⏱ 1 hr 15 min total🍮 Serves 6🌡️ Baked at 325°F⭐ Easy difficulty🥛 Vegetarian
There’s something deeply satisfying about a dessert that asks almost nothing of you and delivers everything in return. No special equipment. No complicated technique. No watching a pot. You just mix a few pantry staples in a baking dish, slide it into the oven, and let the heat do all the slow, beautiful work while your kitchen fills up with the kind of cinnamon-vanilla warmth that makes everyone wander in from the other room asking, “What is that smell?”
That’s the magic of baked rice pudding recipe. It’s one of the oldest, most universally loved desserts in the world — and once you’ve made it from scratch, you’ll wonder why you ever settled for the canned stuff. This recipe is my go-to version: creamy, not too sweet, with that signature golden skin on top that you either love intensely or scoop off immediately. (No judgment. More for me.)
Let’s make it.
Table of Contents
What Makes Baked Rice Pudding Different?
Most people are familiar with stovetop rice pudding — the kind you stir constantly on the stove until it thickens. Baked rice pudding is a different experience entirely. Instead of active stirring, the oven does the work slowly, gently, and evenly. The result is a richer, more custard-like pudding with a slightly firmer texture and that iconic caramelized skin on top.
It’s also considerably more forgiving. Once it’s in the oven, you can basically walk away. No fear of scorching. No constant stirring. Just low heat, time, and patience — and the payoff is absolutely worth it.
Baked rice pudding is believed to date back to 15th century England, where it was traditionally made with short-grain rice, whole milk, and spices. The slow oven method has remained largely unchanged for centuries — a testament to how perfectly it works.
The Best Rice for Baked Rice Pudding
Short-grain or medium-grain white rice is the gold standard here — Arborio being the best choice if you want maximum creaminess. The short grains release more starch as they cook, which is exactly what creates that thick, creamy consistency you’re after.
| Rice Type | Texture Result | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Arborio (short-grain) | Extra creamy, risotto-like | Most luxurious baked pudding |
| Short-grain white rice | Creamy, classic texture | Traditional baked rice pudding |
| Medium-grain white rice | Creamy, slightly less dense | Great everyday option |
| Long-grain white rice | Firmer, less creamy | Works but not ideal |
| Leftover cooked rice | Softer, less structured | Quick weeknight version |
| Brown rice | Chewy, nutty | Heartier, healthier variation |
Can you use leftover rice? Yes — and it actually cuts your bake time significantly since the rice is already cooked. The texture won’t be quite as cohesive, but it still produces a very decent pudding when you need one fast.
The Classic Baked Rice Pudding Recipe
Old-Fashioned Baked Rice Pudding
A slow-baked, creamy rice pudding with vanilla, cinnamon, and whole milk — served warm or cold, it’s pure comfort in a dish.
Prep10 min / Bake1 hr 5 min / Total1 hr 15 min / Serves6 / CourseDessert / CuisineBritish/American
- ¾ cup short-grain or Arborio rice (uncooked)
- 4 cups whole milk (or half whole milk + half heavy cream for extra richness)
- ¼ cup granulated sugar
- 1 tsp pure vanilla extract
- ½ tsp ground cinnamon, plus extra for dusting
- Pinch of salt
- 2 tbsp unsalted butter, cut into small cubes
- Optional: 2 eggs for a custard-style pudding, ½ cup raisins, freshly grated nutmeg
How to make it
1- Preheat oven to 325°F (160°C). Lightly butter a 2-quart (roughly 8×8 inch or equivalent) baking dish.
2- Combine rice, sugar, vanilla, cinnamon, and salt in the baking dish. Stir briefly to distribute evenly.
3- Pour milk over the rice mixture and stir gently to combine. If using eggs, whisk them separately with a splash of the milk first, then pour in.
4- Scatter the butter cubes across the top. If adding raisins, stir them in now.
5- Bake uncovered for 30 minutes. Remove and gently stir the skin that has formed back into the pudding — this redistributes the rice and prevents the top layer from drying out too fast.
6- Return to oven and bake for another 30–35 minutes until the pudding is set with a golden-brown skin on top, and the rice is completely tender.
7- Dust with extra cinnamon. Serve warm directly from the dish, or cool completely and refrigerate. Both are exceptional.
The mid-bake stir is the secret move. It keeps the rice evenly distributed through the custard and prevents the top layer from becoming a thick, dry crust before the rest of the pudding has set. Don’t skip it.
How to Make Baked Rice Pudding Creamy
Creaminess in rice pudding comes from three places: the starch from the rice, the fat content of your liquid, and the ratio of rice to milk. Get these right and the pudding practically takes care of itself.
- Use whole milk — skim milk produces a watery, thin pudding. Full-fat is non-negotiable for the classic version.
- Add heavy cream — replacing 1 cup of milk with cream makes the pudding noticeably richer and silkier.
- Don’t skimp on rice — the starch released during baking is what thickens the pudding naturally.
- Butter on top — those small cubes melt into the surface and contribute to the creamy, glossy finish.
- Stir once mid-bake — this is the key technique for even creaminess throughout the dish.
Eggs or No Eggs?
This is genuinely a personal preference question, and both camps have great arguments. Here’s the honest breakdown:
| Version | Texture | Flavor | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| With eggs (2 whole) | Firmer, custard-like, sliceable | Richer, more complex | Serving in portions, cold |
| Without eggs | Softer, looser, more porridge-like | Purer, milkier | Spooning warm from the dish |
| With egg yolks only (2) | Very creamy, slightly dense | Luxuriously rich | Special occasions |
My preference? No eggs for a weeknight comfort version. With eggs when I’m making it for company and want something that looks a little more composed on the plate. Either way, the vanilla and cinnamon make it taste wonderful.
Rice Pudding Variations Worth Exploring
Rice pudding with raisins
The classic add-in. Stir in ½ cup of raisins before baking — they plump up beautifully in the milk and add little bursts of sweetness throughout. Golden raisins are my preference over regular; they’re a bit more delicate in flavor and look prettier in the finished dish.
Vanilla rice pudding
If vanilla is your thing — and it should be — use a whole vanilla bean instead of extract. Split it, scrape the seeds into the milk, and add the pod too. Fish it out before serving. The flavor difference is extraordinary.
Cinnamon rice pudding
Double the cinnamon to a full teaspoon and add a pinch of freshly grated nutmeg. Serve with a light dusting of cinnamon sugar on top. This version is particularly good in the fall.
Rice pudding with cream
Swap 1–1.5 cups of whole milk for heavy cream. The result is noticeably more indulgent — almost like a crème brûlée situation in your baking dish. For special occasions only, unless you have absolutely zero impulse control, which is also valid.
Should Rice Pudding Be Served Warm or Cold?
The real answer is: both, and it’s a completely different experience each way. Warm, it’s loose, custardy, and deeply comforting — like the dessert equivalent of a weighted blanket. Cold, it firms up, the flavor deepens, and it becomes more like a dense, creamy set pudding that you can scoop cleanly.
I’ll tell you what I do: I serve the first bowl warm, straight from the oven. Then I cover the rest and refrigerate it, and eat it cold for breakfast the next morning with a drizzle of honey. Judge me if you must.
How to Stop Baked Rice Pudding from Drying Out
There are a few culprits if your pudding comes out dry or gummy on top:
- Oven too hot. 325°F is the sweet spot. Higher temperatures cause the milk to evaporate too quickly before the rice finishes cooking.
- Too much rice for the milk. Stick to the ratio — roughly 3 tablespoons of uncooked rice per cup of milk.
- Skipping the mid-bake stir. This one move prevents an overly dry skin forming too early.
- Overbaking. Pull it when it’s just set — it will continue firming up as it cools.
If your pudding has dried out a bit more than you wanted: stir in a splash of warm milk before serving and it comes right back to life. This also works perfectly for reheating leftovers.
Old-Fashioned Baked Rice Pudding Recipe
Ingredients
Method
- Preheat oven to 325°F (160°C). Lightly butter a 2-quart baking dish.
- Add rice, sugar, vanilla, cinnamon, and salt to the dish. Stir to combine.
- Pour milk over the rice mixture and stir gently. Add raisins if using.
- Dot butter cubes across the surface. Grate nutmeg over top if desired.
- Bake uncovered for 30 minutes. Remove and stir the skin back into the pudding.
- Return to oven for 30–35 more minutes until golden on top, set, and rice is fully tender.
- Dust with extra cinnamon. Serve warm or cool completely, cover, and refrigerate.
Notes
- Do not raise the oven temperature — low and slow is essential for creaminess.
- The mid-bake stir (step 5) prevents a dry skin and distributes the rice evenly.
- For custard-style: whisk 2 eggs with ¼ cup of the milk before adding to the dish.
- For extra richness: replace 1 cup whole milk with heavy cream.
- Dairy-free: use full-fat coconut milk (1:1 swap).
- Leftover rice version: use 2 cups cooked rice, reduce bake time to 45 min.
- Store: refrigerator up to 4 days. Reheat with a splash of milk, stir gently.
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Quick FAQs
How long does baked rice pudding keep?
Up to 4 days in the refrigerator, covered tightly. Add a splash of milk when reheating to restore the creamy consistency.
Can I make it dairy-free?
Yes. Full-fat coconut milk is the best swap — it produces a beautifully creamy result with a subtle tropical note. Oat milk works too but gives a thinner consistency.
What milk is best for rice pudding?
Whole milk is the baseline. For maximum creaminess, replace one cup of milk with heavy cream. The fat content is what creates that silky, thick texture — low-fat options will produce a noticeably thinner pudding.
Can I make individual portions?
Absolutely. Divide the mixture into six oven-safe ramekins and reduce the bake time to around 45–50 minutes. Check for doneness with a gentle jiggle — the center should wobble slightly but not slosh.
Did you make this recipe?
Leave a comment below — warm or cold? Raisins or no raisins? I need to know where you stand.
And if someone in your house said “wait, that’s actually really good” — this is a safe space to brag about it.




