Cinnamon and Cream

Classic Maple Pumpkin Cheesecake Tart

21 min read

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There is a moment in autumn when the air turns cool enough to justify pulling out the spice jars and the can of pumpkin you have been saving since September. This is the tart for that moment. The filling is a burnished, amber-tinted custard that slices cleanly and trembles just slightly at its center, carrying the deep, woodsy sweetness of real maple syrup alongside the warm comfort of cinnamon, ginger, and nutmeg. It sits in a crisp, golden graham cracker shell that stays perfectly firm even after a night in the refrigerator, and every single bite tastes like the best parts of November distilled into a single dessert.

What sets this version apart is the combination of two techniques borrowed from classic cheesecake baking. First, the cream cheese is blended until completely smooth before any other ingredient is added, which eliminates lumps entirely and creates that signature velvety texture. Second, the tart is baked in a gentle water bath, which surrounds it with moist, even heat and prevents the top from cracking or the custard from curdling at the edges. Real maple syrup, rather than artificial flavoring or brown sugar alone, gives the filling a complexity that pumpkin pie extract simply cannot replicate. It deepens and slightly caramelizes as it bakes, leaving a flavor that lingers.

This tart falls comfortably in the medium difficulty range. The steps are straightforward, but a little patience during mixing and chilling is well rewarded. It is an ideal project for a relaxed weekend afternoon, and because it must be made ahead to set properly, it is a genuinely stress-free choice for Thanksgiving, holiday dinners, or any occasion where you want to impress without scrambling at the last minute.

Prep: 30 minutesTotal: 6 hours (includes at least 4 hours chilling)Yield: one 9-inch round tart, serving 10 slicesDifficulty: ★★☆ IntermediateOccasion: Special Occasion
✓ Vegetarian
Servings:

10

servings

Ingredients

  • Whipped Topping (about 3/4 Cup)
  • 200 ggraham cracker crumbs (about 1 and 2/3 cups, from roughly 14 full crackers)
  • 25 glight brown sugar, packed (about 2 tbsp)
  • 1 tspground cinnamon
  • 85 gunsalted butter, melted (about 6 tbsp)
  • Pinch of fine sea salt
  • 450 gfull-fat cream cheese, at room temperature (two 8-oz blocks)
  • 150 ggranulated sugar (about 3/4 cup)
  • 80 mlpure maple syrup, Grade A Dark or Amber (about 1/3 cup)
  • 240 gpure pumpkin puree, not pumpkin pie filling (about 1 cup)
  • 120 mlheavy cream (about 1/2 cup)
  • 2 largeeggs, at room temperature
  • 1 largeegg yolk, at room temperature
  • 1.5 tspground cinnamon
  • 0.5 tspground ginger
  • 0.25 tspfreshly grated nutmeg
  • 0.25 tspground cloves
  • 1 tsppure vanilla extract
  • 1 tbspcornstarch
  • Pinch of fine sea salt
  • 180 mlcold heavy cream
  • Whipped Topping (about 2 Tbsp)
  • 15 gpowdered sugar
  • Maple syrup drizzle and a pinch of cinnamon, to garnish

Ingredient Substitutions

graham cracker crumbs

  • Digestive biscuit crumbs in equal weight, for a slightly less sweet, more buttery crust
  • Gingersnap cookie crumbs for a spicier, snappier shell that complements the pumpkin filling beautifully
full-fat cream cheese

  • Neufchatel cheese (one-third less fat) works in a pinch, but the filling will be slightly less rich and may be a touch softer
  • Do not use whipped cream cheese or spreadable cream cheese — the added air and stabilizers will cause the filling to weep and not set properly
pure maple syrup

  • An equal volume of honey will work and adds a floral sweetness, though the maple flavor will be absent
  • Replace with 60g (about 4 tbsp) additional granulated sugar if maple syrup is unavailable — the flavor will be simpler but still delicious
heavy cream

  • Full-fat sour cream or creme fraiche in equal measure gives a slightly tangier, denser filling with a beautiful texture
eggs

  • For a firmer, less custard-like set: replace the 2 whole eggs with 3 egg yolks total (use 4 yolks in place of the 2 eggs plus the extra yolk). Note this is not a vegan swap.
pure pumpkin puree

  • Butternut squash puree (roasted and drained of excess moisture) makes a lovely, slightly sweeter substitute in equal amounts

Instructions

🔧 Equipment

9-inch tart pan with removable bottom
stand mixer or hand mixer
🧁large roasting pan or deep baking dish (for water bath)
🧁heavy-duty aluminum foil
🍴rubber spatula
🔵fine-mesh sieve
🍴offset spatula
🌡️instant-read digital thermometer
🔵wire cooling rack
🥣medium mixing bowls
🥛measuring cups and spoons
⚖️kitchen scale


Prep: 30 minutes
Bake: 15 minutes for crust at 325°F (160°C), then 40 to 45 minutes for filling at 325°F (160°C)
Total: 6 hours (including at least 4 hours chilling)
The water bath is strongly recommended — it ensures a crack-free, silky surface and an evenly set custard from edge to center.
  1. Preheat your oven to 325°F (160°C). Wrap the outside of a 9-inch tart pan with removable bottom tightly with two layers of heavy-duty aluminum foil, ensuring no seams are exposed. This prevents water from seeping in during the water bath. Place a large roasting pan or baking dish on the lower oven rack.
  2. Make the crust: In a medium bowl, stir together the graham cracker crumbs, brown sugar, cinnamon, and salt. Pour in the melted butter and mix until every crumb is evenly moistened and the mixture holds together when pressed between your fingers. Press firmly and evenly into the bottom and up the sides of the prepared tart pan, using the flat bottom of a measuring cup to compact it. Bake for 12 to 15 minutes until lightly golden and fragrant. Set aside to cool slightly while you make the filling. Leave the oven on.
  3. Make the filling: In a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, or using a hand mixer, beat the cream cheese on medium speed for 3 to 4 minutes until completely smooth and fluffy, scraping down the sides and bottom of the bowl at least twice. This step is critical — any lumps now will remain in the finished tart.
  4. Add the granulated sugar and beat on medium for 2 minutes more until fully incorporated. Add the maple syrup, vanilla extract, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, cloves, cornstarch, and salt. Mix on low speed until combined, about 1 minute, scraping the bowl again.
  5. Add the pumpkin puree and heavy cream, mixing on low speed until smooth. Add the eggs and egg yolk one at a time, mixing on low after each addition just until incorporated. Do not overmix once the eggs are added, as this incorporates air that can cause the surface to crack.
  6. Pour the filling into the par-baked crust. Gently tap the pan on the counter once or twice to release any surface bubbles. Place the foil-wrapped tart pan into the roasting pan. Pour enough hot tap water into the roasting pan to reach about 1 inch up the side of the tart pan.
  7. Carefully slide the roasting pan into the oven and bake at 325°F (160°C) for 40 to 45 minutes. The tart is done when the edges are set and the center 2 to 3 inches still jiggles gently like softly set Jell-O when the pan is nudged. It will firm up completely as it cools.
  8. Turn off the oven, crack the door open 2 inches, and let the tart rest in the cooling oven for 30 minutes. This gradual temperature drop helps prevent cracking. Remove from the water bath, peel away the foil, and let it cool fully on a wire rack to room temperature, about 1 hour. Refrigerate uncovered for at least 4 hours, or overnight, before unmolding and serving.
  9. To serve: Whip the cold heavy cream with powdered sugar to soft peaks. Unmold the tart, slice with a warm, clean knife, and top each slice with a dollop of whipped cream, a drizzle of maple syrup, and a dusting of cinnamon.
Prep: 30 minutes
Bake: None
Total: 5 hours 30 minutes (includes 4 to 5 hours freezer-setting)
This version uses a gelatin-stabilized filling that sets in the freezer and is served just-thawed. The texture is lighter and more mousse-like than the baked version, and there is no risk of cracking. Perfect for warm-weather entertaining or when you want to skip the oven entirely.
  1. Make the no-bake crust: Combine the graham cracker crumbs, brown sugar, cinnamon, salt, and melted butter as described in the oven method. Press firmly into a 9-inch tart pan with removable bottom. Refrigerate while you make the filling — no baking needed.
  2. Bloom the gelatin: In a small bowl, sprinkle 2 and 1/4 tsp (one standard 7g packet) of unflavored powdered gelatin over 3 tbsp of cold water. Let it sit for 5 minutes until it absorbs the water and looks spongy. Gently melt it in the microwave in 10-second bursts, stirring between each, just until liquid and clear. Do not boil. Set aside to cool slightly.
  3. Beat the cream cheese on medium speed for 3 to 4 minutes until completely smooth and fluffy. Add the granulated sugar, maple syrup, pumpkin puree, vanilla, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, cloves, and salt. Beat on medium-low until silky and uniform, about 2 minutes, scraping the bowl well. Drizzle in the melted gelatin with the mixer running on low speed and mix for 30 seconds until fully incorporated.
  4. In a separate cold bowl, whip the 120ml of heavy cream listed in the filling ingredients to medium-stiff peaks (the cream for serving is separate and whipped just before serving). Gently fold the whipped cream into the pumpkin mixture in two additions using a rubber spatula, preserving as much volume as possible for a lighter texture.
  5. Pour the filling into the chilled crust and smooth the top with an offset spatula. Tap the pan gently on the counter. Cover loosely with plastic wrap and freeze for at least 4 to 5 hours until fully set.
  6. Remove from the freezer 20 to 30 minutes before serving and let it temper at room temperature until it reaches a creamy, sliceable consistency (not frozen solid in the center). Unmold, whip the topping cream with powdered sugar to soft peaks, and garnish with whipped cream, a maple syrup drizzle, and a pinch of cinnamon.

Nutrition Per Serving

Per 1 serving (makes one 9-inch round tart, serving 10 slices)

415Calories
38gCarbs
26gSugar
27gFat
6gProtein

Why This Recipe Works

The foundation of this tart’s silky texture is the cream cheese itself. Full-fat cream cheese contains a high ratio of fat to moisture, and when beaten alone first, that fat is fully emulsified before any liquid is introduced. Adding sugar next continues the emulsification and helps dissolve the sugar crystals so the finished filling has no graininess. The eggs and egg yolk are added last and mixed minimally, because eggs provide structure through protein coagulation during baking — overmixing them incorporates air bubbles that expand in the oven and then collapse, which is the primary cause of cracking. The cornstarch is an extra safeguard: it tightens the protein network around the eggs, reducing the risk of curdling and giving the filling a slightly firmer, cleaner slice.

The water bath works by surrounding the pan with an environment that cannot exceed 212°F (100°C) as long as water is present. Cheesecake and custard fillings are prone to overbaking because eggs begin to tighten and curdle at around 180°F (82°C). The slow, moist heat of the bain-marie ensures the filling never gets too hot too fast, cooking the center gently while the edges stay tender. It also keeps the oven humidity high, which prevents the top surface from drying out and cracking. The gradual cooling in the turned-off oven extends this benefit by avoiding the sudden temperature drop that can contract the filling and pull it away from the crust.

Pumpkin puree contributes both flavor and structural moisture, but it also introduces variability: different brands and even different cans can vary in water content. If your puree seems unusually wet (it should be thick enough to mound slightly on a spoon, not pour), blot it briefly between paper towels before measuring. The maple syrup adds hygroscopic sugar, meaning it attracts and holds moisture in the baked filling, contributing to that glossy, yielding texture that distinguishes this tart from a drier pumpkin pie.

Baker’s Tips

  • Room temperature cream cheese is non-negotiable. Cold cream cheese will not beat smooth and will leave lumps that no amount of mixing will fully remove. Plan to pull it from the refrigerator at least 1 hour before you start.
  • Use a 9-inch tart pan with a removable bottom for the cleanest presentation and the easiest unmolding. A springform pan can substitute but will give you thicker sides and a slightly different ratio of crust to filling.
  • When pressing the crust, use the side of a straight measuring cup to press firmly up the fluted sides of the tart pan first, then press the bottom flat. An even, compact crust will not crumble when sliced.
  • Wrap the tart pan in foil carefully — two layers of heavy-duty foil is much more reliable than one. Even a tiny pinhole can let water seep in and create a soggy crust bottom. Check the foil before you pour in the water.
  • Test for doneness visually, not with a timer. The jiggle test is reliable: the outer inch should be completely still, the inner 2 to 3 inches should move as a single, unified wobble, not in liquid ripples. A digital thermometer inserted in the center should read 150°F to 155°F (65°C to 68°C).
  • Run a thin offset spatula or thin knife gently around the inside edge of the tart pan about 5 minutes after removing from the oven. This releases the filling from the sides as it contracts during cooling and greatly reduces the chance of surface cracks.
  • For the cleanest slices, use a long sharp knife dipped in hot water and wiped dry between each cut.

Variations

  • Brown butter crust: Brown the butter before mixing it into the crumbs for a nutty, caramelized depth that is genuinely extraordinary with the pumpkin filling.
  • Pecan praline topping: Scatter a rough chop of homemade pecan praline over the whipped cream topping for crunch and caramel sweetness.
  • Bourbon-maple version: Swap 1 tbsp of the maple syrup for good-quality bourbon. It amplifies the warmth of the spices and adds a sophisticated edge.
  • Chocolate-swirl variation: Melt 60g of dark chocolate and drizzle it over the filling in the tart shell before baking, then use a skewer to swirl it gently into the surface.
  • Individual tartlets: Divide the crust and filling among twelve 3-inch individual tart pans. Reduce baking time to 22 to 28 minutes and check for the same jiggle cue.

Troubleshooting & FAQ

My filling has lumps in it. What went wrong?
The most common cause is cream cheese that was not fully softened before beating. Even if it feels soft on the outside, the center can still be cool and firm. Beat the cream cheese alone for a full 3 to 4 minutes on medium speed, scraping the bowl and paddle thoroughly, before adding any other ingredient. If you spot lumps after adding other ingredients, stop and press the batter through a fine-mesh sieve before pouring it into the crust.
The top of my tart cracked. Is it ruined?
Not at all — the whipped cream topping covers cracks beautifully. Cracking is caused by overbaking (too high a temperature or too long in the oven), overmixing after the eggs are added, or cooling too quickly. Next time, check the jiggle test earlier, mix eggs on low and just until incorporated, and cool the tart gradually in the turned-off oven with the door cracked. Running a thin knife around the edge immediately after baking also helps.
Water got into my tart and the crust is soggy. How do I prevent this?
Use two full sheets of heavy-duty foil and wrap them up and over the top edge of the tart pan, crimping snugly so no seams sit below the waterline. Alternatively, place the foil-wrapped tart pan inside a slightly larger cake pan and then place that in the roasting pan of water — this adds a second layer of protection. Avoid pouring water directly over the foil once the tart is in the oven.
My filling did not set and is still wobbly after 4 hours in the fridge. What happened?
If the center was very liquid when it came out of the oven (not just a gentle jiggle but actual sloshing), the tart was likely underbaked. The internal temperature needs to reach at least 150°F (65°C) at the center. Return it to the oven at 300°F (150°C) for 10 to 15 more minutes if you catch this early. If it has already chilled, give it a full overnight rest — often what seems undercooked after 4 hours is perfectly set by morning.
Can I taste the pumpkin distinctly, or does the cream cheese overpower it?
In a well-balanced filling, pumpkin and cream cheese should be equal partners. If your tart tasted more like plain cheesecake, your pumpkin puree may have been underseasoned or too mild. Make sure you are using pure pumpkin puree (not pie filling), and consider boosting the spices by 25 percent next time. Briefly roasting canned pumpkin puree in a dry skillet over medium heat for 5 minutes, stirring constantly, concentrates its flavor significantly before you add it to the filling.

Storage & Make-Ahead

  • Storage: Store the finished tart loosely covered in the refrigerator for up to 5 days. The crust may soften slightly after day 2, but the flavor actually deepens and improves overnight. Do not store at room temperature for more than 2 hours. The baked tart (without whipped topping) can be frozen whole or in slices, well wrapped, for up to 2 months. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator.
  • Make-Ahead: This tart is an ideal make-ahead dessert. The crust can be pressed and refrigerated (unbaked) up to 2 days ahead, or baked and cooled up to 3 days ahead. The fully assembled and baked tart is best made 1 day ahead and refrigerated overnight, which gives the filling time to fully set and the flavors time to meld. Add the whipped cream topping just before serving.


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