Waitrose and Partners
The best rice pudding

The best rice pudding

Martha Collison's rice pudding recipe is inspired by the original – oven baked in the traditional way. Baking avoids the need for hours of stirring, while slow cooking the milk brings out its natural sweetness. Taking inspiration from Scandinavian desserts, this is delicately spiced with cardamom and cinnamon, plus a little lemon zest for a citrus lift.

0 out of 5 stars(0) Rate this recipe
Vegetarian
  • Serves4
  • CourseDessert
  • Prepare15 mins
  • Cook2 hrs 5 mins
  • Total time2 hrs 20 mins

Please note, we take every care to ensure the product, allergen and recipe information displayed is correct. However, should a product be unavailable, alternatives may be displayed and/or a substitution provided. If you have an allergy or intolerance, please always check the product label before use.

Ingredients

  • Butter, for greasing
  • 80g short grain pudding rice
  • 4 cardamom pods
  • 600ml whole milk
  • 200ml single cream
  • 45g demerara sugar
  • 1 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1 vanilla pod, split
  • 1 unwaxed lemon, 3 strips pared zest
  • Cherry or plum compote, to serve (optional)

Method

  1. Preheat the oven to 150ºC, gas mark 2 and generously grease a 1L pudding dish (enamel is best) with a thick layer of butter.

  2. Place a small frying pan over a low heat. Add the rice and cardamom, then toast, tossing occasionally, for 3-4 minutes until the rice is golden and smells nutty. Remove from the heat, then pop the cardamom seeds out of their pods and grind into a fine powder using a pestle and mortar or spice grinder.

  3. Combine the milk, cream, sugar and cinnamon in a large jug until mixed. Scrape the seeds from the vanilla pod and add to the mixture with the cardamom powder and rice.

  4. Pour the creamy mixture into the buttered dish, then add the lemon zest strips and empty vanilla pod. Bake for 1 hour, then remove the pudding from the oven and take out the lemon zest and vanilla pod.

  5. Give the pudding a good stir to break up any clumps and mix in the skin. Return to the oven for 1 hour more. The top will have turned deeply golden and caramelised in places, and the rice will have become tender.

  6. Serve warm, with extra cream and a big dollop of tangy compote, if liked – cherry or plum work well.

Cook’s tip

Toasted rice

Toasting the rice gently in a frying pan before adding it to the pudding is a simple way to layer flavour into this humble dessert. It releases a nuttiness that works beautifully alongside the spices.

Hidden almond

Norwegian rice pudding, as I discovered through my brother-in-law, is often eaten at Christmas, and a single blanched almond is stirred into it. Whoever receives it in their bowl is said to have good luck for the coming year and wins a small prize (a marzipan pig). Try throwing an almond into this recipe for a fun element of surprise!

Texture

This recipe makes for a gloriously stodgy pudding. The rice will be cooked through after 90 minutes, so if you prefer your pudding to be more creamy with less of a dark skin, remove it from the oven then

Nutritional

Typical values per serving when made using specific products in recipe

Energy

1,192kJ/ 286kcals

Fat

17g

Saturated Fat

11g

Carbohydrates

24g

Sugars

8.3g

Fibre

0.2g

Protein

8.3g

Salt

0.2g

Book a slot to see product availability at your nearest Waitrose & Partners store

Rating details

Rate this recipe

Select your rating

0 out of 5 stars

Overall rating

No ratings for this recipe yet