Composite Image by Michelle A. Hoyle based on Lin Pernille Photography’s attribution licensedphoto and Amarand Agasi’s attribution-noncommercial-sharealike licensed photo.
Image: Chocolate pudding with a candy cane.
I was inspired to try this out by following the trail of a LifeHacker blog post on making macaroni and cheese in a coffee mug to The Family Kitchen blog. My eye was caught by a side panel link to "Microwave Chocolate Peppermint Pudding in 5 Minutes!. I did store the URL away but then when I went to make it, I couldn’t be bothered to check my stash and came up with “Chocolate-Peppermint Pudding” at the FatFree Vegan Kitchen. My final recipe was an adaptation of the latter and took more than 5 minutes, but not much longer. The result is something that tastes an awful lot like After Eight mints! Note that this is gluten-free and can be vegan.
Time & Results
- Preparation time: 5 – 10 minutes
- Cooking time: 5 – 10 minutes
- Servings: 2
Ingredients
- 4 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder
- 2 tablespoons cornstarch ([1])
- 250 ml (¼ cup) sugar [2]
- 375 ml (1 ½ cups) milk [3]
- 1.25 ml (quarter teaspoon) peppermint extract
- Peppermint sticks for garnish (optional)
Preparation
- In a 1-litre (4-cup) microwavable bowl, blend the cocoa powder, cornstarch, and sugar together.
- Slowly, while stirring well, mix in the milk. Stir until most of the cocoa powder seems blended in. Some may seem to remain but this will mix in during cooking.
- Microwave on high power for 1 -minute, then stir well.
- Repeatedly heat for 30 seconds and stir until the mixture boils, watching carefully to ensure it doesn’t boil over. The mixture will gradually thicken as it cooks.
- When it boils, heat it for another 30 seconds, stopping the microwave if it threatens to boil over.
- Add the peppermint extract, stir the pudding well, and ladle into 2 serving bowls.
- Garnish with peppermint sticks, if desired.
Notes
-
Cornstarch is known as “cornflour” in the United Kingdom. ↩
-
I used caster (raw) sugar, but regular white granulated sugar would be fine. FatFree Vegan Kitchen suggests you can halve the sugar and add 2 tablespoons of stevia or other sweetener instead. ↩
-
To make this vegan, use fat-free soymilk, rice milk, or any other non-dairy milk. ↩
Personal Notes
The FatFree Vegan Kitchen notes you can experiment with other flavours, like orange extract or even peanut butter, or even cook it on the stove. I didn’t try any of those variations. I did, however, put my pudding in the fridge to cool. The consistency later seemed a little rubbery. Perhaps I should have left it to cool to room temperature? Nevertheless, it was tasty!