Mom's Best Recipes
Recipe

Hearty Cocoa Pudding

A thick, cozy cocoa pudding steeped with fresh herbs for a subtle, surprising flavor that tastes like hot chocolate decided to put on a nice sweater.

Author By Matt Campbell
4.8
A rustic ceramic bowl filled with glossy dark cocoa pudding, topped with a small spoonful of whipped cream and a fresh mint sprig on a wooden table in warm window light

This is the dessert I make when I want something chocolatey and a little interesting, without turning my kitchen into a science fair. Think classic cocoa pudding: thick, spoon-coating, and unapologetically comforting. Now add a gentle herbal note that makes you pause mid-bite like, “Wait. What is that?” in the best way.

The trick is simple: we steep fresh herbs in the milk, then strain them out before the pudding thickens. You get aroma and depth, not leaf bits. It is cozy, grown-up, still kid-friendly, and it works with what you can grab at most grocery stores.

A small saucepan of milk with fresh mint and rosemary sprigs steeping, with gentle steam rising on a stovetop

Why It Works

  • Deep chocolate flavor without bitterness: Making a quick cocoa paste with warm dairy helps the cocoa dissolve smoothly and taste rounder.
  • Herb flavor that stays elegant: A short steep gives perfume, not “I ate a plant.” You strain before thickening so the texture stays silky.
  • Hearty, spoon-standing texture: A cornstarch plus egg yolk combo sets reliably and feels extra lush.
  • Flexible sweetness: Use brown sugar for a rounder, caramel vibe or white sugar for clean chocolate.

Pairs Well With

Storage Tips

Refrigerate: Press plastic wrap directly onto the pudding surface (this prevents a skin) and chill up to 4 days.

Single-serve jars: Portion into small jars or cups, then cover. Great for lunchbox desserts or a “midnight fridge spoon” situation.

To loosen after chilling: Pudding thickens as it sits. Stir in a splash of milk to get it silky again.

Freezing: Not my favorite. It can turn grainy and weepy when thawed. If you do it anyway, whisk aggressively after thawing and consider serving it as a semi-frozen dessert.

Common Questions

What herbs work best in cocoa pudding?

Mint is the most familiar and kid-friendly. Rosemary adds piney warmth that feels very “winter cozy.” Thyme is subtle and surprisingly chocolate-friendly. Start small, steep briefly, and taste.

Will it taste like toothpaste if I use mint?

Not if you steep gently and do not overdo it. Use fresh mint, keep the steep to about 10 to 15 minutes, and strain. Peppermint extract is where things can go full candy cane fast.

Can I make it without eggs?

Yes. Skip the yolks and increase the cornstarch by 2 teaspoons to 1 tablespoon (start with 2 teaspoons if you like it softer, go up to 1 tablespoon for a firmer set). The pudding will be a little less custardy but still thick, glossy, and very snackable.

Can I use non-dairy milk?

You can, with a small expectation reset. Use unsweetened oat milk for the creamiest result. Coconut milk works too, but it will bring coconut flavor. Whisk well and consider adding an extra 1 to 2 teaspoons of cornstarch if your plant milk is thin. If going egg-free and non-dairy, choose the higher end of the cornstarch range.

Why did my pudding get lumpy?

Usually one of two things: the cornstarch did not fully dissolve, or the yolks got too hot too fast. The fix is to make a cocoa-cornstarch paste first (see the steps) and temper slowly while whisking constantly. If lumps happen anyway, strain through a fine-mesh sieve at the end. Quietly iconic.

I started messing with herb-infused desserts because I love the idea of a familiar comfort food getting a tiny plot twist. Cocoa pudding is already a sure thing, but the first time I steeped mint in the milk, it tasted like hot chocolate got upgraded without getting fussy. Now it is my go-to when I want something cozy for a weeknight, but I still want that little “okay, wow” moment after the first bite.