Churros de Queso (Cheese Churros) Recipe

These index finger-sized pastries are filled with firm and salty white cheese that oozes as the churros fry.

By
María del Mar Cuadra
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María del Mar Cuadra is a food stylist, recipe developer, and art director. She has written three cookbooks and worked for America's Test Kitchen.
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Updated March 10, 2025
A small plate loaded with 5 churros de queso.

Serious Eats / María del Mar Cuadra

Churros de queso, not to be confused with the ridged, sugar-and-cinnamon coated churros commonly served with chocolate sauce and coffee, are a savory Nicaraguan finger food. These index finger-sized pastries are rolled and filled with firm, salty, white cheese that resembles mozzarella in texture.

Churros, also called by the diminutive churritos, are a common item found in Nicaraguan bakeries, but they are most commonly served at afternoon parties and especially kids' birthday parties, there known as piñatas after the totem of the celebrations. Because they're a party item, they're rarely made at home, and instead catered and ordered at least by the hundred. Served at room temperature, they're piled greedily into festive paper plates and napkins, one never quite sufficing.

The pastry is the dough used for pie crust, and the procedure for making it is the same: chilled butter is cut into a mixture of flour, and for a bit of puff and lift, baking powder. Ice water, a small amount a time, is mixed in to make the mixture cohesive. (For more on pie dough check out Kenji's guide). Once formed, the dough is chilled, then rolled out and cut into small rectangles into which batons of cheese are rolled. Another rest in the fridge and you're ready to fry. Yes, the dirty secret of these pastries is that they're fried until golden and oozing with cheese. I've had baked versions, and though perfectly acceptable, it's a party, no? Fry 'em up.

This recipe makes 18 to 20 churritos, but if you decide to make them for a gathering and need piles of them, make them a day in advance up to the point of rolling and fry them a few hours before serving.

August 2012

Recipe Details

Churros de Queso (Cheese Churros) Recipe

Prep 20 mins
Cook 15 mins
Active 30 mins
Chilling Time 60 mins
Total 95 mins
Makes 18 to 20 churros
Cook Mode (Keep screen awake)

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 cups (about 7 1/2 ounces) all-purpose flour, plus additional for dusting hands and work surface

  • 1/2 teaspoon salt

  • 1/4 teaspoon baking powder

  • 1 stick (4 ounces) unsalted butter, cut into small pieces and chilled

  • Ice water

  • 6 ounces Latin American white frying cheese (see note), cut into 1/4- by 1 1/2-inch batons

  • 2 cups vegetable oil

Directions

  1. Combine flour, salt, and baking powder on a clean, dry, and cool work surface. With a bench scraper, cut in butter until it resembles wet sand. Alternatively, combine flour, salt, and baking powder in large bowl and cut butter in with two dinner knives until mixture resembles wet sand, then transfer mixture to work surface.

  2. Form well in center of flour-butter mixture and add 3 tablespoons ice water. Working quickly, use bench scraper to combine ingredients. If mixture appears very dry and crumbly, add ice water, 1 teaspoon at a time, until mixture is cohesive but not overly wet.

  3. Bring dough together with lightly floured hands. Pinch off small pieces of dough and, working quickly, with the heel of your hand extend on work surface to ensure even distribution of butter. Gather dough together, shape dough into a disc, wrap in plastic, and refrigerate for 30 minutes.

  4. Wipe work surface clean and dust with flour. Dust rolling pin with flour. Roll out dough into a rectangle about 11- by 10-inches and 3/8 inch thickness. Cut dough into 5- by 1-inch rectangles. Place a piece of cheese on each strip of dough and roll into a cone. Refrigerate churros 30 minutes.

  5. Heat oil over medium-high heat until shimmering in large skillet with high sides. Fry churros until puffed and golden, 4 to 6 minutes, turning occasionally (cheese may ooze out slightly). Transfer to paper towel-lined plate with slotted spoon. Serve warm or at room temperature.

Special Equipment

Bench scraper, 2 dinner knives, rolling pin, plastic wrap, large skillet with high sides, slotted spoon, paper towels

Notes

Latin American white frying cheese can be found in specialty markets and in the dairy section of supermarkets that carry Latin American products. It is labeled "queso de freír." If you cannot find it, substitute mozzarella cheese, but not fresh or buffalo as these are too soft.

Nutrition Facts (per serving)
2551Calories
189gFat
175gCarbs
40gProtein
×
Nutrition Facts
Amount per serving
Calories2551
% Daily Value*
Total Fat 189g242%
Saturated Fat 78g390%
Cholesterol 328mg109%
Sodium 3029mg132%
Total Carbohydrate 175g64%
Dietary Fiber 6g21%
Total Sugars 9g
Protein 40g
Vitamin C 4mg21%
Calcium 629mg48%
Iron 10mg58%
Potassium 676mg14%
*The % Daily Value (DV) tells you how much a nutrient in a food serving contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice.
(Nutrition information is calculated using an ingredient database and should be considered an estimate.)

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