These Easy Cinnamon Cruffin Recipe pastries are about to become your new weekend obsession. Golden on the outside, soft and layered on the inside, and rolled in warm cinnamon sugar the second they come out of the oven — these churro cruffins are everything a breakfast pastry should be. I first made a batch of these churro cruffins on a slow Saturday morning when I had three tubes of crescent dough sitting in the fridge and zero plans. Forty minutes later, my kitchen smelled like a bakery and my family was fighting over the last one.

The best part? You only need four simple ingredients and a muffin tin. These churro cruffins come together faster than you'd think, and they taste like something you'd pay way too much for at a fancy coffee shop. If you're always on the hunt for easy, crowd-pleasing breakfast ideas, you might also love these Crispy Apple Fritters on a cozy fall morning, this warm and filling Cottage Cheese Egg Bake for a protein-packed start, or these fun Sausage French Toast Roll Ups that the kids absolutely go crazy for.
Why You'll Love These cinnamon cruffins
These cinnamon cruffins are genuinely hard to stop eating, and here's why they keep showing up on my breakfast table:
They come together in just 40 minutes from start to finish, which means you can make a full batch of churro cruffins before the kids are even fully awake. The ingredient list is short — crescent roll dough, butter, sugar, and cinnamon. That's it. No fancy equipment, no laminated dough, no pastry skills required. The cinnamon sugar coating gives them that classic churro cruffin crunch on the outside while the layers inside stay soft, buttery, and flaky. They're the kind of breakfast that feels special without being complicated, and every single person who tries them asks for the recipe.
Jump to:
- Why You'll Love These cinnamon cruffins
- Ingredients for Easy Cinnamon Cruffins
- Instructions for Easy Cinnamon Cruffins
- Substitutions and Swaps
- Equipment for Easy Cinnamon Cruffins
- How to Store Cinnamon Cruffins
- Expert Tips for the Best Cinnamon Cruffins
- FAQ for Easy Cinnamon Cruffins
- Related
- Pairing
- Easy Cinnamon Cruffins
Ingredients for Easy Cinnamon Cruffins
Here's everything you need to make a full pan of 12 cinnamon cruffins:
Crescent Roll Sheets (3 tubes, 8 oz each): These are the shortcut that makes this easy cinnamon cruffin recipe so approachable. The pre-made dough creates those beautiful buttery layers without any of the work of traditional croissant dough. If you can only find perforated crescent rolls, just pinch the seams firmly to seal before rolling.
Butter, softened (6 tablespoons, divided into 3 equal portions): Softened butter spreads smoothly across the dough and soaks into the layers as the cruffins bake, adding that rich, indulgent flavor you taste in every bite.
Granulated sugar (1 cup): This makes up the cinnamon-sugar coating used both inside the dough and on the outside after baking. It gives these churro cruffins their signature sweet crunch.
Ground cinnamon (1 tablespoon): Warm, fragrant cinnamon is what ties the whole cruffin together and makes these taste so much like a churro. Don't be shy with it.
See recipe card for quantities.
Instructions for Easy Cinnamon Cruffins
Get your cinnamon cruffins tin ready and your cinnamon sugar mixed, because once you start rolling, this comes together fast.
Preheat oven: Preheat your oven to 350°F (175°C). Lightly spray a standard 12-cup muffin tin with non-stick cooking spray and set it aside.
Roll the dough: On a lightly floured surface, roll each tube of dough into a 12 x 16-inch rectangle. If you're using perforated crescent dough, pinch all the seams together firmly before rolling.

Spread the butter: Spread 2 tablespoons of softened butter evenly over each dough sheet, all the way to the edges.

Mix and sprinkle the cinnamon sugar: In a small bowl, whisk together the granulated sugar and cinnamon. Sprinkle one quarter cup of the cinnamon-sugar mixture evenly over each buttered dough sheet, then gently press it into the surface. Set the remaining cinnamon-sugar aside for rolling later.
Roll into a log: Starting from the long end of the dough, roll it up tightly into a log. If the ends look uneven, gently press them inward to neaten things up.
Cut and divide: Cut the log in half to make two shorter logs. Then cut each shorter log in half lengthwise, giving you four strips. Repeat with all three dough sheets. You should end up with 12 dough sections total.
Spiral into muffin tin: Take one dough section and roll it tightly into a spiral with the cut layers facing outward — this is what gives churro cruffins their gorgeous swirled look. Tuck the end piece of dough into the center top and place it into a prepared muffin cup. Repeat with all 12 sections.
Bake: Bake for 18 to 20 minutes, until the cruffins are puffed and deep golden brown on top.
Coat in cinnamon sugar: Remove from the oven and immediately roll each hot cruffin in the remaining cinnamon-sugar mixture. The heat helps the coating stick, giving you that classic churro cruffin finish.
Substitutions and Swaps
This cinnamon cruffin recipe is already pretty flexible, but here are a few swaps that work well:
Butter: If your butter isn't soft enough, microwave it in 5-second bursts until spreadable. Don't melt it completely or it will soak through before baking.
Granulated sugar: Brown sugar works beautifully here for a richer, slightly molasses-flavored churro cruffin coating.
Crescent roll sheets: Regular crescent roll tubes (the perforated kind) work fine — just pinch the seams well before rolling. You can also use puff pastry sheets for an even flakier result.
Add a filling: Some people love a cream cheese or Nutella layer spread under the cinnamon sugar before rolling. It makes these churro cruffins extra indulgent.
Equipment for Easy Cinnamon Cruffins
12-cup muffin tin
Rolling pin
Non-stick cooking spray
Small bowl for the cinnamon-sugar mixture
Lightly floured surface or dough disc
How to Store Cinnamon Cruffins
These cinnamon cruffins are definitely best the day they're made, when the outside is still a little crispy and the inside is warm and flaky. If you have leftovers, store them in an airtight container at room temperature for up to two days. Reheat in the oven at 300°F for about 5 minutes to crisp them back up. Avoid the microwave if you can — it softens the cinnamon sugar coating and makes them a bit chewy.
Expert Tips for the Best Cinnamon Cruffins
Keep the butter soft, not melted. Spreadable but solid butter stays in the dough layers and creates better texture. Melted butter runs out during baking.
Roll tightly. The tighter you roll the log and the spiral, the better the layers hold together in the muffin tin. Loose rolling leads to cruffins that open up too much.
Don't skip the cinnamon-sugar roll right after baking. That immediate heat is what makes the coating stick properly and gives you that true churro cruffin experience.
Uneven cuts are fine. If your dough sections aren't perfectly even, don't stress. The cruffins still bake up beautifully — they just have their own personality.
Spray the muffin tin generously. These are sticky pastries. A good coat of non-stick spray ensures they pop right out without tearing.
FAQ for Easy Cinnamon Cruffins
What is a cruffin made of?
A cruffin is made from laminated or layered dough, usually croissant dough, that's rolled with butter and sometimes a filling, then shaped into a spiral and baked in a muffin tin. This easy cruffin recipe uses store-bought crescent roll dough to make the whole process simple and beginner-friendly. The result is a flaky, soft pastry with crispy cinnamon sugar on the outside — basically a churro cruffin in muffin form.
What is a cinnamon cruffin?
A cinnamon cruffin is a pastry that combines the flaky, buttery texture of a croissant with the warm cinnamon-sugar coating of a classic cinnamon roll, shaped like a muffin. These churro cruffins take that idea one step further with a generous cinnamon-sugar roll right after baking, which gives them that crispy churro-style exterior that makes them so addictive.
Should churros have cinnamon?
Yes, traditional churros are always rolled in cinnamon sugar right after frying, which is exactly what inspired the coating on these churro cruffins. That warm cinnamon-sugar finish is what gives both churros and these cinnamon cruffins their signature flavor and texture. Without it, you'd just have a buttery pastry. With it, you get something that tastes like a cross between a churro and a croissant.
What is a cruffin?
A cruffin is a hybrid pastry that combines a croissant and a muffin. The name itself comes from those two words. The dough is layered and buttery like a croissant, but it's shaped and baked in a muffin tin like a muffin. Cruffins became popular at specialty bakeries and have since inspired easy home versions like these churro cruffins that anyone can make with crescent roll dough and a few pantry staples.
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Pairing
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Easy Cinnamon Cruffins
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Preheat the oven to 350°F and lightly grease a 12-cup muffin tin with non-stick cooking spray.
- Roll out each crescent dough sheet on a lightly floured surface into a 12 x 16-inch rectangle. If using perforated dough, pinch seams to seal.
- Spread 2 tablespoons of softened butter evenly over each sheet of dough.
- Mix the granulated sugar and ground cinnamon in a small bowl.
- Sprinkle ¼ cup of the cinnamon-sugar mixture over each buttered dough sheet and gently press it into the dough.
- Starting at the longer end, tightly roll the dough into a log. If the ends are uneven, pat them inward to even them up.
- Cut each log in half, creating two shorter logs, then slice each into two halves lengthwise. Repeat with remaining dough sheets to make 12 sections.
- Roll each section tightly into a spiral with the layers facing outward, and tuck the end into the top of the muffin tin. Place the rolled dough into the prepared muffin tin.
- Bake for 18–20 minutes until golden brown.
- Remove from the oven and immediately roll each cruffin in the remaining cinnamon-sugar mixture for an extra coating of sweetness.













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