Like my flourless chocolate cake, I make these Flourless Chocolate Brownies even when I’m not after a gluten free dessert because they’re that good! Using almond meal instead of flour adds lovely undertones of nuttiness as well as guaranteeing they’ll be fudgy and moist.
One bowl, quick, easy and impossible to stuff up!

Flourless Chocolate Brownies
I don’t think of these as gluten-free brownies. Rather, I tell people they are flourless chocolate brownies made with almond meal instead of flour, so they happen to be gluten-free.
And unlike regular brownies made with flour, these flourless brownies are virtually impossible to overcook to the point that you lose that desirable fudginess that we all know and love about brownies.
Win, win!
However, please note. If you ask me to choose between these flourless brownies and classic brownies, I’ll plead the fifth. There’s enough space in this world for both!! (A phrase I often use for competing food-love-interests).

What goes in gluten-free brownies
Here’s what you need to make these gluten-free brownies:

Almond meal / ground almonds (same thing) – this is finely blitzed raw, whole almonds in powder form, used in place of flour to add a beautifully nutty flavour to baked goods (like in this very popular Orange Cake and Flourless Chocolate Cake). It makes them ultra moist and also gluten-free.
Find it in the baking section, dried fruit and nut section or health food section of grocery stores.
Making your own: Blitz whole, raw unsalted almonds until powdered.
Almond flour is slightly different but can be used. Brownie texture will probably be a bit more cake-like (almond flour is made with blanched peeled almonds, no skin, and is finer) and a less pronounced almond flavour.
Rice flour – This is ground rice, widely available these days at everyday grocery stores. It takes the place of flour in this recipe to give the brownies a bit of much needed structure compared to using just almond meal.
Note however that some brands (like McKenzie’s in Australia) are not fully ground into a fine powder and sometimes have a tiny bit of a grit in them. Not a big deal in this recipe, but I prefer using Asian brands as they never seem to have this problem (Asian aisle, Harris Farms in Australia, Asian stores).
Chocolate – Use cooking chocolate chips from the baking section of the supermarket, not eating chocolate. Though actually, Lindt chocolate bars work great, not all eating chocolate does so that’s why I generally don’t recommend it!
Butter – No need to soften it as it is melted with the chocolate.
Large eggs – Use eggs sold in cartons labelled “large eggs” which are 55 – 60g / 2 oz each. This is an industry standard. If you don’t have eggs this size, crack eggs in a bowl, whisk then measure out 90 ml / 100 grams.
Sugar – I like to use brown sugar as it adds a bit of caramely flavour to the brownies. But white sugar works just fine here.
Vanilla – Extract is better quality and flavour than imitation vanilla.
Salt – Generally good practice in baking to include a touch of salt as it brings out the flavour of other ingredients. It doesn’t make these brownies salty!

How to make flourless chocolate brownies
Nice and easy – one bowl and just a wooden spoon!

Melt the butter and chocolate in a heatproof bowl. I do this in the microwave – 3 x 30 second bursts on high, stirring in between, until melted and smooth.
Mix well until smooth, then let it cool for 5 minutes just to be sure we don’t accidentally cook the eggs!
Vanilla, sugar, eggs – Stir in the vanilla and sugar, then mix the eggs in until incorporated and the batter is smooth.
Add dry ingredients – Mix in the almond meal and rice flour.
Bake – Pour into the prepared pan, smooth the surface then bake for 25 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the centre comes out clean but still a bit wet. You want it to be moist because that means the brownie is still fudgy! Note however that flourless brownies are far more forgiving than brownies made with flour as the absence of flour makes it hard to overcook them to the point of drying out.
Cool in the pan for at least 30 minutes before using the paper overhang to lift the brownie out of the pan. Then fully cool on a rack before cutting to serve.
Cutting / serving hot v cooled – Fudgy brownies are difficult to cut when warm as they are too gooey. It is best to fully cool to room temperature before slicing. Better yet, for best results, refrigerate so it firms up, slice when cold so you get neat squares. Then allow to fully come to room temperature before serving. This way, you get perfect neat slices but the same gooey eating experience!
Also, close up proof that even though these are flourless brownies, you’ll get the signature crackly brownie surface that we all know and love:

And proof of fudgy insides:

YUM.
I see these fudgy beauties in your future. Very near future, in fact. Like – this weekend.
Then after you’ve made them, come back and tell me how much you loved them!!! 😇 – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
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Flourless Chocolate Brownies (gluten free)
Ingredients
- 1 cup dark chocolate chips or melts / semi-sweet chocolate (Note 1)
- 85 g / 6 tbsp unsalted butter , cut into 1 cm / 1/2" cubes
- 1/4 tsp cooking/kosher salt
- 3/4 cup brown sugar (sub white)
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 2 large eggs (55-60g / 2 oz each)
- 2/3 cup almond meal / ground almonds (or almond flour, Note 2)
- 1/3 cup rice flour (Note 3)
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 180°C / 325°F (160°C fan-forced) with a rack in the lower third of the oven.
- Preparation: Grease and line a 20cm / 8" square pan with baking paper (parchment paper) with excess overhang so it's easy to lift out the brownie when cooked.
- Melt butter and chocolate: Place chocolate, butter and salt in a heatproof bowl. Microwave in 3 x 30 second bursts on high, mixing in between, until melted and smooth. You could also do this over simmering water on the stove.
- Cool 5 minutes: Mix well to combine the chocolate and butter then leave to cool for 5 minutes.
- Add vanilla, sugar and eggs: Stir in the vanilla and sugar. Crack the eggs straight into the bowl, and stir until combined.
- Add dry: Add almond meal and rice flour, and mix very well until fully combined.
- Bake: Pour the batter into the prepared pan and smooth the surface. Bake for 25 minutes or until the brownies are slightly puffed all over and a toothpick inserted into the center comes out moist but clean. You want it to be moist!
- Cool and serve: Cool brownies for at least 30 minutes in the pan. Remove the brownie by holding the edges of the baking paper, fully cool on a rack. Then cut into squares (3 x 3 for gigantic ones, 4 x 4 for sensible ones). See Note 4 for more cutting tips.
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
Recipe originally published May 2014. Updated with much needed new photos and a video, plus the all important Life of Dozer section! No change to recipe – perfect as is. 😇
Life of Dozer
Massage balls to work knots out of my back regularly go missing around here….

I, like the last comment, need do sugar, no carbs. So can I just leave out the rice flour?
Hi Nagi! Love the look of these brownies! Question- is the rice flour regular rice flour? I have the glutinous kind in my pantry but I’m guessing that might not render the same results. Just want to make sure.. Thanks!
Firstly thank you for posting a GF desert recipe. I often adapt your other desert recipes to GF some work out some fail😞 … my bad
Just one question does the rice flour make the brownies “gritty “?
Also I’m a big fan of your savoury recipes usually make 2 a week 😊
I agree, always happy to see a gf recipe here. I love this site and like lot of other people love your recipes and Dozer!!
Is it possible to make these sugar free? Im extremely sensitive to sugar as well as gluten .
If so , Is there a sugar substitute that you recommend?
Great recipe and I need gluten free. Just a thought – I am glad you offer the cups and metric options. But, I, personally would find it very helpful if you put both options together. For example, in your cups option you also show the metric equivalent. Why not show both for all ingredients? Some ingredients are easier to measure in cups, others metric. I usually get both options and then combine the metric and cups on the recipe I keep. It would be nice to just have it presented that way. Glad you are back!
I missed Dozer (and of course your recipes).
+1 for this idea!
+1 for this suggestion.
Hello NAGI, can I change the rice flour by coconut flour do you think?? I have been Keto for 5 months now and it has changed my life. by the way if you had any request it would be a nice new challenge for you to cook Keto on occasion ❤️ thank you
Coconut flour is too absorbant – it can’t be used to replace other flours. I suggest using all almond flour.
🙏
Can you make your own rice flour?
Hi, Nagi, Lovely to have you back with your delicious recipes. I would love to make this Brownie recipe. Can it be made without real chocolate? I need GF recipes for my husband, but he cannot eat real chocolate.
Just wondering if anyone has tried using pistachio instead of almonds?
Dear Nagi, each and every single day, my daughter (15 years old) cooks something from your website. Yesterday we had Mexican rice with a salad and pulled pork, and a day before we had wickedly delish potato salad, and Peruvian chicken, and Mediterranean chicken bake, and Italian almond and cherries cookies, and madeleines and carrot cake, and churros, and too many to remember. This week she made brownies using my best Belgian chocolate callebauts and she’s taken them all to school to share with her friends. She got in touch with you and you offered to send her a signed cook book. Now she wants Global knives for her birthday! You make our lives better, and I eat the most delicious food as a result. Thank you for everything.
Hello Nagi, I’m really looking forward to making this, but I don’t have rice flour. Is there anything I can use instead?
I haven’t tried but I think cornflour would work and that is what I would use. Because it is not a major ingredient here I think it will be fine! N x
Is cornflour aka cornstarch?
Followed many of your savoury and dessert recipes. All is spot-on delicious and perfect to cook/bake including this GF brownies. It’s nutty, healthy and a bit fancy (GF recipe).
Hi Nagi, any chance you can post the grams of each ingredient?
Hi Mel – there’s a button at the top of my recipes that swaps between metric and cups! N x
So sorry Nagi, where abouts is the button to change between cups and metric? I bet I’m staring at it. :-). Thank you so much. You’re awesome.
Just under ‘ingredients’
Hey Nagi thanks for this. The texture of the brownie is slightly grainy ( must be the rice flour) was wondering if this is how it should be? Thanks
Hi Jen – no it shouldn’t be grainy. It’s most likely the brand of rice flour – try an Asian brand and see how it goes! N x
Hi Nagi, I’d love to make these brownies for my friend who has a gluten and dairy free diet. What do you suggest swapping out the butter with?
Hi Lisa if you are in the UK you can use Stork marg the one in the block and foil wrapper it’s oil based and dairy free.
Try coconut butter.
Hi Nagi, I’m looking to give this a whirl. I don’t have rice flour. Can I sub with arrowroot flour instead?
Absolutely beautiful moist blueberry muffins. Delivered them to my daughters office and her co workers. Gone in an instant, her reply was ,The seagulls are hovering and they want more. Fabulous thanks.
Hi Nagi, Can I substitute coconut flour if I don;t have rice flour? Same measurements?
Thanks!
Hi Nagi.
I noticed in the comments you said to Sarah to use brown sugar, but the recipe ingredients just says 3/4 cup of sugar. I will use brown due to your comment to Sarah but I would have normally used white if it wasn’t specified. PS . Absolutely laughed out loud when I saw your two photos of Dozer with with strawberry flan. That is karma right there for teasing him with such yummy treats. 😂😂😂
Hi Chelsea, this recipe uses white sugar. N x
So easy, and fudgey! Love them
These were just delicious, I think we preferred them to non gluten free brownies!! Could you make them with just rice flour? Or would that not work. Thanks Nagi love your recipes!