How To Make Homemade Banana Pudding From Scratch
If you ask most Southerners about their favorite comfort dessert, Banana Pudding is going to come up pretty quick. Not the kind from a box of instant mix. That’s a whole different thing, and we don’t talk about it here. This is the recipe y’all have been asking for. It takes patience at the stovetop, but once you’ve made it this way, you’ll never go back. And if you love this custard base, you’ll also want to try our Banana Pudding with Meringue Topping and our Frozen Banana Pudding Cups for two more ways to enjoy it all summer long!

A Quick Look At The Recipe
- Recipe Name: Homemade Banana Pudding
- Ready In: 25 minutes
- Serves: 4
- Main Ingredients: sugar, flour, egg yolks, milk, box Nilla wafers, bananas, vanilla, dash salt
- Why You'll Love It: This homemade banana pudding recipe includes making the creamy vanilla pudding from scratch and serving it over Nilla wafers and fresh-cut bananas for the most delicious Southern treat.
If you have ever wanted to know how to make banana pudding from scratch, y’all, you are in exactly the right place. This is the real deal. Homemade vanilla custard poured warm over fresh banana slices and Nilla wafers, just the way Southern grandmothers have been making it for as long as anyone can remember.
The magic is in the custard. Egg yolks, milk, sugar, and flour come together into a rich, silky vanilla pudding that soaks right into those Nilla wafers and turns the whole bowl into something truly special. It takes about 15 minutes of gentle stirring, and I want you to know every single minute is worth it.
☝️ Before You Get Started
Use Nilla brand wafers. I am not usually a brand stickler (well, except for White Lily flour), but if you are going to make banana pudding, you might as well do it right. Generic wafers just are not the same.
No meringue here. I like meringue just fine, but I know plenty of folks who don’t. So this recipe keeps it simple and skips that step. If you do want to add a meringue topping, head over to our Lemon Meringue Pie for step-by-step instructions and photos that will walk you right through it.
Want to serve it cold? Many folks refrigerate their banana pudding and serve it topped with Cool Whip or fresh whipped cream. Both are delicious. Totally your call.
Making it as a trifle? Double the recipe and layer everything into a glass trifle bowl. More layers, more wow factor, more banana pudding for everybody. Our Creamy Dreamy Fruit Trifle shows you just how beautiful a layered dessert in a trifle bowl can look.
No vanilla wafers on hand? Graham crackers make a wonderful substitute and give this a slightly different but equally delicious flavor.
Ingredients you’ll need for the best classic banana pudding:
- 1/2 cup sugar (or swerve)
- 1/3 cup flour
- 3 egg yolks
- 2 cups milk
- 1 box Nilla wafers
- 5 ripe bananas
- 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
- Dash of salt
How to Make Homemade Banana Pudding From Scratch

Put a layer of Nilla wafers in the bottom of a medium-sized mixing bowls.

Slice a banana over the top.
Repeat these layers until you’ve used up all your vanilla wafers and bananas. It really is important that you put Nilla wafers first, by the way. These are going to soak up all the yummy pudding that settles at the bottom of your bowl.

Repeat these layers until you’ve used up all your vanilla wafers and bananas. It really is important that you put Nilla wafers first, by the way. These are going to soak up all the yummy pudding that settles at the bottom of your bowl.


Crack your three eggs and separate the egg whites from the yolks, and place flour, sugar (or your favorite sweetener), and a dash of salt in a saucepan.

Add milk to the saucepan.

Put this milk mixture on the stovetop on medium-low heat and stir it really well with a whisk or a spoon.
Now settle in and BE PATIENT. You need to stir the pot constantly, scraping the bottom so none of it gets a chance to stick and scorch. This will take about 15 minutes, so I usually get something to read while I stand there and stir because I don’t think I’ve ever “just” done one thing for 15 minutes straight.
Seriously, be patient, keep stirring, don’t turn the heat up past four. Now, your pudding isn’t going to get super thick, but after about 15 minutes of stirring, it will suddenly get thicker. The consistency will be about what that boxed pudding is right after you mix it before it sets well. TAKE IT OFF THE EYE! Quick! We don’t want it to scorch or keep getting thicker.
If you end up with a scorched pudding or lumpy pudding mixture, you can still use it (and go a little slower next time!).


Add the vanilla and immediately pour vanilla pudding over your sliced banana and wafers.


💡 Cookin’ Tip:
Let this sit for about five minutes so the pudding has time to soak into the wafers.

IT IS SO GOOD! Eat it warm, then refrigerate leftovers. I prefer to eat the leftovers cold. YUM!
How to Store Banana Pudding
Store your leftovers in an airtight container in the fridge for up to four days. I don’t recommend freezing this homemade pudding, as the wafers will be too soggy.
Recipe FAQs
How do you keep bananas from turning brown in a banana pudding?
To keep bananas from turning brown, I recommend brushing the banana slices with lemon juice, which slows down any fruit browning process.
How do you serve pudding?
If you are going more casual you can serve this in a ceramic ramekin. If you are serving a crowd and don’t want to worry about dishes I love using disposable cups. If you want to fancy it up a bit it looks really pretty in a glass parfait dish as a trifle.
Can I make this pudding ahead of time?
Absolutely! This banana pudding recipe lasts four days covered in the fridge and it tastes great cold, so you could definitely make it the night before and let the pudding soak into the wafers overnight.
Is one banana dessert not enough? Check out these other delicious banana recipes:
Caramel Banana Pie AKA Easy Banoffee Pie
Banana French Toast with Pecans
Recipe for Banana Brownies (with Quick Peanut Butter Honey Icing)
If you make this homemade banana pudding, I would love to hear how it turned out! Leave a star rating and a comment below. It truly means the world to me and helps other folks find this recipe too!

Ingredients
- 1/2 cup sugar or swerve
- 1/3 cup flour
- 3 egg yolks
- 2 cups milk
- 1 box Nilla wafers
- 5 bananas
- 1/2 tsp vanilla
- dash salt
Instructions
- Place a layer of Nilla Wafers in the bottom of a medium-sized mixing bowl. Slice a banana over the top. Repeat two more times with another layer of wafers and the remaining bananas.1 box Nilla wafers, 5 bananas
- In a saucepot (or double boiler) on medium-low heat, add all ingredients except for the vanilla. Stir well with a wire whisk. Allow to cook, stirring constantly to prevent scorching, until thickened – about 15 minutes.1/2 cup sugar, 1/3 cup flour, 3 egg yolks, 2 cups milk, dash salt
- Add in vanilla and stir. Immediately pour over wafers and bananas. Let sit for about five minutes or so before serving, to allow wafers time to absorb pudding. Top with meringue, if desired.1/2 tsp vanilla
Nutrition

To celebrate your 10,000+ mark made your ‘Nanner Puddin’ recipe for the first time…yeh, I know…no good excuse for putting it off for so long…I’m hanging my head in shame…DANG! I should’a known it would be DELICIOUS!!!! And it’s made with Splenda!! Made meringue,too…almost cheated and topped it with whipped topping. Remember you said you’d hunt us down if we used it?!! Well, that got me to thinkin’…Woo-Hooooo! A visit from Christy!!! But then you have enough on your Southern Plate right now ;o) I better be good just this once and make meringue. OH MAN!!! Glad I did!!! Put it over the top!!! Certainly won’t wait for 10,000 more SP Family Members to make this again!!! Thanks for such an easy, tasty treat!! Love you and Southern Plate!!
Just made the banana pudding…..I just went ahead and doubled the recipe and made two bowls because I want leftovers for tomorrow. My suspicions were right…..my family is devouring it as we speak!
My mom use to cook it the same way that you do but i was not feeling the cooked banana pudding but when she made the boxed instant banana pudding i loved it. Regardless of the instant banana pudding hatters I love it.
Long as you’re happy that’s all that matters!
This looks great. I have a box of Nilla wafers and milk and eggs and everything. No bananas, but I’m not a big fan of bananas and I’m afraid they’d go brown a couple hours in the fridge since there are only 2 of us and we wouldn’t be able to eat the whole bowl in one sitting (unless it’s REALLY good :)). I’m considering making it without the bananas or using peaches or strawberries instead. Would I be horrible for making it with a different fruit? Peach pudding sounds tasty to me!
I am so glad I stumbled on your recipe! This is the exact same way my mother use to make it. All of my family members make it that pudding way and I can’t stand it just like you. So many memories….Thank you. And its good!!!!!!
I have learned an important lesson at school: if I make this yummy banana pudding for the tech support guy on our campus, I get my computer issues addressed QUICKLY! 🙂 So guess what I am making to take him at school tomorrow? Yep, you got it!
I pour the milk and about 3/4 of a large can of evaporated milk in a saucepan, turn the burner on low heat , Cook until you can skim the film off the hot milk with a fork or whisk.
I mix my sugar, cornstarch, salt, together in a bowl. In a smaller bowl, I beat my egg yolks, add enough evaporated milk to the yolks to make a thinner mixture which I add to the dry ingredients. Mix well. While stirring the milk pour combined mixture into the milk and cook on low heat ( no higher than 4). Stir constantly until the mixture thickens. Add vanilla and butter or margarine. Stir until butter melts. Pour over the layers of wafers and bananas. True, this takes another step or two, but makes a very good banana pudding.
Most of my family prefers the banana pudding while it is still warm and without meringue. Refrigerate leftover pudding.