Simple Churro Cheesecake for Parties
This simple churro cheesecake for parties is the ultimate crowd-pleaser — flaky crescent dough, creamy cheesecake filling, and a buttery cinnamon sugar crust that tastes like your favorite Mexican dessert in bar form. Ready in under an hour with zero fancy skills required.
Okay, real talk — the first time I made this churro cheesecake, I brought it to a potluck and someone literally asked me if I’d bought it from a bakery. I didn’t. It came from a tube of crescent dough and about 20 minutes of effort. That’s the magic of this recipe, and I am absolutely not sorry for how easy it is.
If you love the warm, cinnamony vibes of classic Mexican dessert recipes but you don’t want to deep-fry anything at 9pm on a Friday, this is your answer. It’s got all the cozy churro flavor you’re craving, layered with a rich, velvety cheesecake filling that sets up beautifully in the fridge. Party-ready, make-ahead friendly, and dangerously easy to eat three pieces of.
Table of Contents
What Makes This Churro Cheesecake So Good
This isn’t just a dessert — it’s a moment. You’ve got two layers of buttery crescent dough hugging a smooth cream cheese filling, with cinnamon sugar baked right into every single bite. The bottom layer gets a little caramelized from the cinnamon sugar sprinkled in the pan, and the top gets this gorgeous golden crunch from the butter and more cinnamon sugar. It’s basically a churro and a cheesecake had a baby, and that baby is perfect.
It slices into neat little bars, which makes it ideal for parties, potlucks, bake sales, or just… Tuesday. No water bath, no springform pan, no drama. Just delicious.

Simple Churro Cheesecake for Parties
Equipment
- 9×13 inch baking pan
- Mixing bowl
- Hand mixer or stand mixer
- Small bowl
- Spatula
- Pastry brush
- Wire rack
Ingredients
Cinnamon Sugar
- 1 tablespoon ground cinnamon
- ½ cup granulated sugar
Cheesecake Bars
- 2 8-ounce packages refrigerated crescent roll dough or sheets Crescent sheets preferred for easier handling
- 16 ounces full-fat cream cheese Softened to room temperature — do not substitute low-fat
- ¾ cup granulated sugar
- 1 large egg
- 1½ teaspoons vanilla extract
- 3 tablespoons unsalted butter Melted and slightly cooled
Instructions
- In a small bowl, mix the ground cinnamon and granulated sugar together until fully combined. Set aside — you’ll use this mixture twice, so keep it close.
- Preheat your oven to 350°F (175°C) and position the rack in the middle. Grease a 9×13-inch baking pan with butter or cooking spray. Sprinkle 1–2 tablespoons of the cinnamon sugar mixture evenly across the bottom of the pan — this is what gives the base that caramelized, churro-like crust.
- Open the first tube of crescent roll dough and unroll it on a clean surface. Press all the perforated seams together firmly to form one solid rectangular sheet. Lay it into the prepared pan and press it all the way to the edges so the bottom is fully covered.
- In a large mixing bowl, beat the softened cream cheese, ¾ cup granulated sugar, egg, and vanilla extract together until completely smooth and creamy — no lumps. Pour the filling over the crescent dough base and spread it evenly with a spatula all the way to the edges.
- Open the second tube of crescent dough, seal the seams the same way, and gently lay it over the cheesecake filling to form the top layer. Pour the melted butter over the top and use a spoon or pastry brush to spread it evenly across the entire surface.
- Sprinkle the remaining cinnamon sugar generously and evenly over the buttered top layer. Don’t hold back — this is the churro magic moment.
- Bake in the preheated oven for 26–30 minutes, until the top is puffed and deep golden brown. Remove from the oven and let cool completely on a wire rack before refrigerating.
- Once cooled to room temperature, cover the pan and refrigerate for at least 3 hours — overnight is even better. Slice into bars just before serving for clean, neat cuts.
Notes
Ingredients
Here’s everything you need. It’s a short list — don’t let that fool you into thinking the result won’t be impressive.

Cinnamon Sugar
| Ingredient | Amount |
|---|---|
| Ground cinnamon | 1 tablespoon |
| Granulated sugar | ½ cup |
Cheesecake Bars
| Ingredient | Amount |
|---|---|
| Refrigerated crescent roll dough or sheets | Two 8-ounce packages |
| Full-fat cream cheese, softened | 16 ounces (2 blocks) |
| Granulated sugar | ¾ cup |
| Large egg | 1 |
| Vanilla extract | 1½ teaspoons |
| Unsalted butter, melted and slightly cooled | 3 tablespoons |
A quick note on the cream cheese: Full-fat is non-negotiable here. Low-fat versions tend to make the filling watery and sad, and we are not doing sad cheesecake. Take the cream cheese out of the fridge about 30–45 minutes before you start so it blends up nice and smooth.
Step-by-Step Instructions
Step 1: Make Your Cinnamon Sugar
Start by mixing the cinnamon and sugar together in a small bowl until it’s fully combined. This is your flavor secret weapon, and you’ll be using it twice — so don’t eat it all with a spoon. (I’m speaking from experience.)
Set the bowl aside. You’re going to want it close when you need it.

Step 2: Preheat and Prep Your Pan
Preheat your oven to 350°F (175°C) and move your rack to the middle position. Grease a 9×13-inch baking pan — butter, cooking spray, whatever you’ve got.
Now here’s a little trick: sprinkle 1–2 tablespoons of your cinnamon sugar mixture evenly across the bottom of the greased pan before adding any dough. That’s what gives the bottom layer that gorgeous caramelized, almost crispy churro base. Don’t skip this step.
Step 3: Press In the Bottom Crust
Open your first tube of crescent roll dough and unroll it onto a clean surface. If you’re using the kind with perforations, press all the seams together firmly so you end up with one solid sheet. No one wants a patchwork crust.
Lay that sheet into the prepared pan and use your fingers to press it all the way to the edges so the bottom is fully covered. It doesn’t have to be perfect — it’s going to puff up and look beautiful in the oven regardless.
Step 4: Mix Up the Cheesecake Filling
In a large mixing bowl, beat the softened cream cheese, ¾ cup sugar, egg, and vanilla extract together until smooth and creamy. You can use a hand mixer or a stand mixer — just make sure there are no lumps. Lumpy cheesecake filling is a vibe no one asked for.
Tip: If your cream cheese isn’t fully softened, microwave it in 10-second bursts until it’s pliable. Don’t skip this — cold cream cheese will give you a lumpy filling no matter how hard you mix.
Pour the filling over the crescent dough base and use a spatula to spread it out evenly all the way to the edges.
Step 5: Add the Top Layer
Open your second tube of crescent dough and repeat the seam-pressing process. Gently lay it over the cheesecake filling — it’s okay if it stretches a little awkwardly. Just ease it into place and press the edges down slightly.
Pour the melted butter over the top layer and use a spoon or pastry brush to spread it evenly. Every part of that dough should get some butter love.
Step 6: Hit It with Cinnamon Sugar
Take your remaining cinnamon sugar and sprinkle it generously over the buttered top. Don’t be shy here. This is the churro part of the churro cheesecake — go for it.
You should end up with a pretty, evenly coated top layer that’s going to bake up golden and slightly crunchy. It’s going to smell incredible.
Step 7: Bake Until Golden
Slide the pan into the oven and bake for 26–30 minutes, until the top is puffed and a deep golden brown. Your kitchen is going to smell like a churro stand at a street fair, and that is absolutely a feature, not a bug.
Pull it out and let it cool on a wire rack until it reaches room temperature. This takes about an hour, so patience is key.
Step 8: Chill Before Slicing
Once it’s cooled down, cover the pan and refrigerate for at least 3 hours — overnight is even better. This is the step that makes the cheesecake layer fully set, so don’t rush it. Cold churro cheesecake bars slice cleanly and hold their shape beautifully.
Cut into bars and serve. Watch them disappear.

Expert Tips, Variations & Troubleshooting
Tips for the Best Results
Make sure your cream cheese is truly softened before you start. If the filling has lumps, they won’t smooth out during baking. Room temperature cream cheese blends in about 60 seconds flat — cold cream cheese takes forever and still doesn’t fully cooperate.
Use crescent roll sheets if you can find them at your store. They skip the perforated seam situation entirely and give you a much cleaner base and top layer. Either version works, but sheets are just easier.
Fun Variations to Try
Want to level up your simple churro cheesecake for parties? Try swirling a couple tablespoons of dulce de leche or caramel sauce into the cheesecake filling before baking. It adds this rich, toffee-like depth that makes the whole thing taste even more like a Mexican dessert dream.
You can also add a pinch of cayenne or nutmeg to the cinnamon sugar if you want a little warmth and complexity. Or fold a handful of mini chocolate chips into the filling — because chocolate and churros are an iconic combo, and you know it.
Troubleshooting Common Issues
Top isn’t browning? Your oven might run a little cool. Give it an extra 3–5 minutes and keep an eye on it.
Filling seems runny after baking? That’s normal! It sets as it chills. Don’t slice into it before it’s had a proper rest in the fridge. Three hours minimum, but overnight is better.
Dough tearing when you lay it over the filling? Just patch it with your fingers. It really doesn’t matter once it’s baked — no one will see the seams under all that cinnamon sugar.
Storage Instructions
These bars keep wonderfully, which makes them perfect for making ahead. Here’s how to store them:
| Storage Method | Duration |
|---|---|
| Refrigerator (covered) | Up to 5 days |
| Freezer (individually wrapped) | Up to 2 months |
Reheating: These are genuinely great cold straight from the fridge, but if you want that warm, fresh-baked feel, pop a bar in the microwave for 15–20 seconds. The cinnamon sugar topping gets a little soft, but the flavor is still phenomenal.
No-waste idea: Got leftover bars that are getting a little dry? Crumble them over vanilla ice cream or layer them into a parfait with whipped cream. Instant dessert upgrade with zero extra effort.
Nutritional Information
Per serving (based on 16 bars):
| Nutrient | Amount |
|---|---|
| Calories | ~310 kcal |
| Total Fat | 18g |
| Saturated Fat | 10g |
| Carbohydrates | 33g |
| Sugar | 21g |
| Protein | 5g |
| Sodium | 330mg |
Note: Nutritional values are estimates and will vary based on specific brands and exact portions.
Simple Churro Cheesecake for Parties FAQs
Can I make churro cheesecake bars ahead of time?
Yes, and honestly you should. These bars are better after they’ve chilled overnight because the layers have time to fully set and the flavors meld together. Make them the day before your party and just slice before serving. Easy win.
Can I use homemade dough instead of crescent rolls?
You can, but crescent roll dough is what makes this a simple churro cheesecake for parties — it’s fast, reliable, and gives you that flaky, buttery texture without any extra work. If you’re going homemade, a rough puff pastry would be the closest substitute.
Do I have to refrigerate churro cheesecake?
Yes — because of the cream cheese filling, these bars need to be kept refrigerated. They’ll also slice much better once they’ve chilled. Don’t leave them out at room temperature for more than 2 hours.
Can I make this gluten-free?
The filling is naturally gluten-free, but you’d need a gluten-free crescent-style dough for the crust layers. A few brands make GF versions, so check your local grocery store. The result might be slightly different in texture, but still delicious.
What other desserts pair well with this at a party?
These bars go beautifully alongside other sweet treats. Try serving them with brown sugar pop tart cookies or caramel apple cheesecake bars for a full dessert spread that’ll have everyone going back for seconds. If you love easy crowd-pleaser cookies, chocolate crinkle cookies and cookies and cream cookies are always a hit too.
If you make this simple churro cheesecake for parties, I really hope it becomes your go-to “I need to bring something impressive but I only have an hour” recipe — because that’s exactly what it is in my house. It hits all the right notes: creamy, flaky, warmly spiced, and deeply satisfying in the way only good Mexican dessert recipes can be.
Give it a try, and if it’s a hit at your next gathering (and it will be), I’d love to hear about it! Drop a comment below and let me know how it went. And if you’re on Pinterest, please save this recipe — it helps more people find it, and honestly, everyone deserves churro cheesecake in their life. 🤍
