Viral Pringles Chocolate Block Recipe 2026
You’ve seen it all over your feed. That moment when the Pringles can gets peeled away and reveals a perfect chocolate cylinder — sliced open to show those gorgeous layered rings of crispy chips and white marshmallow fluff. Yeah. I had to make it.
Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!Quick takeaways
- Only 6 ingredients — you probably already have most of them
- The Pringles can is both the mold AND the magic trick
- Sweet + salty + crunchy + gooey all in one bite
- Freeze time does the heavy lifting — just 30–45 minutes
- Slicing it open is genuinely one of the most satisfying moments in food

Viral Pringles Chocolate Block Recipe
Ingredients
Notes
Step 01
Gather your (very humble) ingredients

Here’s what I love about this recipe: it doesn’t ask much of you. One can of Pringles (original is best — trust me, skip the BBQ flavor here), two cups of semi-sweet chocolate chips, a cup of marshmallow fluff, and optionally a spoonful of coconut oil to make that chocolate extra silky. That’s genuinely it.
Step 02
Build the marshmallow chip tower (yes, really)

This is where the recipe gets oddly meditative. You spread a thin layer of marshmallow fluff on each chip, then press the next one on top — over and over, building a tower of salty-sweet layers. There’s something almost therapeutic about it, honestly.
The goal is to keep the chips whole (easier said than done — Pringles are fragile little things) and to not go overboard with the fluff. A thin, even layer is all you need. Too much and it’ll squeeze out everywhere when the chocolate goes in.
Step 03
Slide it back into the can

Once your chip tower is built, gently slide the whole column back into the empty can. It holds its shape perfectly — which is exactly the genius of this recipe. The can isn’t just packaging; it’s the mold.
Step 04
Pour in the chocolate — slowly and satisfyingly

Melt your chocolate chips in the microwave in 30-second intervals, stirring in between. Add the coconut oil for that gorgeous glossy texture. Then — and this is the good part — slowly pour the melted chocolate straight into the Pringles can.
Watch it seep between the layers, filling every little gap. Give the can a few firm taps on the counter to get rid of air pockets. Keep pouring until the top is completely sealed. Sprinkle sea salt on top if you’re feeling fancy (you should be).
💡Go slowly when pouring. If you rush, the chocolate sits on top instead of working its way down through the layers. Patience = better cross-section when you slice it.
Step 05
Freeze it — then reveal the cylinder

Into the freezer it goes, upright, for 30–45 minutes. While you wait, maybe clean up the kitchen, maybe watch the video that inspired you to make this in the first place.
When it’s firm, grab scissors or a sharp knife and carefully cut and peel away the Pringles can. What you’re left with is genuinely stunning — a perfect freestanding chocolate cylinder that looks like it belongs in a patisserie window.
Step 06
Slice it open and try not to gasp

Let the cylinder sit for 2–3 minutes after coming out of the freezer — this makes cleaner slices. Then cut it into thick rounds with a warm, dry knife (run it under hot water and wipe before each cut for the sharpest layers).
The cross-section is almost too pretty to eat. Alternating rings of crispy golden chips, white marshmallow, and dark chocolate — it looks like something that took way more skill than it actually did. That’s the beauty of this recipe.
So… is it actually good?
Yes. Genuinely, surprisingly yes. Every bite has this incredible thing going on — the snap of chocolate, the crunch of chip, the sweetness of marshmallow, and just enough salt to keep things interesting. It’s the kind of dessert that makes people ask “wait, what IS this?” before they’ve even finished chewing.
At around 360 kcal per serving for 8 servings, it’s not an everyday thing — but for a party, a social video, or just a Tuesday where you need something wildly fun to make, it’s absolutely worth it. Make it. Film it. Watch people lose their minds when you slice it open.
“Did you try this recipe? Drop a comment below — I want to know if yours came out as satisfying to slice as mine did.”

