This 4-ingredient sopapilla cheesecake is the exact pan my aunt brings to every spring get-together, and it’s always the first dessert to disappear. It has the flaky, golden top you’d expect from sopapillas, a thick, creamy cheesecake layer in the middle, and a cinnamon-sugar crust on top that everyone fights over. It’s inspired by the classic potluck sopapilla cheesecake bars that started popping up in Midwestern church basements years ago, but streamlined so a busy weeknight or holiday prep doesn’t feel overwhelming. If you can open a can and stir, you can make this—and you’ll probably end up bringing it to every party from now through summer.
Serve the sopapilla cheesecake slightly warm or at room temperature so the center is set but still creamy and the top stays flaky. I like to cut it into small squares in the glass baking dish and let guests grab their own pieces—it feels casual and homey. A cup of hot coffee, black tea, or a cold glass of milk balances the sweet, cinnamon-dusted top. If you want to dress it up for company, add a few fresh berries on the side or a light drizzle of honey on individual servings, but it honestly doesn’t need anything; it holds its own on a dessert table next to fruit trays, brownies, or a simple green salad if you’re doing a lighter spring meal.
4-Ingredient Sopapilla Cheesecake
Servings: 12
Ingredients
2 cans (8 oz each) refrigerated crescent roll dough
2 packages (8 oz each) cream cheese, softened
1 cup granulated sugar, divided
1 tablespoon ground cinnamon
Directions
Preheat your oven to 350°F (175°C). Lightly grease a clear glass 9x13-inch baking dish so the bars release easily and you can see those pretty layers once it’s baked.
In a medium mixing bowl, beat the softened cream cheese with 3/4 cup of the granulated sugar until completely smooth and creamy. Scrape down the sides of the bowl so there are no lumps—this is your thick, white cheesecake center.
Open one can of crescent roll dough and gently unroll it. Press it evenly into the bottom of the prepared glass baking dish, pinching the seams together to form one solid layer. Try to cover the entire bottom so the filling doesn’t leak through.
Spread the cream cheese mixture over the dough in an even layer, going all the way to the edges and corners. This is what will give you that dense, white center when you cut into it later.
Unroll the second can of crescent roll dough and carefully lay it over the cream cheese layer. If it comes apart, just piece it together and lightly pinch seams so you have another continuous top layer. It doesn’t have to be perfect; the puff and browning will hide small imperfections.
In a small bowl, stir together the remaining 1/4 cup granulated sugar and the ground cinnamon until evenly combined. Sprinkle this cinnamon-sugar mixture generously and evenly over the top layer of dough. This will bake into that dark brown, speckled, flaky top you see in the pan.
Bake in the preheated oven for 25–30 minutes, or until the top is puffed and a deep golden brown and the edges look set. You should see distinct layers through the side of the clear glass dish: flaky top, thick white center, and the base crust.
Remove the dish from the oven and let it cool on a wire rack until it’s just slightly warm or at room temperature. This cooling time helps the cheesecake center firm up so you get clean slices instead of a runny middle.
Once cooled, cut into squares directly in the glass dish. For that classic family-party look, leave it in the pan and serve with a small spatula so guests can fight over the last piece before the night ends.
Variations & Tips
To make this a little lighter, you can use reduced-fat cream cheese, but avoid fat-free, which doesn’t set as well and can turn watery. If you like a stronger cinnamon flavor, bump the cinnamon up to 1 1/2 tablespoons or add a pinch of nutmeg to the cinnamon-sugar mix. For a honey twist that leans more toward traditional sopapillas, drizzle 2–3 tablespoons of honey over the top right when it comes out of the oven—just know that this technically adds a fifth ingredient. You can also swap in brown sugar for half of the granulated sugar in the topping for a deeper caramel flavor and slightly darker speckling. For smaller households, bake the recipe in an 8x8-inch glass dish using 1 can of crescent dough, 1 package cream cheese, 1/2 cup sugar, and 1 1/2 teaspoons cinnamon, and reduce the bake time by a few minutes. Food safety tips: Always soften cream cheese in the refrigerator first and only leave it at room temperature for about 1 hour before mixing so it doesn’t sit out too long. Once baked and cooled, refrigerate leftovers within 2 hours; cover the glass dish tightly and store in the fridge for up to 4 days. Reheat individual squares briefly in the microwave or enjoy them cold. If you’re transporting the dessert to a party, keep it chilled in a cooler bag with an ice pack and set it out just before serving to keep the dairy-based filling safe.