipe. Quick and delicious!!
We can taste every spice and it’s really light and not dense. I made this with fresh pumpkin purée. It’s definitely going to be a regular dessert in our house – all seasons!
Thanks, Heather!
Would this work if one or both of the sugars were replaced with Maple syrup or honey?
I haven’t tried that – you may need to add a bit more flour.
Hi Mel, I’m not sure where I went wrong! I noticed that my finished batter seemed “wetter” than yours but went ahead. And after 30 minutes in a glass 8×8 dish at 325 it was still really wobbly in the middle. At 40 minutes I had to take it out bc I needed to go pick up kids from school, even though the toothpick wasn’t coming out clean.
I used a kitchen scale to measure out 8 oz exactly of pumpkin puree, and a 4oz lunch pack of applesauce. I used half whole wheat and half all-purpose flour. All my kids and I thought it tasted great aside from the soggy middle. I don’t know if anyone else made it this afternoon and had the same issue, but do you have a suggestion for me? Increase the flour when I make it next, or stick with all-purpose since I don’t have white whole wheat? Thank you!
Hey Stephanie, I’m almost positive the glass dish and lower baking temperature is the culprit. Usually if decreasing the oven temp to compensate for a glass dish, you’ll need quite a bit more baking time…maybe even upwards of 15 minutes or so. I’ll add a note to the recipe to help others who might use a glass pan.
Thanks, I’ll plan on more baking time then. 🙂
I had the same problem! I cooked it for way longer than the recipe (used metal 8×8 pan at 350) and the middle never cooked – I thought I could salvage the edges but there were some areas of raw dough there also. But I will try again and let you know my results 🙂
Darn, Patricia! Sorry it didn’t bake up well for you.
It may be that measuring oz. with a kitchen scale created a problem. Pumpkin puree and applesauce would be measured by liquid ounces in a liquid measuring cup, but might be more accurate to meaure in grams on a kitchen scale. 8 ounces in weight is not equal to 8 fluid ounces–it took some ruined recipes for me to realize that!
Just made this in a 9×13 metal pan because I wanted to use the whole can of pumpkin. It worked great and did not overflow. I did put a cookie sheet underneath just in case. I was out of whole wheat flour so I used all purpose. Tastes great!
Thanks, Juliana! Just like that, all our doubling questions answered!
Hi Mel, I would love to have the nutritional information on your recipes because I love the healthy versions that you make like this pumpkin snack cake. Is there anyway you can begin including them when you make your recipes? Thank you so much
I used the MyFitnessPal app and it was really easy to paste in the url for this recipe today and have it compute (and save) the nutritional info—it’s also really nice for times when I modify a recipe and want updated info.
Thanks for letting me know, Connie – I appreciate reader requests and have a long list of them. I’ll definitely add this one! Not sure if/when I’ll integrate this feature, but I’ll keep you posted.
After a weekend with way too many food indulgences, this whole-grain oil free snack cake sounded like it was right up my alley. I subbed 2 flax “eggs” (flaxseed + water) for the eggs, and the cake came out awesome. Thanks for for the healthy indulgence recipe as I’m getting my eating back on track. The texture is definitely more “healthy” than your typical white-flour cake, but it’s super tasty. You rock!
Thanks for the review, Alicia – and details on the egg substitute. Awesome!
Hi Mel, this looks so great. I was just thinking about pumpkin and chocolate chips this week and I think this is perfect–I especially like the size of it. Love how there is no oil. We are in empty nesting mode now, so although I love, love reading your blog and still make your recipes, I bake so much less now. But this one I must bake this week! Love you!!!
xo
I totally understand that, Teresa! I bet life changes dramatically with the empty nesting phase.
You are absolutely the most intuitive food blogger I’ve ever read! Even at 68, I consider myself a novice cook because I don’t understand what to expect. I have so many questions about even the simplest recipe. But you write directly to me.
In this particular recipe, you tell us 1) there’s no need to mix dry ingredients together first, 2) when to add the chips, 3) how to know when to stop mixing, 4) about a curdly appearance, and 5) what kind of wheat flour you use.
All of these details help me SO much.
Plus, you’re such a nice person I wish you were my neighbor.
Please keep it up.
Thanks, Susan
Thank you so much, Susan! That really means a lot to me. I sometimes wonder if the additional details are unnecessary, but I am like you – I love having my questions answered before even making a recipe. Please let me know if you ever have any outstanding questions that I didn’t answer! I’d be happy to see if I can help (that’s what I’m here for!). Appreciate you and your comment today. 🙂
I agree with Susan! I always really love all of the details you give in your recipes so we know just what to expect. I am much more likely to try recipes that way.
Thank you, Suzanne!
I agree with Susan! All the details are very helpful for me. I feel like Mel has taught me (and continues to teach me) how to cook through her recipes and blog.
Thank you so much, sweet Abbi!
Have you tried doubling it so you can use the whole can of pumpkin? Is it too much for a 9×13 pan?
I talk about this in the post a little bit but because this cake is on the thicker side already, I’m worried a double batch might overflow in a 9X13-inch pan (haven’t tried doubling it myself though so that’s just a guess)
This sounds great and especially easy to make. What do you think about subbing in white chocolate chips instead of regular chocolate (which I can’t eat!)? Or do you have other recipes that would work better?
I think that would work great if that’s your chip preference!
I can’t wait to make this! We love your chocolate chip applesauce snack cake and the banana chocolate chip snack cake recipes! Maybe I’ll make this one for after school snack today.
Thanks, Kate!
Checking back in to say I made it and it was delicious! I doubled the recipe in a 9×13 with no problem and also reduced the sugar a bit. Right after I pulled out all the ingredients to make it, the baby woke up and started crying, so I hurriedly threw it together. Later, when I cleaned up, I realized I never put in the applesauce. Whoops! It was still great and enjoyed by all but I’m sure it would be even more moist and delicious with the applesauce!
Thanks for the update, Kate! Glad it worked out despite the chaos of daily life (and without the applesauce!).