Perfectly moist and utterly delicious vegan pumpkin cake with a cinnamon buttercream frosting. Packed with holiday spices and ideal for any special occasion!
Ooooh this vegan pumpkin cake you guys! Soooo good.
It sort of reminded us of carrot cake. Or a spice cake.
It’s deliciously spiced in the same way that a carrot cake usually is, with the cinnamon and the nutmeg and it’s also sweetened with brown sugar.
This pumpkin cake adds in some ground ginger and cloves too, so it’s really a treat.
So if you like carrot cake, or spice cake, then you’ll love this too!
But try our vegan carrot cake too of course! And our vegan pumpkin cupcakes are based on this recipe and just as good!
How To Make Vegan Pumpkin Cake
You will find full instructions and measurements in the recipe card at the bottom of the post. This is a summary of the process to go along with the process photos.
- Sift all purpose flour into a mixing bowl and add light brown sugar, white granulated sugar, baking soda, baking powder, salt, cinnamon, nutmeg, ground ginger and ground cloves.
- Prepare a flax egg by adding 1 tablespoon of ground flaxseed to a bowl with 3 tablespoons of hot water. Let it sit for a minute to become gloopy.
- Then add the flax egg, pumpkin purée, canola oil, apple cider vinegar and vanilla extract.
- Mix into a thick batter. Don’t overmix.
- Divide the batter evenly between two prepared cake pans (sprayed with non-stick spray and lined with circles of parchment paper on the bottom).
- Place into the oven and bake at 350°F for 30 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center of one of the cakes comes out clean.
- Let the cakes cool in the pans for a few minutes before removing them from the cake pans and transferring to a wire cooling rack to cool completely before frosting.
The Frosting
When it came to the frosting, I had a look around the web to see what a good pairing usually is and I saw a lot of recipes using a brown butter frosting.
So, naively I set out to try and make one using vegan butter. And oh my what an utter disaster. You don’t even want to know how badly that turned out.
So it seems browning butter really needs actual butter! Hahaha! Who knew (probably everyone). Apparently it’s the milk proteins in the butter that brown, and there ain’t any of those in the vegan varieties!
So then I decided on a cinnamon buttercream frosting and that was just perfect.
There’s cinnamon and other spices in the pumpkin cake and so the pairing with a cinnamon flavored frosting did the job fabulously well.
And then I sprinkled it with some extra cinnamon and tossed some crushed walnuts on top and the result was utterly divine.
Canned Pumpkin or Fresh?
I searched high and low in our small town for some canned pumpkin because when you’re making pumpkin desserts, canned pumpkin purée is the business!
Sadly though it seems canned pumpkin isn’t a ‘thing’ around here. I guess pumpkin desserts aren’t really a thing around here either. Maybe folks here don’t realize how good they are!
So I had to do things the old fashioned way and make pumpkin purée from scratch! Was pretty easy really, just bought some ready peeled and chopped pumpkin cubes and baked them on a parchment lined baking tray at 350°F (180°C) for 30 minutes. No spices or oils, just plain.
And when baked, you just let it cool and then puree it in a food processor! The baking part gets rid of any excess moisture so you don’t end up with pumpkin puree that is too ‘wet’. But if you do, you can just stand the pumpkin purée in a strainer so any excess water runs off.
So it was really too easy. Probably still better to use canned though if you can get it, saves time!
Storing and Freezing
Keep it covered at room temperature where it will stay fresh for 2-3 days, or keep it covered in the fridge where it will stay fresh for up to a week.
It’s also freezer friendly for up to 3 months.
More Delicious Vegan Cakes
- Vegan Carrot Cake
- Vegan Gingerbread Cake
- Amazing Vegan Chocolate Cake
- Vegan Red Velvet Cake
- Vegan Vanilla Cake
- Vegan Banana Cake
Did you make this recipe? Be sure to leave a comment and rating below!
Vegan Pumpkin Cake
Ingredients
For the Pumpkin Cake:
- 2 cups All Purpose Flour (250g)
- 1 cup Light Brown Sugar (200g)
- ½ cup White Granulated Sugar (100g)
- 1 tsp Baking Soda
- 1 tsp Baking Powder
- ½ tsp Salt
- 2 tsp Cinnamon
- ½ tsp Nutmeg
- ½ tsp Ground Ginger
- ½ tsp Ground Cloves
- 1 Flax Egg 1 Tbsp Ground Flaxseed Meal + 3 Tbsp Hot Water
- 1 ½ cups Pumpkin Purée (337g)
- ¼ cup Canola Oil (60ml) or Vegetable Oil
- 1 Tbsp Apple Cider Vinegar
- 1 tsp Vanilla Extract
For the Cinnamon Buttercream Frosting:
- ½ cup Vegan Butter (112g)
- 3 ¾ cups Powdered Sugar (450g)
- 1 tsp Vanilla Extract
- 2 Tbsp Soy Milk or other non-dairy milk
- 1 tsp Cinnamon
For Decoration:
- Cinnamon
- Crushed Walnuts
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350°F (180°C). Spray two 7 inch cake pans (*see notes) with non-stick spray and cut out circles of parchment paper line the bottoms.
- Sift the flour into a mixing bowl and add the light brown sugar, white granulated sugar, baking soda, baking powder, salt, cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger and cloves.
- Prepare your flax egg by adding 1 Tbsp ground flaxseed meal to a bowl and then adding in 3 Tbsp of Hot Water and allowing to sit for a minute to become gloopy.
- Add the flax egg, pumpkin purée, oil, vinegar and vanilla to the mixing bowl and mix into a batter. Don't overmix.
- Divide the batter equally between the prepared cake pans.
- Place into the oven and bake for 30 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center of the cakes comes out clean.
- Transfer to a wire cooling rack and allow to cool completely before frosting.
- Prepare your frosting by adding the vegan butter, powdered sugar, vanilla and soy milk to the bowl of an electric mixer. Starting at slow speed, gradually increase the speed until the frosting is thick and smooth. If your frosting is too thick, add in soy milk a drop at a time until it reaches the right consistency.
- Add the cinnamon last and mix on low until just mixed in.
- When your cakes are completely cooled, frost them and then sprinkle cinnamon and crushed walnuts on top.
Notes
- Measure your flour correctly. Either weigh it out on a food scale for the most accurate results or use the spoon and level method. Spoon the flour into your measuring cup and then level off the top with a knife. Don’t scoop it and don’t pack it into the cup.
- Pumpkin purée. I used homemade pumpkin purée. I baked peeled and chopped pumpkin in the oven (plain, no oils or spices) for 30 minutes at 350°F (180°C) until soft and cooked and then pureed it in the food processor. If you do it this way and your purée is a bit ‘wet’ then stand it in a strainer so any excess water can run off.
- Cake Sizes: This cake can be adapted for different cake sizes as follows:
- Three 6-inch round cake pans – bake for 25 minutes.
- Two 8-inch round cake pans – bake for 25-30 minutes.
- One 9-inch round cake pan – bake for 30-35 minutes.
- 9×9 square cake pan – bake for 35 minutes.
- 9×13 sheet cake – bake for 25 minutes.
- Storing and freezing: Keep it covered at room temperature where it will stay fresh for 2-3 days, or keep it covered in the fridge where it will stay fresh for up to a week. It’s also freezer friendly for up to 3 months.
- Nutritional information is for 1 slice of 10 with a generous amount of cinnamon buttercream frosting. It excludes crushed walnuts.
Brit says
This was superb! I made it for my moms 65th birthday and everyone loved it! Vegans and non vegans alike. Even a friend whom doesn’t like cake at all called it a “masterpiece.” The one thing I did do differently was that I used tofutti brand vegan cream cheese in place of some of the butter because I didn’t have enough butter. But everything else was basically the same. This will definitely be a new go to recipe! Thank you!
Alison Andrews says
Awesome! So happy to hear that everyone enjoyed it! Thanks for the amazing comment and review Brit.
Stephanie Zick says
Amazing recipe that is easily adaptable to cupcakes, a bread, breakfast muffins, impressive layer cakes, I could go on. We love to make this cake with an apple butter frosting and it is like an Autumn party in your mouth! Thanks for the great recipe!
Alison Andrews says
Thanks so much Stephanie! So happy you love the recipe and adapt it so well! 🙂
Kimmifier says
Omg! I recently started a vegan diet & expected this to be palatable. What a pleasant surprise to find out it was amazing! My entire family loved this. So much that they asked if I could make one all the time!
Alison Andrews says
Awesome! Always love to hear things like this! Thank you for the amazing comment and review. 🙂
Irina says
May I substitute regular flour for gluten free?
Alison Andrews says
Hi Irina, yes you can definitely try it with a gluten free all purpose blend.
Jenna says
We had a friend who made this cake last week. It was phenomenal. She used one egg in place of the flax egg and it was perfect. I’m wondering if anyone has made it in a loaf pan – If so, how long would it bake and at which temperature?
Alison Andrews says
Awesome Jenna, thanks for sharing! It should work in a loaf pan but the baking time will be a lot longer, in the region of 60 minutes.
Susan says
Hi. Could you substitute olive oil margarine for the vegan butter? Thanks.
Alison Andrews says
Yes that should work great! 🙂
Mindy Moyer says
I just made this cake, but with more of a breakfast style. I cut back on the sugar and added baby orange slices, very delicious!
Carol says
I made it without the frosting and it was delicious!! Thank you!! My boyfriend and I don’t like a lot of sugar, so just the sweetness of the cake was enough for us. Good idea to use the rest of the pumpkin puree can when making the pumpkin pie recipe also from this website 🙂 I will post the result on my instagram!
Ruth H Branson says
I recently made this double layer pumpkin cake, and it will not be the last time I make it. I’ve made most of your cake recipes over the past year and they are all delicious – but this one was over-the-top delicious…very moist, a unique and delicious flavour, and it looked so pretty. It was a big hit for all of us and it disappeared very quickly. Thanks for the recipe!
Alison Andrews says
Thanks so much for the wonderful comment and review Ruth! So pleased it was a success!
Paul Regan says
About freezing this cake, do I frost the cake and then freeze it, or apply the frosting once the cake is defrosted? Thank you
Alison Andrews says
You can do either/or.
Pamela says
This is an excellent vegan cake and frosting recipe! I’m so happy that I stumbled on it and gave it a try!
I used a pie pumpkin instead of canned pumpkin. Always. The cake was moist and dense — Exactly how I love my cake.
I took it to a Thanksgiving gathering and it was a huge hit! Everyone enjoyed it immensely!
I will make this cake and frosting recipe again and again.
Thank you for sharing it!
Alison Andrews says
So happy to hear it was a hit! Thanks so much for posting Pamela!
Katie says
Can the flax egg be subbed with apple sauce in this recipe?
Alison Andrews says
Sure, you could use 3 tablespoons of applesauce.
Mariah Slater says
Absolutely delicious! I made for my vegan brother and the whole family loved it more than anything they’ve had!! Have made it 3 years in a row now and will continue. Thank you!
Alison Andrews says
Yay! That’s so awesome Mariah, thanks for the great comment and review.
Nancy says
I made this as a bundt cake with whole wheat flour, the included frosting recipe, and pecans on top for our daughter’s fall birthday, and we all loved it!
I have always assumed that 1 T of ground flaxseed means “measure after grinding,” but this time I measured 1 T of flaxseed into the grinder (thus producing almost 2 T of ground flaxseed) and mixed it all in. Worked fine!
Alison Andrews says
So glad to hear it was a success Nancy! And glad the extra flax worked great! Thanks for the awesome review!