Cinnamon and Cream

Allulose Caramel Apple Galette with Rustic Almond Pastry

23 min read

↓ Jump to Recipe

There is something deeply satisfying about a galette — the way the pastry folds up around the fruit in uneven, imperfect pleats, the caramel pooling in the gaps and bubbling at the edges in little amber puddles. This one smells like October: warm apples, butter browning in the pan, a curl of cinnamon rising from the oven. It looks like something from a French farmhouse kitchen, which is exactly the point. Nobody needs to know it contains no added sugar whatsoever.

What makes this galette genuinely special is the combination of allulose caramel and an almond-based pastry. Allulose is a rare sugar that behaves almost identically to sucrose in cooking — it browns, it caramelizes, it builds a glossy sauce — but it has virtually no impact on blood sugar and contributes almost no usable calories. Unlike erythritol, it does not crystallize when it cools, which means your caramel stays silky and pourable right to the last bite. The pastry blends almond flour with a small amount of tapioca starch for structure and a flaky, slightly nutty crust that pairs beautifully with the spiced apples.

This galette sits comfortably at a medium difficulty level. The allulose caramel requires your full attention for about four minutes at the stove — it moves fast — but the pastry is genuinely forgiving, and the rustic shape means there is no crimping, no blind baking, and no pressure for perfection. It is ideal for anyone eating low-glycemic or keto-adjacent, for diabetic-friendly holiday entertaining, or for anyone who simply loves a beautiful, unfussy apple tart.

Prep: 35 minutesTotal: 1 hour 30 minutes (includes 30 minutes pastry chill time)Yield: one 10-inch rustic galetteDifficulty: ★★☆ IntermediateOccasion: Weekend Bake
✓ Vegetarian✓ Gluten-Free
Servings:

8

servings

Ingredients

  • Pastry)
  • 200 gblanched almond flour (about 2 cups, spooned and leveled, not almond meal)
  • 30 gtapioca starch (about 3 tbsp)
  • 15 gallulose (about 1 tbsp
  • 0.5 tspfine sea salt
  • 113 gcold unsalted butter, cut into 1/2-inch cubes (1 stick or 1/2 cup)
  • 1 largeegg, cold
  • 15 mlice water (about 1 tbsp), plus more if needed
  • 700 gfirm-tart apples such as Granny Smith or Honeycrisp, peeled, cored, and sliced 1/4-inch thick (about 4 medium apples)
  • Caramel)
  • 120 gallulose (about 1/2 cup
  • 60 mlheavy cream, at room temperature (1/4 cup)
  • 30 gunsalted butter (2 tbsp
  • 1 tsppure vanilla extract
  • 1 tspground cinnamon
  • 0.25 tspground nutmeg
  • 0.25 tspground cardamom
  • Tossing With Apples)
  • 10 gallulose (about 2 tsp
  • 1 largeegg, beaten with 1 tsp water (egg wash)
  • Finishing (such As Maldon)
  • Flaky sea salt
  • Whipped cream or crème fraiche, to serve (optional)

Ingredient Substitutions

allulose

  • Granulated erythritol or a 1:1 erythritol-monk fruit blend: works well in the pastry and apple filling but will crystallize as the caramel cools, giving a slightly grainy texture rather than a smooth sauce. Still delicious, just not as silky.
  • Monk fruit sweetener labeled 1:1 sugar replacement: follow the same amounts. Look for a blend that includes erythritol or allulose as the base for best caramelization results.
blanched almond flour

  • Sunflower seed flour (same weight): a good nut-free alternative that behaves similarly, though the crust will be slightly greener in color due to the natural chlorophyll in sunflower seeds.
  • Do not substitute all-purpose flour or oat flour 1:1 — the fat content and protein structure are too different and the pastry will not hold together.
tapioca starch

  • Arrowroot starch (same amount): behaves nearly identically and is a great swap with no noticeable difference in the finished crust.
  • Cornstarch (same amount): works in a pinch, though the crust may be very slightly less tender.
unsalted butter (pastry)

  • Vegan butter sticks such as Miyoko’s (same weight, kept very cold): produces a comparable flaky crust. Avoid spreadable tub-style vegan butter, which has too much water and will make the dough greasy.
  • Solid refined coconut oil (same weight, frozen and grated): gives a slightly crispier crust with a mild coconut note.
heavy cream

  • Full-fat coconut cream (same amount): makes the caramel dairy-free with a subtle coconut flavor that is actually lovely with the apples. Shake the can well before measuring.
  • Half-and-half: the caramel will be slightly thinner and less rich, but still works.
egg (in pastry)

  • 1 flax egg (1 tbsp ground golden flaxseed plus 3 tbsp water, rested 5 minutes): binds the dough adequately but the crust will be more crumbly and less cohesive. Handle gently and chill well before rolling.

Instructions

🔧 Equipment

🥣large mixing bowl
🥣light-colored medium saucepan
🍴long-handled wooden spoon or silicone spatula
🧁plastic wrap
🪵rolling pin
📄two sheets of parchment paper
📋large rimmed baking sheet
🖌️pastry brush
🍳10-inch cast-iron skillet (for skillet method)
💨air fryer (for air fryer method)
🍴offset spatula
🔵wire cooling rack
🔪sharp knife and cutting board
⚖️kitchen scale (strongly recommended)



Prep: 35 minutes
Bake: 30 to 35 minutes at 375°F (190°C)
Total: 1 hour 30 minutes
  1. Make the pastry: In a large bowl, whisk together almond flour, tapioca starch, 15g allulose, and fine sea salt. Add the cold butter cubes and use your fingertips to quickly work the butter into the flour mixture until it resembles coarse crumbs with a few pea-sized pieces remaining. Speed matters here — you want the butter to stay cold.
  2. Add the cold egg and ice water to the flour mixture. Use a fork, then your hands, to bring the dough together. It will be softer than a traditional wheat pastry. If it feels too dry to hold together, add ice water one teaspoon at a time. Shape into a flat disk, wrap tightly in plastic wrap, and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes. This rest is not optional — it firms the butter and relaxes the dough so it rolls without cracking.
  3. Make the allulose caramel: Place 120g allulose in a light-colored medium saucepan over medium heat. Do not stir. Watch closely — allulose browns faster than regular sugar and at a lower temperature. When the edges begin to melt and turn amber (about 3 to 4 minutes), gently swirl the pan. When the entire surface is a deep amber color (it will look slightly darker than traditional caramel), immediately remove from heat.
  4. Carefully pour in the room-temperature heavy cream — it will bubble aggressively, so stand back and use a long-handled spoon. Stir vigorously until smooth. Add 30g butter and stir until melted. Stir in vanilla extract and a small pinch of sea salt. The caramel will be very fluid while hot and will thicken slightly as it cools. Set aside to cool to room temperature (about 20 minutes).
  5. Prepare the apples: Toss the sliced apples with cinnamon, nutmeg, cardamom, and 10g allulose. Set aside. Preheat your oven to 375°F (190°C) and line a large rimmed baking sheet with parchment paper.
  6. Roll the pastry: Place the chilled dough between two sheets of parchment paper. Roll out to a roughly 13-inch circle, about 1/8 inch thick — do not worry about perfect edges, the rustic look is the charm. Transfer the bottom parchment sheet with the dough onto your prepared baking sheet.
  7. Spread 3 tablespoons of the cooled caramel sauce over the pastry, leaving a 2-inch border. Arrange the spiced apple slices in overlapping concentric circles (or simply in an even layer if you prefer a more casual look) over the caramel. Drizzle another 2 tablespoons of caramel over the apples.
  8. Fold the pastry border up and over the edges of the apples, pleating as you go. Press gently to help the pleats adhere. Brush the folded crust with egg wash and sprinkle with a pinch of flaky sea salt.
  9. Bake for 30 to 35 minutes, until the crust is deep golden brown and the apples are tender when pierced with a knife tip. Check at 25 minutes — almond flour crusts can go from golden to over-baked quickly. If the edges are browning too fast, tent loosely with foil.
  10. Allow the galette to cool on the pan for at least 15 minutes before slicing — this allows the caramel to set slightly. Drizzle remaining caramel over individual slices when serving. Serve with whipped cream or crème fraiche if desired.
Prep: 35 minutes
Bake: 18 to 22 minutes at 325°F (160°C)
Total: 1 hour 20 minutes
This method works best for smaller individual galettes rather than one large one. Divide the dough and filling into 4 personal-sized galettes (about 5 inches each) to fit your air fryer basket. The crust comes out wonderfully crisp on the bottom.
  1. Prepare the pastry, caramel, and apple filling exactly as directed in steps 1 through 5 of the oven method. Make sure the caramel is cooled to room temperature before assembling.
  2. Divide the chilled dough into 4 equal portions. Roll each between parchment into a rough 6-inch circle, about 1/8 inch thick. You will work in batches of 1 to 2 depending on your air fryer size.
  3. Spread about 1.5 teaspoons of caramel on each pastry round, leaving a 1.5-inch border. Divide the apple filling evenly among the rounds, arranging in a slightly mounded layer. Fold and pleat the edges up over the apples. Brush with egg wash and sprinkle with flaky salt.
  4. Cut a piece of parchment to fit your air fryer basket. Place 1 to 2 galettes (depending on basket size) on the parchment in the basket. Do not stack.
  5. Air fry at 325°F (160°C) for 18 to 22 minutes, checking at 15 minutes. The crust should be a deep, even golden brown and the apples completely tender. Allulose browns faster than sugar, so a lower temperature prevents the crust from over-darkening before the apples are cooked through. If the tops look done before 18 minutes, reduce to 300°F (150°C) for the remaining time.
  6. Remove carefully using a wide spatula and cool on a wire rack for 10 minutes before serving. Drizzle with remaining caramel and serve warm.
Prep: 35 minutes
Bake: 5 minutes stovetop plus 25 to 30 minutes oven
Total: 1 hour 30 minutes
Cooking the galette in a cast-iron skillet gives the bottom crust an exceptional crispness that a baking sheet cannot match. The skillet retains and radiates heat from below, essentially frying the crust base for the first few minutes. This is the method for serious crust lovers.
  1. Prepare the pastry, caramel, and apple filling exactly as directed in steps 1 through 5 of the oven method. Preheat your oven to 375°F (190°C). Place a 10-inch cast-iron skillet over medium-low heat on the stovetop and let it warm for 5 minutes.
  2. Roll the chilled dough between two sheets of parchment to a 13-inch circle. Carefully peel off the top parchment sheet and use the bottom sheet to help you lower the dough into the warm (not hot) skillet — it will drape over the edges. Work quickly so the cold dough does not begin to melt from the skillet’s heat.
  3. Spread 3 tablespoons of cooled caramel over the pastry base, leaving a 2-inch border. Layer the spiced apple slices evenly and drizzle with another 2 tablespoons of caramel. Fold and pleat the overhanging dough up over the fruit edge, pressing the pleats gently to hold.
  4. Increase the stovetop heat to medium and cook for exactly 3 minutes without disturbing — you will hear a gentle sizzle as the bottom crust sets and begins to crisp. This is building the crunch. Do not lift the edges to check yet.
  5. Transfer the skillet carefully to the preheated oven (use heavy oven mitts — the handle will be hot). Bake for 25 to 30 minutes until the crust is deep golden and the apples are completely tender. Brush with egg wash after the first 10 minutes of oven time, as it is easier to apply once the crust has set.
  6. Remove from the oven and allow to rest in the skillet for 15 minutes. Run an offset spatula carefully under the galette to loosen, then slide onto a cutting board to slice. Drizzle with remaining caramel and finish with flaky sea salt.

Nutrition Per Serving

Per 1 serving (makes one 10-inch rustic galette)

295Calories
18gCarbs
2gSugar
26gFat
6gProtein

Glycemic Load4Low
Low0–10
Medium11–19
High20+
Allulose has a glycemic index of approximately 0. While it is structurally a sugar, roughly 90 percent is excreted without being metabolized, meaning it does not raise blood glucose or insulin levels. The remaining carbohydrate load in this galette comes primarily from the apple slices and tapioca starch.

Sweetener: allulose

Why This Recipe Works

Allulose is the hero of this recipe, and it earns that title. Chemically, allulose is a monosaccharide classified as a rare sugar — it exists naturally in tiny amounts in figs, raisins, and wheat. While it is structurally similar to fructose, the body does not metabolize it the same way: roughly 90 percent is absorbed in the small intestine and excreted in urine without being converted to energy. Its glycemic index is effectively zero. More importantly for baking, allulose undergoes the Maillard reaction and caramelization at temperatures close to regular sugar, which is why this caramel actually browns and develops complex flavor. The key difference is that allulose caramelizes at a slightly lower temperature and moves faster than sucrose, which is why the recipe specifies a light-colored pan and constant vigilance. There is no forgiveness for a distracted cook here — amber to burnt can happen in under 60 seconds.

The almond flour pastry works because almond flour is high in fat (naturally from the almonds) and low in starch, which means there is no gluten development to toughen the crust. Instead, the fat from both the butter and the almond flour creates a tender, almost shortbread-like texture. The addition of tapioca starch is crucial: it provides just enough binding starch to give the crust structural integrity so it holds its folded shape without cracking apart. Without it, an all-almond-flour crust tends to crumble when you try to pleat the edges. The cold butter and cold egg must stay cold throughout mixing — any warmth melts the butter into the flour instead of leaving distinct pieces, and it is those butter pieces that create steam in the oven and produce the characteristic flaky layers.

If your caramel seizes up when you add the cream, do not panic. Return the pan to low heat and stir gently — the hardened bits will dissolve. This happens when cold cream hits the molten allulose, causing rapid crystallization. Using room-temperature cream dramatically reduces this risk. If your pastry cracks while rolling, let it sit at room temperature for 3 to 4 minutes to soften very slightly before trying again. Cracks usually mean the dough is too cold, not that something has gone wrong.

Baker’s Tips

  • Use a light-colored or stainless saucepan for the caramel, not a dark nonstick pan. You need to see the color change clearly — allulose goes from clear to amber to burnt very quickly and a dark pan hides the color.
  • Allulose caramel will look slightly runnier than sugar-based caramel at the same stage. Trust the color (deep amber) rather than the consistency when deciding when to pull it off the heat.
  • Granny Smith apples are ideal because their firm texture and tartness hold up during baking and balance the caramel’s richness. Softer apples like McIntosh will turn mushy.
  • Do not skip the 30-minute dough chill. The almond flour dough is high in fat and needs to firm up before rolling or it will stick and tear.
  • Slice the apples consistently at 1/4 inch thick. Too thin and they turn to mush; too thick and they will still be slightly firm when the crust is fully baked.
  • If the caramel sauce thickens too much as it cools, stir in a teaspoon of warm water and it will loosen right back up.
  • Rolling the dough between two sheets of parchment means no sticking and no extra flour, which is important because adding extra flour would throw off the already-balanced ratio in an almond flour dough.

Variations

  • Pear and Ginger: Swap the apples for firm Bosc pears and replace the cardamom with 1 teaspoon freshly grated ginger and 1/4 teaspoon ground ginger for a warming, aromatic variation.
  • Peach and Raspberry: In summer, use 600g sliced peaches and 80g fresh raspberries in place of apples. Reduce cinnamon to 1/2 tsp and omit the nutmeg. The caramel is exceptional with stone fruit.
  • Chocolate Almond Crust: Add 15g unsweetened cocoa powder to the pastry dough in place of 15g of the almond flour for a subtly chocolatey crust that pairs beautifully with tart apples.
  • Dairy-Free Version: Use vegan butter sticks in the pastry and coconut cream in the caramel. Replace the egg wash with a brush of full-fat coconut milk. The result is fully dairy-free with minimal impact on flavor or texture.

Troubleshooting & FAQ

My allulose caramel turned dark and bitter before I could add the cream. What went wrong?
Allulose caramelizes faster than regular sugar and at a lower heat, so medium heat is the maximum you should use. If your burner runs hot, try medium-low. Have your room-temperature cream measured and right next to the stove before you turn on the heat — the moment you see deep amber color, you need to act within seconds. If the caramel does taste slightly bitter, it is likely over-cooked. Unfortunately, bitterness cannot be fixed once it happens; start a fresh batch. The good news is allulose is relatively inexpensive.
My pastry cracked when I tried to fold up the edges. How do I prevent this?
Cracking during pleating usually means the dough is too cold and too rigid. Let the rolled-out dough sit at room temperature for 3 to 5 minutes before folding — it becomes more pliable. If a crack does form, simply press it back together with your fingers and smooth it with a bit of egg wash. Almond flour dough is very forgiving about being patched because there is no gluten to tighten up.
The bottom of my galette is soggy. What can I do differently next time?
Three things cause a soggy bottom: too much caramel on the base layer, apples that released a lot of liquid during baking, and a baking surface that did not get hot enough. Stick to 3 tablespoons of caramel on the base — resist the urge to add more. Make sure your oven is fully preheated. For best results, place the baking sheet on the bottom third of the oven where the heat is most direct, or use the cast-iron skillet method, which virtually guarantees a crisp base by pre-heating the cooking surface.
Why does my crust look pale and blonde rather than golden brown?
Almond flour crusts do brown — but they need adequate time and heat. If your galette looks pale at the 25-minute mark, check that your oven temperature is accurate (many home ovens run 25°F cooler than their dial indicates — an inexpensive oven thermometer is worth every penny). Also make sure you brushed the crust with egg wash, which promotes browning significantly. If the filling is done but the crust is still pale, you can move the galette to the upper third of the oven for the final 5 minutes.
My caramel hardened completely as it cooled and is not pourable. Is it ruined?
This can happen if your allulose contains erythritol as a filler (check the label) — erythritol is the ingredient that crystallizes when cool. If you are using pure allulose, a thick or slightly stiff caramel simply means it has cooled too much. Gently reheat it in a small saucepan over low heat with a teaspoon of warm water, stirring until it becomes fluid again. It will not break or separate.

Storage & Make-Ahead

  • Storage: Store leftover galette loosely covered at room temperature for up to 1 day, or refrigerate for up to 4 days. The crust will soften in the fridge — reheat slices at 325°F (160°C) for 8 to 10 minutes (or in an air fryer at 300°F for 5 minutes) to restore crispness. Store any remaining caramel sauce in a sealed jar in the refrigerator for up to 2 weeks.
  • Make-Ahead: The pastry dough can be made up to 2 days ahead and refrigerated, or frozen (wrapped tightly) for up to 1 month — thaw overnight in the refrigerator before rolling. The allulose caramel sauce can be made up to 2 weeks ahead and stored in the refrigerator. Warm gently before using. The galette is best baked the day you plan to serve it.


Leave a Comment