Banana Pudding Ice Cream Recipe

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This Banana Pudding Ice Cream is creamy, soft-scoop straight from the freezer, and packed with real banana flavor and vanilla wafer crunch — no churn required.

It’s designed specifically for home bakers who don’t own fancy equipment. Just a bowl, a mixer, and your freezer. I tested different fat ratios and banana amounts to make sure it doesn’t turn icy or dense.

Follow the texture cues, and you’ll get a smooth, mousse-like base that freezes into perfect, nostalgic scoops every time.

This version is perfect when you don’t own an ice cream machine and only have a hand mixer or whisk.


Why This Recipe Works

Banana ice cream often turns icy or grainy. Here’s why this one doesn’t:

  1. Sweetened condensed milk lowers the freezing point.
    Sugar binds water molecules, preventing large ice crystals. That’s why no-churn ice cream stays creamy.
  2. Fat = smooth texture.
    Heavy cream (35–40% fat) traps air when whipped. Those tiny air pockets create a lighter, scoopable structure.
  3. Bananas added late prevent weeping.
    Bananas release water over time. Folding them in gently at the end keeps the base stable and prevents icy pockets.
  4. Crushed wafers absorb moisture.
    Instead of turning soggy, the wafers soften slightly and mimic classic banana pudding texture.

Did you know? If bananas are added too early and aggressively mixed, the enzymes can break down the structure and make the base watery.


Ingredients

  • Heavy whipping cream — 480 g (2 cups) — provides structure and air
  • Sweetened condensed milk — 397 g (1 can / 14 oz) — sweetness + anti-freeze effect
  • Ripe bananas (mashed) — 240 g (2 medium) — flavor + natural sweetness
  • Vanilla extract — 5 g (1 tsp) — enhances banana flavor
  • Fine salt — 1 g (¼ tsp) — balances sweetness
  • Vanilla wafer cookies — 100 g (about 25 cookies) — texture + pudding vibe
  • Optional: 10 ml (2 tsp) lemon juice — prevents banana browning

Banana tip: Use spotty ripe bananas. Green = starchy, over-black = fermented flavor.


Equipment

Required

  • 8-inch loaf pan (or 1L freezer container)
  • Hand mixer or stand mixer
  • Large mixing bowl (cold preferred)
  • Rubber spatula
  • Freezer (-18°C / 0°F)

Nice-to-have

  • Digital scale (recommended)
  • Parchment for lining
  • Ice cream scoop dipped in warm water

Step-by-Step Instructions

Step 1: Prep the Bananas (5 minutes)

Mash 240 g bananas with lemon juice (optional).
Visual cue: Smooth but slightly textured — not liquid. Small lumps are fine.

Set aside.


Step 2: Whip the Cream (3–4 minutes)

In a chilled bowl, whip 480 g heavy cream on medium speed.

Visual cue: Medium peaks — when you lift the beater, the peak should gently curl like a soft hook.
Avoid this: Stiff peaks that stand straight up. That makes dense ice cream.

Checkpoint: If cream looks grainy or buttery, you over-whipped.


Step 3: Combine Base (2 minutes)

In a separate bowl, mix:

  • Condensed milk
  • Vanilla
  • Salt

Stir until smooth.

Gently fold this mixture into whipped cream using a spatula.

Visual cue: Thick, airy, mousse-like. No visible streaks.


Step 4: Fold in Bananas + Wafers (2 minutes)

Fold mashed bananas gently into base.

Crush wafers into chunks (not crumbs — pea-sized pieces are ideal). Fold in.

Visual cue: Even distribution, but mixture still fluffy.


Step 5: Freeze (6–8 hours)

Transfer to lined loaf pan. Smooth top.

Cover tightly with plastic wrap touching surface (prevents ice crystals).

Freeze at -18°C / 0°F for at least 6 hours.

Best texture: 8 hours.

Before scooping, let sit at room temp 5 minutes.


Doneness & Texture Check

  • After 6 hours: Firm edges, slightly soft center
  • After 8 hours: Uniformly set but scoopable
  • Internal temp ideal serving: around -12°C to -14°C (10–7°F)

If rock solid: freezer too cold or too little sugar.


Troubleshooting (Common Failures)

Problem: Ice cream icy
Likely cause: Low fat cream or over-mixing bananas
Fix: Use 35%+ cream; fold gently

Problem: Too hard to scoop
Likely cause: Reduced sugar
Fix: Do not reduce condensed milk; add 1 tbsp corn syrup next batch

Problem: Grainy texture
Likely cause: Over-whipped cream
Fix: Stop at medium peaks

Problem: Brown banana streaks
Likely cause: No lemon or overripe bananas
Fix: Add lemon juice; use ripe but not black bananas

Problem: Wafers soggy
Likely cause: Crushed too fine
Fix: Keep chunks larger

Problem: Bland flavor
Likely cause: Bananas not ripe enough
Fix: Use spotty bananas only


Substitutions & Variations

Egg-Free

Naturally egg-free.

Dairy-Free

  • Use 400 g full-fat coconut cream (chilled overnight)
  • Use 380 g sweetened condensed coconut milk
    Note: Slight coconut flavor present.

Gluten-Free

Use certified gluten-free vanilla cookies (100 g).

Lower Sugar Option

Replace 50 g condensed milk with 50 g thick Greek yogurt.
Texture slightly firmer.

Chocolate Banana Version

Fold in 60 g mini chocolate chips.


Scaling Guide

Pan SizeCreamCondensed MilkBanana
6-inch loaf (~750 ml)360 g300 g180 g
8-inch loaf (standard)480 g397 g240 g
Double batch960 g794 g480 g

Freeze time increases by 1–2 hours for double batch.


Storage, Make-Ahead & Freezing

Freezer:
Store tightly covered up to 2 months.

Best texture window:
Within 3 weeks.

Do not refreeze once melted. Ice crystals will form.

Make ahead tip:
Prepare 2 days before serving for best flavor development.


Serving Suggestions

  • Warm caramel drizzle
  • Extra crushed wafers on top
  • Layer into mini cups for party dessert
  • Serve with warm brownie for hot-cold contrast

Sweetness balance tip: Add a pinch of flaky salt before serving.


FAQs

Can I use frozen bananas?
Yes, but thaw and drain excess liquid first. Too much water = icy texture.

Can I halve the recipe?
Yes, halve all ingredients exactly by weight. Freeze time reduces to 5–6 hours.

Best cream fat percentage?
Minimum 35%. Lower fat = icy.

Can I churn this in an ice cream maker?
Yes. Chill base 2 hours, churn 20–25 minutes, then freeze 2 hours to firm.

Can I use OTG?
No baking involved — freezer only.


Notes From My Kitchen (Testing Log)

Batch 1: Used low-fat cream (25%). Result: icy and hard. Lesson — fat matters.

Batch 2: Over-whipped cream to stiff peaks. Result: dense, almost buttery texture.

Batch 3: Added bananas before folding condensed milk. Base deflated slightly.

Batch 4: Crushed wafers too fine. They disappeared into mush.

Batch 5 (Final Version): Medium peaks, gentle folding, pea-sized wafer chunks. Perfect soft-scoop texture after 8 hours.

What I learned: The folding stage determines texture more than anything else. Gentle hands win.


Nutrition (Approximate, Per Serving)

Calories: ~320
Fat: 20 g
Carbs: 32 g
Sugar: 26 g
Protein: 4 g

Values are estimates and vary by brand and portion size. Store at safe freezer temperature (-18°C / 0°F). Avoid consuming if left at room temperature over 2 hours.


Conclusion

This Banana Pudding Ice Cream is the kind of dessert that feels impressive but is secretly simple. No tempering eggs. No stovetop custard. Just understanding how fat, sugar, and air work together — and respecting those medium peaks.

Once you nail this method, you can adapt it endlessly: strawberry swirl, cookies and cream, peanut butter ribbon.

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