Keto Recipe
Keto Pumpkin Cheesecake Recipe: Silky, Spiced, and Only 6g Net Carbs Per Slice
Can you make a keto-friendly cheesecake that actually tastes like a real dessert? This keto pumpkin cheesecake proves you can — a velvety cream cheese and pumpkin filling spiced with cinnamon, nutmeg, and ginger, set on a buttery almond flour crust, and chilled until perfectly firm. Each slice delivers rich autumnal flavour at just 6g net carbs.
Cheesecake is one of the most naturally keto-friendly desserts because its primary ingredients — cream cheese, eggs, and fat — are already low in carbohydrates. The only thing that needs replacing is the biscuit base and the added sugar. This recipe handles both elegantly, and the pumpkin spice filling turns a classic into something seasonal and extraordinary.
Why Keto Pumpkin Cheesecake Works
Pumpkin purée contains approximately 5g net carbs per ½ cup — modest enough to fold into a keto dessert without blowing the macros. It also acts as a natural binder, contributing to the silky, dense texture that makes this cheesecake so satisfying. The almond flour crust replaces graham crackers or digestive biscuits at a fraction of the carbs, with a buttery, slightly nutty flavour that pairs beautifully with the warm spiced filling.
Ingredients You Will Need
For the Almond Flour Crust
- 1½ cups (150g) almond flour
- 3 tablespoons (45g) unsalted butter, melted
- 2 tablespoons erythritol or powdered sweetener
- Pinch of salt
For the Pumpkin Cheesecake Filling
- 450g (16 oz) full-fat cream cheese, room temperature
- ¾ cup (180g) pumpkin purée (not pumpkin pie mix)
- 3 large eggs
- ½ cup (100g) erythritol or granulated sweetener
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1½ teaspoons cinnamon
- ½ teaspoon ground nutmeg
- ½ teaspoon ground ginger
- ¼ teaspoon ground cloves
How to Make Keto Pumpkin Cheesecake: Step-by-Step
- Make the crust: Preheat oven to 160°C (325°F). Combine almond flour, melted butter, sweetener, and salt. Press firmly and evenly into the base of a greased 23cm (9-inch) springform tin. Bake for 10 minutes until lightly golden. Remove and cool.
- Make the filling: Beat the room-temperature cream cheese until completely smooth — no lumps. Add the sweetener and beat again. Add pumpkin purée, vanilla, and all the spices and mix until fully incorporated. Add eggs one at a time, mixing on low speed just until each is combined. Over-mixing eggs after adding creates cracks.
- Bake: Pour the filling over the cooled crust. Bake at 160°C for 50–55 minutes — the edges should be set but the centre should still have a gentle wobble. A fully-set centre at this stage will crack as it cools.
- Cool slowly: Turn off the oven and leave the cheesecake inside with the door slightly ajar for 1 hour. This prevents the dramatic temperature change that causes cracking.
- Chill and serve: Remove from the oven and cool to room temperature, then refrigerate for a minimum of 4 hours — overnight gives the best set texture. Run a knife around the edge before releasing the springform. Slice with a hot knife for clean cuts.
Tips for a Crack-Free Keto Cheesecake
- Room temperature cream cheese is non-negotiable. Cold cream cheese doesn’t beat smooth and leaves lumps in the batter. Take it out of the fridge 2 hours before you start.
- Don’t over-beat after adding the eggs. Mix just until each egg disappears. Over-aeration of the egg proteins causes the cheesecake to puff in the oven and crack as it falls on cooling.
- Cool in the oven, slowly. The slow temperature drop is what keeps the surface intact.
- A water bath (bain-marie) is optional but produces an even more luxurious, crack-proof result. Wrap the tin’s exterior in foil and set in a roasting pan filled with 2cm of hot water.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is pumpkin keto-friendly? Yes, in moderate portions. Pumpkin purée contains approximately 9–10g total carbs per ½ cup, with roughly 4–5g net carbs after fibre. In this recipe, the pumpkin is distributed across multiple servings, keeping net carbs per slice well within keto limits.
Can I make keto pumpkin cheesecake ahead? Yes — it actually improves overnight as the flavours meld and the texture firms. Make it up to 3 days ahead and refrigerate covered.
What sweetener works best in keto cheesecake? Erythritol or a monk fruit and erythritol blend gives the cleanest flavour with no bitter aftertaste. Avoid pure stevia in large amounts — it can turn bitter in baked goods.
Key Takeaways
- Room-temperature cream cheese and gentle egg mixing prevent cracks.
- Almond flour crust replaces biscuit base — buttery, low-carb, gluten-free.
- Approximately 6g net carbs per slice (based on 12 slices).
- Make ahead — the texture and flavour improve overnight.
- Classic pumpkin spice warmth in a keto-compliant dessert.
This keto pumpkin cheesecake is the dessert that ends the myth that eating low-carb means eating without pleasure. Make it once and it earns a permanent place in your entertaining repertoire.
Nutrition Per Slice (Approximate — based on 12 slices)
Calories: ~280 | Protein: ~7g | Net Carbs: ~6g | Fat: ~24g
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