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The Flavor Bender   ›   Recipes   ›   Delicious Desserts   ›   Custards and Puddings   ›   Sri Lankan Watalappan (Cardamom Spiced Coconut Custard)

Sri Lankan Watalappan (Cardamom Spiced Coconut Custard)

Author:

Dini Kodippili







Jump to Recipe


Updated: 7/17/2023
Total Time9 hours hrs 45 minutes mins
Quick and Easy Recipes
Custards and Puddings
Sri Lankan Watalappan {Cardamom Spiced Coconut Custard}

This Sri Lankan Watalappan is a classic! A delicious and creamy Baked Cardamom Spiced Coconut Custard and sweetened with unrefined jaggery or sugar! A Sri Lankan twist on the deliciously decadent creme caramel!

Sri Lankan Watalappan {Cardamom Spiced Coconut Custard}

Sri Lankan recipes, like the country itself, are not widely known or recognized outside of Asia for the most part. Which is a shame because Sri Lankan cuisine is staggeringly rich and diverse and is a veritable treasure trove of flavors.

From potently flavorful curries like this chicken curry, dhal curry, lamb curry (mutton curry), fish curry, mushroom curry, jackfruit curry etc. to butter cake, breudher cake, pani pol (sweet coconut stuffed crepes), falooda milkshake, chocolate biscuit pudding etc. there is so much flavor to go around!

Its close proximity to India means that they do share a few traits in their food cultures but there’s so much more that’s wholly unique and mouth-wateringly delicious about Sri Lankan food as well.

Thanks to a host of reasons like its very long history, its strategic location that made it a crucial pit-stop in long trade routes that connected regional commercial powerhouses centuries ago, and its diverse ethnic and multicultural society, Sri lankan desserts often employ a unique combination of refined and unrefined sugars and distinct spices.

This trait gives them a sweetness and a warmth that’s truly incomparable. And one such example is this Sri Lankan Watalappan (Cardamom Spiced Coconut Custard)! 

Sri Lankan Watalappan {Cardamom Spiced Coconut Custard}

There are literally dozens of stories I could tell you about some amazing memories that I have that are related to this dessert. And as nostalgic as those memories make me feel I will instead try to explain to you here why this custard is different from other custard desserts in the world. And yet why I think it should rank right up there with creme caramel, creme brulee and other types of egg-based custard dessert.

First off, how do you pronounce Watalappan? Phonetically it’s written wɒtə-lʌp-pʌn (or what-a-lup-pun). My dad sometimes calls it (in typical roll-your-eyes-dad-humour) “what’ll-happen.” You get the idea right?

Sri Lankan Watalappan {Cardamom Spiced Coconut Custard}

Sri Lankan watalappan is a delicious, creamy coconut custard sweetened with traditional “Kitul Jaggery,” and with warming spices like cardamom and nutmeg.

Jaggery (also used in this classic Sri Lankan pani pol recipe) is basically a hardened block of sugar, and almost everywhere else in the world it is made with cane sugar.

In Sri Lanka however, jaggery does NOT come from cane sugar. Instead it uses the sap extracted from a type of palm tree called “Kitul”. Kitul treacle or kitul jaggery can be found in Sri Lanka and parts of India as well and 100% kitul jaggery is just phenomenal!

It’s a dark brown, molassy block of sugar that is softer than its cane sugar counterpart and when grated has a slightly powder-like quality.

When I used to live in Sri Lanka, our desserts would sometimes be a piece of kitul jaggery with a banana or jaggery syrup (“kitul pani”) with yoghurt! Uhmaaazing!

Where I live now in the US, it’s very difficult to find kitul jaggery. But fear not! There is a way you can almost replicate that flavor. All you need is a good quality unrefined brown sugar with a high molasses content such as dark brown molasses sugar (see my comprehensive guide to types of sugar for more information!).

The higher the molasses content, the better! However, if you’d like to try this with kitul, here’s a link for kitul jaggery.

Sri Lankan Watalappan {Cardamom Spiced Coconut Custard}
Straight out of the oven.
You can’t see it, but the custard has just set and is a little “wobbly” in the center

Steamed vs baked watalappan

Also, watalappan is traditionally made by steaming it, but here I use the more uncomplicated technique of baking it in the oven in a water-bath instead. Works just as well!

Muslim families in Sri Lanka always celebrate the end of Ramadan with this amazing dessert! I remember when I was little, some of our Muslim family friends would come over and share with us a platter of their celebratory feast which included (amongst other fantastic dishes) biryani rice and watalappan! It was so darn good it would make you cry.

Sri Lankan Watalappan {Cardamom Spiced Coconut Custard}

Living in Australia and New Zealand never stopped us from enjoying this quintessential Sri Lankan dessert, as my mum made a wicked watalappan. So here I’m sharing with you my version of her recipe which I have tweaked slightly to make the custard a little richer and sweeter (but certainly not too rich/sweet by any reasonable reckoning). I hope you try it. Because it’s easy to make, and because you should. 🙂

I have now also made an ice cream version of this fantastic recipe – eggless and vegan watalappan ice cream (cardamom spiced coconut ice cream!). Tastes absolutely amazing and SO easy to make with or without an ice cream churner.

Recipe

5 from 21 votes

Sri Lankan Watalappan (Cardamom Spiced Coconut Custard)

Author: Dini Kodippili
Cuisine: Sri Lankan
Sri Lankan Watalappan {Cardamom Spiced Coconut Custard}

 Difficulty: 

Easy
Watalappan is a classic Sri Lankan dessert! It's a deliciously creamy baked cardamom spiced coconut custard that is sweetened with unrefined jaggery or sugar!

US based cup, teaspoon, tablespoon measurements. Weight‌ ‌measurements‌ ‌are‌ ‌recommended‌ ‌for‌ ‌accurate‌ ‌results whenever available.

Common Measurement Conversions
Prep: 35 minutes mins
Cook: 1 hour hr 10 minutes mins
overnight chill time: 8 hours hrs
Total Time: 9 hours hrs 45 minutes mins
Print Recipe Rate SaveSaved!
Makes: 8 servings

Ingredients:
 

  • 4 whole eggs
  • 2 egg yolks
  • 226 g Kitul Jaggery ½ lb. Subsitute with Muscavado sugar or dark brown sugar.
  • 30 mL hot water 2 tbsp. upto 30 mL / 2 tbsp more.
  • 3 -4 cardamom pod seeds crushed just over ¼ tsp
  • ¼ tsp nutmeg (If using fresh nutmeg, use less as it will be more potent)
  • 480 mL full fat coconut milk 2 cups
  • ⅛ tsp salt

Instructions:
 

  • Preheat oven to 320°F / 160°C
  • Oil and prepare 8, ½ cup capacity ramekins.
  • in a large bowl combine the sugar and water and stir until it becomes a paste with no lumps (the sugar does not need to dissolve completely)
  • Add the eggs and egg yolk, spices and salt and whisk until well combined – i.e. till the egg mixture becomes very slightly thick (not the “ribbony stage,” just enough to thoroughly mix the sugar and eggs). Take care not to make the egg mixture frothy.
  • Add the 2 cups of coconut milk and whisk well.
  • Pour the mix into the prepared ramekins (or a large dish if you prefer). Cover the ramekins / dish with foil. 
  • Bake the ramekins/dish in a water bath for about 30 – 40 minutes for the ramekins and up to an hour if in a large dish, depending on the depth of it. You want the custard to set, but the middle to be very slightly wobbly.
  • Remove from the oven and let them cool for about 15 minutes in the water bath.
  • When cool enough to handle, remove them from the water bath and cover the ramekins with plastic wrap, and place it in the fridge to chill for at least 3 hours (longer for larger dishes). Best chilled overnight.
  • Serve as is, or with some cashew nuts on top.

Recipe Notes

Note – some watalappan recipes add raisins and cashew nuts into the custard. You can also do this if you like. Personally I’m not a big fan of it.

Nutrition Information:

Serving: 0.5cup Calories: 267kcal (13%) Carbohydrates: 30g (10%) Protein: 5g (10%) Fat: 16g (25%) Saturated Fat: 12g (75%) Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g Monounsaturated Fat: 2g Trans Fat: 0.01g Cholesterol: 130mg (43%) Sodium: 85mg (4%) Potassium: 199mg (6%) Fiber: 0.01g Sugar: 28g (31%) Vitamin A: 184IU (4%) Vitamin C: 1mg (1%) Calcium: 52mg (5%) Iron: 3mg (17%)

“This website provides approximate nutrition information for convenience and as a courtesy only. Nutrition data is gathered primarily from the USDA Food Composition Database, whenever available, or otherwise other online calculators.”

Tag me on Instagram!I love seeing what you’ve made! Tag me on Instagram at @TheFlavorBender or leave me a comment & rating below.

I absolutely love the creaminess of this dessert. The coconut milk gives it that creaminess which pairs brilliantly with the warm spicy bite you get from cardamom.

The molassy flavor of sugar makes this dessert almost festive, especially when paired with nutmeg. So every creamy bite has an earthy sweetness and a hint of spicy warmth. Think Christmas dessert flavors (of molasses and nutmeg) with an eastern spice twist. Who would say no to that?

Sri Lankan Watalappan {Cardamom Spiced Coconut Custard}

So all I have left to say is, you have got to try this! It’s easy to put together, plus it’s dairy-free and made with unrefined sugars. You can make this a day ahead and keep it in the fridge until you eat it, or if you’re like me keep some hidden in the deep dark recesses of your fridge so that you won’t finish it all in one go, because trust me, this is one addictive dessert!

UPDATE – I have added another exciting version of the classic Watalappan… in the form of a Vegan Coconut Ice Cream! So that’s no eggs, and no dairy and creamy just like an Ice Cream.

Vegan Cardamom Spiced Coconut Ice Cream - (aka - Watalappan Ice Cream) A Sri Lankan Classic dessert turned into an ice cream that has no dairy and no eggs (Vegan). Insanely creamy, with a touch of spice and topped with a sweet and crunchy Cardamom and Cashew Praline!

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About

Dini Kodippili

Dini Kodippili is a professional food writer, recipe developer, food photographer, cookbook author, and baker. Dini has been featured on HuffPost, Cosmopolitan, Forbes, Delish, Food & Wine and more. Learn More

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92 responses

  1. Rani
    December 22, 2025

    Hi Dini, is there a way to make the wattalapan more moist? When I made it last time, it was a bit dry.
    Thanks!

    Reply
    1. Dini Kodippili
      December 22, 2025

      Hi Rani
      The watalappan become dry when they are overbaked.
      If you take it out of the oven early after it has set, then it won’t be dry.
      I hope that helps!

      Reply
      1. Rani
        December 23, 2025

        Thanks Dini! I’ll try this next time 🙂

        Reply
  2. Jacob Ikareth
    July 22, 2025

    5 stars
    This recipe makes a spectacular Vattalappam especially if you are looking for a lactose free dessert. The Kittul jaggery elevates this to a higher level. Thank you for this recipe.

    Reply
  3. S Auweiler
    May 1, 2025

    5 stars
    Our daughter called it Wattapanpan when she was little.

    Reply
  4. Darshi K
    November 3, 2024

    5 stars
    This is the best watalappan recipe I’ve tried. It was supper easy and so delicious. I did not use ramekins but a larger dish, so I had to bake it for longer.

    Reply
    1. Tharidu De Silva
      May 7, 2025

      if we cook for 10-12 people on a larger dish, how long do we have to bake?

      Reply
      1. Dini
        May 7, 2025

        Hi Tharidu
        There’s no way to accurately let you know how long it will take, as this depends on the size of the dish you used, and the material. The wider the dish (shallower custard), the faster the dessert will bake. Smaller individual sized dishes will also bake faster. Unfortunately it is hard to know bake times for every possibility other than what is given in the recipe as well. The best way to know when the watalappan is to check the consistency with a digital thermometer / toothpick and visually.
        If you want a creamy, custard consistency, the watalappan should be baked until the custard reaches an internal temperature of 170 – 175 F. The center will still be wobbly, but not liquidy.

        However, classic watalappan is slightly “over cooked” to get the holes in the middle of the custard. This consistency is reached when a toothpick inserted into the middle of the custard comes out fairly clean.
        I hope that helps

        Reply
  5. Daphne Padma Fitzroy-Mendis
    October 3, 2024

    5 stars
    I love to try Wataluppan recipe.
    Sounds great should come up well

    Reply
  6. Maro
    April 24, 2024

    5 stars
    This was delicious! I’ve never had watappalan, but my friend married someone from Sri Lanka and their son made this a couple years ago. It sounded so delicious I’ve had it on my list to make ever since!

    I was surprised by how much coconut flavor still came through. I love cardamom!

    Reply
  7. Kumudu Dehigama
    January 22, 2024

    5 stars
    Dini for half tray, how many eggs, sugar and coconut milk (watalappan)

    Reply
    1. Dini
      January 23, 2024

      Hi kumudu
      Unfortunately I’m not sure because I don’t know the size of the baking pan you’re using, and also haven’t baked this recipe in a baking tray either.
      Sorry about that.

      Reply
  8. Seema
    October 25, 2022

    Does it have to be fresh coconut milk
    Can we use coconut powder to make the coconut milk pleasd

    Reply
    1. Dini
      October 25, 2022

      Hi Seema
      I personally prefer to used canned milk over powdered milk for this recipe.
      I’m not sure how the recipe will turn out if you use coconut milk powder to make this.

      Reply
  9. Janet hofmann
    January 24, 2022

    5 stars
    Love the explanation of Kitul jaggery and the taste is actually more impressive than Christmas, I never celebrated that, but certainly warms a heart on a chilly night! A perfect make ahead for sharing with others! I have ostrich so I love this egg recipe it helps use up egg. I am tempted to freeze a large batch. Can you suggest the best way I might do this? Freeze the unbaked mixture or after baking and cooling? It might be an interesting result. I like the idea of having an offering with tea; to wandering in unannounced visitors that’s a quick taste of welcome come again soon. I like hospitality what’ll happen! Wattlappan a wonderful desert! Thanks for teaching me this! Made and sharing with new Sri Langan neighbors! Thanks!

    Reply
    1. Dini
      January 25, 2022

      Hi Janet
      I haven’t tried to freeze watalappan, so I can’t be 100% sure how well it will hold up to freezing. This is best eaten soon after baking and chilling.
      I wouldn’t recommend freeing the unbaked mixture, as the eggs will degrade and not bake properly. Baked custard can be frozen for a little while, but there will be degradation of texture and taste when it is thawed and eaten, especially when it will be stored for exended periods of time.
      I hope that helps!

      Reply
      1. Janet
        February 5, 2022

        5 stars
        I love this recipe took your advice eat it fresh! Thanks for the reply The additional tip on the custard was good, I really didn’t know eggs degrade when frozen! Good to know!

        Reply
  10. Selindra Desilva
    January 14, 2022

    Hi there, I absolutely love wattalapam, however, do you know if it can be made vegan? Not sure if there is anything I can substitute for the eggs. Thanks!

    Reply
    1. Dini
      January 17, 2022

      Hi Selindra
      Unfortunately I’m not sure how to replace eggs in a baked custard. A cooked custard with the same flavors but use cornstarch as a thickening agent, but it may not have the same texture of a baked custard.
      Sorry I couldn’t be of more help.

      Reply
  11. SaraSiriwardana
    November 11, 2021

    Did not realise it can be so simple the recipe you’ve produced here. Certainly going to try. I have seen my sister law’s recipe while being made have put me off for life trying it. So so laboriously made by her. Thanks for your simplified recipe. Sara

    Reply
    1. Dini
      November 11, 2021

      Hi Sara!
      In Sri Lanka, they do steam the pudding, which involves more work! But it can also be made in the oven too 🙂
      This is one of my family’s favorite desserts, so my mum and I had to figure out how to make it without a steamer. So this was the result!
      I hope you give it a go!

      Reply
  12. Gaby
    August 29, 2021

    Hi, I would just like to subscribe. Can’t find the spot where I’m supposed to put in my email address.

    Reply
  13. Samanmalee
    January 30, 2021

    5 stars
    So good, Made it yesterday.

    Reply
  14. Ania
    January 24, 2021

    Hello! Could you please tell how big are your ramekins (internal diameter)?

    Reply
  15. debbie lynn spinks
    December 17, 2020

    i would like to make a christmas deserrt from SRI Lankan as my daughter has a boyfriend from there and would like him to have something from his traditions

    Reply
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Hey There!

Hi! I’m Dini, a third culture kid by upbringing and a food-geek by nature. I was born in Sri Lanka, grew up in New Zealand and lived in Australia, and then the US, before moving to and settling down in Canada. My food is a reflection of those amazing experiences!

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