• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to header navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

RecipeTin Eats

Fast Prep, Big Flavours

  • My RecipeTin
  • My cookbooks!
  • Recipes
  • Recipes By Category
    • Iconic + cult classics
    • Mains
      • Chicken
        • Chicken mince
      • Beef Recipes
        • Ground Beef (Mince)
      • Pork
      • Lamb
      • Turkey
      • Shrimp / Prawns
      • Salmon
      • Fish recipes
      • Salad Meals
    • Quick and Easy
    • Soups
    • One Pot – One Pan
    • Stewy slow-cooked things
    • Slow Cooker
    • Sides
      • All
      • Salads & veg
      • Show Off Salads
      • Rice (all)
      • Fried rice recipes
      • Rice (plain)
      • Potato
    • Pasta
      • All
      • Pasta bakes
      • Pasta salads
    • Sweet
      • Cakes
      • Candy
      • Cheesecakes
      • Cupcakes & Muffins
      • Cookies
      • Puddings & Cosy Desserts
      • Bite Size
      • Pies
      • Slices & Bars
      • Frosting & Icing
      • Ice cream
    • Cuisine
      • Asian
        • All
        • Stir fries
        • Noodles
        • Soups
        • Chinese
        • RecipeTin Japan 🇯🇵
        • Korean
        • Modern Asian
        • Thai
        • Vietnamese
      • French
      • Greek
      • Indian
      • Italian
      • Mediterranean
      • Mexican
      • Middle Eastern
      • South American
    • Dietary
      • Gluten Free
      • Low Calorie
      • Vegetarian
    • Other Categories
      • BBQ
      • Breakfast
      • Burgers
      • 🎄Christmas
      • Cocktails
      • Party Foods
      • Rice Recipes
      • Roasts
      • Sandwiches & Sliders
    • Recipe collections
    • Cookbook recipes
  • My Food Bank
  • About
    • Me
    • RecipeTin Meals
    • My Cookbooks
      • Tonight (NEW!)
      • Dinner
    • Free Recipe Books
    • Contact
    • Nitty Gritty
      • Policy: Use of Recipes & Images
      • Privacy & Disclosure
Home Sweet

Chocolate Mousse

By Nagi Maehashi
828 Comments
Share
  • Copy Link
  • E-mail
  • Facebook
  • WhatsApp
Published21 Sep '18 Updated21 Mar '26
Jump to
Recipe

This Chocolate Mousse is made the proper French way, with the right ingredients and technique so it has beautiful chocolate flavour with a rich and luscious texture, yet not too sweet. It feels a little fancy but is surprisingly straightforward. Excellent for dinner parties – make it ahead and keep it in the fridge for days, ready to serve!

Chocolate Mousse in glasses topped with a dollop of cream and chocolate shavings, ready to be served

A classic, proper Chocolate Mousse recipe

I’ve never been 100% happy with the various chocolate mousse recipes I’ve tried in my lifetime. Not fluffy enough, not chocolatey enough, too sweet, too grainy. But the most common flaw was that they left a greasy mouthfeel from excessive use of whipped cream which many “easy” chocolate mousse recipes tend to solely rely on to set the mousse, rather than a combination of cream and whipped eggs which is the classic way chocolate mousse is made.

Thus, when Chocolate Mousse was submitted by a reader as a Recipe Request, I had reason to focus and make it over and over again until it was exactly what I wanted.

Let me repeat: I had to make chocolate mousse over and over again for work purposes.

Life is tough, my friends. The sacrifices I make…. (she says sadly, shaking her head, thinking about the various body parts on which all that chocolate mousse appears to have ended up residing…)

Overhead photo of Chocolate Mousse with a scoop taken out, showing how light and fluffy it is

What goes in chocolate mousse

Just FIVE ingredients, all good stuff we like: chocolate, cream, sugar, eggs and butter. Make sure you use chocolate intended for cooking purchased from the baking aisle! More on this below. Don’t use eating chocolate – the only exception is Lindt 70% cocoa chocolate. That is suitable for eating and cooking.

What goes in chocolate mousse? Just FIVE ingredients!

70% cocoa chocolate

It’s important to use the right chocolate for chocolate mousse to ensure it mixes in seamlessly, gives the mousse enough chocolate flavour and the right texture.

  • 70% cocoa dark chocolate – This is the chocolate I use which has good intense chocolate flavour, is not as sweet as milk chocolate but sweeter than unsweetened chocolate. It is also firmer than milk chocolate so it ensures that the mousse sets to the perfect consistency. Brands I use: Best – Lindt 70% cocoa (which is actually an eating chocolate but because it’s tempered it works for baking too, find it in the confectionary aisle). Every day purposes – Cadbury or Nestle Plaistowe baking chocolate block 70% cocoa.

  • Must be baking chocolate – Be sure to use a chocolate intended for cooking, purchased from the baking aisle, not one from the candy aisle. Chocolate made for eating is actually designed to not melt easily (think – hot hands, left in car) and if you use an eating chocolate, you’ll find it won’t melt smoothly (you get little lumps) or it burns in patches before it fully melts (if you use the microwave). Lindt is the only exception. As noted above, it’s an eating chocolate but because it’s tempered (“snaps” when you break it, and is shiny) it can also be used for baking and is my premium option.

  • Bittersweet chocolate can be used – The cocoa percentage of chocolate labelled “bittersweet” can range from 60% to 85% cocoa solids. It will add good chocolate flavour into the mousse but is slightly less sweet than using 70%.

  • Milk chocolate work too – It has a lower cocoa percentage (30% – 40% usually) so the mousse won’t have as intense a flavour, it makes the mousse a little sweeter and it sets a little softer, but it can be used here.

RAW EGGS

Raw eggs are key for real chocolate mousse, the classic French way to make it the way it’s served at fine dining restaurants. You will not achieve a result as good using a recipe that doesn’t use raw eggs, no matter what they promise. It’s just not possible to replicate the fluffy-yet-creamy texture with anything other than eggs whipped into a foam. Those “no egg” recipes will either be too dense, taste like whipped cream (and leave a slick of cream fat in your mouth that mousse does not), or have a weird jelly-like texture.

Note on raw eggs concern

Raw eggs in food is more common than you think – and you’ve probably eaten it without even realising.

It is true that eating uncooked eggs carries a risk of salmonella food poisoning which is transmitted to the eggs via infected hens, but in this day and age, I do not consider it any greater risk than eating sushi.

This concern seems more prevalent in some regions around the world, most notably in the US and Canada, presumably because of the outbreak in 2010 which resulted in the recall of millions of eggs.

Raw eggs are used in a number of popular desserts including Tiramisu, it’s used in mayonnaise, the Japanese eat raw eggs on rice, the Koreans top Bibimbap with raw egg. And I don’t know about you but runny yolks is the only way I have fried eggs!

If you are concerned about eating raw eggs, you can used pasteurised eggs for this recipe. If you cannot find pasteurised eggs in stores, you can pasteurise eggs yourself at home if you have an accurate thermometer (have a read of this resource).

Note: raw eggs is not advisable for pregnant women and babies.


How to make chocolate mousse

The path to light and fluffy Chocolate Mousse involves just a few key steps:

  1. Melt chocolate with the butter;

  2. Whip cream and egg whites separately until fluffy;

  3. Gently fold everything together with the yolks; then

  4. portion into glasses and refrigerate to set.

Here’s are step-by-step photos with a little more detail. And don’t forget there’s a tutorial video below as well which is quite helpful if you are a first-timer!

  1. Beat egg whites and sugar until foamy.

  2. Soft peaks (floppy elf hat!) – Then keep beating to fluff it up into a meringue (ie white fluff) until it is “firm peaks”. This means that the mixture stands upright but the pointy end flops down as pictured above. I call it a floppy elf hat!

    If the mixture stands upright with the pointy end pointing up (not flopping) this means it has be beaten to “firm peaks” which is a little far for chocolate mousse. However, don’t worry! It’s ok, the mousse will work fine and will be great for 2 days, but it deflates a bit more on day 3 and beyond.

  1. Whip cream to stiff peaks. This is one step further than firm peaks which we did for egg whites. So for the cream, we want the peaks to point upright – no floppy elf hat! Stop beating as soon as your cream reaches stiff peaks. If you beat it too much, the cream starts to get lumpy – and if you keep beating, you’ll turn it into butter which we definitely do not want!!😂

  2. Fold together cream and egg yolks. By “fold”, I mean gently combining the mixtures using a lifting and turning motion rather than stirring, so you keep all the air in the mixture and end up with a light, airy mousse. Don’t beat furiously – that’s the sure fire way to a pot of liquid chocolate rather than fluffy mousse!

  1. Fold in melted chocolate. Make sure the chocolate is at room temperature but is still runny. If it’s cooled too much and is thick (not pourable), microwave and stir in 5 second increments until it;s pourable again.

  2. Gently fold egg whites into chocolate mixture. The fluffed egg whites is what makes our mousse beautifully aerated so be gentle in this step!

  1. Mousse mixture – Keep folding until you no longer see egg white lumps or streaks.

  2. Spoon into individual pots or a larger dish, then refrigerate to chill so it sets. It will take around 6 hours for individual pots.

**The recipe video is super helpful to see the consistency of the egg whites and cream, as well as how to fold the ingredients into each other.**

I chose to make little pots (using whisky glasses!) but you can make one dish if you prefer, then scoop out to serve.

Individual pots of Chocolate Mousse
Close up of spoon holding a scoop of Chocolate Mousse

First timers – never fear!

If you’re a chocolate mousse first timer and are concerned about deflation because you’re taking your time with the steps, don’t be worried! When I film recipe videos, I’m always faffing around with camera set ups and batting away a certain giant dog who is always sprawled where I want the tripod to be.

So it probably took me 3 times longer than it usually does to get the mousse in the fridge so I was quite concerned about deflation of the egg whites and cream.

But it was fine! The chocolate mousse came out exactly the same as it always has. Fluffy, chocolate perfection, as show in the photo above! – Nagi x


Watch how to make it

Hungry for more? Subscribe to my newsletter and follow along on Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram for all of the latest updates.

Chocolate Mousse in glasses topped with a dollop of cream and chocolate shavings, ready to be served

Chocolate Mousse

Author: Nagi
Prep: 20 minutes mins
Dessert
French, Western
4.98 from 227 votes
Servings4
Tap or hover to scale
Print
  • 332
Recipe video above. Light and airy yet rich, this is a Chocolate Mousse made the classic French way, as served in fine dining restaurants. Less cream, richer mouth feel, true chocolate flavour. It's actually quite straight forward to make!
Excellent dessert for dinner parties because they keep 100% perfectly in the fridge for 2 days, they're elegant and indulgent but not heavy and overly sweet.
See notes section for comment on raw eggs (yes it's essential to make mousse properly).

Ingredients

  • 3 eggs (~55g/2 oz each)
  • 125g / 4.5 oz 70% cocoa chocolate or bittersweet chocolate, , break or cut into small 1 cm / 0.2" pieces (Note 1)
  • 10g / 0.3 oz unsalted butter
  • 1/2 cup cream , full fat (Note 2)
  • 3 tbsp caster sugar (superfine white sugar)

Decorations:

  • More whipped cream
  • Chocolate shavings (Note 3)
Prevent screen from sleeping

Instructions

  • For reliable results, work at a steady pace so your whipped egg whites and cream do not get too warm!
  • Separate eggs and yolks while eggs are cold. Place whites in a large bowl and yolks in a small bowl. Leave whites while you prepare other ingredients. (Note 4)
  • Whisk yolks until uniform.
  • Melt chocolate and butter – Place chocolate in a microwave-proof bowl with the butter. Melt in the microwave in 20 second bursts, stirring in between, until smooth. (Stir in optional flavourings at this point, but read Note 6 first). Set aside to cool slightly while you proceed with other steps – we want it at room temperature but still pourable.
  • Whip cream – Beat cream until stiff peaks form, being careful not to over-whip (see video).
  • Whip whites – Clean the whisks. Add sugar into the egg whites bowl. Beat until firm peaks form. GOAL – flopping "elf hat"! (see video and Note 5 for what this means).

Fold together all ingredients:

  • Yolks and cream – Fold egg yolks into cream using a rubber spatula – 8 folds max. Some streaks is fine.
  • Check chocolate temperature – The chocolate should be cooled to room temperature but still runny (minimum 35°C / 95°F; ideal 40°C / 104°F). If too cool or thick, microwave in burst of 5 seconds at a time until runny.
  • Chocolate into cream – Pour chocolate into cream yolk mixture. Fold through – 8 folds max. Some streaks here are ok.
  • Fold in egg whites – Add 1/4 of beaten egg whites into chocolate mixture. Fold through until incorporated – "smear" the spatular across surface to blend white lumps in – aim for 10 folds. 
  • Pour chocolate mixture into egg whites. Fold through until incorporated and no more white lumps remain – aim for 12 folds max, but ensure there are no obvious egg white patches.
  • Chill in fridge – Divide mixture between 4 small glasses or pots. Refrigerate for at least 6 hours, preferably overnight.
  • To serve, garnish with cream and chocolate shavings. Raspberries and a tiny sprig of mint for colour would also be lovely!

Recipe Notes:

Raw eggs note – required to make real chocolate mousse, the classic French way. It is not possible to achieve the same result without using eggs, despite what other recipes promise – and I’ve tried many. It will either be denser, lack the luscious mouthfeel, be like eating whipped cream which leaves a film of fat in your mouth, have a jelly-like texture, or is more like panna cotta. Read in post for more information. Note: raw eggs not advisable for pregnant women or babies to consume.

1. Chocolate – Use 70% cocoa or bittersweet for best flavour, colour and texture. I use Lindt 70% (preferred), or Nestle Plaistow / Cadbury for everyday baking.
  • Use cooking chocolate (baking aisle), not eating chocolate (candy aisle). It melts smoother and thinner, giving a silky mousse. Eating chocolate can seize and turn lumpy – except Lindt 70% (an eating chocolate), which works because it’s tempered chocolate.
  • Milk or dark chocolate (semi-sweet chocolate) can also be used, but the mousse will be lighter in colour, less chocolatey and softer set.
2. Cream: You must use full-fat cream that can be whipped – pure cream (35% fat), thickened cream (35% fat) or heavy cream (35 – 40% fat). Do not use pouring cream or dolloping cream that cannot be whipped – the label should state if the cream cannot be whipped. Low fat also won’t work here, the mousse won’t set properly.
3. Chocolate Shavings: Use a small knife and scrape at a low angle on the flat side of a block of chocolate.
4. Eggs tip: It’s easier to separate whites from yolks when eggs are cold, but whites at room temp fluff up better when closer to room temp. So separate the eggs when fridge cold then set aside while you prep the other ingredients to let the whites come to room temp a bit.
5. Firmly whipped egg whites: Egg whites can be beaten to: soft peaks, firm and stiff peaks. We want the middle one – firm peaks. This is when you have a “elf hat” floppage at the top of the peak (see video). If it stands straight upright without the little hook then it’s stiff, not firm (still works fine but it won’t hold up as well after a few days in the fridge). If you do not get any type of peaks at all, then keep beating!
6. Flavourings: Add liquor or other flavourings to the melted chocolate, making sure they’re at room temperature to avoid seizing. Stir in, cool as per recipe, and adjust to taste – but keep it to about 1 tbsp max or it may affect how the mousse sets.
Pro tip: Don’t add flavourings to plain melted chocolate – always mix it with something (like butter) first to prevent it turning grainy.
Storage: Best within 2 days but keeps for a week in the fridge with only a slight reduction in aeration.
Nutrition per serving. Makes 4 x 1/2 cup (125ml) servings. It is quite rich! 

Nutrition Information:

Calories: 375cal (19%)Carbohydrates: 27g (9%)Protein: 7g (14%)Fat: 26g (40%)Saturated Fat: 18g (113%)Cholesterol: 171mg (57%)Sodium: 92mg (4%)Potassium: 266mg (8%)Fiber: 1g (4%)Sugar: 19g (21%)Vitamin A: 700IU (14%)Calcium: 134mg (13%)Iron: 1mg (6%)
Keywords: Chocolate Mousse
Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

PS More ways to get a serious Chocolate fix: Chocolate Cake with Chocolate Buttercream Frosting or Ganache and Chocolate Mirror Glaze, Chocolate Cream Pie and BROWNIES!


Life of Dozer

Back at the beach with his mates! Under strict instructions to take it easy* and ease back into it. Unfortunately, he doesn’t understand what “taking it easy” means…..

* Post knee op a few months ago. According to Dozer, he was back to 100% the week after surgery, but the doc says no! It will be months! 😂

Dozer the golden retriever at Bayview dog beach September 2018
Previous Post
Italian Meatballs
Next Post
Vegetable Pasta – One Pot!

Hi, I'm Nagi!

I believe you can make great food with everyday ingredients even if you’re short on time and cost conscious. You just need to cook clever and get creative!

Read More

Free Recipe eBooks

Join my free email list to receive THREE free cookbooks!

Reader Interactions

Leave a Comment Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Cooked this? Rate this recipe!




828 Comments

  1. Michelle B says

    February 11, 2025 at 9:35 pm

    I absolutely LOVE how you write your recipes, which in turn make me look like a pro in the kitchen! I made your blueberry lemon cake which was a big hit and I will try this mousse next.

    Reply
  2. Francois says

    February 7, 2025 at 5:13 pm

    Hi. Looking forward to trying the recipe. A question though: i have not had great success melting chocolate in the microwave. Can i use the double boiler method ti melt the chocolate instead? Bless you

    Reply
  3. Susie Harris says

    January 26, 2025 at 1:33 am

    Can’t get enough of this
    I add strawberries on top after it’s set. And replace sugar with monk fruit sweetener. Soooo delicious!!

    Reply
  4. Rebecca says

    January 20, 2025 at 10:21 am

    Chocolate mousse is one of my husband’s favorite desserts. I made this for our anniversary, and he loved it!

    Reply
  5. CARA SINGLE says

    January 19, 2025 at 8:54 pm

    I used cooking chocolate (Plaistiowe, topped up with some belcolade because I doubled the recipe) but it still turned out grainy 😞 any ideas why?

    Reply
    • Beth Sprow says

      January 29, 2025 at 3:02 am

      5 stars
      Its possible that you added the chocolate to the cream mixture when it was too warm. The heat from the chocolate can cause the egg yolks to curdle (I think this is the right word) by cooking them slightly. Conversely if the chocolate is too cool some of it may become tiny solid grains when it is added to the cooler cream/egg mixture since it closer to the temp at which the chocolate becomes solid. Just my thoughts.

      Reply
    • Morgan Baxter says

      March 24, 2025 at 4:44 pm

      Hello
      I have a quick question about changing this from chocolate to strawberry flavoured. Would it just be a matter of blending a punnet of fresh strawberries and put with melted butter? I could probably google a specific strawberry mousse recipe but I just love the simplicity and ease of your methods!

      Reply
  6. maggie says

    January 19, 2025 at 11:38 am

    if i use silicone moulds, and then unmoulde the mousse will it set?

    Reply
  7. Jayden says

    January 13, 2025 at 10:27 am

    5 stars
    Beautiful, delicate, smooth, creamy mousse. Super easy to make, and really yum. Have made this several times and it has always turned out exceptional. Move at a steady, fast pace when making this.

    Reply
  8. Bobo says

    December 28, 2024 at 3:31 am

    Wouldnt microwave chocolate. Better to melt it on waterbath. Otherwise good recipe.

    Reply
  9. Bec says

    December 27, 2024 at 5:51 pm

    Such a great fool proof recipe that is absolutely luscious!

    Reply
  10. Ellie says

    December 21, 2024 at 5:04 am

    I’m planning to make this a day ahead then pipe into small cups on Christmas day as I don’t have room in my fridge for 25 cups. Should I refrigerate in a bowl overnight, then place in piping bag before serving?

    Reply
  11. Meghan says

    December 18, 2024 at 5:49 am

    This recipe looks fantastic! I’m planning on making enough for a party of 23 people; how much would you recommend I scale this up by for everyone to have about half a cup to a cup?

    Reply
  12. Donald Black says

    December 17, 2024 at 6:14 am

    Has anyone used powdered egg yolks and whites in this recipe ????¿

    Reply
  13. Donald Black says

    December 17, 2024 at 6:03 am

    Can we use powdered egg yolks and whites????

    Reply
  14. Karyn Kong says

    December 15, 2024 at 7:51 pm

    My first time making Mousse, I upscaled to 8 serves for a dinner party … I always trust Nagis recipes and I was not disappointed !! Hubby can be a harsh critic and he is a great cook, but he told me it was good ✔️ so I am very happy. Thanks Nagi. My son has asked me to print the recipe for him too so that’s another tick ✔️it was super easy and even though I worried I just watched the video twice and followed the instructions, doing things in my own order. It was perfect 🙏🙏

    Reply
  15. Jacqui says

    December 15, 2024 at 2:57 am

    5 stars
    Turned out perfect! Great recipe…one I will use often! Thanks!

    Reply
  16. Billee Fisher says

    December 7, 2024 at 3:52 pm

    The best chocolate mousse I’ve ever tried 😋

    Reply
  17. lucas rea says

    December 5, 2024 at 8:37 pm

    i hate this websit full of gay ppl

    Reply
  18. Bob says

    November 30, 2024 at 6:15 am

    5 stars
    Best mousse in ma life.

    Reply
  19. deborah abasciano says

    November 28, 2024 at 3:23 am

    could I use this type of mouse to fill the inside of a cupcake
    or to frost a cupcake?

    Reply
  20. Georgina Osborne says

    November 15, 2024 at 2:15 pm

    Seriously Nagi!!!!! How do you keep doing it?! Every recipe of yours I try is honestly 10/10 and the best version of that recipe I’ve ever tried. Once again, best mousse recipe I have tried.

    Reply
Newer Comments
Older Comments

Primary Sidebar

Hi, I'm Nagi!

I believe you can make great food with everyday ingredients even if you’re short on time and cost conscious. You just need to cook clever and get creative! Read More

Free Recipe eBooks

Join my free email list to receive THREE free cookbooks!

Meet Dozer

Official taste tester of RecipeTin Eats! Meet Dozer
As Featured On

Never miss a recipe!

Subscribe to my newsletter and receive 3 FREE ebooks!

Subscribe
Recipes
  • All Recipes
  • By Category
  • Collections
About
  • About Nagi
  • About Dozer
  • RecipeTin Meals
Related
  • RecipeTin Japan
Help
  • Contact
  • Image Use Policy
© RecipeTin Eats 2026
  • Privacy Policy & Terms
Site Credits
Maintained by Human Made Designed by Melissa Rose Design Developed by Once Coupled
All Rights Reserved

Subscribe to my newsletter

Sign up and receive 3 FREE EBOOKS!