I love chia seeds and use them all the time. These mini powerhouses pack more calcium than milk, more antioxidants than blueberries, and more omega-3 than salmon. That’s quite the accomplishment for a tiny seed!
Their texture can take a little getting used to, but they’re versatile. I also love that they’re protein-rich and can help thicken recipes.
What is Chia Seed Pudding?
Chia seed pudding is a simple and yummy way to easily get the benefits of chia seeds. These seeds are high in healthy fats and omega-3 fatty acids. It’s similar to overnight oats but without the grains.
It takes minutes to make and has enough protein and nutrients for a quick, on-the-go breakfast. It’s also naturally gluten-free and easily dairy-free. For a low-carb, keto-friendly version use almond milk and stevia to sweeten.
There are two texture options for chia seed pudding. I prefer to keep the chia seeds whole because I love their texture. If you prefer a smoother texture similar to “regular” pudding then you might like yours blended.
Here’s how to make chia seed pudding:
For the whole seed version, just leave the seeds whole and whisk the ingredients together. If you’re adding flavors (berries, chocolate, etc.) you’ll need to blend these into the liquid first. This helps keep the flavor even.
For blended (smooth) pudding, dump all the ingredients in a high speed blender and blend until smooth. I prefer to do this with chocolate or colored options as the simple vanilla recipe is gray when blended.
Mix-Ins and Toppings to Add
I’ve included several different flavor recipe options below, but here are some more ideas. Some of these toppings work best if added right before serving.
My favorite way to eat it is with chopped soaked nuts, fresh fruit, or even chocolate shavings. It makes the perfect healthy breakfast, snack, or dessert.
Chia Seed Pudding Recipe
Delicious and healthy chia seed pudding packed with protein, omega-3, antioxidants, and calcium. Takes less than 5 minutes to make!
The beauty of this recipe is that there are dozens of ways to customize it. You can change the flavor, the texture, the sweetener, the color, and practically any other part of the recipe. It’s almost impossible to mess up.
Different Sweetener Options
Raw honey works well instead of pure maple syrup. For a low-glycemic option try stevia or omit the sweetener entirely. Stevia can be healthy if it’s minimally processed. I like the Sweet Drops brand and they have lots of different flavors. My favorite flavor in this recipe is their English Toffee stevia.
You could also blend some dates or bananas into your liquid before adding the chia seeds. Although it’s popular and touted as healthy, I’d skip the agave syrup.
Milk Options
I use coconut milk here because it’s healthy, allergen-friendly, and gives it a good flavor. Some recipes call for soy milk or oat milk, which I don’t recommend (here’s why). If you don’t want chia seed pudding with coconut milk, then try one of these instead:
I prefer basic vanilla chia seed pudding, but I’ve always been a vanilla ice cream person too. If vanilla isn’t your thing, here are some great flavor options you can try:
Chocolate: Add ¼ cup cocoa powder to the blended version of this recipe and/or add chocolate flavored stevia.
Strawberry: Add ½ cup fresh strawberries to the blended recipe. Or, try blending fresh strawberries into a juice and use as part of the liquid in the whole chia seed recipe.
Chai: Add 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon and a pinch of cardamon and cloves for a chai flavor.
PB&J: Here’s a peanut butter and blackberry jam chia pudding recipe we love.
Pecan Pie: Add ½ teaspoon of ground cinnamon to the base recipe and an optional ½ teaspoon of almond extract. Mix ½ cup of chopped toasted pecans into the finished pudding.
Matcha: Add 1 Tablespoon matcha green tea powder to the mix for a naturally bright green color (great idea for St. Patrick’s Day!).
Chia Seed Pudding With Protein
I’ll add more protein to this recipe, especially if it’s for breakfast. I add 2-4 Tablespoons of collagen protein powder. This adds more protein and skin/hair boosting collagen without changing the taste.
How Long Can You Keep Chia Seed Pudding?
This recipe uses all natural ingredients and isn’t a processed food. It tastes best within two days after it’s made. I prefer to meal-prep and make it at night to have it ready the next morning. This delicious pudding vanishes so quickly in our house though I’ve never had to worry about it!
Reducing Anti-nutrients
Almost all plant foods have some amount of oxalates and our body actually makes oxalates. Certain healthy gut bacteria use oxalates for food. The problem is when we’re not getting enough calcium or have a damaged gut lining.
Calcium-rich foods decrease oxalate absorption. People with disrupted gut function from IBS, antibiotics, or a history of kidney stones should exercise more caution when it comes to oxalate rich foods. So how much oxalates are really in chia seeds?
These tiny seeds are lower in oxalates than spinach, swiss chard, almonds, brazil nuts, chocolate, sweet potatoes, and many other plant foods. If you want to lower that number even further then there’s an easy way to do that!
Soaking chia seeds in an acid starts the fermentation process and makes them easier to digest. A 2018 study found that soaking various seeds and beans reduced the oxalate content by 26-56 percent. Soaking also reduces phytic acid.
For every batch of chia seed pudding use 1 Tablespoon of whey, kefir, or other liquid probiotic. Sauerkraut juice is one option, but might affect the flavor too much for some people. Simply add the liquids and chia seeds to the recipe and let it sit out on the counter overnight or up to 24 hours. Then add in whatever sweetener and mix-ins you want. This mixture will keep in the fridge for about 4 days.
What are your favorite flavors and mix-ins to use with chia seed pudding? Leave a comment and let us know!
Shi, L., Arntfield, S. D., & Nickerson, M. (2018). Changes in levels of phytic acid, lectins and oxalates during soaking and cooking of Canadian pulses. Food research international (Ottawa, Ont.), 107, 660–668.
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About Katie Wells
Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.
234 responses to “The Best Chia Seed Pudding Recipe (+ 5 Delicious Variations)”
Tabitha
Ack! I made a chocolate version of this but it had a horrible bitter aftertaste. Does it matter whether I use the black or white chia seeds? If that’s not an issue for anyone else, it must’ve been my stevia. I used 2Tbsp of cocoa powder so it was definitely not a too chocolatey issue.
It didn’t go to waste because my 5 and 7 YO thought it tasted fine. The teenager and I were just trying to get the bitter taste out of our mouths.
Did you blend yours to hide the frog egg texture? I’ve seen people use almond milk and coconut milk with good results. My seeds taste fine if I use them for chia-ade but I do taste the bitterness if I throw a tbsp in a smoothie. My current guess is the cracked chia seeds give off the bitter taste. We are going to try a half batch with unblinded chia as pictured.
Thanks for asking because I was starting to think we were the only ones with bitter chia issues. Lol
I am planning on preparing this pudding today. Since I am not a fan of Stevia in any form I plan to use coconut nectar which is my favorite sweetner at this time. I am surprised that no one else mentioned coconut nectar. Low glycemic and very good for folks like myself that have hypoglycemia. Look forward to this treat! Thank you.
I drop in some mooshed up pumpkin or sweet potato with a dash of pie spice. Try it with some left-over smoothie as the liquid…as if that ever happens… but you can make extra just for this.
I’m about to make my first chia pudding. Why does maple syrup seem to be the preferred sweetener? I’m guessing the two ingredients (chia seeds & maple syrup) compliment one another and I just wont get it unless I try it? If that’s not the case, what about agave? Sure, sure, there’s stevia which I’ve been making myself use in tea everyday for 3 months now. But, until I develop that acquired taste, is maple syrup really what most people like best in chia pudding?
I read the comment above about grinding the chia seeds and you answered it’s not necessary. But I was wondering if it’d be possible and still yummy? Have you tried it? My doctor says I’m having too many seeds that’s causing problems. Grinding could help I wonder? Wails still being able to enjoy the seeds.
Is there a way to make hot chia pudding? Something about the coldness of it mixed with texture doesn’t sit well with me and makes it hard to eat a whole bowl of it, same with overnight oatmeal. It is delicious however!
Hi, hate to contradict others on here, but the chia company says that it’s fine with heat, you can boil & bake with it, but it can’t be boiled for a long time as that will destroy the omega’s
I tried it three times before I got the consistency I liked with evenness of texture, and in half the amount for a single serving, or enough for 3-4 mini portions, but using half the recipe. Here are some of the things I tried and now do:
* 1/3 cup white chia seeds (whole! I tried ground and they wouldn’t congeal). I sometimes add another 2-3 tablespoons if it’s too watery.
* I used 3/4 coconut milk combined with about 1/4 of regular cow’s milk (don’t kill me!) I also tried gently heating the milks a little bit to aid in getting the chia seeds to open up. Today I put the 3/4 cup of slightly warmed coconut milk in blender, and added the 1/4 cup of cold 4% milk at the end**
* Blend the milk(s) with vanilla extract and/or honey, if using, and any spices first, for 30-60 seconds to make sure your ‘base’ is well-blended.
*When adding the chia seeds, I use a plastic spatula and gently stir with blender off to make sure the seeds are wet and don’t fly up into the blender and stick to the walls and not get into the milks (done that 😉 ).
* Work rather quickly once you add the chia seeds, blend about 30 seconds, then —
* add the cold milk, which will start the process of thickening. ** If it’s somehow still watery, add the 2 Tablespoons of chia seeds. But hold off and try it this way first. (Also I found the added collagen powder did wonders to help it congeal, too!) Blend about 15-30 seconds, see if you need to Pulse a few times, and —
* Pour immediately into container, using spatula to get every last bit out of blender.
Hope this helps! I tried it like this today and had only a very tiny amount of chia seeds below the level of the blades in the blender.
I made this this morning and when I checked it after several hours all the chia seeds were lumped together on the bottom 🙁
I was able to salvage it by blending it but curious if anyone else has had this happen
No need to worry, this does happen and is normal and preventable. About 5 minutes after you mix in the seeds give it a shake/stir, and again 10 minutes later. By then the gelling will have started and the seeds will stay in suspension and not sink to the bottom.
Wow! I cannot believe Wellness Mama wouldn’t include this stirring tip in the actual directions, since its critical to the recipe turning out well. If you follow the instructions to the letter and just pop it in the fridge for 4 hours, you end up with a thick, inedible crust of chia seeds on the bottom, a total waste. Who knows how many wasted batches this has caused. What a stupid oversight. Can you please update this lazy recipe with one more step so that you stop wasting people’s time? Rediculous.
Wow- angry much? Added the tip to the recipe, but I’ve made it without doing this many times and never had a problem. If there is any clumping, I’ve always been able to stir before serving and have it all achieve an even consistency.
I just tried this recipe for one – testing it on myself as a beginner. I went out and saw all the different chia seeds, and then saw the ground one, and got that, figuring it might give me the other version if I wanted it. I followed you recipe using vanilla coconut milk and added a bit of molasses, shook it in a jar and poured into mug, letting it set 4 1/2 hours in the refrigerator. I’m tasting it now, but it’s barely set and goopy :/ What did I do wrong? Should I have used the whole chia seeds instead? Is this package of ground chia salvageable? HELP!
I’ve never purchased pre-ground chia seeds before so I don’t know if they lose any of their “gelling” properties over time. YOu should be able to add more chia powder and blend though and see if that thickens it.
The the same thing happened where I followed the recipe, I allowed it to chill overnight but it never gelled and was clumpy and goopy as well. I even bought chia seeds. This was a B.S. recipe and a waste of good coconut milk.
Did you mix it at all before serving. And did you use ground chia seeds or whole? Since this contains all whole food ingredients and isn’t homogenized and doesn’t contain binders, it will have some natural texture variations, but all should go away once mixed.
I say yes it is. I guess it depends on if you have a sweet tooth. I don’t really like sweet things for breakfast and I find if I add fruit (esp an orange cut up) that adds enough sweetness. Maybe it’s an acquired taste.
Just wondering what would happen if I heated the cocoa and milk and sweetener so the cocoa would completely dissolve before adding the China seeds….would it mess things up ? Or maybe speed things up ?
Will speed things up. You can practically do anything you like with the seeds. There is no wrong way. Any liquid, any flavour. I love it jelled with an espresso coffee shot then served with maple syrup and cream!
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