Banana Pudding Caramel Cream Trifles
How can you go wrong with these banana pudding caramel cream trifles? You can’t, especially if you love banana pudding!
Have we had this talk yet?
The one where I tell you that Brian’s favorite dessert in all the world is a banana pudding/Nilla Wafer blizzard from Dairy Queen and that when other dads tuck their sons into bed at night and tell them gallant stories of heroic adventure, Brian regales our four sons and one daughter with tales of his days working at Dairy Queen as a teenager and his success at making the best banana pudding blizzard known to mankind?
Lucky kids.
The man loves him some banana pudding.
I’ve talked before about the phenomenon that exists between the male species and banana pudding. Sorry to sound biased, but there’s something to it, I swear.
Brian could be the spokesperson for the cause.
These little banana pudding caramel cream trifles left him speechless. And can I announce something here and now? I didn’t even get to taste one of these! I made these Easter morning for our dinner later that night but whattayaknow, my 9-year old and I both came down with some nasty virus within hours of the last drizzle of caramel adorning the final trifle.
My husband, who says he felt sorry I was sick and who says he was just trying to help me out so that I didn’t have to suffer needlessly gazing at a dessert I clearly couldn’t eat, ate mine.
And the next day when the sickie child and I weren’t feeling much better, Brian ate the other leftover one, brown bananas and all, which is fine because I wouldn’t have touched mushy, brown bananas with a ten foot pole at that point.
If that isn’t dedication to his banana pudding cause, I don’t know what is.
In all reality, though, bananas, homemade vanilla pudding, toasted buttery Nilla Wafer crumbles, decadent caramel sauce and whipped cream are just bound to be a success.
I may or may not have eavesdropped on Brian’s bedtime story later that night wherein the epic DQ blizzard was curiously omitted leaving the boys in wide-eyed wonder listening to a farfetched tale of a new kid in town: the banana pudding caramel cream trifle kid, to be exact.
One Year Ago: Mushroom Lasagna with White Sauce
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Three Years Ago: Strawberry Rhubarb Pie
Banana Caramel Cream Trifles
Ingredients
Vanilla Pudding:
- ¾ cup (159 g) granulated sugar
- ⅓ cup cornstarch
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- 1 tablespoon vanilla
- 3 large eggs
- 3 ½ cups milk, whole milk preferred for a creamier pudding
Nilla Wafer Crumble:
- 2 ½ cups coarsely crushed Nilla Wafers, about 3/4 of an 11-ounce box
- 4 tablespoons butter, melted
Bananas, Cream and Caramel:
- 2-4 ripe bananas
- ½ – ¾ cup good-quality caramel sauce
- Sweetened whipped cream, 1 cup heavy whipping cream whipped with 2-3 tablespoons powdered sugar
Instructions
- For the vanilla pudding, in a large bowl, whisk together the sugar, cornstarch, salt, vanilla and eggs until well-combined. Whisk in 1/2 cup of the milk. In a large saucepan, heat the remaining 3 cups milk over medium heat until it reaches a simmer. Slowly ladle in 1/2 cup or so of the hot milk into the egg mixture, whisking quickly and vigorously the entire time to avoid cooking the eggs and forming lumps. Repeat with another ladle of the hot milk, whisking until completely combined. This process tempers the eggs so they don't scramble when added to the hot milk. Slowly pour the tempered egg/milk mixture into the simmering milk, whisking constantly, and cook over medium heat, stirring with a whisk or silicone spatula, until large bubbles break at the surface and the pudding is thick and bubbly, about 3-4 minutes. If desired, strain the pudding through a fine mesh strainer into a large bowl or just pour the pudding into a large bowl. cover the pudding with plastic wrap, pressing the plastic wrap directly on the surface of the pudding. Refrigerate until completely cooled, 4-5 hours.
- For the Nilla wafer crumble, combine the crumbs with the melted butter. Spread the mixture onto a large baking sheet and bake at 350 degrees for 10-12 minutes, tossing once or twice, until the crumbs are golden and fragrant. They will appear soft right out of the oven, but once they cool on the baking sheet, they will crisp up. Once cool, the crumbs can be stored in an airtight container for 1-2 days.
- To assemble, keep in mind, this isn’t rocket science. You can basically layer the components however you like but this is how I did it: Start with a few tablespoons of the crumbles and press into the bottom of an individual trifle dish or similar-type dish. I added each layer to all of the six dishes before proceeding with the next layer. Now add a dollop of vanilla pudding to cover the crumbles. Spread the pudding to the edges of the dish(es). Add slices of banana to cover the pudding. Top the bananas with a spoonful of sweetened whipped cream, spreading to the edges of the dish. Add another layer of Nilla Wafer crumbles and a drizzle of caramel. Another layer of pudding, bananas, whipped cream, a sprinkle of crumbles on top and a final drizzle of caramel.
- Seriously, once you delve into this heavenly concoction, it won’t matter how it’s layered. Refrigerate the desserts for 1-2 hours (any longer and the bananas will have a tendency to get brown and mushy). Serve chilled.
Notes
Recommended Products
Recipe Source: greatly adapted from this recipe at Glorious Treats {changed out graham cracker crumble for Nilla wafer crumble, used an adapted version of my favorite vanilla pudding and a homemade caramel sauce}
These sound so good! I’m thinking of also adding these to my daughter’s dessert bar for her wedding (in little 3 oz shooter cups). How many ounces roughly were in each of your 6 servings? Also, is there any way to prevent the bananas from browning? Does the lemon juice trick work if I made them the day before? If I had to assemble the day of would 6-8 hours ahead of time be too long? I’m freaking out over here 😆
Hi Katie, when I make these, I literally just throw everything together into cups without measuring, so I’m not sure how many ounces were in each cup. Just doing some quick, rough math, the pudding makes about 40 ounces, give or take, so there’s probably about 6 1/2 ounces of pudding if divided among 6 cups. There really isn’t a great way to prevent the bananas from browning that doesn’t completely change the flavor (i.e. so much lemon juice that that is all you taste). I think you *can* make them the day before if the bananas are fully covered in pudding, but there will still be some browning, even with the lemon juice trick. I think assembling them 6-8 hours ahead should be fine. Bananas are finicky little things, darn it.
Thank you for the reply!
Just recently got some individual trifle dishes (thanks, Hobby Lobby!) and was looking for ideas of what to make in them. Saw this and decided to try making it dairy and egg free, and it was awesome!! I subbed out Nilla wafers for Winco old-fashioned oatmeal cookies (crushed and baked with DF butter according to directions), made the pudding with almond milk and subbing Ener-G egg replacer for the eggs, and made your caramel with DF butter and heavy cream. And then whipped Trader Joe’s Vegan Heavy Whipping Cream for the cream layer. It was a ton of substitutions, but the trifles turned out amazing and so pretty!! Everyone loved them – this is going to be a repeat dessert for sure!
Alicia! You are amazing with how creative and resourceful you get with recipes. Super impressed!
One more note, I chose to cook the pudding mixture in a glass 8-cup measuring dish in the microwave to save myself standing at the stove constantly stirring. No scorched/sticking milk in a glass bowl! I just pulled it out occasionally to stir.
Just made the Banana Caramel Cream Trifles to take for Thanksgiving dessert. Is the vanilla pudding suppose to be runny? I made it last night and let it sit over night but it is still runny? I made it with Whole milk and exactly how the recipe says. Please help!
Heather – the pudding should set up so that it is thick. Do you think you may have needed to cook the mixture longer?
This recipe looks amazing! I’m going to attempt to double the recipe and make it in a regular sized trifle bowl for a BBQ this weekend. I compared it to the portions in your regular trifle banana pudding trifle and by doubling it, it seems that it’ll be close to a regular trifle size. I’ll let you know how it turns out! This will be my first recipe of yours, but I hope to make many more! 🙂
Would this work in a regular sized trifle bowl?
Lindy – I’m not sure because I haven’t tried it and I’m not sure the quantities are precise for that size of dish. Worth a try though!
Hey Mel! These look so divine. You’re just amazing. Have you ever tried sprinkling a little Fruit Fresh on your banana slices before putting it all together? (It’s basically just ascorbic acid and citric acid.) It keeps them looking so nice and keeps the brown away. Or even just a little fresh lemon juice on them works too.
hahaha my hubby LOVES banana cream pie so you are totally onto something here. I can’t wait to make these for my family.
these are lovely, mel! it’s like a sophisticated version of my favorite comfort food. 🙂
What are your views on GMO products? Do you buy organic or what do you do? Help!
Hi Olivia – I have a lot of opinions about GMO’s (and other scary food topics)! Email me and we can discuss (mel@melskitchencafe.com). I’m in the process of putting together a post about navigating the scary world of food too (from a realistic, non-rich point of view).
I think my 4 son’s all 32 yrs old & up will enjoy this very much.
I love YOUR epic story telling in this blog post, Mel! lol! And what is it with guys and pudding in general? When I ask my guy what dessert he wants for a special occasion (or just because) he ALWAYS asks for pudding pie! Really? Out of ALL the desserts in life, he wants pudding pie every.single.time!
These little concoctions look heavenly. Never heard of a Banana Pudding Blizzard. What does your hubby think of the tropical and/or Hawaiian Blizzards? I always add an extra ingredient to make it a mix of the two — pineapple, coconut, banana, and pecans. I don’t think there is anything better!
Ha! That’s awesome that your hubby is a banana pudding fiend. Seems like every guy has their do-anything-for-it dessert. My husband’s is pumpkin pie. Weird, but eh. If it makes him happy! These trifles look absolutely amazing, Mel. Perfect Southern summer dessert!
OK!! This is to funny! My husband is also a connoisseur of Banana Pudding …..And he worked at DQ also! He is going to love this deliciousness! I swear I make your dishes ALL the time! My husband and kids new saying at the dinner table now is, “is this food from that kitchen blog lady”! We have loved everything so far! My favorites are Asian Chicken Lettuce Wraps, Skillet Cilantro & Lime Fish Tacos, Spaghetti Pie, Coconut Tres Leches Cake(LOVE), and pretty much everything! Thanks, “Kitchen Blog Lady”, for making our meals delicious!
Scrumptious! I could seriously eat all that caramel and cookies off the top of that!
Whoa. My husband is going to love these. Thanks!
Has your husband tried Banana Pudding ice cream by Blue Bell? OMG is it wonderful!
Yummy! Thanks Mel and have a great weekend!
this recipe looks really good . i will have to try this and those little dishes you put them in are so cute where did you get them? thanks Anne
Hi Anne – I got them at Walmart years ago so hopefully they still have them.
Those banana pudding trifles look so good!
Those must be some pretty impressive bedtime stories! This looks divine! Hope you can make it again and taste it!
I didn’t even know there was a such thing as a DQ banana pudding blizzard. Holy yum. Must find.
I love banana pudding, but only if the pudding is homemade. This recipe sounds perfect.
I have to agree with your husband, I lovvvvvvvvvve banana pudding! I actually just posted a banana pudding recipe too. 🙂 I’m a fan of the caramel/banana layer. Sounds absolutey delicious!
I’m glad you two are feeling better. And your hubby is so sweet 🙂
You should probably make more just for you and your 9 year old! I so agree with you, here boys and big boys down banana smoothies like it´s the only thing around.