Chocolate Smoothie

This creamy chocolate smoothie tastes like a treat. The recipe calls for simple, healthy ingredients and offers delicious chocolate flavor!

11 Reviews
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chocolate smoothie recipe

How about a creamy chocolate smoothie? This classic recipe is one of my favorite easy frozen treats. It’s like a nutritionally redeeming, grown-up chocolate frosty. I love it and my toddler daughter does, too.

This smoothie is made with a few simple ingredients that you might have in your kitchen: your milk of choice, frozen banana, chocolate chips and cocoa powder, and nut butter. You can add a small splash of maple syrup to make it sweeter, although I rarely do.

The end result tastes balanced and not overwhelmingly of banana or nut butter, allowing the chocolate flavor to shine through. You’ll find some fun flavor variations below so you can customize it to suit your preferences.

Chocolate Smoothie Ingredients

You’ll need just a few basic ingredients to make this luscious smoothie. The full recipe is provided further down in the post. Here’s what you’ll need and why:

Milk

Any milk will do—it forms the necessary cold, liquid base of this drink. I’m partial to plain, unsweetened plant-based milks, like cashew milk, almond milk or coconut milk. Cashew milk is the most neutral of the options.

Frozen banana

Frozen banana naturally sweetens this smoothie, making it super creamy and cold. I prefer to use perfectly ripe yellow bananas for smoothies, since I don’t enjoy the flavor of overripe bananas or the overt sweetness that they impart.

Tip: Freeze your banana in one-inch chunks before using (this is a great way to preserve extra bananas). A room-temperature banana won’t be as creamy and will warm up your smoothie.

Chocolate chips and cocoa powder

The combination makes the best chocolate-flavored smoothie! Cocoa powder offers an intense chocolate flavor that is enough to overpower the bananas, and the addition of chocolate chips makes it taste like a decadent treat. This combination is a key element in my Favorite Hot Chocolate recipe, too.

Tip: If you love dark chocolate, choose your chocolate accordingly. Try chocolate chips with 60 percent cacao or higher, and a rich cocoa powder like Droste or Guittard.

Nut butter

Nut butter, like peanut butter, almond butter or cashew butter, thickens the smoothie and makes it taste richer, smoother and more like a milkshake. I recommend it!

Tip: Your nut butter will influence the flavor of your smoothie; you’ll be able to taste and choose whether to add another tablespoon for a more prominent flavor. For the most neutral flavor, use cashew butter. Choose peanut butter for a chocolate peanut butter smoothie, or combine coconut milk and almond butter for an Almond Joy-inspired smoothie.

Watch How to Make Chocolate Smoothies

Recipe Variations

Make it taste like a milkshake: Use the full amount of cashew butter for maximum creaminess. Take a sip, and consider adding the optional maple syrup to make it sweeter. Or, you could add vanilla or chocolate whey protein powder to make it sweeter and even creamier.

Make it a protein smoothie: Add up to 1 scoop of vanilla or chocolate protein powder. Whey-based protein powders make this smoothie even more creamy (I like Puori). Unfortunately, I’ve never met a plant-based powder that tastes good.

Reduce the carbohydrates: This is challenging because you can’t achieve a proper smoothie texture without the banana, which contributes bulk and creaminess along with its carbs. The best option I’ve found is to use half the amount of frozen banana and substitute frozen slices of zucchini for the rest (don’t bother trying frozen cauliflower—I couldn’t take more than one sip).

Make it dairy free and vegan: Use your favorite non-dairy milk, like cashew or almond milk, and non-dairy chocolate chips, like those from Enjoy Life brand.

Make the raw version: Substitute cacao nibs for the chocolate chips and raw cacao powder for the cocoa powder. You can add one teaspoon of maca powder for a nutritious malted flavor.

Make it spicy: Add 1/4 teaspoon of ground cinnamon and a dash of cayenne pepper for a flavor profile reminiscent of spiced Mexican chocolate. This version was inspired by a vegan restaurant where I worked over a decade ago; they called it the Oaxaca Chocolate Smoothie, and they used the raw ingredients listed above.

More Smoothies to Enjoy

If you love this smoothie, here are a few more of my top smoothie recipes:

Please let me know how your drink turns out in the comments! I hope it becomes your new favorite cold treat.

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Creamy Chocolate Smoothie

  • Author: Cookie and Kate
  • Prep Time: 5 mins
  • Total Time: 5 minutes
  • Yield: 1 1x
  • Diet: Gluten Free

5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star 5 from 11 reviews

Print

This chocolate banana smoothie recipe tastes like a treat. Slice peeled ripe bananas into 1-inch chunks and keep them in the freezer so you can make this smoothie whenever your sweet tooth craves it. Recipe yields about 1 ⅓ cups; you can multiply the recipe to make two to three at once, depending on the size of your blender.

Ingredients

Scale
  • ¾ cup cashew milk, almond milk or milk of choice
  • 1 large frozen banana (break your bananas into one-inch chunks before freezing)
  • 1 tablespoon semisweet to dark chocolate chips
  • 1 tablespoon cocoa powder 
  • 1 to 2 tablespoons peanut butter, almond butter or cashew butter 
  • Optional sweetener: ½ teaspoon maple syrup

Instructions

  1. In a blender, combine the milk, banana, chocolate chips, cocoa powder and 1 tablespoon of the nut butter. Securely fasten the lid. 
  2. Blend on low until the blender gains traction, then ramp up to the highest speed as soon as possible. Blend until the mixture is creamy and super smooth (or if your blender has a smoothie function, use that).
  3. Taste, and add another tablespoon of nut butter for a creamier texture, or maple syrup for more sweetness, then blend again. Enjoy while it’s cold.

Notes

Make it a protein smoothie: Add up to 1 scoop of vanilla or chocolate protein powder. 

Make it dairy free/vegan: Use your favorite non-dairy milk and non-dairy chocolate chips. Vegans, if you add sweetener, make it maple syrup.

Make it spicy: Add ¼ teaspoon ground cinnamon and a dash of cayenne pepper, if you love spice.

2025 recipe edits: I revisited this recipe and removed the spices, which you’ll find in the “make it spicy” variation. I increased the amount of cocoa powder by 1 teaspoon to make it more chocolatey and added nut butter for a creamier and richer texture.

Nutrition

The information shown is an estimate provided by an online nutrition calculator. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice. See our full nutrition disclosure here.

 

Kate and Cookie

HELLO, MY NAME IS

Kathryne Taylor

I'm a vegetable enthusiast, dog lover, mother and bestselling cookbook author. I've been sharing recipes here since 2010, and I'm always cooking something new in my Kansas City kitchen. Cook with me!

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Comments

  1. Sandra

    Amazing. I cut the cocoa in half so it is not quite as rich.

    1. Kate

      Thanks, Sandra!

  2. leslie

    This looks SO good! Since I can’t eat bananas.. I’m thinking about using frozen cauliflower instead and adding a bit more sweetener. Hopefully it works out :)

    1. Kate

      Hmm… That sounds very interesting and not sure how it will work out since consistency, flavor, etc is very different. Love to hear what you think!

    2. Bob

      Using organic medjoul dates as a sweetener is also a healthful alternative. Need a heavy duty blender such a Vitamix for this. The same when making your own cashew milk.

  3. Nicole

    This was yummy! I had one non-frozen overripe banana to use up, so I made it with that + 5 ice cubes. I did a full tsp of maple syrup, and used unsweetened oat milk. Thanks for the recipe!

  4. Anshu

    I love your recipes.

  5. Linda

    This IS DELICIOUS!!!Thanks ALWAYS!YOU are ALWAYS my first stop when I need tried and true!!!XXOO

  6. Susan Shacker

    I am allergic to so many things that are in your recipes. What could one substitute instead of bananas? Please don’t say avocado or cherries!
    Thankyou

    1. Cookie and Kate

      Hi Susan, sorry you are struggling with allergies. Have you tried dates? They would add sweetness and texture, which is what you the banana provides to this recipe.

      1. Susan Shacker

        Thankyou so much. I will give dates a try.

  7. Emma

    What’s an alternative if you’re allergic to nuts please?

    1. Cookie and Kate

      Hi Emma, you could try sunflower seed butter or simply omit.

  8. fran

    Love your recipes – what can I substitute in place of nut butter due to nut allergy?

    1. Cookie and Kate

      Hi Fran, you could try sunflower seed butter, or simply omit it.

  9. Jacobi Daley

    I just made the chocolate smoothie for lunch and followed the recipe and added a little bit of vanilla protein powder, per – suggestion. It turned out great and it was thick and smooth.. I used almond cashew milk as well as almond butter.. I will make this again.. 5 *

  10. Surella Baer

    Absolutely amazing! Super thick and so satisfying it doesnโ€™t taste healthy at all!
    Kudos! Love you!

  11. Sheryl Gerety

    We subbed hemp seeds/hearts for nut butter, a 10g protein boost at 2 tbsp. loved the chewy texture of the blenderized chocolate chips

    1. Cookie and Kate

      Hi Sheryl, thanks for sharing your nut free version!

  12. Merav

    Hi Kate! Have you ever considered posting any toddler-oriented lunch or dinner recipes? I’d so appreciate it, given how much I love your recipes! Thanks!

    1. Cookie and Kate

      Hi Merav, now that I have some experience navigating the toddler years, this is on my long term goals. Thank you for your feedback.