These salted caramel cheesecake cookies have become our family's favorite way to satisfy that craving for something sweet and salty at the same time. After making batch after batch and watching oliver and his friends go absolutely crazy for these soft, chewy cookies, I've got the recipe down perfectly for that gooey caramel center with tangy cream cheese and just the right amount of sea salt on top. It's not one of those complicated recipes that takes all day - just good cookie dough with a simple cheesecake filling and caramel that stays soft even after the cookies cool.
Why You'll Love These Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies
I've made these cookies for so many different occasions now, and they never let people down. What I love most is how they look like something you'd pay way too much for at a fancy bakery, but they're actually pretty easy to make at home. oliver's friends always get excited when they see me pulling these out of the oven because they know they're getting something special. Even my neighbor who's always bragging about her baking skills asked me for the recipe after trying one.
The taste is exactly what you'd want from the perfect dessert - that combination of sweet caramel, tangy cream cheese, and just enough salt to make all the flavors pop. The cookies stay soft and chewy for days, and the caramel stays gooey instead of turning into hard candy like it does in a lot of other recipes. Plus, they're one of those cookies where you can mess up the timing a little bit or use store-bought caramel instead of homemade, and they still turn out great. I've burned the edges slightly, used different cream cheese, and made them bigger or smaller depending on my mood, and they always end up tasting good.
Jump to:
- Why You'll Love These Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies
- Ingredients For Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies
- How To Make Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies
- Substitutions
- Tasty Twists on Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies
- Equipment For Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies
- Storing Your Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies
- Sister's Secret Fix Passed Down for Generations
- Top Tip
- Why This Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies Works
- FAQ
- Time to Make Some Cookie Magic!
- Related
- Pairing
- Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies
Ingredients For Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies
The Cookie Base:
- 2 ¼ cups all-purpose flour
- 1 cup butter
- ¾ cup brown sugar
- ½ cup white sugar
- 2 large eggs
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- ½ teaspoon salt
The Cheesecake Part:
- 8 oz cream cheese
- ½ cup powdered sugar
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1 tablespoon lemon juice
The Caramel Magic:
- ½ cup caramel sauce
- 1 teaspoon sea salt for sprinkling
- Extra caramel for drizzling
How To Make Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies
Step 1 - Make the Cheesecake Filling:
- Beat 8 oz softened cream cheese until smooth
- Add ½ cup powdered sugar and mix well
- Stir in 1 teaspoon vanilla and 1 tablespoon lemon juice
- Set aside while you make cookie dough
Step 2 - Mix the Cookie Dough:
- Cream 1 cup butter with ¾ cup brown sugar and ½ cup white sugar
- Add 2 eggs and 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- Mix in 2 ¼ cups flour, 1 teaspoon baking powder, and ½ teaspoon salt
- Don't overmix or cookies will be tough
Step 3 - Assembly Time:
- Preheat oven to 350°F
- Scoop cookie dough onto baking sheets
- Make small wells in each cookie
- Add dollops of cream cheese mixture and caramel sauce
Step 4 - Create the Swirl:
- Use a knife to swirl cream cheese and caramel together
- Don't mix completely - you want distinct swirls
- Sprinkle with sea salt
Step 5 - Bake and Finish:
- Bake for 12-15 minutes until edges are set
- Centers should still look slightly soft
- Cool on pan for 5 minutes, then move to cooling rack
- Drizzle with extra caramel when cool
Substitutions
From making these Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies with whatever I had on hand, here are the swaps that actually work:
Cream Cheese Options:
- Regular → Light cream cheese (less rich but still good)
- Block → Tub cream cheese (not as smooth but works)
- Dairy → Dairy-free cream cheese (for people who can't have dairy)
- Fresh → The stuff that's been in your fridge for a week
Caramel Choices:
- Store-bought → Homemade caramel (way more work but tastes better)
- Caramel sauce → Caramel candies melted down
- Regular → Sugar-free caramel (for people watching sugar)
- Smooth → Chunky caramel with nuts
Sugar Switches:
- Brown sugar → All white sugar (less chewy texture)
- White sugar → Coconut sugar (healthier but different taste)
- Regular → Sugar substitute (changes texture some)
- Powdered → Regular sugar in cream cheese (won't be as smooth)
Flour Changes:
- All-purpose → Whole wheat pastry flour (denser but healthier)
- Regular → Gluten-free flour (for people who can't have gluten)
- White → Almond flour (totally different texture)
Salt Options:
- Sea salt → Kosher salt (whatever you have around)
- Fine → Coarse salt (gives more crunch)
- Plain → Flavored salts (if you're feeling fancy)
Tasty Twists on Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies
Chocolate Lover's Version:
- Add cocoa powder to the cookie dough
- Use chocolate caramel sauce
- Drizzle with melted dark chocolate
- oliver thinks these are the ultimate cookies
Peanut Butter Twist:
- Mix peanut butter into the cream cheese
- Use peanut butter caramel sauce
- Sprinkle chopped peanuts on top
- Perfect for people who love that combo
Apple Pie Style:
- Add cinnamon to the cookie dough
- Use caramel apple sauce
- Mix tiny apple pieces into cream cheese
- Tastes like fall in cookie form
Espresso Kick:
- Add instant coffee to the cookie dough
- Use coffee-flavored caramel
- Dust with cocoa powder
- Great for coffee lovers
Holiday Special:
- Add pumpkin spice to the dough
- Use spiced caramel sauce
- Sprinkle with cinnamon sugar
- Perfect for autumn gatherings
Pretzel Crunch:
- Press crushed pretzels into tops before baking
- Extra salt for that sweet-salty combo
- Gives amazing texture contrast
- Kids love the crunch
Equipment For Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies
- Electric mixer
- Large mixing bowls
- Cookie sheets
- Measuring cups and spoons
- Sharp knife for swirling
- Cookie scoop or spoon
Storing Your Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies
Counter Storage (3-4 days):
- Let them cool completely first
- Store in airtight containers
- Put wax paper between layers
- The cream cheese keeps them moist
Fridge Storage (1 week):
- Because of the cream cheese, they should go in the fridge
- Bring to room temperature before eating
- They taste way better when not cold
- Cover well so they don't pick up weird flavors
Freezing (2-3 months):
- Freeze in freezer bags with wax paper between layers
- Thaw at room temperature
- The caramel might get a little weird but they're still good
- Great for making ahead for parties
Make-Ahead Tips:
- You can make the cream cheese mixture ahead
- Cookie dough can be made a day early
- Don't add caramel until you're ready to bake
- Everything stays fresher that way
Sister's Secret Fix Passed Down for Generations
My sister discovered something amazing about these Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies when she was experimenting in her kitchen about five years ago. Instead of just swirling the caramel and cream cheese on top, she'd take about half the caramel and mix it right into the cookie dough before baking. This created these incredible pockets of caramel throughout the entire cookie, not just on the surface. But her real smart move was freezing the cream cheese mixture for about 20 minutes before adding it to the cookies - this kept it from melting too fast and disappearing into the dough.
She also figured out that adding just a tiny bit of cornstarch to the caramel sauce kept it from getting too runny during baking, which meant it stayed in perfect swirls instead of spreading out and making a mess. "You want distinct flavors in every bite," she'd say, and she was absolutely right. Now when I make these Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies, I use both of sister's tricks and they come out perfect every time. oliver has no idea why these taste so much better than other people's versions, but Sister's little changes make all the difference between good cookies and cookies that people actually remember.
Top Tip
- These salted caramel cheesecake cookies need to be in the fridge because of the cream cheese - leaving them out too long in hot weather can make people really sick.
- Because of the cream cheese, these really need to go in the fridge after the first day, not just sit on the counter like regular Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies. They'll keep for about a week in there, but bring them back to room temperature before you eat them because they taste way better when they're not cold. Make sure to cover them well so they don't pick up weird flavors from whatever else is in your fridge - nobody wants cookies that taste like leftover Chinese food.
- You can freeze these for up to three months if you want to make them ahead for parties or whatever. Just layer them with wax paper in freezer bags and thaw them at room temperature when you're ready to eat them. The caramel might get a little weird after freezing, but they're still good. You can also make the cream cheese mixture and cookie dough ahead of time and keep them separate in the fridge, then put everything together and bake when you want fresh Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies.
Why This Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies Works
From making these Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies so many times and figuring out what went wrong when they didn't turn out right, I've learned exactly why this recipe works every time. The main thing is how the cream cheese and caramel are mixed together instead of just dumped on top of the cookie dough. When you swirl them together, the cream cheese acts like a buffer that keeps the caramel from getting too hot and turning into hard candy, while the caramel keeps the cream cheese from drying out during baking. The brown sugar in the dough also gives them that slightly caramel-y flavor that works perfectly with the real caramel swirled on top.
What really makes the difference is not overbaking them and getting the ratio of wet to dry ingredients just right. There's enough butter and brown sugar to keep them soft and chewy, but not so much that they spread out into flat pancakes in the oven. Most people think cookies need to be completely set when they come out, but these salted caramel cheesecake cookies should still look a little underdone in the center. They keep cooking on the hot pan after you take them out, and that's what gives you that perfect soft and chewy texture instead of hard, crunchy cookies that nobody wants to eat.
FAQ
What are the ingredients in cheesecake Factory salted caramel?
The Cheesecake Factory's version probably has cream cheese, caramel, salt, and their regular cheesecake base. These salted caramel cheesecake cookies use similar flavors but in cookie form - cream cheese, caramel sauce, and sea salt mixed into regular cookie dough. Way easier to make at home than a whole cheesecake.
Can you add caramel to cookies?
Yes, you can add caramel to cookies, but it can be tricky. The caramel needs to be the right consistency so it doesn't make the cookies too wet or leak out everywhere. For these Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies, I swirl it in with the cream cheese so it stays put and doesn't burn.
How to make your cookies soft and chewy?
Don't overbake them - they should still look slightly underdone in the center when you take them out. Use brown sugar instead of all white sugar, and make sure not to overmix the dough. Also, storing them with a piece of bread helps keep them soft.
How to keep caramel soft in cookies?
The trick is to not bake the cookies too long and to use caramel that's already the right consistency. If you make your own caramel, add a little cream to keep it soft. Store-bought caramel sauce usually stays softer than homemade candy-type caramel.
Time to Make Some Cookie Magic!
Now you've got everything you need to make perfect salted caramel cheesecake cookies - from getting the swirls just right to Katie's secret tricks with the frozen cream cheese and cornstarch. These cookies have been a hit at so many family gatherings, school events, and random afternoons when oliver's friends show up hungry. They always disappear fast, and people always ask what makes them taste so much better than regular cookies, which makes you feel like a baking expert even though they're actually pretty easy to make.
Want more cookie recipes that'll make everyone happy? Try our Easy Peanut Butter Cup Cookies Recipe that combines chocolate and peanut butter in the most perfect way. If you're in the mood for something savory, our Best Cheesy Potato Pancakes Recipe turns leftover mashed potatoes into something amazing. And when you want more fruity sweetness, our Easy Blueberry Cheesecake Swirl Cookies Recipe delivers that perfect berry and cream cheese combination!
Share your Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies success! We love seeing your beautiful swirl patterns and hearing about who ate them all!
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Related
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Pairing
These are my favorite dishes to serve with Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies
Salted Caramel Cheesecake Cookies
Equipment
- 1 Electric mixer (Hand or stand mixer)
- 2 Large mixing bowls (For dough and filling)
- 1 Cookie sheet (Lined with parchment or silicone mat)
- 1 Measuring cups and spoons (For dry/wet ingredients)
- 1 Sharp knife (For swirling caramel and cream cheese)
- 1 Cookie scoop or spoon (To portion dough evenly)
Ingredients
Cookie Base
- 2 ¼ cups All-purpose flour
- 1 cup Butter - Softened
- ¾ cup Brown sugar - Packed
- ½ cup White sugar
- 2 Eggs - Large
- 2 teaspoon Vanilla extract
- 1 teaspoon Baking powder
- ½ teaspoon Salt
Cheesecake Filling
- 8 oz Cream cheese - Softened
- ½ cup Powdered sugar
- 1 teaspoon Vanilla extract
- 1 tablespoon Lemon juice - Fresh preferred
Caramel Swirl
- ½ cup Caramel sauce - Store-bought or homemade
- 1 teaspoon Sea salt - For sprinkling
- Extra caramel - For drizzling after baking
Instructions
- Make the cheesecake filling by beating cream cheese with powdered sugar, vanilla, and lemon juice.
- Mix the cookie dough with butter, sugars, eggs, vanilla, flour, baking powder, and salt.
- Scoop dough, form wells, and add cream cheese and caramel to each.
- Swirl the cream cheese and caramel slightly and sprinkle sea salt.
- Bake cookies, cool, and drizzle with extra caramel if desired.
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