Bite-sized churro cheesecake bites land right in the middle of creamy, crunchy, and warmly spiced. The crust bakes up with that cinnamon-sugar snap you want from a churro, while the cheesecake layer stays smooth and just firm enough to cut cleanly into neat little squares. A drizzle of dulce de leche on top ties everything together with a caramel note that keeps people reaching for a second piece.
What makes this version work is the balance. The crust gets a short bake first, which keeps it from turning soggy once the filling goes on. The cheesecake itself is mixed just until smooth, then baked only until the center still has a slight wobble. That gentle bake keeps the texture creamy instead of dry and dense. The chopped churro pieces inside add a little chew and a burst of cinnamon-sugar flavor in every bite.
Below, I’ve included the small details that matter most here: how to keep the crust compact, when to stop mixing the filling, and how to cut the squares cleanly after chilling. Those are the differences between tidy, bakery-style bites and a pan that falls apart at the edges.
The crust stayed crisp under the cheesecake, and the little churro pieces gave every square that real cinnamon-sugar bite I was hoping for. I chilled them for an hour and they sliced cleanly without smearing.
Keep these churro cheesecake bites handy for the dessert tray — the cinnamon crust, creamy center, and dulce de leche drizzle make them vanish fast.
The Crust Needs a Real Press, Not Just a Mix
The crust is the part that usually gets rushed, and that’s why it crumbles when you cut the bites. Graham crumbs need enough butter to clump, then they need to be pressed firmly into the pan so they bake into a base instead of staying sandy. An eight-minute bake gives them structure before the cheesecake layer goes on, which keeps the bottom from going soft under the filling.
The filling is another place where people overwork the batter. Once the egg goes in, beat on low speed just until it disappears. Too much air gives you a puffed top that sinks as it cools, and that makes the squares harder to slice neatly.
What the Churro Pieces and Dulce de Leche Are Actually Doing Here
Graham cracker crumbs — The cinnamon-sugar version gives you the closest shortcut to a churro-style base without frying anything. If you only have plain crumbs, add a little extra cinnamon and a spoonful of sugar so the crust still tastes intentional.
Cream cheese — Use full-fat cream cheese that’s fully softened. Cold cream cheese leaves tiny lumps, and those won’t smooth out once the egg is added. Low-fat cream cheese works in a pinch, but the filling won’t set with the same rich, dense texture.
Sour cream — This keeps the filling tangy and soft without making it loose. Plain Greek yogurt can stand in, but the texture will be a little firmer and the flavor a touch sharper.
Churro pieces — These bring the chewy contrast that makes the bites taste like more than plain cheesecake with cinnamon on top. Chop them small so they distribute through the filling instead of sinking into pockets.
Dulce de leche — This is the finishing move. It adds a caramel note that complements the cinnamon instead of fighting it. Warm it just enough to drizzle; if it’s too thick, it will tear the top instead of coating it.
Cinnamon sugar topping — Sprinkle it after chilling so it stays visible and fragrant. If you add it before baking, it melts into the surface and loses the churro effect.
Getting the Center Set Without Drying Out the Edges
Building the Crust
Mix the crumbs and melted butter until the mixture looks like wet sand and holds together when you pinch it. Press it firmly into the pan, pushing all the way into the corners so the edge pieces cut cleanly later. Bake just until the crust smells toasted and looks slightly darker at the edges. If it goes too long, the butter can separate and the crust turns greasy instead of crisp.
Mixing the Filling
Beat the cream cheese, sugar, sour cream, vanilla, and cinnamon until the mixture is smooth and glossy, with no streaks left in the bowl. Add the egg on low speed and stop as soon as it disappears. Fold in the churro pieces by hand so they stay intact. If you whip the batter hard at this stage, you’ll trap air and the cheesecake can crack or collapse after baking.
Baking to the Right Jiggle
Spread the filling over the cooled crust and bake until the edges look set but the center still moves slightly when you tap the pan. That little wobble is the sweet spot. The pan will continue to cook as it cools, and the refrigerator finishes the job. If you wait until the middle looks completely firm in the oven, the bites will end up dry.
Chilling Before You Cut
Let the pan cool completely at room temperature first, then chill for at least an hour. The filling needs that time to firm up enough for clean cuts. Use a sharp knife wiped clean between slices if you want tidy squares. If you cut them while they’re still warm, the filling will smear and the crust will break apart.
How to Adapt These Churro Cheesecake Bites for Different Needs
Gluten-Free Version
Use gluten-free graham-style crumbs and check that your churro pieces are made with gluten-free dough or skip them entirely. The filling stays the same. The crust will still bake up nicely as long as the crumbs are fine and the butter ratio stays unchanged.
Lighter Dairy Swap
You can use reduced-fat cream cheese and Greek yogurt instead of sour cream, but expect a slightly firmer filling and a less rich finish. The bites will still set, though they won’t taste quite as plush. Keep the bake time short so the texture doesn’t turn chalky.
No Churro Pieces
If you don’t have churro pieces, leave them out and increase the cinnamon sugar topping a bit. You’ll lose the chewy contrast, but the dessert still reads clearly as churro-inspired because the crust and topping carry the cinnamon-sugar flavor.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The crust softens a little over time, but the flavor holds well.
- Freezer: These freeze well without the dulce de leche topping. Wrap the cut squares tightly and freeze for up to 2 months, then thaw in the refrigerator before serving.
- Reheating: These are best served chilled or at room temperature, not warmed. If they get too cold from the fridge, let them sit out for 15 to 20 minutes so the filling relaxes and the cinnamon flavors come forward.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Churro Cheesecake Bites
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Preheat the oven to 325°F. Mix cinnamon sugar graham cracker crumbs with melted butter until evenly coated.
- Press the crumb mixture firmly into a 6x8 inch or 8x8 inch baking pan. Bake for 8 minutes, then let cool slightly.
- Beat cream cheese, granulated sugar, sour cream, vanilla extract, and cinnamon until smooth. Scrape the sides as needed to keep the mixture lump-free.
- Add the egg and beat on low speed until fully combined. Fold in the chopped churro pieces.
- Spread the cheesecake mixture over the cooled crust. Bake at 325°F for 12-15 minutes until mostly set but still slightly jiggly in the center.
- Cool completely at room temperature, then refrigerate for at least 1 hour. Chill until firm enough to cut cleanly.
- Cut into 24 bite-sized squares. Drizzle each with dulce de leche and sprinkle with cinnamon sugar for topping.
- Serve chilled or at room temperature. Store in an airtight container in the refrigerator.


