A pumpkinbanana smoothie is the quickest way to get fall flavors into a glass without turning on the oven. It blends canned pumpkin and ripe banana into a thick, naturally sweet drink that works as breakfast or an afternoon snack. This recipe keeps the ingredient list short so you can make it on a busy morning.
The texture lands between a milkshake and a sipper smoothie because the banana does the thickening instead of ice alone. You don’t need added sugar when the banana is spotted and soft. Below you’ll find the exact ratios, swaps, and a few mistakes that turn this drink watery or bland. If you enjoyed this, our dole whip smoothie is worth trying next.
Why You’ll Love These Pumpkinbanana Smoothies
- Ready in about 5 minutes with a standard blender and no cooking.
- Uses pantry pumpkin puree so you can make it outside pumpkin season.
- Naturally sweet from banana, so no refined sugar is required.
- Freezes into pops or a make-ahead breakfast jar with no texture loss.
- Easy to scale up for two without changing the method.
Ingredients You’ll Need
- 1 cup unsweetened almond milk — keeps the base light and dairy-free.
- 1/2 cup canned pumpkin puree — use pure pumpkin, not pie filling.
- 1 large ripe banana, frozen in chunks — gives body and sweetness.
- 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon — the main warm spice note.
- 1/4 tsp ground nutmeg — adds a sharp, earthy edge.
- 1/4 tsp ground ginger — brightens the squash flavor.
- 1 tbsp chia seeds — thickens and adds omega-3 fat.
- 3 ice cubes — cools without diluting much.
Ingredient Substitutions
Unsweetened almond milk: Replace with an equal volume of oat milk for a creamier, slightly thicker base. Oat milk carries more natural starch, so the finished pumpkinbanana smoothie feels more like a malt. You won’t need to change blend time, but the color reads a shade lighter.
Canned pumpkin puree: Swap with 1/2 cup roasted fresh pumpkin flesh, cooled and mashed. Fresh roast pumpkin holds more water, so cut the almond milk to 3/4 cup to keep the drink from thinning out. The flavor is milder and a bit grassy compared with canned.
Ripe banana: Use 3/4 cup plain Greek yogurt plus 1 tsp maple syrup if you’re out of banana. The yogurt gives tang and protein but less natural sweetness, so the maple balances it. Expect a looser pour and a brighter white-yellow tone.
Chia seeds: Replace with 1 tbsp ground flax for the same gel-thickening effect. Flax thickens slower, so let the blended drink sit 5 minutes before serving. The taste stays neutral but the flecks turn a darker brown.
Ground ginger: Use 1 tsp grated fresh ginger for a cleaner, hotter note. Fresh root is stronger, so start with half and taste. It also adds tiny fibrous bits you won’t get from powder. For another easy option, check out our dole whip smoothie.
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Pour 1 cup almond milk into a blender jar. Add 1/2 cup pumpkin puree, the frozen banana chunks, cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger, and chia seeds on top.
- Drop in 3 ice cubes. Secure the lid and blend on high for 45 seconds until no banana chunks remain and the mix looks uniform orange-cream.
- Stop and scrape down the sides with a spatula if seeds cling. Blend another 15 seconds to fully incorporate the chia.
- Pour into a 12-ounce glass. The drink should coat the back of a spoon but still fall in a slow ribbon. strawberry banana smoothie uses the same freeze-and-blend base if you want a berry twist.
Pro Tips
Freeze bananas at peak ripeness when the skin is heavily spotted. That stage gives the pumpkinbanana smoothie its sugar without any added syrup. Peel, chunk, and bag them so you skip prep on blend day.
Toast the cinnamon, nutmeg, and ginger in a dry pan over medium-low heat for 30 seconds before blending. The heat wakes up the oils so the spice tastes round instead of dusty. Let the pan cool before adding spices to the blender.
If you like a thicker sip, blend in 1/4 cup rolled oats. They break down fast and add a milkshake feel without changing the flavor much. For more technique on spice prep, see Simply Recipes on toasting whole spices.
Make a double batch and freeze half in a cube tray. Thaw a cube in the fridge overnight, then reblend with a splash of milk for a oatmeal smoothie style quick breakfast.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Using pumpkin pie filling instead of puree drops canned sugar and clove-heavy spice into the glass. That throws off the balance and makes the pumpkinbanana smoothie taste like dessert pudding. Check the label for one ingredient: pumpkin.
Adding ice before the liquid causes the blades to stall. Always start with almond milk at the bottom so the frozen banana circulates. A stalled blender leaves chunks and a uneven texture.
Skipping the rest after blending means chia stays gritty. Let the pour sit 2 minutes and the seeds swell into a smooth gel. Rushing this step is why some versions taste sandy.
Serving Suggestions
Pour the drink into a chilled glass and dust the top with extra cinnamon. A smoothie bowl base pairs well if you want to spoon rather than sip. Add toasted pecans on the side for crunch.
For a brunch spread, serve next to scrambled eggs and wheat toast. The squash sweetness cuts the salty egg without needing juice. Keep the glass cold so the mix stays thick to the last sip.
Storage and Reheating
Store leftovers in a sealed jar in the fridge for up to 2 days. Chia keeps thickening, so stir or shake before drinking. Don’t leave the finished drink on the counter beyond 2 hours.
You can freeze the smoothie flat in a freezer bag for freeze for up to 2 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge, then blend 10 seconds to rebuild the texture. This is a no-cook drink, so reheating isn’t needed — serve cold.
Recipe Variations
Protein Boost
Add one scoop of plain or vanilla protein powder with the dry spices. Cut almond milk to 3/4 cup so the powder doesn’t loosen the pour. The result is a post-workout pumpkinbanana smoothie with about 20g more protein per glass.
Coffee Version
Replace 1/4 cup almond milk with cooled espresso. The bitter roast balances the banana sugar and gives a morning kick. Use coffee smoothie ratios if you want a stronger base. Blend as written and serve over one ice cube.
Coconut Twist
Swap almond milk for canned light coconut milk and add 2 tbsp shredded coconut. The fat makes the drink richer and the coconut reads as a piña-colada cousin. Use tropical oatmeal smoothie as a flavor guide. Expect a thicker, more custard-like sip.
Kid Friendly Pops
Pour the blended mix into popsicle molds and freeze 4 hours. The chia keeps them from turning icy and the banana holds sweetness for small palates. These are a good swap for store pops with added syrup.
Pumpkinbanana Smoothie
Description
A pumpkinbanana smoothie blends canned pumpkin and ripe frozen banana into a thick, naturally sweet drink that tastes like fall without any oven time. It works as a quick breakfast or afternoon snack and needs just a standard blender and pantry staples.
Ingredients
Instructions
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Pour almond milk
Pour 1 cup almond milk into the bottom of a standard blender jar. Starting with liquid at the bottom prevents the blades from stalling when the frozen banana is added later, so the mix circulates smoothly from the first second.
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Add dry and fruit
Add 1/2 cup pumpkin puree, the frozen banana chunks, 1/2 tsp cinnamon, 1/4 tsp nutmeg, 1/4 tsp ginger, and 1 tbsp chia seeds on top of the milk. Layering the solids above the liquid keeps the spices from clumping on the blade and lets the chia disperse as blending starts.
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Drop in ice
Drop 3 ice cubes into the jar on top of the other ingredients. The ice cools the drink without diluting it much because the frozen banana already provides most of the body.
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Blend on high
Secure the lid and blend on high for 45 seconds until no banana chunks remain and the mix looks uniform orange-cream. You should see a consistent color with no streaks of puree or flecks of unblended banana when you peek through the jar.
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Scrape sides
Stop the blender and scrape down the sides with a spatula if seeds or puree cling to the wall. This ensures every bit of chia and pumpkin gets pulled into the vortex so the final texture stays even rather than gritty at the edges.
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Finish blending
Blend another 15 seconds on high to fully incorporate the chia into the liquid. The extra time lets the seeds begin to swell so the drink coats a spoon instead of pouring like water.
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Pour into glass
Pour the smoothie into a 12-ounce glass and observe the fall. The drink should coat the back of a spoon but still fall in a slow ribbon, signaling the right thickness between a milkshake and a sipper smoothie.
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Rest before serving
Let the poured drink sit for 2 minutes before drinking so the chia finishes swelling into a smooth gel. Skipping this rest leaves the seeds gritty and the texture sandy, so the short wait makes the sip creamy.
Nutrition Facts
Servings 1
- Amount Per Serving
- Calories 220kcal
- % Daily Value *
- Total Fat 6g10%
- Saturated Fat 1g5%
- Sodium 180mg8%
- Total Carbohydrate 38g13%
- Dietary Fiber 9g36%
- Sugars 18g
- Protein 5g10%
* 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
- Storage: Keep leftovers in a sealed jar in the fridge for up to 2 days and stir before drinking; don't leave the finished drink on the counter beyond 2 hours.
- Freezing: Freeze flat in a bag for up to 2 months or as pops for 4 hours; thaw overnight in the fridge and reblend 10 seconds.
- Pro tip: Freeze bananas at peak spotted ripeness and toast spices in a dry pan over medium-low heat for 30 seconds to round their flavor; see tropical oatmeal smoothie for a flavor guide.
- Make ahead: Double the batch and freeze half in a cube tray, then thaw and reblend with a splash of milk for a quick breakfast.
