Cinnamon Raisin Rice Pudding

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I don’t know what it is about rice pudding, it’s not something I grew up eating, but I think it is the ultimate comfort food.  I like it thick and creamy, studded with plumped raisins, and hot off the stove.  And with the cool dampness settling in for the winter, combined with an enduring lack of sleep, I have been deeply craving comfort food. (That, and steaming hot bubble baths.)

My mother-in-law recently arrived with a suitcase full of all my favourite spices from India – the freshest cinnamon, cardamom, peppercorns, and cloves – so I’ve been using them in everything I can.

I tossed a cinnamon stick into my go-to rice pudding recipe along with a vanilla bean and a handful of raisins.

I stood at the stove stirring and tasting the warm pudding and deeply inhaling the sweet steam.  It was like a much-needed warm hug.  Now if only there was a pudding that feels like a nap. 

The rice I used was Thai sticky (glutinous) rice – I had it on hand and wanted to find out if it would be a good substitute or arborio.  It was great on the first day, but got too sticky overnight.  Stick with arborio.

Feel free to substitute the vanilla bean for extract (just stir in a teaspoon at the very end) and/or the cinnamon stick for ground cinnamon (just swap in a teaspoonful at the same point in the recipe).

And I would totally support your decision to add an ounce of rum with the cream.

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Cinnamon Raisin Rice Pudding

Thick, creamy rice pudding with cinnamon and plump raisins. Delicious hot or chilled, it's my ultimate comfort food.
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cook Time: 1 hour
Total Time: 1 hour 10 minutes
Servings: 6

Ingredients  

  • 4 cups 2% or whole milk
  • ½ cup arborio rice
  • ½ cup raisins
  • ½ cup granulated sugar
  • 1 tbsp butter
  • 1 cinnamon stick broken
  • 1 vanilla bean scraped
  • ¼ tsp salt
  • 2 egg yolks
  • ½ cup heavy cream

Instructions 

  • In a large saucepan over medium-high heat, bring milk to a boil with rice, raisins, sugar, butter, vanilla bean seeds, cinnamon stick and salt. Reduce to a simmer, and cook, stirring frequently, for about 1 hour, until rice is very tender.
  • Whisk egg yolks in a small bowl. Slowly add 1/2 cup of hot pudding to yolks, whisking constantly, to temper the eggs. Slowly whisk egg mixture into remaining pudding in saucepan. Cook, stirring constantly, 3-5 minutes, until pudding thickens. Remove from heat; stir in cream. Transfer to a shallow dish and chill 4 hours, up to overnight, pressing plastic wrap directly onto the surface to avoid a pudding "skin".
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141 Comments

  1. S says:

    I just made two poached eggs using this method but skipped the vinegar since I didn’t have any. They turned out beautifully and were not even a stringy mess! Thank you!!!

    1. Jennifer Pallian says:

      Good to know that they’ll still turn out without the vinegar!! Glad you liked 🙂

  2. S says:

    I just made two poached eggs using this method but skipped the vinegar since I didn’t have any. They turned out beautifully and were not even a stringy mess! Thank you!!!

    1. Jennifer Pallian says:

      Good to know that they’ll still turn out without the vinegar!! Glad you liked 🙂

  3. S says:

    I just made two poached eggs using this method but skipped the vinegar since I didn’t have any. They turned out beautifully and were not even a stringy mess! Thank you!!!

    1. Jennifer Pallian says:

      Good to know that they’ll still turn out without the vinegar!! Glad you liked 🙂

  4. Laura Mittelstadt says:

    Just made this. First try followed the directions exactly but it exploded in my ramekin. Ooops. Second try it worked beautifully except not all the white stayed on the egg even with the vinegar.But of course it tasted amazing. Thank you for sharing!

    1. Jennifer Pallian says:

      Yikes, it exploded?? That hasn’t happened to me in the hundreds of eggs I’ve made this way… glad you gave it a second go, though!

  5. Laura Mittelstadt says:

    Just made this. First try followed the directions exactly but it exploded in my ramekin. Ooops. Second try it worked beautifully except not all the white stayed on the egg even with the vinegar.But of course it tasted amazing. Thank you for sharing!

    1. Jennifer Pallian says:

      Yikes, it exploded?? That hasn’t happened to me in the hundreds of eggs I’ve made this way… glad you gave it a second go, though!

  6. Laura Mittelstadt says:

    Just made this. First try followed the directions exactly but it exploded in my ramekin. Ooops. Second try it worked beautifully except not all the white stayed on the egg even with the vinegar.But of course it tasted amazing. Thank you for sharing!

    1. Jennifer Pallian says:

      Yikes, it exploded?? That hasn’t happened to me in the hundreds of eggs I’ve made this way… glad you gave it a second go, though!

  7. Tiffany Dunois says:

    I just tried this and it worked out great! I used a a cereal bowl and my microwave is 900volts so it took 45 second then a turn and then another 30. Your times were a great starting point, I didn’t even have one lost egg!

    1. Jennifer Pallian says:

      Glad to hear it, Tiffany!! Enjoy 🙂

  8. Tiffany Dunois says:

    I just tried this and it worked out great! I used a a cereal bowl and my microwave is 900volts so it took 45 second then a turn and then another 30. Your times were a great starting point, I didn’t even have one lost egg!

    1. Jennifer Pallian says:

      Glad to hear it, Tiffany!! Enjoy 🙂

  9. bullokie says:

    This recipe is fantastic. Now to atone to the chicken gods for all the rubbery abominations I’ve microwaved in the past…
    Pro tip: if you prick the yolk with a toothpick you reduce the chance of explosion by 63%.

  10. bullokie says:

    This recipe is fantastic. Now to atone to the chicken gods for all the rubbery abominations I’ve microwaved in the past…
    Pro tip: if you prick the yolk with a toothpick you reduce the chance of explosion by 63%.

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