This is the dessert I make when I want to look like I tried, while actually doing zero baking. Banana pudding is one of those classic Southern desserts that everybody loves, and swapping the usual Nilla wafers for Biscoff cookies gives it that warm caramelized spice flavor that turns it into something a little more grown-up. The cookies soften overnight into a cake-like layer between the pudding and the bananas, and you get that perfect creamy-cookie-banana bite in every spoonful.
Layering it into individual cups instead of one big trifle is the move for dinner parties, holidays, or just looking fancy on a Tuesday. Each guest gets their own portion, no scooping at the table, and the layered colors look beautiful through clear glass.
Traditional banana pudding uses Nilla wafers, which are sweet and buttery but a little plain. Biscoff cookies (also sold as Lotus speculoos) are cinnamon-spiced, deeply caramelized, and just a touch crunchier. When they soften in the pudding overnight, they take on a flavor that's halfway between graham cracker and cookie butter, and the spice plays beautifully with banana. If you have leftover Biscoff cookie butter spread, drizzle a little over each cup right before serving for a finishing touch that takes it from good to ridiculous.
Pudding base
Layers
For an 8-ounce cup, this is the order that gives you visible layers and balanced flavor in every bite:
Can I use a non-dairy milk?
Yes for the pudding base. Use a full-fat oat or soy milk so the texture stays creamy. Do not substitute the heavy cream though, only dairy heavy cream whips into stable peaks.
Can I make this gluten-free?
Biscoff cookies contain wheat, so the recipe as written is not gluten-free. Swap in a gluten-free spiced cookie or graham cracker for the cookie layers and check that your instant pudding mix is GF-certified.
Can I use cook-and-serve pudding mix instead of instant?
No. Instant pudding mix sets up at room temp, which is what makes the layered no-bake structure work. Cook-and-serve needs heat and won't set the same way.
Why are my bananas browning?
Bananas oxidize fast when sliced. Slice them right before you assemble each cup, and toss them in a teaspoon of fresh lemon juice if you need to slow the browning even more.
Can I scale this up to a 9x13 dish?
Yes. Layer the pudding, cookies, and bananas the same way in a 9x13 baking dish. Cook time and chill time stay the same. Serves 8 to 10 from one dish.
Where can I buy Biscoff cookies?
Most major grocery stores carry them in the cookie aisle (Lotus brand). Trader Joe's also sells their own version called Speculoos cookies. Costco sells the giant party-size pack if you're going big.
Recipe adapted from Gail Ng at Teak & Thyme and remixed into individual cup format. For more no-bake desserts that look like you tried, browse the Sweets section.
A no-bake banana pudding remixed with Biscoff cookies and layered into individual cups. Same creamy spiced filling as the family-style version, with that perfect dinner-party portion and pretty layered look in every glass.
Pudding base
Layers
For serving
This looks amazing! I love the idea of using Creme Fraiche here. 💕💕
These look so lovely! I love the idea of using pizza dough. We make TJ pizza all the time and often have like half a bag of dough left. Next time we do, I'll make these for breakfast the next day. Thanks for sharing :)
These tacos look amazing!