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5 from 1 vote

Sugar Cookie Cups (With Pumpkin Cream)

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Sugar Cookie Cups bake refrigerated cookie dough into crispy golden shells in a mini muffin tin, then get piped full of spiced pumpkin cream and a cloud of whipped cream, and the first fall afternoon I made a batch Maddie declared them official lunchbox currency. If my soft sugar cookies are already in your fall rotation, these little cups are their party trick.

Sugar cookie cups filled with pumpkin cream and whipped cream arranged on a two tier white cake stand.Pin

Twenty four little two bite desserts from one package of cookie dough, that is the whole pitch.

  • 🕒 Prep Time: 15 minutes
  • 🌡️ Cook Time: 15 minutes
  • Total Time: 30 minutes
  • 🍽️ Serving: 24 cookie cups
  • Calories: 162kcal
  • 🌶️ Flavor Profile: Crispy buttery sugar cookie with tangy spiced pumpkin cream and fresh whipped cream
  • Difficulty: Easy, store bought dough does the baking work, even simpler than my cream cheese cookies

Quick Answer

How do you make sugar cookie cups?

Place one piece of prepackaged sugar cookie dough into each slot of a greased mini muffin tin and bake at 350 degrees for about 15 minutes until lightly golden. Let them cool 5 minutes, then press the center of each cookie down with a small rounded utensil to form a cup and cool completely. Whip cream cheese with pumpkin puree, powdered sugar, heavy cream, cinnamon, and vanilla, pipe the filling into the cups, and finish with whipped cream and a sprinkle of cinnamon.

Jump to:

Why This Recipe Works

Click to see the technique science
  • The mini muffin tin does the shaping. Cookie dough baked in a tin rises into a dome with crisp walls, so one gentle press turns each cookie into a perfect cup with zero cutting or molding.
  • Pressing while warm is the whole trick. Five minutes out of the oven the cookies are set but still soft, press then and the centers give cleanly instead of cracking.
  • Cream cheese keeps the filling from being frosting. It brings a cheesecake tang that balances all that powdered sugar, so the filling tastes like pumpkin cheesecake instead of straight sweetness.
  • Real pumpkin puree, small amount, big flavor. A quarter cup flavors the filling without loosening it, which is why the piped swirls hold their shape in the cups.
  • Fresh whipped cream lightens every bite. The stabilizing powdered sugar keeps it perky on top while the airy texture plays against the dense pumpkin cream.
  • Prepackaged dough is quality control. Every piece is identical, so all 24 cups bake to the same size and color, a uniform tray with zero portioning work.

Why You’ll Love This Recipe

  • One package of cookie dough turns into 24 adorable two bite desserts in half an hour.
  • The spiced pumpkin cream filling tastes like pumpkin cheesecake without turning on the oven twice.
  • The filling tastes like the middle of my pumpkin whoopie pies in a crispy cookie shell.

Key Ingredients

Sugar cookie cups topped with swirls of pumpkin cream and dollops of whipped cream on a scalloped white plate.Pin

Short list, big payoff, here is what carries these little cups.

  • Prepackaged Sugar Cookie Dough: The shortcut shell. The pre cut 24 count package portions itself, every cup bakes identical and crispy.
  • Cream Cheese: The tang. Room temperature so it whips completely smooth into the pumpkin filling.
  • Pumpkin Puree: The star flavor. Pure pumpkin, not pie filling, keeps the cream thick and lets you control the spice.
  • Cinnamon and Vanilla Bean Paste: The warmth. Cinnamon in the filling and dusted on top, vanilla rounding out both creams.
  • Heavy Whipping Cream: Double duty. A splash loosens the pumpkin cream for piping and the rest whips into the fluffy topping.

See recipe card for exact quantities.

Variations and Substitutions

The cup is a blank canvas, the filling is up for grabs.

  • Chocolate: Swap the pumpkin for a quarter cup of cocoa powder and fill with chocolate cream cheese mousse.
  • Maple pecan: Replace the cinnamon with a tablespoon of maple syrup and top each cup with a toasted pecan.
  • Cheesecake and jam: Skip the pumpkin, fill with the plain cream cheese mixture, and spoon a little strawberry jam on top.
  • Cookie dough: Fill the cooled cups with my edible cookie dough for a birthday party version.
  • Extra spice: Use pumpkin pie spice instead of plain cinnamon for a deeper spiced flavor.
Close up row of sugar cookie cups filled with pumpkin cream, whipped cream, and a dusting of cinnamon.Pin
  1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Place one piece of sugar cookie dough into each slot of a greased mini muffin tin and bake for 15 minutes, until lightly golden brown. Set the tin on a wire rack and cool for 5 minutes.
  2. Using a utensil with a small rounded tip, gently press the center of each cookie down to form a cup. Let the cups cool completely in the tin.
  3. Cream the cream cheese for 1 minute with a hand mixer on medium speed. Mix in the pumpkin puree, then slowly add the powdered sugar until combined. Add the heavy cream, cinnamon, and vanilla and whip for 2 minutes. Set aside.
  4. In a large bowl, whip the heavy cream on high until soft peaks form, then add the powdered sugar and vanilla and continue whipping to stiff peaks.
  5. Pop the cookie cups out of the tin, pipe the pumpkin cream evenly into the cups, and top each with a small dollop of whipped cream and a sprinkle of cinnamon. Store in an airtight container in the refrigerator.

Recipe Tips & Tricks

  • Grease the tin generously. Sugar cookie dough loves to grab mini muffin slots, a good coat of spray means the cups pop out clean.
  • Watch the 5 minute window. Press too soon and the centers collapse, wait too long and they crack, five minutes of cooling is the sweet spot.
  • Use the back of a teaspoon measure. Its small rounded bowl presses perfect cup centers if you do not have a wooden spatula handle.
  • Room temperature cream cheese, always. Cold cream cheese leaves lumps in the pumpkin filling that no amount of whipping fixes.
  • Blot the pumpkin if it looks wet. A quick press with a paper towel keeps the filling thick enough to pipe tall swirls.
  • Fill close to serving time. The cups stay crispiest when filled within a few hours, though they still taste great softer the next day.

Serving Ideas and Suggestions

These little cups are built for fall gatherings, pile them on a tiered stand and they carry the dessert table without any slicing or serving drama. Set them out next to a plate of my pumpkin cupcakes and let the fall dessert table flex.

They are teacher gift and bake sale gold too, nestle them in mini cupcake liners inside a bakery box and watch them disappear first. They are perfect alongside a warm slice of my pumpkin bread and a mug of something cozy.

For Thanksgiving, set them out as the light two bite option next to the heavy hitters, pie loyalists always sneak at least two. For a hand pie and cookie cup duo, my pumpkin hand pies keep the flaky side of the table covered.

And for a kid birthday in October, they beat cupcakes on effort and cuteness, no frosting bag skills required.

A sugar cookie cup with a bite showing the creamy pumpkin filling inside the golden cookie shell.Pin
How do you keep sugar cookie cups from sticking to the pan?

Grease the mini muffin tin well with baking spray, getting into the corners of each slot, and let the baked sugar cookie cups cool completely before removing them. A completely cooled cookie firms up and releases with a gentle twist, while a warm one tears. If a cup resists, run a thin knife or offset spatula around the edge. Nonstick tins plus spray is the reliable combo, paper liners are not needed and actually prevent the cup shape from forming crisp walls.

Can I use homemade dough for sugar cookie cups?

Absolutely, any sugar cookie dough firm enough to scoop works for sugar cookie cups. Use about one tablespoon of dough per mini muffin slot, roll it into a ball, and bake the same way, 350 degrees for 13 to 15 minutes until lightly golden. Chill homemade dough for 30 minutes first so the cups do not spread over the edges of the slots. The prepackaged pre cut dough is simply the speed run, identical portions with zero scooping.

Can I make sugar cookie cups ahead of time?

Yes, sugar cookie cups are a great make ahead dessert. Bake and press the empty cups up to 3 days ahead and store them airtight at room temperature, then whip the fillings and pipe the day you serve. Fully assembled cups keep 2 days in the refrigerator in an airtight container, the cookie softens slightly but plenty of people like them that way. The unfilled cups also freeze beautifully for up to 2 months.

Why did my sugar cookie cups collapse?

Collapsed sugar cookie cups usually mean the centers were pressed too early or too hard. Give the baked cookies a full 5 minutes in the tin first, the structure needs to set before you press, then use gentle pressure with a small rounded tool rather than punching straight down. Underbaking causes it too, the cups need to reach lightly golden so the walls have enough strength to hold a cup shape once the centers go down.

What can you fill sugar cookie cups with?

This recipe fills sugar cookie cups with a spiced pumpkin cream cheese filling and whipped cream, but the cups take almost anything: chocolate mousse, lemon curd, cheesecake filling with fruit, frosting and sprinkles, ice cream, or edible cookie dough. Thicker fillings pipe prettiest and keep the cookie crisp longest. Runny fillings like plain pudding work if you fill right before serving, otherwise they soften the cup within an hour or two.

How long do sugar cookie cups last?

Filled sugar cookie cups keep about 2 days in an airtight container in the refrigerator, with the cookie gradually softening from the cream filling. Unfilled cups last 3 days at room temperature or 2 months in the freezer, which makes them the perfect component to stash ahead of a party. If you want maximum crispness for serving, fill the cups within a few hours of when they hit the table and keep them chilled until go time.

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Made these sugar cookie cups? Leave a comment and a star rating below, and tell me what you piped inside, I want to hear the wild card fillings!

This Silly Girls Kitchen Logo
5 from 1 vote
Prep: 15 minutes
Cook: 15 minutes
Total: 30 minutes
These two bite sugar cookie cups bake prepackaged sugar cookie dough into crispy little shells in a mini muffin tin, then get piped full of spiced pumpkin cream cheese filling and topped with fresh whipped cream and cinnamon.
Servings 24 servings

Ingredients
  

Pumpkin Cream

Whipped Cream

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Using a greased mini muffin tin, place one sugar cookie dough piece in each slot. Bake for 15 minutes until slightly golden brown. Take out of the oven and place the muffin tin on a wired rack. Let cool for 5 minutes.
  • Using a utensil with a small rounded tip (I used a wooden spatula) gently press in the centers of the sugar cookies to make cups. Let cool completely.

Pumpkin Cream

  • Cream the cream cheese for 1 minute with a hand mixer on medium speed. Add in the pumpkin and mix to combine. Slowly, add in the powdered sugar until combined. Add in the remainging ingredients and whip for 2 minutes, set aside.

Whipped Cream

  • Add whipping cream to a large bowl, whip on high with a hand mixer until soft peaks form. Add in the powdered sugar and vanilla. Continue to whip until cream forms stiff peaks, set aside.

Cookie Cup Assembly

  • Take cookie cups out of the muffin tin and pipe in the pumpkin cream evenly among the cups. Top with a tiny dollop of whipped cream and a sprinkling of cinnamon if desired. Serve and enjoy! Store in an air tight container in the fridge.

Nutrition

Calories: 162kcal | Carbohydrates: 21g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 9g | Saturated Fat: 4g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 2g | Cholesterol: 18mg | Sodium: 55mg | Potassium: 32mg | Fiber: 0.3g | Sugar: 16g | Vitamin A: 639IU | Vitamin C: 0.2mg | Calcium: 15mg | Iron: 0.4mg
Nutrition Disclaimer
Course Dessert
Cuisine American

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5 from 1 vote (1 rating without comment)

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4 Comments

  1. It took that shape while cooking, I just popped them as is into each section of the tin. Then I went back after they were done baking and using a rounded end of a wooden spoon I have, gently pressed in the center to make the cup more pronounced.

  2. These look amazing.
    Did you shape the cookie dough or did it take the shape of the muffin tin during baking?