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TM31 · TM5 · TM6 · TM7

Chocolate Pudding with the Thermomix®

The perfect dessert! Our basic recipe for chocolate pudding using the TM31, TM5 or TM6.

Aktualisiert 21. June 2026
Direkt zum Rezept

Chocolate pudding with the Thermomix® is ready in 19 minutes and makes 4 servings. Just 4 ingredients: 100 g dark chocolate, 500 g milk, 30 g sugar, 20 g cornflour. No eggs and no packet mix, this is the family classic made from ingredients you always have at home.

We make it as a quick dessert for children’s birthday parties or as a warming winter treat. Around 220 kcal per serving. Compared to ready-made pudding from the chilled aisle (often with setting agents and artificial flavourings), the homemade version is more economical and its ingredients are completely transparent.

Recipe

Chocolate Pudding with the Thermomix®

by Tobias
Cook mode: screen stays on
Servings
4 servings

Ingredients 0 / 4 ✓

  • 100 g dark chocolate
  • 500 g milk
  • 30 g sugar
  • 20 g cornflour

Instructions 0 / 3

  1. 1

    Chop the chocolate.

    Break the chocolate into pieces, place in the mixing bowl and chop for 12 sec / speed 8.

  2. 2

    Bring the ingredients to the boil.

    Add the remaining ingredients to the mixing bowl and cook for 7 min / 100°C / speed 4.

  3. 3

    Serve the pudding.

    Pour the pudding mixture into small bowls and serve warm, or leave to cool.

Tip.

Tip: If the pudding is too firm, stir in a little milk.

Video

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More Information

Nutrition per serving

274
kcal
30g
Carbs
6g
Protein
15g
Fat
20g
Sugar

Dark chocolate vs. milk chocolate: why dark chocolate

100 g of dark chocolate with at least 70 per cent cocoa is the best choice. Milk chocolate would make the pudding too sweet (because 30 g of sugar goes in as well). Dark chocolate brings a grown-up chocolate flavour and balances the sweetness of the milk much better.

If you prefer it sweeter (children’s version): use milk chocolate and reduce the sugar to 15 g. For an extra-intense result: use 80 per cent dark chocolate. Above 85 per cent becomes too bitter, so increase the sugar to 45-50 g instead of 30 g.

No eggs: why we skip the classic approach

Classic pudding (along the lines of Creme Anglaise or Creme Patissiere) is thickened with egg yolks. We use cornflour instead of egg. Advantages: foolproof (no risk of curdling), no salmonella risk, suitable for vegans (with plant-based milk), and quicker (no tempering needed). Downside: slightly less rich and a little less silky.

If you want an egg-based pudding: add 2 egg yolks (chocolate, milk, sugar, egg). Cook for 8 min at 80°C instead of 7 min at 100°C, otherwise the egg will curdle. We chose the egg-free version because it is more reliable.

20 g cornflour: not more, not less

20 g cornflour to 500 g milk is the ideal ratio. More starch (30 g) makes the pudding too firm, almost like a set bar. Less starch (10 g) makes it too runny, closer to a sauce. 20 g gives the classic pudding consistency that holds on a spoon.

Potato starch and cornstarch both work equally well. Cornflour is the standard term here. If you use plain flour (Type 405): 30 g instead of 20 g. With flour the pudding will be slightly denser and less glossy.

Homemade Thermomix® chocolate pudding, creamy

100°C at speed 4: why this combination

7 minutes at 100°C on speed 4 is the ideal combination for activating the starch. Starch needs 95 to 100°C to swell and thicken fully. Below 90°C the pudding stays liquid. Speed 4 is fast enough for even stirring, yet slow enough to prevent the chocolate from splashing.

If you prefer a lower speed (speed 2 to 3): cook for 10 minutes. At a higher speed (speed 6 and above) air bubbles form and the pudding becomes foamy. Speed 4 is the sweet spot.

Four variations: vegan, with liqueur, with banana, with almonds

Vegan version: Use 500 g plant-based milk (oat or almond) instead of dairy milk, plus 1 tbsp coconut oil for creaminess. Works particularly well with unsweetened dark chocolate.

Grown-up version with liqueur: Stir in 30 g rum or amaretto after cooking. Turns a family pudding into an adult dessert.

Banana and chocolate: Blend 1 ripe banana and stir into the cooled pudding. The banana adds natural sweetness and creaminess. A children’s favourite.

With toasted almonds: Toast 30 g flaked almonds in a dry pan for 3 minutes, then scatter over the pudding. Adds crunch and a nutty depth.

Thermomix® chocolate pudding with toasted almonds

What to serve with chocolate pudding

Classic as a dessert after the main course. Also works as a topping for warm stewed apple, paired with vanilla ice cream, served with fresh berries (raspberries or strawberries), layered in trifles or dessert glasses, or piped from a piping bag to decorate cakes and cupcakes.

If you are looking for another chocolate dessert: our Thermomix® chocolate ice cream is the cold version. For a similar pudding in vanilla: our Thermomix® vanilla pudding.

Keeps for 3 days in the fridge, firms up as it chills

Stored in sealed dessert glasses in the fridge, the pudding keeps for 3 days. It sets after 2 hours and is at its best after 4 hours. Before storing, press cling film directly onto the surface to prevent a skin forming.

If you dislike the skin: cling film on the surface is essential. If you like the skin (the classic old-fashioned way): simply leave it uncovered. Freezing does not work: the starch separates on thawing and the pudding turns grainy.

Also delicious: Waffles and vanilla ice cream.

Our tip: Christmas pudding spice mix with the Thermomix®.

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