Delish White Chocolate Pumpkin Truffles

These are the cozy little sweets I make when fall hits and I want something that feels like a sweater for your taste buds. White chocolate on the outside, pumpkin-spiced truffle on the inside—soft, creamy, a little gingery from the cookie crumbs, and just fancy enough to impress your mother-in-law without breaking a sweat. They’re dangerously poppable, no bake, and the kind of treat that makes your kitchen smell like you meant to plan ahead.
The first time I made these, my husband said, “Only save three for me,” and then promptly ate five before they were set. Our kid calls them “pumpkin snowballs,” which is adorable until I find powdered cookie dust in every corner of the house. These truffles have become our annual signal that it’s officially fall. They’re the thing I bring to school bake sales, book club, and also to the couch at 9:30 PM with hot tea. Prep’s chill, the dips look fancy, and if you can roll a meatball, you can make these.
Why You’ll Love This Delish White Chocolate Pumpkin Truffles
– They taste like pumpkin pie went to pastry school and came back wearing a white chocolate tuxedo.
– No oven, no drama—just mix, roll, chill, dip. Your kind of project.
– They freeze like a dream, so you can stash a secret mom/husband/you-only stash.
– Ridiculously customizable: gingersnaps or grahams, drizzle or sprinkle, yes to all of it.
– They look bakery-level even if your kitchen’s a lovable disaster.
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How to Make It
Grab a small bowl of pumpkin puree and blot it with paper towels a couple times—sounds fussy, but pumpkin is watery and that’s what makes truffles go mushy. In a mixing bowl, mash softened cream cheese with a spoon till it’s smooth-ish. Stir in the pumpkin, pumpkin pie spice, a pinch of salt, and a little vanilla if you’re feeling it. Now rain in your finely crushed gingersnap crumbs (or graham crackers if you’re team mild) and mix until it turns into a soft dough. If it looks like baby food, add more crumbs. If it’s crumbly, a smidge more pumpkin.
Scoop into little balls—about a tablespoon each—roll with slightly damp hands, and line them up on a parchment sheet like tiny pumpkins at a farmer’s market. Freeze 20–30 minutes so they firm up and behave.
Melt white chocolate low and slow—microwave in 15–20 second bursts, stirring each time, or use a double boiler like a person who washes extra dishes. If it’s thick, a teaspoon of coconut oil or neutral oil loosens it right up. Dip the chilled balls using a fork, tap off extra, and set them back on the parchment. Sprinkle crushed cookies or a dust of cinnamon while the chocolate’s still glossy. Chill again till set. Eat one for quality control. Okay, two.
Ingredient Notes
– Pumpkin puree: Use plain canned pumpkin, not pie filling. Blot with paper towels so your truffles don’t slouch. Fresh puree works if you cook it down a bit.
– Gingersnap or graham crumbs: Gingersnaps bring spice and snap; grahams are softer and sweeter. Crush super fine—food processor is easiest.
– Cream cheese: Full-fat = creamy center that sets nicely. Room temp so it blends without little lumps. Dairy-free works, but chill longer.
– White chocolate: Melting wafers are the least fussy. Chips can seize if you look at them wrong—add 1–2 teaspoons oil and melt gently.
– Pumpkin pie spice: No blend? Use cinnamon + ginger + nutmeg + a whisper of cloves. Heavy hand means it tastes like a candle—go easy.
– Coconut oil (optional): Smooths the melt for dipping. Skip if your chocolate is already thin and shiny.
Recipe Steps
1. Blot 1/2 cup pumpkin puree with paper towels to remove excess moisture.
2. Beat 4 oz softened cream cheese until smooth, then stir in pumpkin, 1–1 1/2 teaspoons pumpkin pie spice, 1/2 teaspoon vanilla, and a pinch of salt.
3. Mix in 2–2 1/2 cups very fine gingersnap (or graham) crumbs until a soft dough forms; adjust crumbs as needed.
4. Scoop and roll 1-tablespoon balls; place on a parchment-lined sheet and freeze 20–30 minutes.
5. Melt 16 oz white chocolate (wafers preferred) in short bursts; stir in 1–2 teaspoons coconut oil if thick.
6. Dip chilled balls, tap off excess, garnish with cookie crumbs or cinnamon, and chill until set.
What to Serve It With
– Hot coffee or a maple latte for peak fall vibes.
– Apple cider (hot or cold) if you’re a cinnamon person.
– A scoop of vanilla ice cream for full dessert energy.
– Salty snacks (pretzels, roasted nuts) to balance the sweet.
Tips & Mistakes
– Don’t skip blotting the pumpkin—extra moisture = floppy truffles.
– If the mix is sticky, add more crumbs and chill. If it’s crumbly, add a teaspoon of pumpkin.
– Keep the balls cold for dipping; work in batches so they don’t melt into the chocolate.
– Burned white chocolate tastes like sadness. Low power, short bursts, lots of stirring.
– Tap your fork on the bowl’s edge to clean off drips for a neat shell.
Storage Tips
Fridge: Keep them in an airtight container up to 1 week. They’re best cold—like cheesecake bites wearing white chocolate coats.
Freezer: Freeze up to 2 months. Eat straight from the freezer for an extra snappy shell, or let them sit 5–10 minutes. Will I eat them for breakfast? Yes. Do I regret it? Not once.
Variations and Substitutions
– Swap gingersnaps ↔ graham crackers ↔ vanilla wafers. Gluten-free cookies work great too.
– Coat in dark or milk chocolate if white isn’t your thing. Still dreamy.
– Add-ins: finely chopped toasted pecans, a little orange zest, or a spoon of maple syrup (but adjust crumbs).
– No cream cheese? Try cookie butter or almond butter; chill longer and expect a softer center.
– Dairy-free: use plant-based cream cheese and dairy-free white chocolate.
– Not big on spice? Stick to cinnamon only, or go chai-ish with cardamom.
Frequently Asked Questions

Delish White Chocolate Pumpkin Truffles
Ingredients
Main Ingredients
- 16 oz white chocolate melting wafers for coating
- 1 tbsp coconut oil optional, to thin chocolate
- 0.5 cup pumpkin puree well-blotted to remove excess moisture
- 4 oz cream cheese softened
- 0.25 cup powdered sugar
- 0.75 cup graham cracker crumbs finely ground
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 1 tsp pumpkin pie spice
- 0.25 tsp fine sea salt
- 0.25 cup gingersnap cookie crumbs optional, for garnish
Instructions
Preparation Steps
- Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. Spread the pumpkin puree onto several layers of paper towel and blot well to remove excess moisture; set aside.
- In a medium bowl, beat the softened cream cheese, powdered sugar, vanilla, pumpkin pie spice, and salt until smooth and creamy.
- Stir in the blotted pumpkin puree until fully incorporated.
- Fold in the graham cracker crumbs until a soft dough forms. Cover and refrigerate until firm enough to scoop, about 30 minutes.
- Scoop the mixture into 24 portions (about 1 tablespoon each), roll into smooth balls, and place on the prepared baking sheet. Freeze for 15 minutes to set.
- Melt the white chocolate with the coconut oil in a microwave-safe bowl using 20-second bursts, stirring between each, until smooth and fluid.
- Using a fork or dipping tool, coat each chilled ball in the melted white chocolate, letting excess drip off, then return to the parchment-lined sheet.
- Immediately sprinkle with gingersnap crumbs or a pinch of pumpkin pie spice before the coating sets.
- Refrigerate until firm, about 15 minutes. Serve chilled and store in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 5 days.
Notes
Featured Comments
“Impressed! Clear steps and so flavorful results. Perfect for busy nights.”
“Super easy and will make again! My family asked for seconds. Saving this one.”
“Super easy and absolutely loved! My family asked for seconds. Saving this one.”
“This rich recipe was will make again — the sweet treat really stands out. Thanks!”
“This rich recipe was absolutely loved — the sweet treat really stands out. Thanks!”
“New favorite here — will make again. rich was spot on.”
“New favorite here — turned out amazing. sweet treat was spot on.”
“Super easy and turned out amazing! My family asked for seconds. Saving this one.”
“Impressed! Clear steps and absolutely loved results. Perfect for busy nights.”
“This creamy recipe was will make again — the sweet treat really stands out. Thanks!”