Tag: keto dessert

  • Keto Mexican Chocolate Pudding Cups

    Keto Mexican Chocolate Pudding Cups

    Dessert does not always need flour.

    It does not always need a crust, a cake pan, or the kind of sweetness that leaves the body tired afterward.

    Sometimes dessert can be small.

    Cold.

    Dark.

    Quiet.

    A spoon moving through chocolate thickened by cream and patience.

    This week began with green chile lime chicken and cauliflower rice. Then came the green chile avocado salad, cool and sharp and full of New Mexico brightness. So, for dessert, I wanted something that didn’t break the rhythm. Something chilled. Something keto-friendly. Something with depth instead of heaviness.

    That brought me to Mexican-style chocolate.

    I want to be clear about that.

    I am not Latino, and this is not me claiming a tradition that is not mine. This pudding is inspired by the flavors often associated with Mexican chocolate—cocoa, cinnamon, vanilla, and a small whisper of chile. I use those flavors with respect and gratitude, because good food deserves credit. Flavor has a lineage. Ingredients have memory. And when we borrow from a tradition, the least we can do is credit the source.

    This is not a traditional Mexican dessert.

    It is a keto chocolate pudding cup shaped like that.

    Rich cream. Unsweetened cocoa. Cinnamon. Vanilla. A pinch of salt. A little chile powder or cayenne if you want the heat to arrive at the end, quietly, like a door opening in another room.

    The sweetness is controlled.

    The texture is soft.

    The portion is small enough to feel reasonable and rich enough to feel like a dessert.

    Because even when you are trying to eat lighter, even when you are watching carbs, even when you tell yourself you do not need anything after dinner, there is still room for a little something sweet.

    Especially if it knows how to leave gently.

    Keto Mexican Chocolate Pudding Cups

    Serves

    4 small pudding cups

    Ingredients

    • 480 ml heavy cream
    • 25 g unsweetened cocoa powder
    • 40 g powdered monk fruit sweetener or powdered allulose
    • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
    • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
    • ⅛ teaspoon cayenne pepper or ancho chile powder, optional
    • ¼ teaspoon salt
    • 2 large egg yolks
    • 15 g unsalted butter

    Optional Toppings

    • 120 ml heavy cream, whipped
    • 1 teaspoon powdered monk fruit or allulose, for whipped cream
    • A light dusting of cinnamon
    • Sugar-free dark chocolate shavings
    • 15 g chopped pecans or almonds

    Method

    1. Warm the Cream

    In a medium saucepan, add the heavy cream, cocoa powder, powdered sweetener, cinnamon, chile powder if using, and salt.

    Set the pan over medium-low heat.

    Whisk slowly until the cocoa dissolves and the cream begins to steam.

    Do not boil it.

    Chocolate does not need violence to become itself.

    2. Temper the Egg Yolks

    In a small bowl, whisk the egg yolks.

    Slowly pour a small amount of the warm chocolate cream into the egg yolks while whisking constantly.

    This warms the yolks gently so they do not scramble.

    Add the yolk mixture back into the saucepan.

    3. Thicken the Pudding

    Keep the heat on low.

    Whisk constantly for about 5 to 8 minutes, until the pudding thickens enough to coat the back of a spoon.

    Do not rush this part.

    Low heat gives you silk.

    High heat gives you regret.

    4. Finish

    Remove the pan from the heat.

    Stir in the vanilla extract and butter until smooth.

    Taste carefully.

    If you want more warmth, add a pinch more cinnamon or chile.

    If you want more sweetness, add a little more powdered sweetener.

    Let the pudding tell you what it needs.

    5. Chill

    Divide the pudding into 4 small cups or jars.

    Cover and refrigerate for at least 2 hours, or until fully chilled and set.

    6. Serve

    Top with lightly sweetened whipped cream, a dusting of cinnamon, sugar-free dark chocolate shavings, or chopped nuts.

    Serve cold.

    Small spoon recommended.

    Not because you have to be delicate.

    Because this is the kind of dessert that deserves to last a little longer.

    Notes From My Kitchen

    For the smoothest pudding, use powdered sweetener instead of granulated. Granulated sweeteners can leave a gritty texture.

    Allulose usually gives a softer, more sugar-like finish. Monk fruit works well too, especially if powdered.

    Chile is optional. Use just enough to warm the chocolate, not enough to dominate it.

    Ancho chile powder gives a deeper, earthier flavor. Cayenne gives sharper heat.

    For a dairy-free version, use full-fat coconut milk instead of heavy cream and coconut oil instead of butter, though the flavor will change.

    If you want a thicker pudding, chill it longer.

    Why This Dessert Works

    The chocolate brings depth.

    The cinnamon brings warmth.

    The Chile brings a small spark.

    The cream brings softness.

    And the keto structure keeps it from becoming heavier than the meal needs.

    It is a dessert without collapse.

    Sweetness without surrender.

    A small ending after a warm week of green chile, lime, avocado, and sun.

    And while it is only inspired by Mexican-style chocolate, that inspiration matters.

    Because food should not erase where its beauty comes from.

    It should be remembered.

    It should give thanks.

    Then it should be served cold, in a small cup, with a spoon.

    Kyle J. Hayes

    kylehayesblog.com

    Please like, comment, and share

    Resources for Hard Times

    If you’re looking for practical help, food support, or community resources, you can visit the Salt, Ink & Soul Resources Page.

    👉 Resources for Hard Times

  • Vanilla Cinnamon Ricotta Cream (Keto)

    Vanilla Cinnamon Ricotta Cream (Keto)

    A gentle way to end things

    There’s a moment after a meal where everything slows.

    The plates are mostly empty. The conversation softens. The weight of what you’ve eaten begins to settle, not heavily—but honestly. And in that space, you don’t need another course that tries to impress you.

    You need something that understands the moment.

    Something cool.

    Something light.

    Something that doesn’t ask for attention.

    Just enough sweetness to remind you the meal mattered.

    This is that kind of dessert.

    Ingredients (Serves 2–3)

    • 1 cup whole milk ricotta
    • 1/4 cup heavy cream
    • 1 to 2 tablespoons powdered erythritol (or preferred keto sweetener), to taste
    • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
    • 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
    • Pinch of salt

    Optional (if you want a little more, but not too much):

    • A few raspberries or sliced strawberries
    • A light drizzle of sugar-free syrup
    • A few shavings of dark chocolate

    Method

    Start by bringing everything into one place.

    In a bowl, add the ricotta, heavy cream, sweetener, vanilla, cinnamon, and a pinch of salt. Nothing complicated. Just ingredients that already understand each other.

    Whisk it gently. Or use a hand mixer if you prefer. A minute or two is enough. You’re not trying to force air into it—you’re just smoothing it out, letting it become something cohesive.

    Taste it.

    This part matters. Adjust the sweetness if needed, but keep it restrained. This isn’t meant to be loud.

    If you have the time, let it rest in the refrigerator for 20 to 30 minutes. It settles there. The texture firms slightly. The flavors come together more quietly.

    Spoon it into a bowl.

    Leave it plain, or add a few berries, a light drizzle of syrup, or a touch of chocolate. Nothing that overwhelms what’s already there.

    Notes From My Kitchen

    • This works best when it stays simple—too much sweetness changes its purpose
    • If your ricotta feels too thick, a small splash of cream will bring it back
    • Best served chilled, especially after a warm meal

    Closing Thought

    Some desserts try to be remembered.

    This one just lets you rest.

    It doesn’t ask for more space than it needs. It doesn’t pull you back into hunger after you’ve already been fed.

    It simply brings things to a close—gently, honestly, and without excess.

    At the Table

    This is how the meal ends.

    But it didn’t begin here.

    It started with something warm and steady—Green Chile Beef & Cauliflower Casserole.

    And something fresh came alongside it—Crisp Lime & Avocado Salad.

    This just carries you the rest of the way.

    Kyle J. Hayes

    kylehayesblog.com

    If this found you at the right time,

    Feel free to like, comment, or share it with someone who might need it too.

    Resources for Hard Times

    If you’re looking for practical help, food support, or community resources, you can visit the Salt, Ink & Soul Resources Page.

    👉 Resources for Hard Times