If you’ve got a Ninja Creami and a tub of cottage cheese, you’re about four minutes of hands-on work away from the creamiest high-protein ice cream you’ll make all week. I’ve spun this one more times than I’d like to admit — partly because my family keeps eating it, and partly because I wanted to get the texture exactly right without leaning on a box of instant pudding mix the way most recipes do.
Here’s my promise: blended smooth and spun properly, this Ninja Creami cottage cheese ice cream is rich, scoopable, and tastes nothing like cottage cheese. I’ll also show you the fix for that crumbly first spin everyone panics about, and how to keep it creamy with no pudding mix at all. If you don’t own a Creami, you can still make a great no-machine cottage cheese ice cream — but if you do, let’s spin.
Table of Contents
Why You’ll Love This Ninja Creami Cottage Cheese Ice Cream
- High in protein straight from the cottage cheese — no protein powder required.
- Ultra creamy and scoopable, not icy, when you follow the spin tips below.
- No pudding mix needed — most recipes insist on it, but you don’t have to use it.
- You genuinely can’t taste the cottage cheese once it’s blended smooth.
- One blend, one freeze, one spin — then customize it any way you like.

It’s become a staple in my high-protein rotation, right next to my grab-and-go cottage cheese snack jar.
Does Ninja Creami Cottage Cheese Ice Cream Taste Like Cottage Cheese?
This is the question everyone asks first, so let me put it to rest: no, it doesn’t. Once the cottage cheese is blended completely smooth and spun in the Creami, the curds and that distinct cottage cheese texture vanish. What you’re left with is a creamy, lightly tangy scoop that tastes like a soft, fresh vanilla ice cream — closer to frozen yogurt than to anything cheesy.
If yours does taste a little too cheesy or sour, that’s almost always the cottage cheese itself, not the method. Reach for a fresh, mild brand that isn’t tangy, blend it fully, and balance it with a touch more sweetener or vanilla. That one swap is the difference between “wow” and “hmm.”
Ingredients You’ll Need
Here’s what goes into this Ninja Creami cottage cheese ice cream, and why each one matters — and notice what’s not on the list (no pudding mix):
- Cottage cheese — full-fat gives the creamiest, richest result. Pick a fresh, mild brand; if you’re not blending it first, use small curd. (Good Culture is a popular pick.)
- Milk — whole milk for creaminess, or a high-protein milk like Fairlife for an extra boost. Keep a little extra aside for re-spinning.
- Sweetener — honey, maple syrup, sugar, or monk fruit, to taste.
- Vanilla extract — for that classic ice cream flavor.
- Heavy cream (optional, 1–2 tbsp) — adds richness back if you’re using lower-fat milk.
- Protein powder (optional) — if you want to push the protein even higher; just add a splash more liquid.
A half cup of cottage cheese brings roughly 14 grams of protein to the pint before you’ve added anything else — that’s the whole appeal. And if you love turning cottage cheese into sweet treats, my lemon cottage cheese donuts are worth a look too.

How to Make Cottage Cheese Ice Cream in the Ninja Creami
The method is simple, but a few details make all the difference:
- Blend until completely smooth. Combine the cottage cheese, milk, sweetener, and vanilla in a blender and run it longer than feels necessary — hidden curds are what cause a grainy final texture.
- Pour into a clean Creami pint. Don’t fill past the max line; the mixture expands as it freezes and an overfilled pint won’t seat properly.
- Freeze flat, with the lid OFF, for a full 24 hours. Freezing with the lid on creates a hump that can damage the blade, and cutting the freeze time short (8–12 hours) leaves it less creamy.
- Loosen the edges. Run warm water over the outside of the pint for about 30 seconds before spinning.
- Spin on Lite Ice Cream. After the first spin it will likely look crumbly or powdery — this is completely normal, don’t panic.
- Add a splash of milk and Re-Spin. Run it one to three more times until it’s smooth and creamy.
- Add mix-ins on the mix-in setting, then scoop and enjoy right away.

No Pudding Mix? Here’s How to Keep It Creamy
Most Ninja Creami cottage cheese ice cream recipes call for a packet of instant pudding mix, and a lot of readers don’t love that — it’s a processed shortcut, and it’s the number-one thing people search to avoid. So here’s the truth: pudding mix is just a stabilizer. It limits ice crystals so the ice cream stays smooth and scoopable. Useful, but completely optional.
If you’d rather skip it, here’s how to get the same creamy result:
- Lean on the cottage cheese itself. Full-fat cottage cheese is a natural stabilizer — it does most of the work on its own.
- Add a splash of heavy cream. A tablespoon or two brings back richness and softens the freeze.
- Stir in collagen or protein powder. A scoop genuinely makes it creamier and less icy (and bumps the protein).
- Use a tiny pinch of guar or xanthan gum. A little goes a long way — too much turns the texture gummy, so stay light-handed.
Any one of these gives you a smooth, scoopable pint with zero pudding mix. You’ll find conflicting advice out there — some recipes swear it’s essential — but I’ve spun plenty of creamy pints without it.
Full-Fat vs Low-Fat Cottage Cheese
The cottage cheese you choose changes the texture of your Ninja Creami cottage cheese ice cream more than anything else. Everyone says “use full-fat,” but here’s the actual tradeoff so you can decide:
- Full-fat makes a noticeably creamier, richer, more scoopable ice cream. It’s the better choice for texture.
- Low-fat is lighter and lower in calories, but it freezes icier. If you go low-fat for the macros, compensate with a splash of cream, a scoop of collagen, or one of the no-pudding stabilizer tricks above.
Neither is wrong — it just depends on whether you’re after indulgence or a leaner treat.
Chef Linda’s Tips for the Creamiest Spin
After a lot of pints, these are the things that consistently make or break it:
- Pick the right setting. Use Lite Ice Cream for these higher-protein, lower-fat bases — it handles them better than the regular Ice Cream setting. Menus differ slightly across Creami models, so check yours.
- Don’t overfill the pint. Make a proper pint’s worth and stay below the fill line; an underfilled or overfilled pint spins unevenly.
- Freeze it dead flat. A level pint spins evenly from top to bottom.
- Re-spin without fear. Run a knife around the edges, add a splash of milk, and re-spin to erase any icy edges.
- Serve immediately. Creami ice cream is at its smoothest the moment it finishes spinning.
For more ways to put the machine to work, browse my full collection of Ninja Creami recipes.
Easy Flavor Variations

The vanilla base is your launchpad. Here are the ones my family requests most:
Vanilla
The base recipe as written — clean, creamy, and the best blank canvas for mix-ins.
Chocolate
Blend in 2 tablespoons of cocoa powder and a little extra sweetener to balance the bitterness. Stir in chocolate chips at the mix-in stage for chocolate-chip style.
Peanut Butter
Blend a spoonful of peanut butter into the base, then swirl in a little more after the final spin. Rich, salty-sweet, and extra satisfying.
Strawberry
Blend in fresh or frozen strawberries for a creamy pink scoop. If you love strawberry frozen treats, my strawberries and cream ice cream is a great next make.
A few more to try: mint chocolate chip (peppermint extract + chips), blueberry, or cookies and cream — all added on the mix-in setting.
Troubleshooting — Crumbly, Icy, or Too Cheesy?
Even an easy Ninja Creami cottage cheese ice cream can hit a snag — and most are easy fixes:
- Crumbly or powdery after the first spin? Totally normal. The Creami breaks the frozen block into fine crystals first; just add a splash of milk and re-spin until smooth.
- Icy? Usually a low-fat base or no stabilizer. Go full-fat or add one of the no-pudding stabilizers, and make sure you froze the pint flat.
- Grainy? The cottage cheese wasn’t blended smooth enough — blend longer next time, or use small curd.
- Rock-hard out of the freezer? Run warm water over the pint for 30 seconds and re-spin; don’t try to serve it straight from a deep freeze.
- Too cheesy or sour? That’s the cottage cheese, not the method — switch to a fresh, mild, non-tangy brand and add a little more sweetener.
Nutrition & Macros (Per Serving)
Here’s roughly what one serving of this Ninja Creami cottage cheese ice cream looks like (it shifts with your cottage cheese, milk, and sweetener):
| Per serving | Amount |
|---|---|
| Calories | (from recipe card) |
| Protein | high — scales with the cottage cheese |
| Carbs | (from recipe card) |
| Fat | (from recipe card) |
| Sugar | depends on sweetener |
| Sodium | varies by brand |
One honest note: you’ll see other recipes quote big protein numbers, but some are counting a whole pint as one serving. I’m giving you per-serving math so it’s realistic, and your protein climbs if you add a scoop of protein powder. Sodium also varies a lot between cottage cheese brands, so check your label if that matters to you.
Storage & Re-Spinning Leftovers
Store your Ninja Creami cottage cheese ice cream right in the Creami pint with the lid on — it’ll refreeze solid. When you want more, re-spin it before serving (it won’t be scoopable straight from the freezer; a quick spin brings back the creamy texture). It’s best within about 2 days for the smoothest result. For another easy frozen treat to keep on hand, try my 2-ingredient ice cream.

Ninja Creami Cottage Cheese Ice Cream
Equipment
- Ninja Creami
- Blender
Ingredients
Base
- 1 cup full-fat cottage cheese fresh, mild brand (not tangy)
- 3/4 cup whole milk or high-protein milk like Fairlife
- 2-4 tbsp sweetener honey, maple syrup, sugar, or monk fruit
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 1 pinch salt
Optional
- 1-2 tbsp heavy cream for extra creaminess
- 1 scoop protein powder add a splash more liquid if using
Instructions
- Add the cottage cheese, milk, sweetener, vanilla, and salt to a blender. Blend until completely smooth with no curds remaining — blend longer than you think to avoid graininess.
- Pour the mixture into an empty Ninja Creami pint, filling no higher than the max fill line.
- Freeze the pint flat, with the lid OFF, for a full 24 hours. Freezing with the lid on can create a hump that damages the blade.
- Run warm water over the outside of the pint for about 30 seconds to loosen the edges, then place it in the Ninja Creami.
- Process on the Lite Ice Cream setting. The first spin will look crumbly or powdery — this is normal.
- Add a splash of milk and select Re-Spin. Repeat 1 to 3 times until smooth and creamy.
- Add any mix-ins on the mix-in setting, then scoop and serve right away.
Notes
Frequently Asked Questions
Do you need a Ninja Creami to make cottage cheese ice cream?
No. The Creami gives the smoothest result, but you can make a great version without one — just blend and freeze, stirring as it sets. See my no-machine cottage cheese ice cream for the full method.
Can you make Ninja Creami cottage cheese ice cream without pudding mix?
Yes. Pudding mix is only a stabilizer. Full-fat cottage cheese, a splash of heavy cream, a scoop of collagen or protein powder, or a tiny pinch of guar gum will all keep it creamy with no pudding mix at all.
Do you have to blend the cottage cheese first?
For the creamiest texture, yes — blending removes the curds. If you skip it, use small curd cottage cheese; the Creami will smooth it out, just not quite as perfectly.
Why is my Ninja Creami cottage cheese ice cream crumbly?
That crumbly, powdery look after the first spin is completely normal. Add a splash of milk and run the Re-Spin cycle once or twice until it turns smooth and creamy.
What setting do you use for cottage cheese ice cream?
Use the Lite Ice Cream setting for these higher-protein bases, then Re-Spin as needed. Settings vary slightly by Creami model, so check yours.
Is cottage cheese ice cream healthy?
It’s a smart swap — higher in protein and usually lower in sugar than regular ice cream, made from a nutrient-dense base. You can read more about cottage cheese’s benefits at Cleveland Clinic.
How long does it last?
It keeps in the freezer in the pint, but it’s best within about 2 days. Re-spin any leftovers before serving to restore the creamy texture.
Once you’ve got the spin down, the flavor combinations are endless — keep the no-machine cottage cheese ice cream in your back pocket too, and browse more Ninja Creami recipes when you’re ready to keep that machine busy. Happy spinning!
