Healthy Gluten-Free Zucchini Muffins With Applesauce
These zucchini muffins are one of those recipes I reach for when I want something wholesome, not fussy, and reliably good. They’re naturally sweetened with dates and applesauce, use oat flour for a tender crumb, and include a little chocolate because life is better with chocolate. The result is moist, not greasy, and they handle a morning commute or a kiddo’s lunchbox with equal grace.
I like to think of this as a pantry-friendly recipe: most of the ingredients are shelf-stable or keep well in the fridge, and the method is straightforward. You don’t need a mixer—just a food processor and a bowl. Timing is also forgiving: the batter can wait a short while in the fridge if you need to prep something else.
Below you’ll find a clear shopping guide, ingredient notes, step-by-step instructions, and practical tips for baking, storing, and swapping items if you need to. These muffins freeze beautifully, so making a double batch is a smart idea.
Your Shopping Guide

- Dates (¾ cup, halved and packed / 140 grams) — Look for Medjool for softer texture; pitted and packed makes processing easiest.
- Zucchini (½ cup, grated) — Use medium-grated zucchini; squeeze only if it seems excessively watery, but a bit of moisture helps keep muffins tender.
- Unsweetened applesauce (¼ cup) — Adds moisture and natural sweetness; plain unsweetened is best to control sugar.
- Unsweetened vanilla almond milk (¼ cup) — Any unsweetened plant milk works; keeps muffins dairy-free and light.
- Vanilla extract (1 teaspoon) — Enhances flavor depth; pure extract is worth it.
- Egg or egg substitute (1) — Binds the batter; for vegan use a commercial egg replacer that matches one egg.
- Oat flour (1 cup / 103 grams) — Gluten-free when certified; provides structure with a soft crumb.
- Cinnamon (1 teaspoon) — Warms and balances sweetness.
- Baking powder (1 teaspoon) — Gives lift; check freshness for good rise.
- Salt (¼ teaspoon) — Small amount to brighten flavors.
- Mini chocolate chips (3 tablespoons) — Optional but delightful; small chips distribute through the batter without weighing it down.
Healthy Gluten-Free Zucchini Muffins With Applesauce: From Prep to Plate
Step-by-step Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 400°F (204°C). Lightly spray 7 cavities of a muffin tin with nonstick cooking spray and set aside.
- Place the halved, packed dates (¾ cup / 140 g) in a microwave-safe bowl. Microwave until just warm, about 30 seconds—this softens them and helps them break down in the food processor.
- Add the warmed dates to a large food processor along with the grated zucchini (½ cup), unsweetened applesauce (¼ cup), unsweetened vanilla almond milk (¼ cup), vanilla extract (1 teaspoon), and the egg or egg substitute (1). Process until combined, stopping once or twice to scrape down the sides. Small pieces of dates may remain visible; that’s fine.
- In a medium bowl, combine the oat flour (1 cup / 103 g), cinnamon (1 teaspoon), baking powder (1 teaspoon), and salt (¼ teaspoon). Whisk to distribute the leavening and cinnamon evenly.
- Pour the zucchini-and-dates mixture from the food processor into the dry ingredients. Stir gently until everything is well incorporated and there are no dry pockets of flour.
- Fold in the mini chocolate chips (3 tablespoons) until evenly distributed.
- Using an ice cream scoop or spoon, fill the 7 greased muffin cavities just over half full. The batter will yield nicely domed tops if you don’t overfill.
- Bake at 400°F for 20–22 minutes, until the muffins are browned on top and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.
- Remove the pan from the oven and let the muffins cool in the pan for 30 minutes. After 30 minutes, run a sharp knife around each muffin edge to loosen and transfer the muffins to a cooling rack to cool completely.
- Devour. These are great warm, at room temperature, or chilled—pick your pleasure.
Why It Deserves a Spot
These muffins balance nutrition and comfort. They use whole-food sweeteners and oat flour, which gives them a tender, slightly crumbly texture without refined white flour. Zucchini sneaks in extra moisture and a bit of veg, making them a smart swap for conventional muffins. They’re forgiving, naturally lower in added sugar, and versatile for breakfast, snack, or a lunchbox treat.
Quick Replacement Ideas

- Dates — Swap with the same volume of very soft raisins if needed, but flavor and texture will change slightly.
- Almond milk — Any unsweetened milk (cow’s, soy, oat) can substitute 1:1.
- Oat flour — If not gluten-free-sensitive, light whole wheat pastry flour may work, but start with ¾ cup and watch texture.
- Mini chocolate chips — Chopped dark chocolate or carob chips are fine alternatives.
- Egg — Use a commercial egg replacer equivalent to one egg or a flax “egg” (1 tbsp ground flax + 3 tbsp water, let sit 5 minutes) though results vary.
Equipment Breakdown

- Food processor (large, ~10 cups) — For blending dates and wet ingredients into a smooth base; a high-powered blender can work but you may need to chop dates first.
- Muffin tin — Standard-size with at least 7 cavities for this recipe.
- Measuring cups/scale — Oat flour is listed by weight (103 g); a kitchen scale improves consistency.
- Ice cream scoop or large spoon — For even portioning and domed tops.
- Cooling rack — Helps muffins finish cooling without sogginess.
Troubles You Can Avoid
- Gummy texture — Make sure baking powder is fresh. Old leavening gives poor rise and denser muffins.
- Too-wet batter — Grate zucchini to the medium size and lightly pat if it’s dripping; excessive liquid can make baking times inconsistent.
- Muffins sticking — Use nonstick spray or liners. Let muffins sit 30 minutes in the pan as directed; removing them too soon risks tearing.
- Uneven rise — Fill cups just over half full; overfilling leads to flat or cracked tops and uneven baking.
Make It Year-Round
Zucchini is abundant in summer, but frozen shredded zucchini works well when fresh isn’t available—thaw and drain lightly. Dates and applesauce keep year-round, so this recipe is a good candidate for batch baking in any season. Add a sprinkle of toasted nuts in fall for a seasonal twist, or swap in lemon zest in spring for brightness.
Insider Tips
- Warm dates, easier processing: Heating dates briefly makes them break down faster and blend more evenly with the other wet ingredients.
- Don’t overmix: Stir the dry and wet just until combined. Overworking oat flour can make muffins tough.
- Portioning trick: Use an ice cream scoop for uniform heights and quicker, more predictable baking.
- Test for doneness: Toothpick should come out clean; a few melted chocolate flecks are normal but no wet batter.
Keep-It-Fresh Plan
- Room temp: Store in an airtight container for up to 2 days.
- Refrigerate: Up to 5 days; bring to room temperature or warm briefly before serving for best texture.
- Freeze: Flash-freeze on a tray, then transfer to a freezer bag for up to 3 months. Thaw at room temp or microwave for 20–30 seconds.
Ask & Learn
Questions about swaps, making the recipe egg-free, or adjusting sweetness are common—ask and I’ll suggest tested options. If you want to scale this up, I can convert quantities for 12 muffins and adjust timing. Tell me what you have on hand and I’ll help adapt.
See You at the Table
These Healthy Gluten-Free Zucchini Muffins With Applesauce are simple, flexible, and friendly to busy mornings. They reward small, deliberate steps: warm the dates, measure the oat flour by weight if you can, and let the muffins rest in the pan before unmolding. Bake a batch, freeze half, and enjoy a ready-made, wholesome snack whenever you need it. Happy baking—and please let me know how yours turn out.

Healthy Gluten-Free Zucchini Muffins With Applesauce
Ingredients
- 3/4 cup dates, halved and packed 140 grams
- 1/2 cup zucchini, grated
- 1/4 cup unsweetened applesauce
- 1/4 cup unsweetened vanilla almond milk
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1 egg or egg substitute
- 1 cup oat flour 103 grams
- 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 3 tablespoons mini chocolate chips
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 400°F (204°C) and spray a 7-cavity muffin tin with nonstick cooking spray.
- Place the halved dates in a microwave-safe bowl and heat about 30 seconds until just warm.
- Transfer the warm dates to a food processor. Add the grated zucchini, applesauce, almond milk, vanilla, and egg (or egg substitute). Blend until combined, scraping the sides as needed; small date pieces remaining are fine.
- In a medium bowl, whisk together the oat flour, cinnamon, baking powder, and salt.
- Pour the zucchini-date mixture into the dry ingredients and stir until just combined, then fold in the mini chocolate chips.
- Divide the batter among the 7 prepared muffin cavities, filling each just over half full (an ice cream scoop helps create domed tops).
- Bake for 20–22 minutes, or until the tops are golden and a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean.
- Let the muffins cool in the pan for about 30 minutes, run a knife around the edges, then transfer the muffins to a cooling rack to cool completely.
- Serve and enjoy.
Equipment
- muffin tin (7-cavity)
- Nonstick cooking spray
- food processor or blender
- Microwave-safe Bowl
- medium mixing bowl
- spatula or spoon
- cooling rack
Notes
- Measure oat flour by gently spooning into the cup and leveling.
- Small bits of dates in the batter are normal and add texture.
- Use an ice cream scoop for even, domed muffins.
- If using an egg substitute, follow package instructions for one egg equivalent.
