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Churro Cheesecake
Home Desserts & Baking Churro Cheesecake
Desserts & Baking

Churro Cheesecake

Prep Time 30 min
Cook Time 50 min
Servings 12

Churro Cheesecake

Churro cheesecake lands right in that sweet spot between creamy and crunchy, with a cinnamon-kissed crust, a smooth baked filling, and little pockets of churro throughout that keep each bite from feeling one-note. The chocolate drizzle and dulce de leche take it from good dessert to the kind people hover over after dinner, waiting for one more slice. It’s rich, but not heavy in the way an all-cheesecake dessert can be, and the churro pieces give it a texture you don’t get from a plain swirled cheesecake.

What makes this version work is the balance. The crust gets a quick bake first, which keeps it from turning soggy under the filling. The cream cheese mixture stays on the low side of the mixer once the eggs go in, because overbeating adds air and that’s how a cheesecake puffs, cracks, and sinks. Folding the churro pieces in at the end keeps them from dissolving into the batter, so you still get those soft, cinnamon-sweet bites in the finished slice.

Below you’ll find the part that matters most: how to keep the cheesecake smooth, when the center should still wobble, and how to swap in store-bought churros without losing the texture that makes this dessert worth baking.

The filling baked up so smooth and the churro pieces stayed soft instead of disappearing into the batter. I used store-bought churros and the dulce de leche swirl tasted like a bakery dessert.

★★★★★— Marisa T.

Save this churro cheesecake for the nights when you want a creamy baked dessert with a cinnamon crust, churro bites, and a glossy chocolate finish.

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The part where churro cheesecake usually cracks

Most cheesecake problems start before the pan ever goes in the oven. A crust that hasn’t been pre-baked can soften into paste under the filling, and a batter that gets whipped too hard traps extra air that expands in the heat. That’s when the top splits and the center collapses as it cools.

This recipe avoids both issues by treating the crust and filling as separate jobs. The crust gets a short bake so the butter and crumbs set together, and the filling is mixed just until smooth. Once the eggs go in, the mixer should stay on low. You want a dense, creamy batter, not a fluffy one.

  • The cinnamon sugar graham cracker crumbs build a base that tastes close to a churro without needing to fry anything. If you only have plain graham crumbs, add an extra teaspoon of cinnamon and a tablespoon of sugar.
  • The cream cheese needs to be fully softened. Cold cream cheese leaves tiny lumps that don’t bake out, and those lumps show up in every slice. Room temperature is the difference between silky and gritty here.
  • Sour cream adds tang and helps the filling stay creamy after chilling. Plain Greek yogurt works in a pinch, but it gives a slightly firmer texture and a sharper finish.
  • The churro pieces should be chopped small enough to fold through the batter, not so small that they disappear. Fresh churros stay softer inside the cheesecake, while store-bought ones bring a little more chew.

Building the filling without losing that creamy middle

Pressing and pre-baking the crust

Mix the crumbs with the melted butter until the mixture looks like wet sand, then press it firmly into the bottom of the springform pan. An even, compact layer bakes into a sliceable crust instead of crumbling apart under the filling. Bake it just until it smells toasted and the edges deepen a shade or two. If it’s pale and loose, the cheesecake can soak into it.

Keeping the batter smooth

Beat the cream cheese and sugar until the mixture loses its grainy look and turns glossy. Add the sour cream, vanilla, cinnamon, and nutmeg before the eggs so the batter is already cohesive. Once the eggs go in, mix on low and stop as soon as they disappear. If the batter looks foamy, it has too much air and the cheesecake is more likely to crack.

Folding in the churros and adding the swirl

Fold the churro pieces in by hand so they stay distinct. Pour in half the batter, drizzle the dulce de leche in loose swirls, then cover it with the rest of the batter. Don’t stir the dulce de leche into the filling; you want ribbons, not a uniformly sweet cheesecake. That swirl gives you pockets of caramel flavor instead of one flat note across the whole dessert.

Knowing when to pull it from the oven

Bake until the edges look set and the center still jiggles slightly when you nudge the pan. A cheesecake that looks completely firm in the oven is usually overbaked by the time it cools. Let it cool all the way at room temperature before refrigerating, because rushing it into the fridge can cause condensation on the top. The chill time is what finishes the texture and gives you clean slices.

Three ways to adapt churro cheesecake without losing the point

Use store-bought churros when you want the easiest route

Store-bought churros are the fastest option and they work well here because they’re folded into the batter, not used as a topping. Chop them after they’ve cooled so they don’t smear into the filling. The result is a softer, slightly chewier bite than fresh churros, but the flavor still comes through clearly.

Make it gluten-free with a gluten-free crumb base

Swap in gluten-free graham-style crumbs for the crust and use gluten-free churros, if you can find them. The cheesecake filling itself is naturally gluten-free, so the crust and churro pieces are the only places you need to check. Expect the crust to be a touch more delicate, so press it firmly and let it cool before adding the batter.

Skip the dulce de leche swirl for a cleaner slice

If you want a more classic cheesecake look, leave out the swirl and save the dulce de leche for drizzling over each slice. You lose the caramel pockets in the middle, but you gain a neater cut and a slightly less sweet filling. That’s the better move if you’re serving it with extra chocolate sauce on top.

Use Greek yogurt if you’re out of sour cream

Plain full-fat Greek yogurt can stand in for sour cream, but the filling will taste a little tangier and set a bit firmer. That firmer texture isn’t a problem here, especially if you like clean slices. Keep the rest of the method the same and don’t increase the eggs to compensate.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 5 days. The churro pieces soften a little as it sits, but the cheesecake stays rich and sliceable.
  • Freezer: It freezes well. Chill fully, slice, wrap tightly, and freeze for up to 2 months. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator for the cleanest texture.
  • Reheating: Serve it chilled or let slices sit at room temperature for 15 to 20 minutes. Don’t microwave the cheesecake; it turns the filling soft and can make the churro pieces rubbery.

Answers to the questions worth asking

Can I use frozen churros in churro cheesecake?+

Yes, as long as they’re fully thawed and chopped before you fold them in. If they go in frozen, they can release moisture unevenly and leave soft pockets in the batter. Thawed churros blend into the cheesecake more evenly and still keep their cinnamon flavor.

How do I know when churro cheesecake is done baking?+

The edges should look set and the center should still wobble slightly when you gently shake the pan. That wobble is what you want; it firms up as the cheesecake cools and chills. If the center is completely firm in the oven, it’s already overbaked.

Can I make churro cheesecake the day before?+

Yes, and that’s actually the best way to serve it. The chilling time helps the filling fully set and makes the slices cleaner. Add the chocolate sauce right before serving so the top stays glossy.

How do I keep my cheesecake from cracking?+

Don’t overmix the batter after the eggs go in, and don’t bake past the point where the center still has a slight jiggle. Overbeating and overbaking are the two biggest reasons cheesecakes crack. Cooling the cheesecake gradually also helps, because a sudden temperature drop can pull the top apart.

Can I leave out the churro pieces and still make this cheesecake?+

You can, but you’ll lose the texture contrast that makes it churro cheesecake instead of a standard cinnamon cheesecake. If you skip them, add a little extra cinnamon to the batter and keep the dulce de leche swirl so the dessert still has that warm caramel-cinnamon profile. The result will be smoother, but less interesting.

Churro Cheesecake

Churro cheesecake is a baked, creamy dessert with a cinnamon-sugar graham crust and churro pieces folded throughout. It’s swirled with dulce de leche and finished with a chocolate drizzle for a rich, sliceable interior.
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 50 minutes
Resting 4 hours
Total Time 5 hours 20 minutes
Servings: 12 servings
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: Mexican-Fusion
Calories: 520

Ingredients
  

Cinnamon sugar graham crust
  • 1 cup cinnamon sugar graham cracker crumbs
  • 0.25 cup melted butter
Cheesecake filling
  • 32 oz cream cheese, softened
  • 1 cup granulated sugar
  • 0.5 cup sour cream
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1 tsp cinnamon
  • 0.25 tsp nutmeg
  • 4 eggs
  • 1 cup chopped churros (fresh or store-bought)
  • 0.5 cup dulce de leche
  • 0.5 cup chocolate sauce

Equipment

  • 1 springform pan

Method
 

Bake the cinnamon sugar crust
  1. Preheat the oven to 325°F. Mix cinnamon sugar graham cracker crumbs with melted butter, then press into the bottom of a 9-inch springform pan.
  2. Bake the crust for 8 minutes, then let it cool slightly before assembling the cheesecake.
Make the cheesecake batter
  1. Beat cream cheese and sugar until smooth. Scrape down as needed to keep the mixture lump-free.
  2. Add sour cream, vanilla extract, cinnamon, and nutmeg, then beat until combined. Keep the batter creamy and evenly colored.
  3. Add eggs one at a time, beating on low speed after each addition. Stop when the mixture looks fully incorporated but not overbeaten.
  4. Fold in chopped churro pieces. Distribute them evenly so you get churro bites throughout.
Assemble and bake
  1. Pour half the cheesecake batter over the crust. Spread gently to form an even layer.
  2. Drizzle dulce de leche over the batter in a swirl pattern. Use small, even drizzles so the swirl spreads as it bakes.
  3. Top with the remaining batter. Smooth the surface without pressing down too hard.
  4. Bake for 40-50 minutes at 325°F until the cheesecake is set but the center still jiggles slightly when gently shaken. Do not overbake; the jiggle should be mild.
Cool, chill, and finish
  1. Cool the cheesecake completely. Let it reach room temperature before chilling to prevent condensation.
  2. Refrigerate for at least 4 hours. Chill until fully firm for clean slices.
  3. Drizzle with chocolate sauce before serving. Slice and serve with the chocolate visible on the plate.

Notes

For the cleanest slices, chill the cheesecake overnight if you can, and wipe your knife between cuts. Store covered in the refrigerator up to 4 days; freeze slices in an airtight container up to 2 months (thaw overnight in the fridge). If you need a lower-sugar version, use a reduced-sugar dulce de leche and swap granulated sugar for a 1:1 baking substitute to keep the texture similar.

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