A buttery biscuit base, thick homemade toffee, fresh banana slices, and a generous cloud of whipped cream. Britain's most beloved no-bake dessert — assembled in 20 minutes with no oven required.

Banoffee pie is a British dessert invented in the 1970s, combining a buttery digestive biscuit base with a layer of thick homemade toffee, sliced bananas, and softly whipped cream. The name combines 'banana' and 'toffee'. It requires no baking — just a stovetop toffee and an hour or two of chilling.
No oven, easily made ahead, and one of the most popular desserts in Britain for fifty years. The combination of buttery biscuit, sticky toffee, fresh banana, and whipped cream is universally appealing. It feeds a crowd easily and looks impressive with minimal effort.
Dinner parties, family gatherings, or any occasion where a crowd-pleasing no-bake dessert is needed. It is particularly popular at celebrations and holidays. Make the base and toffee the day before for a stress-free assembly on the day.
Stir the toffee constantly. Chill each layer before adding the next. Only add banana and cream on the day of serving. Finish with grated dark chocolate.
The classic base for British no-bake desserts. Their slightly malty, wholemeal flavour and sandy texture compress into a firm, crumbly base that holds its shape when sliced.
Cooked with butter and sugar to make the toffee. The milk sugars caramelise as the mixture cooks, creating a thick, glossy toffee that sets firm when chilled.
Use ripe but still firm bananas — they should be sweet and flavourful but not mushy. Overripe bananas collapse when sliced and grey quickly after cutting.
Swap digestive biscuits for Hobnobs (adds an oaty flavour), Oreos (for a chocolate base), or ginger biscuits (adds warmth that pairs well with the toffee). Use coconut cream instead of double cream for a lighter, dairy-free topping. Add a teaspoon of sea salt flakes to the toffee for a salted caramel variation.
Crush the digestive biscuits into fine crumbs — use a food processor or seal in a bag and bash with a rolling pin. Stir in the melted butter until the mixture resembles damp sand. Press firmly and evenly into the base and up the sides of a 23cm loose-bottomed tart tin. Refrigerate for 30 minutes to set.
Melt 100g butter in a saucepan over medium heat. Add the brown sugar and stir until dissolved. Pour in the condensed milk and stir continuously over medium heat for 5–7 minutes until the mixture thickens, deepens in colour, and pulls away slightly from the sides of the pan. Do not stop stirring or it will catch and burn.
Pour the hot toffee over the chilled biscuit base and spread evenly with a spatula. Leave to cool to room temperature, then refrigerate for at least 2 hours until the toffee is completely firm and set.
Using a hand mixer or stand mixer, whip the double cream with the icing sugar and vanilla extract to soft peaks — it should hold its shape but still be slightly billowy, not stiff. Over-whipped cream is grainy and harder to spread.
Slice the bananas and arrange in an even layer over the set toffee. Spoon or pipe the whipped cream generously on top. Finish with a grating of dark chocolate or a light dusting of cocoa powder. Serve immediately or refrigerate for up to 2 hours before serving.
Techniques that separate good from great
The difference between smooth, glossy toffee and grainy, burnt toffee is constant stirring. Keep the heat at medium (not high) and stir with a silicone spatula the entire time, scraping the base and sides of the pan. The whole process takes 5–7 minutes.
Banoffee pie is all about distinct, clean layers. The biscuit base needs 30 minutes to set. The toffee needs 2 hours to firm completely. Only when each layer is cold and set should the next be added — rushing produces a pie that collapses when sliced.
Once the banana is sliced and the cream added, the clock is ticking. Banana oxidises and softens. The cream begins to weep. The ideal window is 30–90 minutes between assembly and serving — long enough for the layers to meld slightly, short enough that everything stays fresh.
Different ways to make this dish your own
Stir ½ teaspoon of flaky sea salt into the toffee just before pouring. The salt cuts through the sweetness and adds a modern twist to the classic.
Use an Oreo or chocolate digestive base. Drizzle the finished pie with melted dark chocolate or add a layer of chocolate ganache between the toffee and banana.
Layer crushed biscuit base, toffee, banana, and cream in individual glasses or mason jars. No tin required and easier to transport — ideal for picnics or parties.
Add 1 teaspoon of instant espresso powder to the toffee while cooking. The coffee deepens the caramel flavour and balances the sweetness of the banana.
Perfect pairings to complete the meal
The standard and best finishing touch — a generous grating of dark chocolate (70%+) over the cream adds bitterness that balances the sweet toffee and banana.
A scoop of good vanilla ice cream alongside a slice of banoffee pie is excellent — the cold ice cream contrasts with the rich toffee layer.
A strong espresso or filter coffee is the ideal accompaniment — the bitterness is the perfect counterpoint to the very sweet dessert.
Keep it fresh and plan ahead
Assembled pie (with banana and cream) keeps for up to 2 hours before the banana starts to soften and discolour. The base and toffee layer alone keeps for up to 3 days.
The biscuit base and toffee layer can be frozen (without banana and cream) for up to 1 month. Defrost overnight in the fridge.
Make the biscuit base and toffee up to 2 days ahead and refrigerate. Add the banana and whipped cream no more than 2 hours before serving.
Not applicable — served cold. The toffee layer softens at room temperature if the pie is left out for more than 30 minutes.
Be the first to review this recipe!
Turn what you already have in your fridge into delicious meals. Our AI-powered generator creates personalized recipes from your ingredients.
Browse more like this:
Discover more delicious recipes similar to what you're cooking
Join our newsletter and discover new favorites delivered straight to your inbox. No spam, just tasty inspiration.