Churro Tiramisu

Category:Desserts & Baking

Golden churro pieces and a cold mascarpone cream make this churro tiramisu the kind of dessert people keep sneaking back to with a spoon. The contrast is the whole point: crisp cinnamon-sugar edges soften just enough in the coffee soak, while the filling stays light, billowy, and rich without turning heavy. Every bite lands somewhere between bakery treat and classic layered dessert, and that balance is what makes it worth making again.

The trick here is using store-bought churros that still have some structure, not soft ones that collapse the second they hit the coffee. The coffee mixture should be cool and brief to soak; you want flavor, not soggy dough. The mascarpone filling gets its body from gently cooked egg yolks, then whipped cream lightens it so the layers slice cleanly after chilling.

Below you’ll find the small details that keep the texture right, plus a few ways to adapt it if you want a stronger coffee note, a boozy edge, or a version that skips the alcohol altogether.

The churros held their texture better than I expected, and the coffee soak gave it that classic tiramisu taste without making the layers mushy. After chilling, it sliced beautifully.

★★★★★— Melissa R.

Save this churro tiramisu for the nights when you want a layered dessert with crisp cinnamon churros and a coffee-kissed mascarpone filling.

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The Churros Need to Stay Crunchy Long Enough to Matter

The biggest risk in churro tiramisu is treating the churros like ladyfingers and soaking them too long. Churros start out denser and richer, so they need just a quick dip in the coffee mixture — enough to pick up flavor and soften the edges, but not enough to turn them into paste. Once they sit under the mascarpone, they keep relaxing, which is exactly why the dessert needs a full chill before serving.

Cutting the churros into 1/2-inch pieces gives you more surface area for the coffee and more distinct layers in the dish. That also helps each bite hold a mix of textures instead of one heavy block of cream. If the churros are overly airy or stale, the dessert can go dry; if they’re too fresh and soft, they’ll lose structure faster.

What the Mascarpone and Egg Yolks Are Doing Here

Egg yolks and sugar cooked over a double boiler create the base that gives this filling its smooth, stable body. That step matters because it dissolves the sugar and thickens the yolks just enough to keep the cream from feeling loose. If you skip that heat, the filling can taste flat and may not set as neatly after chilling.

  • Mascarpone: This is the ingredient that gives the dessert its signature plush texture. Use it at room temperature so it folds in smoothly; cold mascarpone tends to clump and fight the yolk base.
  • Heavy cream: Whipping it separately keeps the filling light instead of dense. Soft peaks are the target. Stiff peaks can make the final mixture grainy once it’s folded in.
  • Cooled coffee: Hot coffee melts the mascarpone and makes the churros disintegrate faster. Strong brewed coffee gives the best tiramisu-style backbone, but espresso works if you want a deeper note.
  • Cinnamon sugar: This ties the churro layers back to their bakery-style flavor and keeps the coffee soak from tasting one-dimensional. If your churros are already heavily coated, use a lighter hand here so the dessert doesn’t tip into sweetness overload.

Building the Layers Without Turning the Dessert Heavy

Cooking the Yolks to a Pale Ribbon

Whisk the yolks and sugar over gently simmering water until the mixture turns lighter in color and thickens enough to fall from the whisk in a ribbon. That usually takes 3 to 4 minutes, and the mixture should feel warm and glossy, not hot enough to scramble. If the bowl sits directly on boiling water, the yolks can seize at the edges before the center is ready, so keep the heat gentle and keep whisking.

Folding in the Mascarpone and Cream

Once the yolk mixture cools slightly, fold in the mascarpone until the mixture is smooth and even. Then add the whipped cream in two or three additions, using a light hand so you keep the air you worked into it. If the mixture looks streaky, keep folding just until it turns uniform; overmixing can make it loose and shiny instead of thick and spoonable.

Soaking and Stacking the Churros

Dip the churro pieces quickly in the coffee mixture, then layer them over a thin base of cream in a 9×13 dish. The pieces should be moistened, not saturated. Alternate churros and cream until you finish with a smooth cream layer on top, pressing gently only if you need to settle gaps. Too much pressure squeezes the air out and makes the dessert dense instead of layered.

Finishing and Chilling

Mix the cocoa powder and cinnamon, then dust the top evenly before chilling. That top layer looks best after a full rest because the cocoa hydrates slightly and settles into the cream instead of sitting powdery on top. Cover the dish and refrigerate for at least 4 hours, but overnight gives you cleaner slices and a more integrated flavor.

How to Adapt This for Different Tastes and Dietary Needs

Alcohol-Free Churro Tiramisu

Skip the rum or brandy and keep the coffee mixture as written. You’ll still get the warm, bittersweet contrast that makes the dessert work, just without the boozy finish. If you want a little extra depth, add a splash of vanilla to the coffee instead of alcohol.

Gluten-Free Version

Use certified gluten-free churros if you can find them, or make your own with a gluten-free choux-style dough. The texture will be a little softer than the store-bought version, so shorten the coffee dip even more. The goal is the same: flavor on the surface, structure underneath.

Stronger Coffee, Deeper Dessert

Replace the brewed coffee with espresso or double-strength coffee if you want a sharper tiramisu note. This makes the dessert taste more grown-up and less like a cinnamon-sugar trifle, but it can overpower the churros if you soak them too long. Keep the dip quick so the coffee stays on the outside where it belongs.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 3 days. The churros will soften over time, but the dessert still slices well on day two.
  • Freezer: Not ideal. The mascarpone filling can turn grainy after thawing, and the churros lose the texture that makes this dessert special.
  • Reheating: No reheating needed. Serve it cold straight from the fridge, and wipe the knife between cuts if you want clean layers.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I make churro tiramisu the day before?+

Yes, and it actually benefits from an overnight rest. The churros soften just enough, and the cream firms up into cleaner layers. If you make it ahead, wait to dust the top with cocoa and cinnamon until just before serving for the nicest finish.

How do I keep the churros from getting soggy?+

Use cooled coffee and a quick dip, not a soak. Churros are denser than tiramisu cookies, so they only need a light coating to carry the coffee flavor. If they sit in the liquid, the dessert turns heavy and pasty instead of layered.

Can I use cream cheese instead of mascarpone?+

You can, but the filling will taste tangier and a little heavier. Mascarpone is softer and richer, which is what gives this dessert its smooth, dessert-shop texture. If cream cheese is your only option, beat it until completely smooth before folding in the yolks and cream.

How do I know the egg yolks are thick enough?+

They should turn pale and fall from the whisk in a ribbon that sits on the surface for a second before disappearing. That tells you the sugar has dissolved and the mixture has enough body to support the mascarpone. If it still looks thin and yellow, keep whisking over the heat a little longer.

Can I freeze leftovers of churro tiramisu?+

I wouldn’t. The mascarpone filling can separate after thawing, and the churros lose the contrast that makes the dessert worth serving. It’s better to keep it refrigerated and finish it within a few days.

Churro Tiramisu

Churro tiramisu layers golden, crispy churro pieces with a creamy mascarpone filling soaked in cooled coffee. This make-ahead dessert is finished with a cocoa-and-cinnamon dusting for a classic tiramisu-style cross-section.
Prep Time 20 minutes
chilling 4 hours
Total Time 4 hours 20 minutes
Servings: 8 servings
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: Mexican-Italian Fusion
Calories: 520

Ingredients
  

Churro pieces
  • 12 store-bought churros Cut into 1/2-inch pieces
Coffee soak
  • 0.5 cup strong brewed coffee Brewed strong, then cooled
  • 2 tbsp cinnamon sugar Use as written
  • 2 tbsp rum or brandy Optional
Mascarpone filling
  • 6 egg yolks
  • 0.75 cup granulated sugar
  • 1.25 lb mascarpone cheese Softened
  • 1 cup heavy cream Whipped to soft peaks
Chocolate topping
  • 2 tbsp unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 1 tsp cinnamon

Equipment

  • 1 double boiler

Method
 

Prep churro pieces and coffee mixture
  1. Cut the store-bought churros into 1/2-inch pieces. This creates bite-size chunks that layer evenly.
  2. Combine cooled strong brewed coffee, cinnamon sugar, and rum or brandy if using in a bowl. Stir until the cinnamon sugar dissolves.
Make the egg yolk base
  1. Whisk the egg yolks with granulated sugar over a double boiler until pale and thick, about 3-4 minutes. Keep the heat gentle so the mixture thickens without scrambling.
  2. Remove the mixture from heat and let it cool slightly. Aim for warm, not hot, so the mascarpone won’t loosen.
Fold mascarpone filling and assemble layers
  1. Fold the mascarpone cheese into the egg yolk mixture. Mix until smooth and fully incorporated.
  2. Gently fold in the whipped heavy cream until combined. Stop when no streaks remain to keep the texture airy.
  3. Spread a thin layer of the mascarpone mixture on the bottom of a 9x13 dish. This forms the base for the first churro layer.
  4. Dip the churro pieces in the coffee mixture and layer them over the cream. Arrange evenly so every bite gets coffee-soaked edges.
  5. Alternate layers of cream and churro pieces, ending with cream. Keep layers consistent for clean cross-sections.
Dust and chill
  1. Mix unsweetened cocoa powder and cinnamon, then dust it over the top. Cover the surface so the cocoa sits as a finishing layer.
  2. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least 4 hours before serving. Chill until set for sliceable, spoonable layers.

Notes

For clean layers, whip the heavy cream until it holds soft peaks, and let the egg yolk base cool slightly before folding in mascarpone. Refrigerate covered for up to 3 days; freezing is not recommended because the mascarpone and cream can separate. For a lighter option, use low-fat mascarpone or a reduced-fat cream (texture will be a bit less rich).

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