So you’re craving banana pudding, but you also want cake, and you want it to be ridiculously easy. Cool. Same. Let me introduce you to banana pudding poke cake: the dessert that tastes like you tried really hard… even if you absolutely did not.
It’s soft, creamy, banana-y, and topped with all the good stuff. Also, it’s the kind of dessert people will “just take a small piece” of and then somehow return for a fourth “small piece.” Science can’t explain it.
Why This Recipe is Awesome
This cake has two big personality traits: moist (yes, we said it) and low effort. You bake a cake, poke holes in it like it owes you money, then flood it with pudding. That’s basically the whole plot.
It’s also a party hero. You can make it ahead, toss it in the fridge, and magically become the person who “always brings the best desserts.” No fancy piping bags. No layers sliding around. No stress.
A few more reasons you’ll love it:
- It’s forgiving. Your cake cracks a little? Who cares, you’re covering it with pudding and whipped topping.
- It’s nostalgic. It tastes like banana pudding at a family cookout, but in cake form.
- It’s customizable. Go extra banana. Go extra cookies. Go full chaos. This cake supports your decisions.
Ingredients You’ll Need
Grab your goods, clear some counter space, and try not to eat the cookies straight from the box (I believe in you… kind of).
- Yellow cake mix (plus the eggs, oil, and water it calls for)
- Instant pudding mix: Banana cream (you can also use vanilla, but banana is the vibe)
- Milk: Cold (pudding gets grumpy with warm milk)
- Sweetened condensed milk (optional, but it makes the filling extra rich)
- Whipped topping (like Cool Whip) or homemade whipped cream
- Vanilla wafer cookies (you know the ones)
- Ripe bananas (yellow, a few freckles, not fully brown and sad)
- Vanilla extract (optional, but a tiny splash makes it taste “bakery-ish”)
- Pinch of salt (optional, helps everything taste louder)
Step-by-Step Instructions
You’re about to look like you know what you’re doing. Love that for you.
- Preheat the oven and prep the pan. Heat your oven to whatever your cake mix says (usually 350°F). Grease a 9×13-inch pan, because scraping stuck cake is not character-building, it’s annoying.
- Mix and bake the cake. Make the cake batter according to the box directions. Pour it into the pan and bake until a toothpick comes out mostly clean. Don’t overbake or the cake won’t soak up the pudding as nicely.
- Cool it a bit, then poke holes like you mean it. Let the cake cool for about 10 to 15 minutes. Then poke holes all over using the handle of a wooden spoon or a thick straw. Go deep. Go often. This is the whole “poke cake” situation.
- Whisk up the pudding filling. In a bowl, whisk the instant pudding mix with cold milk until it thickens. If you’re using sweetened condensed milk, whisk it in too. FYI: if it looks a little thick, that’s good. Thick pudding stays in the cake instead of running away.
- Pour the pudding over the cake and help it sink in. Pour the pudding all over, aiming for the holes. Use a spatula to spread it out and gently push it into the pokes. Then chill the cake in the fridge for at least 2 hours so everything sets up and gets cozy.
- Top it like you’re decorating a dessert billboard. Spread whipped topping over the chilled cake. Crush some vanilla wafers and sprinkle them on top. Add banana slices if you want the full banana pudding look. Add bananas close to serving time if you want them pretty, not brown-ish.
- Slice, serve, and accept compliments. Cut into squares and serve cold. Watch people suddenly become very interested in “just one more bite.”
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Let’s keep you out of dessert trouble.
Skipping the cooling step before poking. If you poke immediately, the cake can crumble and tear. Give it 10 to 15 minutes to calm down.
Making pudding with warm milk. Warm milk makes pudding sulk. Use cold milk so it thickens properly and doesn’t turn weird.
Not poking enough holes. If you’re being polite with the pokes, the pudding won’t spread through the cake. Be generous. This is not the time for minimalism.
Overbaking the cake. A dry cake won’t absorb the pudding as well. Bake just until done, then get it out.
Adding banana slices too early. Bananas brown. They just do. If you want the top to look fresh, add banana slices shortly before serving, or brush them lightly with lemon juice (yes, it works, no, it won’t taste like lemonade if you don’t overdo it).
Alternatives & Substitutions
Want to tweak it? Go for it. This cake is chill, and it doesn’t judge. IMO, the best versions are the ones that match your snack personality.
Here are easy swaps and upgrades:
| What you want | Use this | Why it works |
|---|---|---|
| More “banana pudding” flavor | Banana cream pudding + an extra ripe banana mashed into the pudding | Bigger banana energy without extra effort |
| More classic flavor | Vanilla pudding + sliced bananas | Tastes like old-school banana pudding |
| A richer filling | Half milk, half heavy cream | Thicker, creamier pudding texture |
| Less sweet | Skip sweetened condensed milk | Still tasty, just less dessert-sweet |
| Homemade vibe | Homemade whipped cream (heavy cream + sugar + vanilla) | Fluffier and less “tub” flavored |
| Extra texture | Layer crushed wafers between pudding and topping | More crunch in every bite |
If you’re feeling fancy, you can also drizzle caramel sauce over the top. It’s not necessary, but it’s also not wrong.
FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions)
Can I make this the day before? Yes, and it actually gets better after chilling overnight. The pudding soaks in, the cake softens, and everything tastes more “together.” Add fresh banana slices right before serving if you care about looks.
Do I have to use yellow cake mix? Nope. White cake works, vanilla works, even butter cake works. Yellow cake just gives that cozy, bakery flavor that plays really well with pudding.
Can I use cook-and-serve pudding instead of instant? You can, but it takes longer and you need to cool it properly before pouring. Instant pudding is the whole reason this recipe feels like a life hack.
How do I keep the vanilla wafers from getting soggy? If you sprinkle crushed wafers on top right away, they’ll soften over time. That’s not bad, just more “banana pudding” authentic. If you want crunch, add the wafer topping shortly before serving.
My pudding looks too thick. Did I mess it up? Probably not. Thick pudding is good because it stays in the holes. If it’s comically thick, you may have used a bit less milk than needed. Whisk in a splash of cold milk to loosen it.
Can I freeze banana pudding poke cake? You can freeze it without the banana slices. The texture will be a little softer after thawing, but it’s still very edible. Thaw in the fridge overnight for best results.
Can I use margarine instead of butter? Technically yes, but why hurt your soul like that? If your cake mix only needs oil, you’re safe anyway.
Serving & Storage (AKA: How to Keep It From Disappearing)
Serve it cold, straight from the fridge. This is not a “warm dessert” situation. Cold is where the pudding feels thick and creamy, and the whipped topping holds its shape.
Store leftovers covered in the fridge for 3 to 4 days. The top might soften a bit, and the wafers will lose crunch, but the flavor stays great. If you used bananas on top, expect them to brown after a day. The cake won’t be ruined, it just won’t be winning any beauty contests.
And if you’re bringing it to a gathering, do yourself a favor: keep it chilled until the last minute, then set it out and act casual when people start hovering around the pan like it’s the main event. TBH, it kind of is.
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The Ultimate Banana Pudding Poke Cake Recipe 🍌
A moist vanilla poke cake soaked with creamy banana pudding and topped with whipped cream, fresh bananas, and vanilla wafers—classic comfort dessert everyone loves.
- Total Time: 45
- Yield: 12 servings
Ingredients
- Cake
- 1 box vanilla or yellow cake mix
- Ingredients listed on cake box (eggs, oil, water)
- Banana Pudding Layer
- 1 box (3.4 oz / 96 g) instant banana pudding mix
- 1½ cups cold milk
- Topping
- 2 cups whipped topping (Cool Whip or homemade)
- 3–4 ripe bananas, sliced
- 1½ cups vanilla wafers (whole or crushed)
Instructions
- Preheat oven and bake cake according to package directions in a 9×13-inch pan.
- Let cake cool for about 10 minutes, then poke holes all over using the handle of a wooden spoon.
- Whisk banana pudding mix with cold milk until thick.
- Pour pudding evenly over the cake, spreading it into the holes.
- Let cake cool completely.
- Spread whipped topping evenly over the top.
- Top with sliced bananas and vanilla wafers.
- Refrigerate for at least 2 hours before serving.
Notes
- Chill overnight for the best flavor and texture.
- Use ripe but firm bananas to prevent browning.
- Add crushed wafers just before serving for extra crunch.
- Best enjoyed within 24–36 hours.
- Prep Time: 15
- Cook Time: 30
- Category: Dessert / Cake
- Method: Baking + No-Bake Assembly
- Cuisine: American
- Diet: Vegetarian
