Three years ago, oliver and I discovered sticky toffee pudding at a tiny British pub during our vacation. He called it "the best cake that's not a cake" and begged for it every single night. When we got home, I spent months perfecting this traditional sticky toffee pudding recipe. After testing different dates, tweaking the toffee sauce dessert ratio, and adjusting baking times, we finally nailed it. Now this moist toffee cake rivals any sticky toffee pudding near me that we've tried.
Why You'll Love This Sticky Toffee Pudding
This classic sticky toffee pudding transforms ordinary ingredients into pure comfort food dessert magic. The moist sponge cake stays tender for days, and the butter toffee topping gets better as it sits. oliver helps measure the Medjool dates while I handle the hot toffee sauce. Each bite combines warm dessert with that rich caramel flavor that makes everyone ask for seconds. This recipe sticky toffee pudding fits perfectly for holiday gatherings or cozy Sunday dinners. Plus, it's impressive enough for guests but simple enough for weeknight cravings. The English toffee pudding tradition has never been easier to master at home.
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Sticky Toffee Pudding Ingredients
For the Pudding:
- Medjool dates
- Boiling water
- Baking soda
- All-purpose flour
- Baking powder
- Unsalted butter
- Brown sugar
- Eggs
- Vanilla extract
- Salt
For the Toffee Sauce:
- Heavy cream
- Brown sugar
- Unsalted butter
- Vanilla extract
- Salt pinch
For Serving:
- Vanilla ice cream
- Whipped cream
- Extra toffee sauce for drizzling
See recipe card for quantities.
How To Make Sticky Toffee Pudding
Years of testing this traditional British dessert taught me what works:
Step 1: Prepare the Dates
Chop your Medjool dates into small pieces and place them in a heatproof bowl. Pour boiling water over the dates and stir in baking soda - it will fizz up dramatically. This isn't just for show. The baking soda and flour mixture interaction breaks down the dates' tough skins and creates incredible moisture throughout the pudding. Let this mixture sit for 30 minutes until the dates soften completely and the liquid cools to room temperature. Don't skip this soaking time or your sticky toffee pudding ingredients won't blend properly.
Step 2: Make the Batter
Preheat your oven to 350°F and butter a 9x13 baking dish. In a large bowl, cream softened butter with brown sugar until light and fluffy - this takes about 3-4 minutes. Beat in eggs one at a time, then add vanilla extract. In a separate bowl, whisk together flour, baking powder, and salt. Add the dry ingredients to the butter mixture in three additions, alternating with the date mixture. Fold everything together gently until just combined. The batter should look thick and studded with date pieces. Pour into your prepared pan and smooth the top.
Step 3: Bake the Pudding
Slide your pan into the preheated oven and bake for 35-40 minutes. The sticky toffee pudding cake is done when a toothpick inserted in the center comes out with just a few moist crumbs - not wet batter. The top should look golden and spring back when lightly touched. Don't overbake or you'll lose that signature gooey texture. While it bakes, your kitchen fills with the most amazing caramel and vanilla scent. oliver always camps out by the oven during the last 10 minutes, waiting impatiently.
Step 4: Create the Toffee Sauce
While your baked dessert cools slightly, make the magic sauce. In a medium saucepan, combine heavy cream toffee sauce ingredients - cream, brown sugar, and butter. Bring to a gentle boil over medium heat, stirring constantly. Once it boils, reduce heat and simmer for 3-4 minutes until it thickens slightly and turns a beautiful amber color. Remove from heat and stir in vanilla extract and a pinch of salt. This brown sugar sauce should coat the back of a spoon but still pour easily. If it's too thick, add a splash more cream.
Step 5: Assemble and Serve
Poke holes all over the warm pudding using a skewer or fork. Pour half the toffee sauce over the entire surface, letting it soak into those holes. This creates pockets of caramel sauce throughout every bite. Cut into generous squares and serve immediately in bowls. Drizzle remaining sauce over each portion. Top with a scoop of vanilla ice cream that melts into the warm dessert, or serve with custard for the traditional British pub-style sticky toffee pudding experience. The contrast of cold ice cream against warm toffee-soaked cake is absolutely perfect.
Smart Swaps for Sticky Toffee Pudding
Date Alternatives:
- Medjool dates → Deglet Noor dates
- Fresh dates → Dried dates (soak longer)
- Dates → Dried figs for variation
- Regular → Prunes for deeper flavor
Dairy Substitutions:
- Heavy cream → Coconut cream
- Butter → Coconut oil
- Regular milk → Almond milk
- Dairy → Vegan alternatives throughout
Sugar Options:
- Brown sugar → Coconut sugar
- Light brown → Dark brown for richer taste
- Regular → Maple syrup (reduce liquid)
- Standard → Date syrup for extra depth
Serving Swaps:
- Vanilla ice cream → Salted caramel ice cream
- Ice cream → Traditional custard
- Whipped cream → Crème fraîche
- Plain → Coffee ice cream pairing
Sticky Toffee Pudding Variations
Individual Ramekins
- Divide batter among 6-8 small ramekins
- Bake 18 to 20 minutes for mini portions
- Perfect for dinner parties and presentations
- Easier portion control for guests
Christmas Sticky Toffee Pudding
- Add 2 tablespoons rum to toffee sauce
- Mix candied ginger into batter
- Top with orange zest before serving
- Festive twist for holiday gatherings
Chocolate Date Pudding
- Fold ½ cup cocoa powder into batter
- Add chocolate chips to date mixture
- Drizzle chocolate sauce alongside toffee
- Decadent version for chocolate lovers
Bourbon Pecan Version
- Add 2 tablespoons bourbon to sauce
- Stir chopped toasted pecans into batter
- Top with candied pecans before serving
- Sophisticated twist on comfort food dessert
Equipment
- 9x13 inch baking dish or individual ramekins
- Large mixing bowls
- Electric mixer or whisk
- Medium saucepan for sauce
- Measuring cups and spoons
- Skewer for poking holes
Storing Your Sticky Toffee Pudding
Room Temperature Storage
- Cover tightly and keep up to 2 days
- Store sauce separately in sealed container
- Reheat individual portions as needed
- Best texture when served warm
Refrigerator Method
- Store covered up to 5 days refrigerated
- Sauce keeps fresh up to 1 week separately
- Microwave portions 30 seconds before serving
- Add fresh sauce when reheating
Freezer Storage
- Wrap cooled pudding twice in plastic wrap
- Freeze up to 3 months without sauce
- Thaw overnight in refrigerator before reheating
- Make fresh sauce when ready to serve
Reheating Instructions
- Microwave individual portions 45 seconds
- Or reheat in 300°F oven 15 minutes
- Pour warm sauce over reheated pudding
- Top with fresh ice cream for best results
Top Tip
- Last winter, oliver made a mistake that became our signature touch. He was helping measure ingredients and accidentally grabbed the jar of espresso powder instead of cocoa powder. Before I could stop him, he dumped a teaspoon into the date mixture. I almost started over, but decided to see what happened.
- That tiny bit of espresso transformed our sticky toffee pudding completely. It didn't taste like coffee at all. Instead, it deepened the caramel notes and made the whole dessert taste richer and more complex. Guests started commenting that ours tasted "more intense" than versions they'd tried elsewhere. oliver beamed with pride when I explained his "mistake" was actually genius.
- Now we deliberately add that teaspoon of instant espresso powder to the date soaking water. It's become our secret ingredient that sets our recipe sticky toffee pudding apart. Sometimes the best discoveries happen when kids help in the kitchen and you're willing to roll with their mistakes. His accidental addition taught me that perfection sometimes comes from unexpected places. Even when we're making this classic sticky toffee pudding for guests, oliver makes sure to add "his special powder" that nobody can quite identify.
FAQ
What is in Gordon Ramsay's sticky toffee pudding?
Gordon Ramsay's sticky toffee pudding features chopped dates soaked with baking soda, classic sponge cake base, and rich toffee sauce made with heavy cream and brown sugar. His version emphasizes proper date preparation and sauce consistency. While our recipe follows traditional methods, we add espresso powder for deeper flavor complexity not found in standard recipes.
What is in a traditional sticky toffee pudding?
Traditional sticky toffee pudding contains dates, flour, eggs, butter, brown sugar, and vanilla for the cake. The signature toffee sauce uses heavy cream, butter, and brown sugar cooked until thick and glossy. British versions often include treacle or golden syrup. Served warm with vanilla ice cream or traditional custard for authentic pub-style experience.
What is Gordon Ramsay's signature dessert?
While Gordon Ramsay serves many famous desserts, his sticky toffee pudding remains a customer favorite at his restaurants worldwide. He's known for perfectly moist texture and generous toffee sauce portions. His version typically includes warm custard alongside the pudding. Many consider it one of the best representations of this British classic dessert.
How much is Gordon Ramsay's sticky toffee pudding?
At Gordon Ramsay restaurants, sticky toffee pudding typically costs $12-16 depending on location. NYC locations charge premium prices around $15-18. Making homemade sticky toffee dessert costs roughly $8-10 for entire pan serving 12 people. Restaurant portions are individual servings, while homemade feeds the whole family at fraction of the price.
Time to Create This Classic!
Now you have everything for perfect sticky toffee pudding - from proper date soaking to oliver's espresso powder secret. This traditional sticky toffee pudding recipe brings British comfort food dessert magic into your home without restaurant prices or complicated techniques. The moist toffee cake stays tender for days, and that gooey toffee sauce makes every bite absolutely .
This warm dessert pairs beautifully with other comfort classics. Craving more easy dinner winners? Try our Easy Pumpkin Swirl Cheesecake Recipe that delivers bold Southern flavors in under 30 minutes - the spicy kick pairs surprisingly well before serving this sweet finale. Love Italian comfort food? Our The Best Chicken Gyros Recipe combines savory sausage with rich tomato cream sauce perfect for Sunday dinners. Need something the kids will devour first? Our Old Fashioned Butter Pecan Cookies features tender homemade meatballs that disappear before they cool - save room for this sticky toffee pudding afterward!
Share your pudding success! We love seeing your served with ice cream creations and hearing about your family's favorite toppings!
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Pairing
These are my favorite dishes to serve with Sticky Toffee Pudding
Sticky Toffee Pudding
Equipment
- 1 9x13 inch baking dish (or 6-8 ramekins for individual servings)
- 2 Large mixing bowl (swet & dry ingredients)
- 1 Electric mixer or whisk (for creaming butter & sugar)
- 1 Medium saucepan (for toffee sauce)
- Various Measuring cups/spoons
- 1 Skewer (for poking holes)
Ingredients
For the Pudding
- 1 ½ cups Medjool dates, chopped - or Deglet Noor
- 1 ¼ cups boiling water
- 1 teaspoon baking soda - added to hot water
- 1 ¾ cups all-purpose flour
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- ½ teaspoon salt
- ½ cup unsalted butter, softened
- 1 cup brown sugar - packed
- 2 eggs - room temp
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1 teaspoon instant espresso powder - optional "secret ingredient"
For the Toffee Sauce
- 1 cup heavy cream
- 1 cup brown sugar - light or dark
- ½ cup unsalted butter
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1 pinch salt
For Serving
- Vanilla ice cream - or custard
- Whipped cream - optional
- Extra toffee sauce - for drizzling
Instructions
- Chop dates, pour boiling water, add baking soda, optional espresso powder, and let soften 30 minutes.
- Cream butter and sugar, add eggs and vanilla, combine dry ingredients, fold in date mixture.
- Spread batter in pan and bake at 350°F for 35-40 minutes.
- Simmer cream, brown sugar, and butter; add vanilla and salt.
- Poke holes and pour half the sauce over the warm pudding.
- Cut and serve with ice cream, whipped cream, or custard and extra sauce.
















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