Creamy banana pudding ice cream hits the spoon with the same soft vanilla-banana comfort as the classic dessert, only colder, denser, and studded with those buttery Nilla wafer bits that soften just enough in the churn. The banana flavor stays front and center instead of turning muddy, and the custard base gives it the kind of rich scoop you expect from a good homemade ice cream.
The trick is building a real custard first, then adding the banana puree after the custard is cooked and strained. That keeps the banana flavor bright and keeps the texture smooth. Frozen banana slices go in at the end so they stay distinct instead of melting into the base, and the wafers give you those little pockets of crunch that make every bite taste like banana pudding in frozen form.
Below, I’ll walk through the part that matters most: cooking the custard without scrambling the yolks, keeping the banana flavor clean, and deciding when to add the wafers so they don’t disappear completely. There are also a few useful swaps and storage notes if you want to make it ahead.
The custard stayed silky, and the crushed wafers softened just enough that it tasted like frozen banana pudding instead of plain banana ice cream.
Save this Banana Pudding Ice Cream for the days when you want creamy custard, banana chunks, and Nilla wafer crunch in one scoop.
The Custard Has to Be Set Before the Banana Goes In
The biggest mistake with banana ice cream is rushing the base and adding the fruit too early. Banana puree can taste flat if it cooks hard for too long, and dairy can take on a dull, cooked flavor if you boil the custard instead of warming it gently. The goal here is a smooth custard at 175°F, which gives you body without graininess.
Straining the custard matters more than it sounds. Even a few tiny bits of cooked egg will show up once the ice cream is churned and frozen. If the mixture looks a little thin after straining, that’s normal; it thickens as it chills and churns.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Ice Cream

- Base ingredient (cream, milk, or custard) — This provides the foundation and richness. Quality matters.
- Sweetener (sugar, honey, or condensed milk) — This sweetens and prevents ice crystals. The ratio is critical.
- Flavor element (vanilla, fruit, chocolate, coffee, or other) — This defines the ice cream personality. Use quality ingredients.
- Egg yolks (if making custard base) — These create richness and silky texture. Optional but elevates ice cream.
- Churning (if using ice cream maker) — This incorporates air and prevents ice crystals. Critical for smooth texture.
- Freezing temperature and time — Proper freezing prevents rock-hard texture. Store at 0°F or below.
- Mix-ins (chocolate, cookies, fruit, or swirls) — These add texture and prevent one-dimensional flavor. Add near end of churning.
- Serving temperature (slightly soft, not rock hard) — This provides creamy mouthfeel. Remove from freezer 5 minutes before serving.
What Each Ingredient Is Doing in This Frozen Banana Pudding
- Very ripe bananas — These bring the actual banana pudding flavor, not just sweetness. The browner and softer they are, the more intense the banana flavor will be. Blend them until completely smooth so the base churns evenly.
- Heavy cream and whole milk — This combination gives you a rich scoop that still freezes with a clean bite. All cream makes the ice cream heavy and harder to scoop; the milk keeps it balanced.
- Egg yolks — They turn the base into custard, which is why this ice cream feels lush instead of icy. If you skip them, the texture gets lighter but also less stable and less pudding-like.
- Nilla wafers — Crush them roughly, not into dust. A mix of crumbs and small pieces gives you the best contrast, and a few larger bits stay recognizable after freezing.
- Frozen banana slices — These add little pockets of banana flavor and a firmer, almost chewy texture. Freezing them first keeps them from melting into the churned base.
Cooking the Custard, Chilling It Hard, Then Churning Fast
Warming the Dairy Without Curdling the Yolks
Heat the cream and milk until they’re steaming but not boiling. Whisk a little of the hot dairy into the yolks and sugar first so the eggs warm gradually, then pour that mixture back into the pan. If you dump the dairy in all at once, the yolks can scramble at the edges before the custard has a chance to thicken evenly.
Cooking to the Right Spoon Coat
Stir constantly over medium-low heat until the custard reaches 175°F and lightly coats the back of a spoon. You’re looking for a texture that’s thicker than cream but still pourable. If it starts to bubble hard, pull it off the heat; once custard boils, it can turn grainy fast.
Adding the Banana Puree and Cooling It Completely
Stir in the vanilla, salt, and banana puree after you strain the custard. The puree blends in best while the mixture is still warm, but it shouldn’t be cooked again after that. Chill it for a full 4 hours, or overnight if you’ve got the time, because a cold base churns smoother and freezes with a finer texture.
Folding in the Wafers and Banana Pieces at the End
Churn the base until it reaches soft-serve thickness, then fold in the crushed wafers and frozen banana slices during the last 2 minutes. That timing keeps the wafers from dissolving completely and helps the banana pieces stay visible in the finished ice cream. If you add them too early, they break down and disappear into the base.
How to Bend This Recipe Without Losing the Banana Pudding Character
Dairy-Free Version with Full Banana Flavor
Swap the cream and milk for full-fat coconut milk and coconut cream, then keep the custard method the same if you still want yolk richness. The flavor shifts a little toward coconut, but the banana and wafer notes still come through. Use a dairy-free vanilla wafer-style cookie if you need the recipe fully dairy-free.
Gluten-Free Banana Pudding Ice Cream
Use gluten-free vanilla wafers in place of the Nilla wafers and keep everything else the same. The ice cream base is naturally gluten-free, so this swap only changes the cookie mix-in. Crush the cookies a little more coarsely if they’re extra fragile.
Extra Banana, Less Cookie
If you want a stronger banana flavor and a softer texture, increase the banana slices slightly and cut the wafers back by a small handful. You’ll lose some of the classic pudding crunch, but the ice cream will taste more like straight banana cream. This is the version I’d pick if you like a fruit-forward scoop.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Not applicable once churned; this is meant to be frozen, not held in the fridge.
- Freezer: Store in an airtight container with parchment pressed against the surface for up to 2 weeks. After that, the banana flavor starts to fade and ice crystals become more noticeable.
- Reheating: Let it sit at room temperature for 5 to 10 minutes before scooping. If it’s rock hard, the freezer was too cold or the base wasn’t fully chilled before churning.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Banana Pudding Ice Cream
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Blend the very ripe bananas until completely smooth, then set aside.
- Heat the heavy cream and whole milk over medium-low heat until steaming.
- Whisk the steaming cream mixture slowly into the egg yolks beaten with granulated sugar.
- Cook the custard over medium-low heat, stirring constantly, until it reaches 175F (about 10 minutes).
- Strain the custard and stir in the vanilla extract and salt along with the banana puree.
- Cool the custard completely, then refrigerate for 4 hours to chill thoroughly.
- Churn the chilled custard in an ice cream maker until thickened.
- Fold in the crushed Nilla wafers and the frozen banana slices in the last 2 minutes of churning.
- Transfer to a freezer-safe container and freeze until scoopable.


