The most delicious Chocolate Chip Granola Bars made from leftover almond pulp! Or you can just use blanched almond flour if you prefer. These are full of flavor, are vegan, gluten-free, dairy-free and oil-free and only 8 ingredients! SO much better than store-bought!
I make my own homemade almond milk. It’s ridiculously easy and SO MUCH better than store bought. Honestly, I make mine on the thick side, so it is almost like cream. I use organic almonds as well, and I swear that increases the clean smell and flavor of the milk as well. It smells just like pure sweet almond oil.
Anyways, the only issue I have had when making almond milk is what to do with the leftover almond pulp. I hate to admit, I’ve thrown it away too many times. I have made a few recipes with it and haven’t been pleased with how they’ve turned out….typically too soggy of results. The almond pulp has tons of moisture in it, so it doesn’t work exactly the same as almond flour in every recipe. But for these bars specifically, the almond pulp finally worked well….without having to dry/dehydrate it first. Score.
So, I finally came up with these amazingly, delicious chocolate chip bars. The almond pulp makes them so moist and chewy. These have a slight crisp on the outside, but soft and chewy on the inside. These almond chocolate chip bars are only 8 ingredients, vegan, gluten-free and oil-free!
A lot of sites/blogs are copying/stealing this recipe and posting it on their site as their own, without ANY CREDIT. It’s shameful and disgusting behavior. Please have respect to my hard work, create your OWN RECIPES and do not repost my recipe on your site, if you are inspired, link and give credit properly, but do not post my recipe on your site.

Almond Pulp Makes The Best Chocolate Chip Bars
Ingredients
- 1 cup (107g) almond pulp or 1 cup (112g) blanched almond flour
- 1/2 cup + 2 tablespoons( 200g) pure maple syrup, room temperature (or agave)
- 1/4 cup (32g) ground flaxseed
- 1 cup (100g) gluten-free whole rolled oats, NOT quick oats
- 2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
- 1/2 teaspoon fine sea salt
- 1/2 cup (120g) mini dairy-free chocolate chips (I use Enjoy Life)
- 1/2 cup (128g) creamy roasted almond butter
- 2 teaspoons (10g) vanilla extract
Note
- This recipe does not require you to use a dehydrator or "cook" your almond pulp before using it! But because of this, there is more moisture in it than almond flour. You can use regular blanched almond flour as well for this recipe, just note that the baking times below are slightly different. They are delicious either way.
NOTE
- I always recommend to use a scale for accuracy when baking, following MY gram weights listed, since we all measure differently. Please understand that using your measuring cups and comparing them to the weights I have listed will likely vary. In fact, you don't even need to get out the cups to do this, it is not needed if you just follow my weights listed. I always test my recipes specifically using the WEIGHT LISTED. Keep in mind, so many measuring cups, even if they all state 1/2 cup, for example, will still slightly vary in size. I've noticed this myself with several different measuring cups I own! This is also why your measurements will vary. For this reason, weighing is the only TRUE way to get the exact result. Just use the scale and bowl and make sure to zero out in between each ingredient.
- I use this scale.
Instructions
- Before following the recipe, if you are using homemade almond pulp, make sure you have squeezed out the excess moisture out really well, from preparing the almond milk. Papertowel dry it and store in the fridge overnight, as this helps to dry it out some. You do not need a dehydrator or to bake it to dry it out, but you also don't want it too wet or to use it immediately after making your almond milk, because it could make the bars too wet.
- Preheat an oven to 350 degrees and line a 9X5 loaf pan with parchment paper hanging over the sides for easy removal later. Do you use a different size or bigger pan, otherwise the bars will be too thin and not bind well or hold their shape. They are meant to be thick bars like in the photos.
- Mix the syrup and flaxseed in a cup well with a fork and set aside for 10 minutes to gel up. Do not skip this step, as it is what acts as the "egg" and binds the bars to hold their shape.
- In a large bowl, combine the almond pulp (or almond flour), oats, cinnamon and salt and whisk well. Stir in the chocolate chips. I prefer mini because they disburse well and stay in tact better.
- After the 10 minutes is up for the syrup and flaxseed mixture, stir in the almond butter and vanilla until very smooth. Pour over the dry ingredients and stir for a couple of minutes until very sticky and absorbed, pressing with the back of your spoon to help mix.
- Add the dough to the loaf pan and spread out evenly and flat with a rubber spatula. You can slightly dampen your fingers to help press it down around the edges, as it will be sticky.
- For dough using almond pulp, bake for 30-32 minutes until very golden brown and firm on top. For dough using almond flour, bake about 27-30 minutes until very golden brown and firm on top.
Important
- Cool 1 hour before cutting, or they will fall apart. They firm up a lot as they cool. If desired, melt some chocolate chips and drizzle the tops for added sweetness or for presentation purposes. Honestly, they are plenty delicious without it, I just did it more for looks. Slice very carefully into 8 bars. Wrap each individually in plastic wrap and store in the fridge. They will hold their shape very well this way and it makes for an easy grab-and-go snack!




Hi thank you so much for this recipe it looks amazing
Just wanting to confirm the amount of maple syrup
It says 200 g but next to it says half a cup
is this a typo?
I don’t know any cut measurements they are 400 g 200 g sounds more like one cup and not half a cup
Kind regards,
Cherry
Hi! It’s 1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons. Which is 200 grams. Each tablespoon of syrup weighs 20 grams, so at 10 tablespoons, it’s 200 grams 😊
Wow, these are delicious. By far the best way to utilise almond milk pulp. Will definitely be making these regularly!
Thank you 🙏
Can I use Hazelnut butter instead of Almond butter?
You can try it, but hazelnut butter is much more naturally oily and runny, so the bars may be more fragile and greasy. Let me know if you try it!
These are fabulous!!! Was just wondering protein rating?? But they are very good and keep you full for a good long time!!
Hi Brandi,
These granola bars were perfect. Thank you so much for all the effort you put into your recipes. This is the third recipe I’ve tried from your site and each of them have been foolproof. You clearly test them multiple times which is not the case for all sites. I’ve been raising my family on a vegan diet for over two years now and have found your recipes to be unique in that they are very wholesome with clean ingredients. It will be my “go to” site from now on. Thank you again.
That is so kind to hear all of this, yay!! Thank you so much for your sweet compliments, Satin!
Good morning, I made these the other day and love them. very tasty, not too sweet. I did use quick oats and they worked well. when i measured the oats i put my cup into the bag and filled it that way so it was quite full.
i melted the chips and put on top, i used the lily brand so when i melted them they wouldnt drizzle so i just spread a thin layer on top. so good. i have been telling my friends.
These are really good! What a great way to use up almond pulp. Healthy too! Thank you for sharing this recipe.
So relate to what you say about almond pulp. And now, with this recipe our dilemma is solved. Love love love it. Thank you for sharing
I adore these bars. There are my go to for a quick healthy snack. Thank you so much for your ingenuity in using up almond pulp. I made my own almond milk for a long time and love using it up in these bars! I always double them and individually wrap and freeze. So yummy. Thank you!!
Yum! Slowly transitioning to vegan for health reasons and so happy to have found this blog. These granola bars are DELICIOUS and pretty easy to create. I made a double batch and I’m so glad I did.
This is the best recipe for using almond pulp that I’ve found! I used raisins and extra cinnamon instead of chocolate. My mixture wasn’t staying together, so I added another flax egg. I had to bake it longer because of the extra egg, and it turned out great! This is going into the weekly rotation. They are pretty dense and chewy, so they make a great breakfast bar.
So glad you loved these! Yes, I love the chewiness of these too! The mixture firms up while baking and mainly while cooling, so you didn’t need another flax if measured correctly, but glad to hear it all worked out!
These bars are fantastic! Best way to use my almond pulp. Husband and son loved them !
So awesome to hear that!!
These were just wonderful, delicious and satisfying and sweet and chocolaty. I’m not a fan of vegan baked goods, but I had almond pulp left from making almond milk and it’s not easy to find uses for it. AND my husband liked these (he’s very much a butter and eggs type person.)
I followed the directions exactly except for Ghirardelli mini chips (OK, I added some extra mini-chips!) and baked for an extra 5 minutes because top seemed a bit too soft. I followed the advice to weigh the ingredients. The texture was very nice.
Yay that is awesome!!
Is there anything that would work to replace the oats? I’m out at the moment and would love a sub recommendation 🙂 thank you!
Hi Jess! I’m sorry but the base of the texture and main binding is oats, so without them, they’d fall apart. I’d wait to make them until you get oats.
How could I incorporate cocoa into this recipe? Thank you.
I made these todsy, although I didn’t fully read the instructions prior to starting and I actually dried my pulp, but it made the pulp smell so damn good and I think it really adds to the flavor. I too, used natural peanut butter and they came out very delucious, im curious as to why not using quick cook oats is recommended as I feel the old fashion rolled didn’t quite cook enough to be as soft as I’d like. They stick in my teeth a but, but the flavor is fantastic. So delicious and so yummy. Thank you for this. Also I will weigh the ingredients next time. Maybe that will fix it. Thank you. So yummy.
Hi Jamie, so happy you enjoyed them! Using quick oats are much smaller and would be more like using flour here, which would make these quite dry. The reason yours didn’t cook through as well is because peanut butter is much drier and more stiff than almond butter. Really creamy roasted almond butter is much higher in natural oils and makes things a lot more moist than peanut butter, so it does work best here in the bars. And yes, weighing always makes a huge difference in baking! 🙂
Have you calculated nutritional information on this recipe?
Have you tried this recipe using dates or date syrup in place of the maple syrup? That’s the only ingredient I’d prefer to avoid. Thoughts?
No I haven’t. I’ve never used date syrup. Feel free to experiment, I just can’t guarantee results without having tested it. If it’s a similar texture as syrup, it may work.
okay i made this last night and let me tell u it is AMAZING! I was impatient to let it cool the full hour- i only waited 40 min and it crumbled when i cut into it. After that i decided to pop it in the fridge overnight and let me tell you its EVEN BETTER COLD! So healthy and delicious! the fam loved it (:
I made this today, had some almond pulp from making almond milk. It is easy to make and it tastes really good! My little one loved it. How long do they last in the fridge? Can you freeze them once already cut? Would adding walnuts or almonds work? Thank you for this and all your amazing recipes!
That is wonderful Karina! They will last about a week in the fridge or so! Yes, you can freeze them!
I have made these several times and they are sooooo good. I am allergic to almond, though, so I make my own cashew milk and us the pulp for these, along with cashew butter. Several friends have tried them and asked for the recipe.
Hi, do you have an alternative to the rolled oats?
Thanks Becky
Hi Becky, the oats are a big part of the recipe and texture, so it is what will work best. I haven’t tried it with anything else, but the only thing I can think of is trying it with quinoa flakes.
Can I use hazelnut pulp? Thank you!
Yes, I think that should work well! I’ve never tried it, but I imagine it would be delicious.
I just started making my own almond milk, and this looks like a yummy way to use up the left over almond pulp. For now, I can’t do maple syrup. Would this work with lakanto’s classic sweetener? It’s a 1:1 substitute for white sugar.
Hi Chloe! I’ve never used that so I don’t know, but you can certainly try it as long as it’s a liquid and similar sweetness.
Hi, thanks for getting back to me Brandi! No, lakanto’s classic sweetener it’s not a liquid sweetener, it’s a white granular sweetener that’s just like white sugar (but without the carbs!). I could make it into a simpler syrup if it has to be liquid. I guess I’ll try that. Fingers crossed it turns out!
I inadvertently used 1 cup of almond butter and
wow they are delicious.
So happy to hear that Anber!
What a wonderful idea! I make almond milk every other day and I always have pulp left over these bars are great so easy to make and delicious. I’m thinking a turning them in to energy balls thank you so much for a wonderful recipe! Just a little note, I added a tbsp of date paste also. By the way I like your website and book. Thank you so much Brandi