Introduction
Meet the cruffin: a hybrid pastry that takes the best of a croissant and a muffin and turns it into an addictive morning treat.
As a professional food blogger I love recipes that feel elevated but actually respect your time, and these cruffins do exactly that. They give you multiple layers of buttery, flaky pastry, a warm cinnamon-sugar kiss in every bite, and enough charm to make a casual breakfast feel celebratory.
What I value most about this version is how it leans on tidy technique rather than complicated ingredients. You get that signature laminated texture from an accessible shortcut, and a glossy finish that catches the eye and the appetite.
Tone and intention: this introduction is for cooks who love texture, crave a cinnamon aroma in the morning, and want a repeatable method that fits into a busy weekend. Iâll share sensory cues to watch for during baking and little tweaks that change the pastryâs personality without altering the recipeâs ingredient list or precise steps.
Read on for thoughtful notes about flavor, tools worth keeping on hand, and how to preserve that delicate flakiness after the ovenâsmall insights that make a big difference the next time you bake.
Why Youâll Love This Recipe
A few honest reasons these cruffins are a keeper:
- They deliver multilayered flakiness without full laminated dough work.
- The cinnamon-sugar interior melts into tiny caramelized pockets that contrast with a crisp exterior.
- The recipe is approachable and scalable for small gatherings or an easy weekend bake.
From a bakerâs perspective, the joy is twofold: the tactile pleasure of rolling and slicing the log, and the visual payoff when each cup rises into a fan of layers. Technique-forward benefits: expect predictable oven spring and clear visual cues you can use to time the bake preciselyâwatch the color at the edges and the rise of the inner spirals.
For hosts, these pastries hit the sweet spot between homemade charm and professional look. Serve them warm and they provide heady cinnamon perfume and that irresistible tear-apart texture; serve them slightly cooled and the interior settles into distinct, sliceable layers that still deliver crunch and buttery lift.
Finally, this recipe is a great canvas for small flavor experimentsâthink a pinch of citrus zest in your glaze or a nut-crunch toppingâbut the base technique remains the star, producing a reliable, elevated pastry every time.
Flavor & Texture Profile
What to expect on the palate:
These cruffins balance a warm, toasted-cinnamon sweetness with clean butter notes. The sugar caramelizes into tiny pockets as the layers separate, giving both crunchy flecks and pillowy inner pockets. The dominant flavors are pure butter and cinnamon, with any glaze adding a soft vanilla-sweet finish rather than overpowering the pastryâs base notes.
Texture cues to love:
- Exterior: a crisp, golden shell that yields a satisfying initial snap.
- Interior: multiple laminated layers that pull apart into delicate sheets.
- Sugar pockets: tiny caramelized shards that provide contrast and mouthfeel.
If you prefer a chewier interior, a slightly longer rest before baking can encourage the layers to relax and bind; if you want extra crunch, a brief final blast of high heat at the end will deepen the crust. Aroma: the top note is toasted cinnamon, with a supporting butter rumble that carries through to the finish. This is a pastry designed around contrastâlight and airy sheets of pastry punctuated by granular sweetnessâso every bite offers a layered sensory experience rather than a single texture.
Gathering Ingredients
Shop and prep notes before you bake:
Choose the highest-quality core ingredients you can accessâyour pastry will sing if the butter is flavorful and the puff pastry is well-made. Keep everything chilled until youâre ready to work, except for items specified to be at room temperature in the recipe, and have your tools ready: a sharp knife, a pastry brush, and a muffin tin.
Ingredient list (use exactly these items):
- 1 sheet (about 250g) puff pastry, thawed
- 4 tbsp unsalted butter, melted
- 1/2 cup granulated sugar
- 2 tbsp ground cinnamon
- 1 egg (for egg wash)
- Optional: 1 cup powdered sugar for glaze
- Optional: 2â3 tbsp milk or cream for glaze
- Optional: 1/2 tsp vanilla extract for glaze
- Nonstick spray or butter for muffin tin
Ingredient sourcing tips: look for a puff pastry with visible layers and a clean butter flavor on the label; European-style butter will deliver a rounder, slightly nutty finish. For cinnamon choose a fragrant, bright varietyâCeylon if you prefer subtlety, or Saigon for a more assertive spice. Keep optional glaze ingredients on hand if you like a glossy finish or a dusting of powdered sugar for a more rustic look.
Preparation Overview
Big-picture rhythm before you begin:
This recipe rewards clean, steady movements rather than rushed handling. Lay out your tools and ingredients so each action flows into the next: brushing, sprinkling, rolling, slicing, and transferring to the tin. When you approach the rolling step, imagine youâre coaxing each laminated sheet to stack neatly so that the spirals will fan outward in the muffin cups.
Temperature control matters: slightly chilled pastry holds its shape better when you slice; a too-warm sheet will compress and lose definition. Likewise, a hot oven creates decisive oven spring, so preheat thoroughly and avoid opening the door early in the bake.
Tool and technique notes:
- Use a sharp knife to get clean slicesâserrated blades tear layered dough.
- A thin, even brush of butter helps the sugar adhere and encourages caramel pockets.
- Work with confident strokes when rolling to maintain tight spirals.
These preparatory principles will help you translate the simple ingredient list into consistent pastries with defined layers, a glossy top, and an unmistakable cinnamon aromaâwithout altering precise recipe measurements or step-by-step instructions that are provided separately.
Cooking / Assembly Process
What happens during assembly and bake:
Move with intention through the process: the brushing and sprinkling stage builds the flavor pockets, the rolling creates the spiraled structure, and the baking converts sugar and butter into those small caramelized shards you seek. Keep an eye on color for doneness rather than relying solely on timeâedges should be deeply golden and the interior layers puffed and separate cleanly.
Below are the explicit step-by-step instructions for the recipe:
- Preheat oven to 200°C (400°F). Lightly grease a 6-cup muffin tin with nonstick spray or butter đ§.
- Unfold the thawed puff pastry on a lightly floured surface. Brush the entire surface with melted butter đ§.
- Mix the granulated sugar and ground cinnamon in a bowl until combined. Sprinkle the cinnamon-sugar evenly over the buttered pastry đŹâš.
- Starting from one long edge, tightly roll the pastry into a log. Use a sharp knife to slice the log into 6 equal pieces (about 3â4 cm / 1â1.5 in thick) đȘ.
- Place each slice cut-side up into the prepared muffin cups, slightly pressing down so they fan into a cruffin shape đ„.
- Beat the egg and brush a thin layer over each cruffin for golden shine. Sprinkle a little extra cinnamon-sugar on top if desired đ„đŹ.
- Bake in the preheated oven for 18â22 minutes, or until puffed and deep golden brown. Rotate the tin halfway for even browning đ„.
- While cruffins bake, whisk powdered sugar, milk (start with 2 tbsp) and vanilla to make a smooth glaze. Add more milk if needed for desired consistency đŠđ„.
- Remove cruffins from oven and let cool in the tin 5 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack. Drizzle with glaze while slightly warm or dust with extra cinnamon-sugar before serving âïž.
- Serve warm or at room temperature. Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 2 days and reheat briefly for best flakiness âšïž.
Mid-bake check: trust visual cuesâif the outer layers are bronzed and you can see distinct expansion, youâre in the right zone. Avoid overbaking; a deep amber hue is desirable but going too far will dry the interior layers.
Serving Suggestions
How to present and pair cruffins:
These pastries are happiest warm, where the contrast between crisp exterior and tender interior is most pronounced. Serve them straight from the rack with a light dusting of powdered sugar or a glossy drizzle of glaze to add a finishing note. For a café-style moment, display them in a shallow basket lined with a linen napkin so the visual warmth invites guests to reach in.
Beverage pairings:
- Coffee with medium roast acidity to balance the sugar.
- A milk-forward latte to mirror the pastryâs creaminess.
- Black tea with a bright finish if you want contrast rather than complement.
For a small brunch spread, pair these with fruit-forward itemsâsliced stone fruit, citrus segments, or a lightly sweetened ricottaâfor texture and flavor contrast. If youâre serving them as a snack, place a small bowl of warmed glaze or spiced honey on the side so guests can customize sweetness and finish.
Finally, think about temperature: a warm cruffin brings out buttery volatility and the perfume of cinnamon; a room-temperature cruffin reads as more composed and sliceable. Both are deliciousâchoose based on the moment youâre creating.
Storage & Make-Ahead Tips
Keep flakiness for later:
When planning ahead, the single most important principle is to preserve crispness by limiting trapped moisture. Store cooled pastries in a container that allows a tiny amount of airflow at first, or lay them in a single layer with parchment between layers to prevent steam buildup. If you must refrigerate, bring them back to room temperature and re-crisp with a brief gentle heat to restore that delicate texture.
Freezing and reheating: for longer storage, wrap individual pieces tightly and freeze; thaw slowly at cool room temperature and then refresh in a warm oven for a few minutes to revive the layers. Avoid microwave reheats unless you plan to immediately finish them with a quick oven crisp to recover surface crunch.
If youâre making these in advance for an event, finish glazing just before serving so the surface retains shine and the sugar doesnât dissolve into the pastry over time. Small adjustments in reheatingâmodest heat and short durationsâare what protect the pastryâs multilayered structure and keep each bite satisfying rather than soggy.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Can I use store-bought puff pastry?
Yesâstore-bought puff pastry is the intended shortcut for this recipe. Choose a sheet with visible layers and a clean flavor; that will ensure good lift and a buttery mouthfeel.
Q: How do I prevent the sugar from leaking out during baking?
Use a thin, even layer of butter before sprinkling the cinnamon-sugar so the crystals have something to adhere to; this helps them stay within the spirals as the pastry puffs. Also, a tight roll helps keep fillings contained.
Q: Can I make flavor variations?
Absolutelyâadd-ins like finely chopped nuts or a smear of fruit jam will change texture and balance. Keep in mind that wetter fillings may affect lamination, so use conservative amounts.
Q: Whatâs the best way to reheat cruffins?
Refresh them briefly in a warm oven to restore crispnessâshort bursts of heat re-crisp the exterior while warming the interior, bringing layers back to life.
Final note: enjoy experimenting within the structure of this recipeâsmall adjustments in garnish, glaze, or serving temperature can highlight different facets of the pastry without changing the core method. Happy baking!
Quick Cinnamon Sugar Cruffins
Start your morning with warm, flaky cruffins: quick to make with storeâbought pastry, buttery cinnamon sugar and a golden crunch đ„âš Perfect for breakfast or brunch!
total time
35
servings
8
calories
340 kcal
ingredients
- 1 sheet refrigerated puff pastry (or croissant dough) đ„
- 4 tbsp unsalted butter, melted đ§
- 1/2 cup granulated sugar đ
- 2 tsp ground cinnamon đ«
- 1 large egg, beaten đł
- 2 tbsp milk đ„
- Powdered sugar for dusting (optional) âïž
- Maple syrup or glaze to serve (optional) đŻ
instructions
- Preheat oven to 375°F (190°C). Lightly grease a 6â8 cup muffin tin or line with paper liners đ§.
- Combine granulated sugar and ground cinnamon in a shallow bowl; set aside to make cinnamon sugar mixture đđ«.
- On a lightly floured surface, unfold the puff pastry sheet and roll gently to smooth any seams. Brush the pastry evenly with half the melted butter đ„đ§.
- Sprinkle the cinnamon sugar evenly over the brushed surface, pressing lightly so it sticks âš.
- Cut the pastry into 8 long equal strips (about 8 strips for one sheet). Starting at one end, roll each strip tightly into a spiral (like a jelly roll) to create layered coils đ.
- Coil each rolled strip into a muffin cup, spiral-side up, tucking the tail under so it holds its shape. Repeat for all strips to fill the tin đ§đ„.
- Mix the beaten egg with milk to make an egg wash, then brush the tops of each cruffin with the egg wash. Sprinkle a little extra cinnamon sugar on top for crunch đłđ„đ.
- Bake in the preheated oven for 18â22 minutes, or until the cruffins are puffed and deep golden brown on top. Rotate the pan halfway if your oven bakes unevenly đ„.
- Remove from oven and let cool in the tin for 5 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack. Dust with powdered sugar and/or drizzle with maple syrup if desired âïžđŻ.
- Serve warm (best the same day). To reheat, warm briefly in a 325°F (160°C) oven for a few minutes to refresh the flakiness đ.