This rice pudding with cooked rice is the recipe to make when you have leftover rice in the fridge and want something warm, creamy, and comforting without starting from raw rice. You only need cooked rice, milk, sugar, vanilla, cinnamon, a little salt, and about 20 minutes on the stove.
You can use leftover white rice, jasmine rice, basmati rice, short-grain rice, plain takeout rice, or any pre-cooked rice that has been stored safely. The real trick is the ratio: start with roughly equal parts cooked rice and milk, then adjust depending on how dry, soft, or separate the rice is.
The main recipe is an easy no-egg stovetop version. Once you have that base down, you can make it more custardy with egg, richer with condensed milk or evaporated milk, or faster in the microwave. You will also find the small fixes that matter most, because cooked-rice pudding can go from too thin to too thick very quickly when the rice is especially dry or starchy.
What you will find here
Quick Answer: How to Make Rice Pudding with Cooked Rice
To make rice pudding with cooked rice, simmer 2 cups cooked rice with 2 cups milk, ⅓ cup sugar, ¼ teaspoon salt, and ½ teaspoon cinnamon over medium-low heat until creamy. Stir often, then finish with 1 tablespoon butter and 1 teaspoon vanilla. The pudding usually takes 15 to 20 minutes on the stove, plus a short rest so it thickens into a spoonable texture.
At a glance: use 2 cups cooked rice, 2 cups milk, ⅓ cup sugar, and 15–20 minutes on the stove. The best starting ratio is about 1 cup cooked rice to 1 cup milk; add a splash more milk for dry fridge rice or use slightly less for very soft rice.
Leftover rice safety: only use rice that was cooled and refrigerated promptly. If it sat out for more than 2 hours, smells sour, feels slimy, or you are unsure how long it has been stored, skip it and start with a fresh batch of plain cooked rice.
Don’t worry if it looks a little loose while it is still hot. Rice pudding thickens as it rests, and leftover rice keeps absorbing milk even after the heat is off.
Want the exact amounts? Go to the recipe card. Need to adjust for dry or soft rice? See the ratio guide.
Why This Recipe Works
Cooked rice pudding behaves differently from rice pudding made with raw rice. Raw rice needs time to absorb liquid and release starch. Cooked rice has already absorbed water, so the goal is not to cook the rice from scratch. Instead, you are softening it, loosening the grains, seasoning it properly, and simmering the milk until everything turns creamy.
That is why this recipe starts with a simple 1:1 ratio of cooked rice to milk. It gives the rice enough liquid to soften again without drowning it. As the mixture simmers, starch from the rice thickens the milk. Butter and vanilla go in at the end so the pudding tastes round, fragrant, and dessert-like instead of plain sweet rice.
The default version is made without egg because it is easier, smoother, and less likely to curdle or scramble. That said, a custardy egg version is included below for anyone who likes a more old-fashioned rice pudding.
The Best Ratio for Cooked Rice Pudding
The easiest way to avoid soupy or gluey pudding is to start with the right ratio. Think of this as a flexible starting point, not a strict rule, because leftover rice can be soft, dry, fluffy, sticky, or somewhere in between.

| Cooked Rice | Milk | Best For | Texture Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 cup cooked rice | 1 cup milk | Small batch | Good for 2 small servings. |
| 2 cups cooked rice | 2 cups milk | Standard batch | Best starting point for 4 servings. |
| 3 cups cooked rice | 3 cups milk | Family batch | Use a wider saucepan so it thickens evenly. |
| Dry leftover rice | Equal milk plus 2–4 tbsp extra | Cold fridge rice, basmati, takeout-style plain rice | Add extra milk early so the grains soften. |
| Very soft cooked rice | Start with 2–4 tbsp less milk | Freshly cooked soft rice or short-grain rice | Cook gently to avoid a mushy texture. |
This ratio also makes the recipe easy to scale. If you have 1½ cups cooked rice, start with 1½ cups milk. If you have 4 cups cooked rice, start with 4 cups milk and use a large saucepan.

Once the ratio makes sense, see how to make it. If your rice tends to turn dry, gummy, or too thick, keep the texture fixes handy.
Ingredients
The ingredient list is short, and that is part of the comfort of this recipe. Cooked rice, milk, sugar, salt, cinnamon, vanilla, and butter are enough to make a soft, creamy pudding. From there, you can make it richer with cream, more old-fashioned with egg, sweeter with condensed milk, or dairy-free with coconut milk.

What Kind of Cooked Rice Works Best?
The rice you have will decide the final texture more than anything else. Basmati, jasmine, short-grain rice, and cold fridge rice all need slightly different handling, but plain cooked white rice is the easiest all-purpose choice.

Cooked Rice Texture Guide
| Cooked Rice Type | Works? | What to Expect |
|---|---|---|
| Plain cooked white rice | Yes | Best all-purpose choice. Creamy, neutral, and easy to season. |
| Jasmine rice | Yes | Soft and lightly fragrant. Good for a delicate pudding. |
| Basmati rice | Yes | Works well, but the grains stay more separate. Add 2–4 tbsp extra milk if it seems dry. |
| Short-grain rice or sushi rice | Yes | Thicker and creamier because it releases more starch. Watch the heat so it does not turn pasty. |
| Arborio rice | Yes | Very creamy, but it thickens quickly. Keep extra milk nearby. |
| Brown rice | Sometimes | Use only fully cooked, soft brown rice. The pudding will be chewier and nuttier, not classic and silky. |
| Plain takeout rice | Sometimes | Fine if it is plain, unsalted, and not oily. Avoid fried rice or seasoned rice. |
| Flavored rice packets | No | Usually too salty or savory for dessert. |
How to Handle Dry Leftover Rice
Cold leftover rice can look dry and stiff at first, especially if it has been in the fridge overnight. Give it time and enough milk before judging the final texture.

Use Plain Rice, Not Seasoned Rice
Do not use fried rice, salty takeout rice, rice cooked in broth, seasoned rice packets, or rice with garlic, onion, soy sauce, curry, or savory seasoning. This pudding needs plain cooked rice.

If you need to make a fresh batch first, this guide to how to cook rice perfectly covers stovetop, rice cooker, and Instant Pot methods, so you can start with plain rice that is soft enough for pudding.
Using dry fridge rice or basmati? Go to the texture fixes if your pudding looks too loose, too separate, or too thick once it starts cooking.
Milk, Cream, Condensed Milk, and Dairy-Free Options
Whole milk gives the best everyday texture. It is creamy without being too heavy. For a richer pudding, replace 2 to 4 tablespoons of the milk with heavy cream, or stir a splash of cream into the pudding at the end.
Evaporated milk makes the pudding richer and slightly more old-fashioned. Use half evaporated milk and half regular milk. Sweetened condensed milk makes the pudding thicker and sweeter, so reduce or skip the sugar when using it.
For a dairy-free version, use full-fat coconut milk, oat milk, or almond milk. Coconut milk gives the richest result. Almond milk is lighter and may need a slightly longer simmer or a small cornstarch slurry to thicken.
Egg or No Egg?
Egg is not required here. The easiest version uses no egg and thickens through simmering, which gives you a soft, creamy pudding without the risk of scrambling.
An egg makes the pudding more custardy and old-fashioned. If you use one, temper it first with warm milk or warm pudding before adding it back to the saucepan. Then keep the heat gentle and do not boil the pudding hard after the egg goes in.

Raisins, Cinnamon, Vanilla, and Add-Ins
Cinnamon and vanilla are the classic flavor base. A pinch of salt is just as important because it keeps the pudding from tasting flat. Raisins are optional. If you like soft raisins, add them while the pudding simmers. If you prefer them plumper, soak them in warm water for 10 minutes first, then drain and stir them in.
Other good additions include cardamom, nutmeg, orange zest, lemon zest, toasted coconut, chopped dates, chopped pistachios, jam, berry compote, caramel, or a spoonful of brown sugar on top.
For a more Indian-inspired direction, cardamom, saffron, pistachios, rosewater, and jaggery all work beautifully. MasalaMonk’s Indian-inspired pudding ideas include a cardamom rice pudding direction if you want a more fragrant variation.
How to Make Rice Pudding with Cooked Rice
This is the simple stovetop method. Use a heavy saucepan if possible. Thin pans scorch milk more easily, especially once the pudding begins to thicken.
Once you understand the ratio, the recipe is simple: keep the heat gentle, stir often, and stop while the pudding is still slightly loose. It will finish thickening as it rests.

Step 1: Combine the Rice, Milk, Sugar, Salt, and Cinnamon
Add the cooked rice, milk, sugar, salt, and cinnamon to a 2- to 3-quart saucepan. Stir well so the rice loosens and the sugar begins dissolving into the milk.

Step 2: Bring It to a Gentle Simmer
Set the pan over medium heat until the milk begins to steam and small bubbles appear around the edges. Stay close at this stage because milk can boil over quickly.

Step 3: Lower the Heat and Cook Until Creamy
Reduce the heat to medium-low. Simmer for 15 to 20 minutes, stirring often, until the rice softens and the milk thickens. The pudding should look creamy and spoonable, but still slightly loose.

Step 4: Finish with Butter and Vanilla
Turn off the heat. Stir in the butter and vanilla. If you want a richer pudding, stir in 2 to 4 tablespoons of cream at the end.

Step 5: Rest Before Serving
Let the pudding rest for 5 to 10 minutes before serving. This short rest helps the texture settle. Serve it warm, at room temperature, or chilled.

Once you have made it once, you probably will not need to measure as carefully the next time. The pudding tells you what it needs: more milk if it tightens up, more simmering if it looks loose, and a short rest before you judge the final texture.

Ready for the exact measurements? Jump to the recipe card. If the texture does not look right yet, go to the fixes.
Recipe Card: Rice Pudding with Cooked Rice
This easy stovetop rice pudding uses already cooked rice, so it is faster than traditional rice pudding made from raw rice. The default version is egg-free, creamy, and flexible enough for leftover white rice, jasmine rice, basmati rice, or short-grain rice.
Equipment
- 2- to 3-quart heavy saucepan
- Wooden spoon or silicone spatula
- Measuring cups and spoons
- Airtight container for leftovers
Ingredients
- 2 cups cooked white rice, cold or room temperature, about 315–330 g / 11–12 oz
- 2 cups whole milk, 480 ml / 16 fl oz
- ⅓ cup granulated sugar, 65–70 g / about 2.3 oz, adjust to taste
- ¼ teaspoon fine salt
- ½ teaspoon ground cinnamon, plus more for serving
- 1 tablespoon unsalted butter, 14 g / 0.5 oz
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract, 5 ml
- 2–4 tablespoons heavy cream, optional, 30–60 ml
- ⅓–½ cup raisins, optional, 50–75 g
Instructions
- Combine: Add cooked rice, milk, sugar, salt, and cinnamon to a heavy saucepan. Stir to loosen the rice.
- Simmer: Warm over medium heat until the milk begins to steam and gently bubble at the edges.
- Cook: Reduce heat to medium-low. Simmer for 15–20 minutes, stirring often, until the mixture is creamy and the rice is soft.
- Adjust: If the pudding looks too thick before the rice softens, add milk 1–2 tablespoons at a time. If it looks too thin, simmer uncovered for a few more minutes.
- Finish: Turn off the heat. Stir in butter, vanilla, and optional cream. Add raisins now if you want them less cooked, or add them earlier if you want them softer.
- Rest: Let the pudding rest for 5–10 minutes. Serve warm, room temperature, or chilled with extra cinnamon.
Notes
- For dry leftover rice: add 2–4 extra tablespoons milk at the beginning.
- For basmati rice: expect a looser, more separate-grain texture. Add a little extra milk if needed.
- For short-grain rice: stir gently and watch the heat because it thickens faster.
- For sweeter pudding: increase sugar to ½ cup. For a lightly sweet pudding, use ¼ cup.
- For richer pudding: replace ¼ cup milk with cream, or stir cream in at the end.

Leftover Rice Pudding: What to Know Before You Start
This recipe is ideal for leftover rice, but only use rice that has been handled safely. Cooked rice should be cooled and refrigerated promptly. If it has been sitting at room temperature for more than 2 hours, smells sour, feels slimy, or you are unsure how long it has been in the fridge, it is safer to discard it and start with a fresh batch.

If your leftover rice is plain but you are not in the mood for dessert, you can also turn leftover rice into arancini balls instead. Use this rice pudding when you want something creamy and sweet; use arancini when you want a crisp, savory snack.
For general leftover storage guidance, FoodSafety.gov lists cooked leftovers at 3 to 4 days in the refrigerator. For reheating, FoodSafety.gov recommends reheating leftovers to 165°F / 74°C.
Leftover rice tip: cold rice may look dry and stiff at first. Give it time. As it warms in milk, the grains relax and the pudding turns creamier.
Variations
Once you know the base method, this is one of those forgiving desserts you can easily bend toward what you have. Keep the rice-to-liquid ratio in mind and adjust sweetness depending on the milk or add-ins you use.
Rice Pudding with Cooked Rice and Condensed Milk
Sweetened condensed milk gives the pudding a richer, sweeter, almost caramel-like finish. Because it already contains sugar, do not add the full amount of sugar from the main recipe. Start with ⅓ cup condensed milk, taste, then increase to ½ cup only if you want a sweeter pudding.

| Ingredient | Amount |
|---|---|
| Cooked rice | 2 cups / about 315–330 g |
| Whole milk | 1½ cups / 360 ml |
| Sweetened condensed milk | ⅓–½ cup / about 100–150 g |
| Salt | Pinch to ¼ teaspoon |
| Vanilla | 1 teaspoon / 5 ml |
| Cinnamon | ½ teaspoon |
Simmer the rice, milk, condensed milk, salt, and cinnamon over medium-low heat for 12 to 18 minutes, stirring often. Finish with vanilla. If it becomes too thick, loosen it with a splash of milk.
Evaporated Milk Rice Pudding
Evaporated milk gives you a pantry-style pudding that tastes richer without becoming as sweet as condensed milk pudding. Use 1 cup evaporated milk and 1 cup regular milk for every 2 cups cooked rice. Then keep the sugar at ¼ to ⅓ cup and adjust at the end.
Microwave Rice Pudding with Cooked Rice
The stovetop version gives the best texture, but the microwave works for a small quick bowl. Use a deep microwave-safe bowl at least twice as large as the mixture, because milk can bubble up as it heats.

| Ingredient | Small Microwave Batch |
|---|---|
| Cooked rice | 1 cup |
| Milk | 1 cup |
| Sugar | 2–3 tablespoons |
| Cinnamon | ¼ teaspoon |
| Vanilla | ½ teaspoon |
| Butter | 1 teaspoon |
Microwave on high for 1 minute, stir well, then continue in 30- to 60-second bursts, stirring each time, until creamy. Stop when the pudding is still slightly loose because it thickens as it sits.
Old-Fashioned Egg Rice Pudding
A custardy version starts with 1 large egg whisked with ½ cup milk. Cook the rice pudding as usual with the remaining milk, sugar, salt, and cinnamon. When the pudding is hot and creamy, slowly whisk a few spoonfuls of warm pudding into the egg mixture. Then stir the tempered egg mixture back into the pan and cook gently for 2 to 3 minutes. Do not boil hard after adding the egg.

Coconut Milk Rice Pudding
Coconut milk is the richest dairy-free option. Use 2 cups cooked rice with 1½ to 2 cups full-fat coconut milk, then sweeten with sugar, maple syrup, or a small amount of coconut condensed milk. Cinnamon works, but cardamom, ginger, mango, toasted coconut, and lime zest also fit beautifully.

For another coconut-and-rice dessert, MasalaMonk’s mango sticky rice leans more tropical, chewy, and fruit-forward, while this cooked-rice pudding stays softer and creamier.
Baked Rice Pudding with Cooked Rice
Baked rice pudding has a firmer, more custardy texture. To make it, whisk milk, eggs, sugar, vanilla, cinnamon, and salt, then stir in cooked rice. Pour into a buttered baking dish and bake at 325°F / 162°C for about 45 to 50 minutes, or until just set.

This gives you a different dessert from the stovetop version: more set at the edges, more custardy through the center, and less loose in the bowl.
How to Fix the Texture
Quick Texture Check
Cooked-rice pudding is forgiving, so don’t panic if it looks wrong halfway through. Most texture problems come down to the rice, the heat, or the amount of milk. A few small adjustments usually bring it back.

Common Rice Pudding Texture Problems and Fixes
| Problem | Likely Cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Rice pudding is too thin | It has not simmered long enough, or there is too much milk. | Simmer uncovered for 3–5 more minutes, stirring often. |
| Still thin after simmering | The rice is low-starch or the batch has too much liquid. | Mix 1 teaspoon cornstarch with 1 tablespoon cold milk. Stir it in and simmer 1 minute. |
| Rice pudding is too thick | The rice absorbed more milk than expected. | Add warm milk 1–2 tablespoons at a time until spoonable. |
| Dry after chilling | Rice continues absorbing liquid in the fridge. | Stir in a splash of milk before serving or reheating. |
| Rice is still firm | The rice was undercooked before you started. | Add ¼–½ cup milk and cook 5–8 minutes longer over low heat. |
| Pudding tastes bland | Not enough salt, vanilla, spice, or sweetness. | Add a tiny pinch of salt first, then adjust vanilla, cinnamon, or sugar. |
| Pudding turned gummy | Heat was too high, rice was very starchy, or it was over-stirred. | Loosen with milk and stir gently. Next time, use lower heat. |
| Egg scrambled | The egg was added to very hot pudding too quickly. | Use the no-egg method, or temper the egg slowly before adding it. |
| Milk scorched on the bottom | Pan was too thin or heat was too high. | Use a heavy saucepan and medium-low heat. Stir more often as it thickens. |
Once the texture is fixed, let the pudding rest before judging the final thickness. Only need storage advice? Jump to storage and reheating.
How to Store, Freeze, and Reheat Rice Pudding
Let rice pudding cool, then transfer it to an airtight container and refrigerate. Because this recipe often starts with leftover rice, use conservative storage habits and do not keep it sitting at room temperature for long.

| Storage Method | How Long | Best Practice |
|---|---|---|
| Refrigerator | Up to 3–4 days | Store in an airtight container. Add milk before reheating if it thickens. |
| Freezer | Best quality within 1 month | Freeze in small portions. Texture may be softer or grainier after thawing. |
| Stovetop reheating | 5–8 minutes | Reheat gently with a splash of milk, stirring often. |
| Microwave reheating | 30-second bursts | Stir between bursts and add milk as needed. |
Rice pudding thickens in the fridge. That does not mean it is ruined. Stir in a splash of milk before reheating, or loosen chilled pudding with a little cold milk if you prefer eating it cold.
What to Serve with Rice Pudding
Rice pudding is good plain, but toppings make it feel more finished. Try extra cinnamon, brown sugar, toasted nuts, raisins, chopped dates, berry compote, strawberry jam, mango, caramel, maple syrup, toasted coconut, pistachios, or a spoonful of cream.

If you like chilled spoon desserts, this quick mango pudding is another easy option for a softer, fruitier dessert table.
For a warmer dessert, serve this rice pudding just after resting. For a thicker make-ahead dessert, chill it and loosen with a little milk before serving. Either way, it is the kind of recipe that becomes easier every time you make it, because the texture tells you what it needs.

A finished bowl should feel like a real dessert, not just reheated rice. The best texture is creamy, spoonable, gently spiced, and soft enough to serve warm or chilled.

FAQs
What is the best rice for rice pudding with cooked rice?
Plain cooked white rice is the best all-purpose choice. Jasmine rice is soft and fragrant, basmati rice works but stays more separate, and short-grain rice makes the thickest pudding. Brown rice works only when it is fully cooked and soft.
How much milk do you need for 2 cups cooked rice?
Use 2 cups milk for 2 cups cooked rice as the starting point. Add 2 to 4 extra tablespoons of milk if the rice is dry, cold, or separate-grained.
Is egg necessary in rice pudding?
No. Egg is optional here. Rice pudding with cooked rice can turn creamy through gentle simmering alone. Egg gives a more custardy old-fashioned texture, but the no-egg version is easier and less likely to scramble.
Why is my rice pudding runny?
It probably needs more simmering time. Cook it uncovered over medium-low heat for a few more minutes, stirring often. If it still stays thin, add a small cornstarch slurry made from 1 teaspoon cornstarch and 1 tablespoon cold milk.
Why did my rice pudding get too thick?
Cooked rice keeps absorbing liquid as it sits, especially in the refrigerator. Stir in milk 1 to 2 tablespoons at a time until the texture becomes creamy again.
Does basmati rice work for rice pudding?
Yes, basmati rice works, but it gives a looser pudding because the grains stay separate. Add a little extra milk and simmer gently so the rice softens without breaking down too much.
Does leftover takeout rice work?
Plain takeout rice works if it is unsalted, not oily, and has been refrigerated safely. Do not use fried rice, seasoned rice, or rice with savory sauces for dessert pudding.
How do you make rice pudding with cooked rice and condensed milk?
Use 2 cups cooked rice, 1½ cups milk, and ⅓ to ½ cup sweetened condensed milk. Skip the regular sugar at first, simmer until creamy, then adjust sweetness at the end.
What is the best way to reheat rice pudding?
Reheat it gently with a splash of milk. Use low heat on the stove or short microwave bursts, stirring between each burst. The pudding should loosen as it warms.
Can you freeze rice pudding?
You can freeze rice pudding, but the texture may become softer or slightly grainy after thawing. Freeze it in small portions for best quality, thaw in the refrigerator, then reheat gently with a splash of milk.
How long does rice pudding last in the fridge?
Keep rice pudding in an airtight container in the refrigerator and use it within 3 to 4 days. Since this version may start with leftover rice, it is better not to stretch the storage time.
Made it with leftover rice? Share what kind you used — jasmine, basmati, short-grain, brown rice, or plain takeout rice — and whether you liked the pudding warm, chilled, with raisins, or without. It helps other readers adjust the texture before they start.


































































































