
Dessert pizza sounds odd until I remember how many times I have eaten sweet bread with chocolate for breakfast. This one starts with a small piece of pizza dough and turns into a crisp-edged, soft-centered dessert that is more bakery snack than dinner pizza.
The filling is not a classic pastry cream. It is a shortcut paste made from chocolate pudding mix, butter, sugar, brown sugar, and a little flour. I spread it thinly because the dough needs to bake through and the topping tastes better as a layer, not a mound.
I like this recipe when I want something warm and sweet without making a full cake. It is also a good use for the last 200 grams of pizza dough left from another night.
Why I keep coming back to this
- Prepared dough makes it fast, and I do not need to measure yeast or wait on a long rise.
- The chocolate pudding mix gives a creamy flavor without cooking custard on the stove.
- The topping is thick enough to stay in place if I leave a small border around the edge.
- It bakes hot at 425°F (218°C), so the crust gets color before it dries out.
- The dessert is sweet but not huge, which is useful when I want three tidy servings.
- It is easy to dress up with fruit, nuts, or whipped cream after the pizza cools.
What you need (and what each one is doing)
- 3 tablespoons chocolate-flavored pudding mix.This makes the sweet creamy layer. I use instant pudding mix because it blends into the butter quickly.
- salt (to taste).A pinch keeps the topping from tasting flat and overly sweet.
- 6 teaspoons unsalted butter, softened.Butter turns the pudding mix and sugars into a spreadable paste that bakes into the dough.
- 4 tablespoons all-purpose flour or bread flour (for dusting and thickening).Some flour keeps the topping from running and gives the counter enough grip for rolling.
- 3 teaspoons white granulated sugar.Granulated sugar sweetens the topping without adding extra moisture.
- 200 gram pre-made pizza dough.Prepared dough keeps this simple. I let it sit out briefly so it rolls instead of springing back.
- 1/4 tablespoon brown sugar.Brown sugar adds a little caramel note to the chocolate topping.
How I make it
Step 1 — Heat the oven
Preheat the oven to 425°F (218°C). I put a sheet pan in the oven while it heats if I want a crisper bottom, but a regular lined baking sheet works fine too.
Step 2 — Roll the dough
Dust the counter or a large cutting board with part of the flour. Roll the 200 grams of pizza dough into a rough circle or oval about 1/4 inch thick. If the dough snaps back, I cover it for five minutes and let the gluten relax.
Step 3 — Mix the sweet topping
In a medium bowl, stir the pudding mix, remaining flour, softened butter, granulated sugar, brown sugar, and a small pinch of salt. It should look like a thick chocolate paste. If the butter is too cold, I mash it with a fork until the mixture smooths out.
Step 4 — Spread and shape
Move the dough to parchment. Spread the pudding mixture over the center, leaving a border. Fold or roll the edges just enough to make a rim, then press lightly so the rim stays put during baking.
Step 5 — Bake and cool
Bake about 15 minutes, until the crust is golden brown and the topping looks set. The source lists 30 minutes of cook time, so I use the extra time for slower ovens or thicker dough, checking often after 15 minutes. Cool before slicing so the topping does not smear everywhere.
Tips from my kitchen
- Let the dough warm slightly.Cold pizza dough fights the rolling pin and bakes unevenly.
- Keep the topping thin.Too much in the center makes the dough gummy.
- Use parchment.Sugar can leak and stick hard to a bare pan.
- Cool before cutting.Five to ten minutes makes cleaner slices and saves the roof of my mouth.
Variations I have actually tried
- Banana slices after baking:I add them fresh so they do not turn watery in the oven.
- Toasted hazelnuts:A tablespoon or two gives the chocolate topping crunch.
- Vanilla pudding mix:It makes a lighter, custardy version that I like with strawberries.
- Mini chocolate chips:Sprinkle a few on during the last two minutes of baking.
- Powdered sugar finish:A light dusting makes it look bakery-style without changing the recipe.
Small details I pay attention to
I treat bavarian cream dessert pizza as a recipe where the written numbers are a guide, not a reason to stop paying attention. I look for the practical cues: the way the dough feels, how the sauce coats a spoon, how the edges brown, or whether the center has actually set. Those little signs are what keep a familiar recipe from turning into a dry loaf, a pale crust, or a pan of fruit that never thickened.
I also set up my counter before I start. Ingredients measured, pan or skillet ready, towel nearby, and a clear place for cooling. That sounds fussy, but it keeps me from making rushed choices while butter is softening, dough is drying, or a hot pan is waiting. Most of my kitchen mistakes happen in the two minutes when I think I can multitask.
How I like to serve it
For the first serving of bavarian cream dessert pizza, I keep things simple so I can taste what the recipe is doing. If it is baked, I let it cool long enough for the crumb, crust, or filling to settle. If it is cooked on the stove, I serve it while the texture is still lively. That first plate tells me whether I want extra salt, something creamy, something crisp, or just a cup of coffee beside it.
When I make it for other people, I add the extras at the table instead of hiding them in the recipe. A bowl of fruit, hot sauce, whipped cream, rice, butter, or chopped herbs lets everyone steer their own plate. I like recipes that can be shared without making the cook stand there explaining every bite.
Storing and serving
This dessert pizza is best the day it is baked, especially while the rim still has a little crispness. If I have leftovers, I cover them and refrigerate for up to two days.
To reheat, I use a 325°F (163°C) oven for 6-8 minutes. The microwave softens the crust, which is fine for a midnight fork snack but not ideal if I want it to taste freshly baked.
Frequently asked questions
Is this the same as Bavarian cream?
No. This is a shortcut dessert pizza inspired by Bavarian cream flavors, but the topping is made with pudding mix rather than a cooked egg custard.
Can I use homemade pizza dough?
Yes. I use 200 grams of any plain pizza dough. A dough with olive oil works especially well because it browns nicely.
Why is flour in the topping?
It thickens the butter-pudding paste and helps keep the topping from sliding off the dough.
Can I make it gluten-free?
Use gluten-free pizza dough and a gluten-free flour blend for dusting and thickening. Check the pudding mix label too.
What should I serve with it?
I like small slices with whipped cream, berries, or coffee. It is rich enough that I keep the sides simple.
If you try it, tell me what you put on top after baking.

Bavarian Cream Dessert Pizza
Description
This Bavarian cream pizza is a quick dessert pizza made with prepared dough and a chocolate pudding-butter spread. I bake it until the crust is golden, then let it cool so the sweet topping settles before slicing.
Ingredients You’ll Need
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 425°F (218°C). Line a baking sheet with parchment.
- Dust a board with some of the flour and roll the 200 grams pizza dough about 1/4 inch thick.
- Stir together the pudding mix, remaining flour, softened butter, granulated sugar, brown sugar, and a pinch of salt until thick and spreadable.
- Spread the pudding mixture over the dough, leaving a border. Roll or fold the edge to form a crust.
- Bake about 15 minutes, or longer as needed within the listed cook time, until the crust is golden. Cool before slicing.
Nutrition Facts
Servings 3
- Amount Per Serving
- Calories 71kcal
- % Daily Value *
- Total Fat 8g13%
- Saturated Fat 5g25%
- Trans Fat 0.3g
- Cholesterol 20mg7%
- Sodium 1mg1%
- Potassium 4mg1%
- Total Carbohydrate 1g1%
- Sugars 1g
- Calcium 3 mg
- Iron 0.0 mg
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Note
Dough temperature. Room-temperature dough rolls easier and bakes more evenly.
Parchment helps. The sugary topping can stick if it bubbles over the edge.
Watch the oven. Start checking at 15 minutes even though the source cook time is longer.
Serving. Slice after cooling so the chocolate layer has time to settle.
Frequently Asked Questions
No. This is a shortcut dessert pizza inspired by Bavarian cream flavors, but the topping is made with pudding mix rather than a cooked egg custard.
Yes. I use 200 grams of any plain pizza dough. A dough with olive oil works especially well because it browns nicely.
It thickens the butter-pudding paste and helps keep the topping from sliding off the dough.
Use gluten-free pizza dough and a gluten-free flour blend for dusting and thickening. Check the pudding mix label too.
I like small slices with whipped cream, berries, or coffee. It is rich enough that I keep the sides simple.