
A strawberry cheesecake dump cake is an easy, crowd-friendly dessert that delivers cheesecake flavor with far less effort. In this 9×13 dump cake recipe, you layer strawberry pie filling, softened cream cheese, and strawberry cake mix, then bake until bubbling and set. The result is a creamy interior with a lightly browned, tender top—no springform pan or water bath required.
This article explains a reliable method for a strawberry cheesecake dump cake using common pantry ingredients: strawberry pie filling, cream cheese, and a strawberry cake mix base. You’ll also learn what affects texture, including baking time, butter distribution, and how soft (not melted) the cream cheese should be.
Essential Concepts
- Layer strawberry pie filling and cream cheese in a 9×13 dish.
- Use strawberry cake mix and melted butter as the dry and fat components.
- Bake until bubbling and set; rest before serving for clean slices.
What Makes a Cheesecake “Dump Cake” Different
Traditional cheesecake is built from a crust, a prepared filling, and careful temperature control, often with a water bath. A cheesecake dump cake simplifies those steps by substituting pre-made convenience ingredients and relying on heat to merge flavors.
The key functional ideas are:
- Fruit provides moisture and acidity. Strawberry pie filling contributes both sweetness and hydration.
- Cream cheese supplies the cheesecake character. It melts and thickens the surrounding mixture, creating a custard-like interior.
- Cake mix provides structure. The mix acts as both a dry binder and a topping layer. As it bakes, it forms a crumbly, lightly browned surface.
- Butter drives cohesion. Melted butter hydrates the cake mix unevenly at first, then sets into a top that ranges from tender to crisp depending on bake time.
Understanding these interactions makes it easier to troubleshoot when the final texture is too runny or too dry.
Ingredients for a 9×13 Strawberry Cheesecake Dump Cake
Below is a tested ingredient set for a standard 9×13 dump cake. Many recipes call for either cream cheese blocks or whipped versions. Using block cream cheese generally yields a more cheesecake-like thickness.
U.S. Measurements

- 1 (21 oz) can strawberry pie filling (or strawberry filling for pies)
- 8 oz cream cheese, softened
- 1 (15.25 oz) box strawberry cake mix
- 1/2 cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, melted
- Optional: 1/2 cup chopped strawberries or vanilla extract (see notes)
Metric Measurements
- 595 g strawberry pie filling (about one 600 g can)
- 225 g cream cheese, softened
- 433 g strawberry cake mix
- 113 g unsalted butter, melted
- Optional: 75 g chopped strawberries or 5 ml vanilla extract (see notes)
Notes on Ingredient Choices
- Strawberry pie filling cake mix dessert profile: Using pie filling rather than fresh strawberries ensures consistent sweetness and viscosity.
- Cream cheese dump cake texture: Softened cream cheese spreads more evenly. If it is too firm, it may form unmelted pockets.
- Butter consistency: Melted butter should be fully liquid when you drizzle it. Partially melted butter can create uneven dry pockets.
Equipment You Actually Need
You can make a strawberry cheesecake dump cake with basic tools.
- 9×13-inch baking dish
- Mixing bowl (optional, for prepping cream cheese)
- Spatula or spoon
- Knife for cutting softened cream cheese into dollops (if not spreading)
No stand mixer is required.
Step-by-Step Method
Step 1: Preheat and Prepare the Pan
- Preheat the oven to 350°F (175°C).
- Lightly grease the 9×13 dump cake dish if your dish is prone to sticking. Many recipes omit this because the butter and cake mix release reasonably well, but greasing reduces cleanup issues.
Step 2: Spread the Strawberry Pie Filling
- Pour the strawberry pie filling into the baking dish.
- Spread it into an even layer.
A level layer helps the cake mix absorb moisture uniformly during baking.
Step 3: Add the Cream Cheese Layer
There are two common approaches.
- Dollop method: Cut softened cream cheese into small cubes or spoon it in dollops across the filling. Press lightly so it contacts the fruit layer.
- Smear method: If the cream cheese is very soft, you can spread it in irregular smears.
Place the cream cheese throughout rather than only in one region. This distribution is one reason cheesecake dump cakes can fail when the cream cheese remains clustered and does not integrate.
Step 4: Cover with Strawberry Cake Mix
- Sprinkle the strawberry cake mix evenly over the entire surface.
- Do not stir it in.
This is the defining characteristic of a dump cake. The dry mix will hydrate and bake into both the crust-like top and part of the interior.
Step 5: Drizzle Melted Butter
- Melt the butter until fully liquid.
- Drizzle or pour it over the cake mix, covering as much surface area as possible.
If you notice dry patches after pouring, lightly reposition the butter with a spoon. Under-buttered areas tend to become overly powdery.
Step 6: Bake Until Bubbling and Set
- Bake at 350°F (175°C) for 35 to 50 minutes.
- Start checking around 35 minutes.
Look for these cues:
- The edges should bubble steadily.
- The center should no longer appear wet and raw under the top layer.
- The surface should look set and lightly browned.
Baking time varies based on your oven and how soft the cream cheese was. A slightly longer bake produces a firmer top and reduces surface moisture, but it can also dry the fruit layer if overextended.
Step 7: Rest Before Slicing
Let the dump cake rest for 15 to 25 minutes after baking.
Resting matters for texture. Straight from the oven, the filling can be fluid and difficult to slice. After resting, the cream cheese thickens further as it cools.
Variations and Practical Adjustments
Adjusting Sweetness and Tartness
If your strawberry pie filling is very sweet, you may prefer serving with plain yogurt or unsweetened whipped cream to balance richness. For a tangier profile, choose a pie filling labeled “strawberry” that includes fruit pieces, as these often contain more balanced flavor.
Changing the Cheesecake Flavor Intensity
Cream cheese is the flavor driver. If you want a more pronounced cheesecake character, the main adjustment is to distribute cream cheese more thoroughly and ensure it softens. Avoid adding extra cream cheese beyond reasonable limits without adjusting bake time. Excess cream cheese can increase internal moisture and extend baking requirements.
Adding Strawberry Chunks for Texture
For a fruit-forward bite:
- Stir 1/2 cup chopped strawberries (about 75 g) into the pie filling before layering.
- Alternatively, scatter a small handful of chopped strawberries on top after the pie filling and before the cream cheese.
This can add a fresh flavor and provide contrast with the pie filling’s thickness.
Using Vanilla (Optional)
A small amount of vanilla extract can round out flavor. Add 1 to 2 teaspoons (5 to 10 ml) blended into the pie filling or mixed into the softened cream cheese.
Do not add large amounts, since the goal is to preserve strawberry dominance.
Troubleshooting Common Issues
The Center Is Too Runny
Causes can include:
- Underbaking (insufficient time for bubbling and set)
- Overly soft or melted cream cheese pockets that fail to thicken
- An oven temperature lower than stated
Fixes:
- Bake 5 to 10 minutes longer next time.
- Ensure the oven is fully preheated.
- Rest adequately before cutting.
The Top Is Dry or Powdery
This typically results from:
- Insufficient butter coverage
- Cake mix sprinkled unevenly
- Bake time too short
Fix:
- Use the full amount of melted butter and drizzle evenly.
- Spread cake mix into an even layer.
- Bake until set, not merely warmed through.
The Cake Looks Done but Tastes Under-Integrated
Sometimes the strawberry topping can feel separate if cream cheese is not dispersed and if cake mix stays largely unhydrated. Distribution and contact matter.
Fix:
- Dollop or smear cream cheese throughout, not only in a single row.
- Pour butter in small passes to reach more dry mix.
Edges Burn While Center Is Not Set
This often indicates uneven heating or too high a bake temperature. It can also occur when the dish is placed too close to the broiler.
Fixes:
- Keep the oven at 350°F (175°C).
- Move the rack to the middle position.
- Cover loosely with foil for the last 10 to 15 minutes if browning occurs early.
Serving Suggestions That Respect the Dessert
A strawberry cheesecake dump cake is rich and moist, so serving needs restraint.
- Serve at warm or room temperature.
- Add a modest portion of unsweetened whipped cream or Greek yogurt if you want a tangy balance.
- For clean slicing, use a wide spatula and cut after resting.
Avoid overly sweet sauces that duplicate the pie filling.
Why This Method Works
The strawberry cheesecake dump cake relies on staged melting and thickening. The pie filling heats and reduces slightly, concentrating flavor while loosening into a sauce. Cream cheese melts and then thickens, providing the cheesecake-like body. Cake mix hydrates under butter, creating a crumbly top and partial interior set.
This sequence explains why certain steps should not be altered. If the cake mix is stirred into the fruit, the texture can become gummy rather than layered. If cream cheese is omitted or replaced incorrectly, the dessert loses the custard effect that differentiates it from a basic strawberry dump cake.
If you’re curious about how baking temperatures and time affect doneness, see guidance from USDA on food temperature and safe handling (usefully educational when planning timing for baked dishes).
For more 9×13-friendly strawberry dessert inspiration, try Best Strawberry Dump Cake (Quick Dessert for a Crowd).
Short Conclusion
A strawberry cheesecake dump cake is a layered dessert that combines strawberry pie filling, cream cheese, and strawberry cake mix in a 9×13 baking dish. With even layering, sufficient melted butter, and correct baking time followed by a rest period, it produces a creamy interior and a lightly browned top without the labor of traditional cheesecake. The method is straightforward, but consistent texture depends on details: distribution of cream cheese, coverage of dry mix with butter, and patience before slicing.
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