Churro cheesecake hits that sweet spot between creamy and spiced: a smooth baked filling, a cinnamon-sugar crust, and little pockets of churro tucked through every slice. The best bites give you tangy cheesecake first, then warm cinnamon, then a ribbon of dulce de leche or chocolate at the end. It feels rich without being heavy-handed, which is exactly why this dessert disappears fast once it hits the table.
What makes this version work is the contrast in texture. The crust gets a quick bake before the filling goes in, so it stays crisp instead of turning soggy under the cheesecake. Softened cream cheese and low-speed mixing keep the batter smooth and dense in the right way, while the chopped churros are folded in at the end so they stay distinct instead of dissolving into the filling. The swirl of dulce de leche adds pockets of caramel-like sweetness without making the whole cake overly sweet.
If you’ve ever had churro desserts that tasted flat or got lost under too much filling, this one fixes that problem. You’ll also find the timing that matters most, plus the best way to cut clean slices after the chill time is up.
The cheesecake set up perfectly and the churro pieces stayed chewy instead of disappearing. The cinnamon crust held together great, and the chocolate drizzle on top made every slice taste like a bakery dessert.
Save this churro cheesecake for the dessert nights when you want a creamy baked cheesecake with cinnamon sugar crunch and a chocolate finish.
The Secret to Keeping the Churro Pieces Distinct Instead of Melting Into the Filling
The biggest mistake with churro cheesecake is treating the churro pieces like a mix-in that can take any amount of stirring. They can’t. If you beat them into the batter, they break down fast and the whole filling starts to taste like cinnamon batter instead of cheesecake with actual churro in it. Folding them in at the very end keeps the texture interesting and gives you those little pockets that show up in each slice.
The other thing that matters here is the layering. A partial layer of cheesecake batter, then a swirl of dulce de leche, then the rest of the filling gives you defined ribbons instead of one muddy, overmixed center. That swirl also helps the dessert taste more like churro shop dessert than standard baked cheesecake.
What Each Ingredient Is Doing in This Churro Cheesecake
The cinnamon sugar graham cracker crumbs bring the obvious base flavor, but they also give the cake a drier, sturdier crust than plain graham crumbs alone. If your crumbs are coarse, pulse them a little finer so the crust packs tightly. Melted butter is what holds that crust together; there isn’t a shortcut that gives the same snap after baking.
- Cream cheese — Full-fat blocks give you the dense, creamy texture this dessert needs. Tub-style cream cheese has too much water and can bake up loose.
- Sour cream — This softens the filling and keeps the texture from becoming heavy. Plain Greek yogurt works in a pinch, but the tang will be sharper and the texture a touch less velvety.
- Churros — Fresh churros bring the best chew, but store-bought churros work well if you chop them just before folding them in. If they sit too long in the batter, they start to soften and disappear.
- Dulce de leche — This adds a caramel note that belongs with churros. Thick caramel sauce can work, but it won’t have quite the same milky richness.
- Chocolate sauce — This is for the finish, not the bake. A thick sauce gives you cleaner drizzles and better contrast against the chilled cheesecake.
Getting the Batter Smooth, the Center Set, and the Swirl Right
Build the crust first
Mix the cinnamon sugar graham crumbs with melted butter until every crumb looks evenly damp, then press the mixture firmly into the bottom of the springform pan. Bake it for 8 minutes so it sets before the filling goes in. If you skip that short bake, the crust tends to turn pasty under the cheesecake instead of staying crisp.
Mix the filling without adding air
Beat the cream cheese and sugar until the mixture looks smooth and creamy, then add the sour cream, vanilla, cinnamon, and nutmeg. Keep the mixer on low once the eggs go in, one at a time. Overbeating adds air, and air is what causes cracks and a puffy top that falls as it cools.
Fold in the churros and layer the swirl
Stir the chopped churros in by hand so they stay in pieces. Pour in half the batter, drizzle the dulce de leche in a loose swirl, then cover it with the rest of the batter. You want visible streaks, not full mixing; once the dulce de leche disappears completely into the batter, the flavor gets muted.
Bake until the center still moves
Bake until the edges look set and the center still jiggles slightly when you gently shake the pan. That wobble is what you want. If the whole cake looks firm in the oven, it’s already overbaked and will set up dry once chilled. Let it cool completely before it goes into the refrigerator, or condensation can form and dampen the top.
Three Ways to Make This Dessert Fit Your Kitchen
Gluten-Free Churro Cheesecake
Swap in gluten-free graham-style crumbs for the crust and use gluten-free churros. The texture stays close to the original as long as the crumbs still pack well with the butter. Check the churro pieces for a sturdy exterior so they don’t turn mushy in the filling.
Dairy-Free Version
Use dairy-free cream cheese and a thick dairy-free sour cream alternative, then replace the dulce de leche with a coconut caramel. The filling won’t be quite as rich as the original, but it will still slice cleanly if you chill it long enough. Choose a dairy-free chocolate sauce for the finish.
Extra Churro Texture
If you want stronger churro flavor in every bite, reserve a few pieces and scatter them over the top right before serving instead of baking them all into the filling. That keeps some crunch and gives the dessert more contrast. It’s the best move if you’re serving it the same day.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 4 days. The crust stays best in the first two days, but the flavor deepens as it chills.
- Freezer: Freeze slices tightly wrapped for up to 1 month. The texture softens a little after thawing, but it still tastes great if you thaw it overnight in the fridge.
- Reheating: Serve chilled or let a slice sit at room temperature for 15 to 20 minutes. Don’t microwave it; that’s the fastest way to make the filling greasy and the crust soggy.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Churro Cheesecake
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Preheat oven to 325°F. Mix cinnamon sugar graham cracker crumbs with melted butter and press into the bottom of a 9-inch springform pan.
- Bake crust for 8 minutes. Let cool slightly before adding filling, so it doesn’t melt the batter.
- Beat cream cheese and granulated sugar until smooth. Scrape the sides and beat again briefly to remove any lumps.
- Add sour cream, vanilla extract, cinnamon, and nutmeg, then beat until combined. Stop as soon as the mixture looks fully uniform.
- Add eggs one at a time, beating on low speed after each addition. Keep mixing gentle so the batter stays smooth and creamy.
- Fold in chopped churro pieces. Stir just until evenly distributed throughout the batter.
- Pour half the cheesecake batter over the crust. Spread into an even layer.
- Drizzle dulce de leche over the batter in a swirl pattern. Swirl lightly so you get ribboned pockets rather than fully mixing it in.
- Pour remaining batter on top. Smooth the surface so it bakes evenly.
- Bake for 40–50 minutes at 325°F. It should be set with the center still jiggles slightly when gently shaken.
- Cool the cheesecake completely at room temperature. Do not refrigerate warm cheesecake, or the texture can turn grainy.
- Refrigerate for at least 4 hours. Chill until firm for clean slices.
- Drizzle chocolate sauce before serving. Slice and plate so the creamy interior is visible with the drizzle on top or around the slice.