Refined Sugar-Free Maple Carrot Cupcakes with Lactose-free Cream Cheese Frosting

Maple-Sweetened Carrot Cake Cupcakes

I brought these refined sugar free and lactose free maple carrot cake cupcakes over to my grandma’s house today. She’s a 90-year-old Irish Catholic woman who always speaks her mind, so when she says these are some of the best cupcakes she’s ever tasted, she is not lying. Endorsement of the year right there! My grandma and I are also on the same low-fiber, low-residue diet, so we had a good laugh about that.

Carrot cake is my favorite cake — yes, of all the desserts in the world, my favorite cake is the one with vegetables in it. Laugh at me all you want, but carrot cake is incredibly moist from the liquid content of the grated carrots and yields a beautifully-spiced cake. Converting the cake batter to a refined sugar-free recipe was actually quite easy for this one. Pure maple syrup replaces cane sugar, and the additional liquid is offset by reducing the amount of oil that you would normally use for a carrot cake, so it’s a win-win: no refined sugar, and less oil!

This recipe makes 11 cupcakes on the dot for me, but you could probably get an even dozen out of this recipe if you don’t overfill your muffin tins like I tend to do.

And what is carrot cake without that tangy cream cheese frosting? My original posting of this recipe included a whipped coconut cream topping, but I’ve since figured out how to make a pipeable refined sugar free and lactose free cream cheese frosting. Just look at the beautiful stiff ruffles in this photo!

Refined sugar free maple carrot cupcakes with refined sugar free and lactose free honey cream cheese frosting
Refined sugar free maple carrot cupcakes with sugar free and lactose free honey cream cheese frosting

Most bakers know that for a cream cheese frosting, you always use a block of cream cheese, which is higher in fat, instead of a tub of cream cheese spread, which tends to hold too much water and get soupy. The problem is, most lactose-free cream cheese options only come in a tub instead of a block.

This frosting is just three ingredients (butter, lactose free cream cheese, and honey) and its success all has to do with the order in which you combine those ingredients — butter and honey first, then cream cheese! Apparently sugars naturally draw liquid out of foods with higher water content, but by coating your sweetener in high fat butter first, the sugar is less effective in making liquid seep out of the cream cheese. Science, FTW!

I’d also recommend placing the cream cheese between two paper towels and gently pressing the excess liquid out as if it were a block of tofu. I use the Green Valley brand lactose-free cream cheese for this recipe.

These cupcakes looks great decorated with crushed pistachios, which also happen to be the only nut I can eat.

 

Maple-Sweetened Carrot Cake Cupcakes

Refined Sugar-Free Maple Carrot Cupcakes with Lactose-free Cream Cheese Frosting

These deliciously moist refined sugar-free maple carrot cupcakes pair a sweet and spicy carrot cake with a tangy sugar-free and lactose-free cream cheese frosting. Maple syrup replaces refined sugar and significantly reduces the oil content in the cake batter, and just three ingredients make up the perfect pipeable frosting.
5 from 2 votes
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Decorating time 20 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 10 minutes
Course Dessert
Cuisine American
Servings 12
Calories 235 kcal

Ingredients
  

For the cake

  • 1 cup all purpose flour
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1 1/2 tsp cinnamon
  • 1/2 cup oil (vegetable or canola)
  • 2 large eggs
  • 3/4 cup pure maple syrup
  • 1/2 tsp pure vanilla extract
  • 1 1/2 cups grated carrots

For the frosting

  • 8 oz butter (room temperature)
  • 1/4 cup honey
  • 8 oz lactose-free cream cheese

Instructions
 

For the cake

  • Sift all dry ingredients (flour, baking soda, salt, cinnamon) together into a stand mixer or large mixing bowl.
  • Add oil and stir to combine.
  • Add eggs one at a time, continually stirring.
  • Add maple syrup, vanilla, and grated carrots and mix until all ingredients come together to form a cake batter, scraping down the sides and bottom of the bowl as necessary to make sure all of the dry ingredients are incorporated.
  • Line one medium-sized muffin tin with cupcake liners, then fill each liner approximately halfway until all batter is used (should yield about 12 cupcakes).
  • Bake at 350°F for 20 minutes or until a toothpick comes out clean.
  • Cool completely before decorating.

For the frosting

  • Remove cream cheese from the tub and place between two paper towels. Gently press excess liquid out of the cream cheese like its a block of tofu.
  • Combine softened, room temperature butter and honey in a large mixing bowl or stand mixer and cream together until fully combined.
  • Once the honey is completely coated in butter, add the cream cheese and whip until smooth and fluffy.
  • Transfer to a piping bag and decorate cooled cupcakes.

Notes

You can use this recipe for a full-sized cake, too! The recipe above yields about 12 cupcakes, which is roughly equivalent to one 9-inch cake layer. Double the recipe above to make a two-tiered cake, and bake at the same temperature for 30-40 minutes. Don't forget to grease and flour your cake tins or line them with parchment paper!
Keyword Cupcakes, Honey, Lactose-free, Maple Syrup, Sugar-free

Recommended Articles

9 Comments

  1. 5 stars
    Yummm! Today Miles (age 2) asked to make a cake. I don’t like him to have too much sugar, so we made these cupcakes without the frosting. They were delicious! The only adjustment I made was that we greased the pan instead of using liners, and they came out fairly easily with a little rubber spatula. Thanks for the recipe, Amanda!

    1. I’m so glad to hear that you and Miles enjoyed these today! I’ll be posting a chocolate cupcake recipe soon, too, if he’s more of a chocolate guy 🙂

      1. Ooh, that sounds good! We just made the carrot cake again today with Ener-G brand egg replacer, and it was still good! A little stickier and crumblier than with eggs, but still a hit.

        1. That’s great to know that the cake portion of this recipe can be made vegan!

  2. […] you might have read in my Maple Carrot Cake Cupcakes recipe, carrot cake is my favorite dessert. My fiancé ruthlessly makes fun of me for this, because […]

  3. […] know this is the ultimate dessert betrayal for some, but I love oatmeal raisin cookies. Then again, my favorite cake has vegetables in it, so I might not be in the majority opinion […]

  4. SO pumped to make this! Curious: did you try adding more cornstarch to the frosting to make it stiffer? I’m dying to have a low sugar way to make exciting sculptable frosting! THANKS for your amazing recipes, Amanda! I love them! Keep ’em coming!

    1. Hey Lainie! This is definitely one of my favorite recipes, so I’m excited for you to try it! I actually need to update this post because I have a new cream cheese frosting recipe! I learned that the order that you combine the ingredients is crucial: apparently sugars encourage cream cheese to release liquid, but if you mix your sugar element with the high fat content butter first, it doesn’t turn into a soupy mess — science FTW! So here’s the new frosting recipe:

      – 8oz butter
      – 8oz lactose free cream cheese (I like Green Valley)
      – 1/4 cup honey
      – 1/2 tsp vanilla extract

      1. Bring the butter to room temperature
      2. Remove the cream cheese from the tub, place it between two paper towels, and gently press the excess water out like it’s a block of tofu
      3. Cream together the butter and the honey first
      4. Once the butter and honey are fully combined, add the cream cheese and vanilla extract and whisk until smooth and fluffy
      5. Pipe to your heart’s desire

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating