Almond Flour Waffles
Crispy on the outside but soft and fluffy on the inside, these vegan almond flour waffles are grain free, paleo, and the perfect weekend breakfast! They store well in both the fridge and freezer which makes them perfect for meal prep.

Are you team waffles or pancakes? If you’re reading this, I’m going to take a wild guess and assume you’re team waffle. But then again, I’m writing this and I’m usually team pancake so I probably shouldn’t assume!
Despite my love for a tall stack of fluffy pancakes, I have to say, these almond flour waffles are one of my favorite recipes to date. They’re easy to make, vegan, paleo, crispy but fluffy, refined sugar free, made with no eggs and grain free.
They have such a great flavor and smell delicious as they’re cooking, and have the perfect little pockets for puddles of maple syrup.
As you might guess, this recipe does call for almond flour, but if you have a nut allergy, you can try this belgian waffle recipe instead. Try one of my other favorite almond flour recipes or my peanut butter banana waffles next!

Key ingredients
Almond Flour: This will make up the base of the recipe. Be sure to use almond flour and not almond meal. These are two different ingredients and will drastically change the final recipe. And yes, the almond flour will help these waffles get nice and crispy!
Tapioca Starch/Flour: Unless you want your waffles to crumble all over the place, don’t skip this ingredient! This is a key binding agent and works well to hold the ingredients together.
Almond Milk: Any non dairy milk will work for this recipe, but unsweetened vanilla almond milk has always been a personal favorite.
Apple Sauce: To help bind everything together. I do not recommend subbing for oil because the apple sauce is necessary to make these fluffy, and we get plenty of fat from the almond flour/butter.
Almond Butter: To give the waffles some fluff and texture. Any nut butter should work just fine, but I suggest one with a more neutral flavor such as almond or cashew.
Maple Syrup: For sweetness! Coconut sugar, brown sugar or honey will also work. To make these a bit more keto friendly, you can sub your favorite sugar free maple syrup alternative.
Flax Seeds: To make a “flax egg” to bind everything. Real egg also works but will make the waffles a bit lighter and fluffier. Still delicious though!

How to make almond flour waffles
All you’ll need to do is make your flax egg by combining the flax seeds and water. Let this sit aside for about 5-10 minutes to thicken.
After a few minutes, if you give it a stir, it should have almost an egg like consistency and will work to bind all of the ingredients together.
Meanwhile, combine all the dry ingredients, and mix together. Add in the wet ingredients and whisk together until you have a batter.
WANT TO SAVE THIS RECIPE?
Next, use a ladle, 1/2 measuring cup, or pour about 1/3 of the batter onto a hot waffle maker and let cook until the waffle maker beeps. Don’t lift the top up until it beeps!

All waffle makers are different, but I suggest setting the maker to a higher setting because these take a bit longer to cook than normal waffles.
If you set it too low, the waffles won’t be finished cooking and they’ll pull apart when you open it.
On that note, be sure you do not open the waffle maker while they are cooking! This will cause them to separate and will make clean up rather difficult. I used to do this all the time as a kid and it never went over very well!
Once the waffles are all done, top them off with some fresh berries, maple syrup, or a dollop of coconut whipped cream!

Almond flour vs. Almond meal
Almond meal is made from whole ground almonds with the skin on, whereas almond flour is made from blanched almonds without the skin.
Be sure to use blanched almond flour and not whole almond meal for these waffles. While similar, they have very different textures and will yield different results.
For this recipe, you want to use blanched almond flour to keep the waffles fluffy. Same with my almond flour banana bread.

Can I freeze waffles?
Yes, these waffles store really well in the fridge or freezer! They will last in the fridge for 3 days or in the freezer for about 3 weeks. Let them cool completely and then store in an air tight container or freezer safe bag.
How do I make them crispy?
To keep these waffles warm and crispy while the others are cooking, preheat your oven to 200 degrees Fahrenheit and place the waffles directly on the rack to stay warm while the other waffles cook.
You can also pop them in the toaster if they’ve been sitting out for a bit. Just avoid putting hot waffles directly on a plate because the bottoms can get soggy.

Try these next!
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Almond Flour Waffles
by: claire cary
Ingredients
- 1 tablespoon ground flax seeds
- 2 ½ tablespoons water
- 1 cup blanched almond flour
- ½ cup tapioca starch
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- ½ cup milk dairy or non-dairy
- 2 tablespoons apple sauce
- 2 tablespoons almond butter
- 1 teaspoon apple cider vinegar
- 2 tablespoons maple syrup
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- ¼ teaspoon salt
Instructions
- Combine the ground flax and water in a bowl, whisk together and set aside to thicken.
- In a mixing bowl, whisk together the almond flour, tapioca starch, baking powder, and salt.
- Add in all remaining ingredients and whisk together. Stir in the flax egg.
- Heat a waffle maker and grease with oil to prevent sticking. I suggest setting the waffle maker to one of the higher settings. All of them are different, but I set mine on level 5 out of 6 since these waffles require a bit of a longer cooking time than regular waffles.
- Use a ladle to scoop out the batter into the waffle maker.
- Repeat until all batter has been used.
- If you want the waffles to get extra crispy, pop them in the toaster for about 30 seconds to crisp up the outside or keep them warm in a low temperature oven.
- Serve with maple syrup and berries and enjoy!
Notes
Comments
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very delicious and crispy! I used tahini in place of almond butter and used 1 tbsp olive oil in place of apple sauce. Also we halved the recipe and it came out great. Will definitely make again!
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WOW! LOVE LOVE LOVE. Our new weekly favorite waffle recipe.
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Thank you for this delicious recipe! I tried it while I was in an elimination diet. It was SO SO good! I’m going to keep making these. Thank you!
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Thank you, Catherine!
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These waffles are fabulous! Being vegan and gluten-free can cause some challenges in finding good recipes. I found a brand new waffle maker today at a garage sale, and wanted to try it out. I googled “ best gluten-free vegan waffles” and these came up. I made them in my new waffle maker and they came out so delicious! Light and fluffy and so tasty! I followed the recipe exactly except instead of vanilla extract, I used almond extract. Thank you so much for this delicious recipe!❤️❤️
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Love the addition of the almond extract, I’ll have to try that!
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These were the best gluten free and egg free waffles I’ve ever made. Thanks for the recipe!
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Thank you, Emily!
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These turned out amazing! I used one egg and arrowroot powder as I did not have tapioca on hand. My only gripe is that I did not double or triple the recipe bc they’re SO good.
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Thank you, Samira!
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Excellent recipe! Thank you!
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I have had a lot of fails at making gluten-free waffles. I was going to give up, but then I found your recipe! It was delicious. Thank you so much. You have restored my faith in online food blogger lol!
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Love it! Thank you 🙂
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The whole family adored this recipe for dinner. My 1 year old loved it and my very picky 3 year old loved it. It had even been husband approved. It is being added to our meal rotation!
Just one question, any advice on adding any veggie purée’s? I would love to sneak some in for the kiddos:)
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You can try adding some in and then decrease the wet ingredients by the same proportion!
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Munching on these as I write this. Excellent recipe! Delicious, crispy and cooks through completely, no sticking if you oil iron – yay! Will be replacing my regular gf vegan recipe with this! Subbed peanut butter since I didn’t have almond butter. Felt like I was eating a giant peanut butter cookie!
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Amazing, so glad you loved these!
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These don’t work in a standard waffle maker. They stick.
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Be sure to grease your waffle maker well to prevent this!
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I made these yesterday and they turned out perfectly. My husband loved and son had no complaints, which is practically a miracle. With the double recipe there were leftovers to freeze. Yum!
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Amazing, thank you Aly!
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Can you use this recipe for pancakes as well? Or would they not work out well?
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No they will work for pancakes!
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I made these using corn starch, Becel plant-based butter, and almond milk. I added a tiny bit more almond milk because the mix was so thick. Delicious! Cooking time: about 7 minutes on my old 1950s waffle maker
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So so so good! I added cinnamon, blueberries and chopped pecans and it was absolutely amazing! Thank you for this 💜





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