This churros recipe produces the crispy, golden, cinnamon-sugar-dusted Spanish churros you've been dreaming about — with a shatteringly crunchy ridged exterior, a soft and pillowy interior, and a thick dark chocolate dipping sauce that makes every bite dangerously good. The whole thing comes together in 35 minutes, start to finish. No special equipment beyond a piping bag and a pot of oil.
Churros are one of those foods that sounds harder to make at home than they actually are. The dough is a choux paste — the same base used for cream puffs and eclairs — which requires no yeast, no rising time, and no special mixer. You cook it on the stovetop, stir in a few eggs, and pipe it straight into hot oil. The result is a light, hollow interior surrounded by a crispy ridged crust that shatters when you bite through it. Rolled in warm cinnamon sugar while still fresh from the fryer, they're genuinely one of the most satisfying things you can make in a home kitchen.
The chocolate dipping sauce in this recipe is not an afterthought. It's a proper thick ganache-style sauce made from real dark chocolate and heavy cream, finished with a knob of butter and a pinch of cinnamon. It coats the churro generously rather than sliding off like a thin syrup would. If you've only ever had churros with a watery chocolate dip, this sauce will change your perspective on the whole dish.
I've tested this recipe dozens of times across different oil temperatures, dough consistencies, and piping tip sizes to nail down exactly what produces the best churros at home. The key findings are in the recipe below — and the answers to the most common churro questions are in the FAQ section at the bottom of this page.
The Secret to Crispy Homemade Churros
The single most important variable in churro-making is oil temperature. The oil must be at exactly 375°F (190°C) before you pipe in the dough. Too low — below 350°F — and the churros absorb oil before the outer crust can form, producing a greasy, soft result that bears no resemblance to the real thing. Too high — above 390°F — and the outside burns dark before the center cooks through, giving you a raw, doughy core. A cheap candy or fry thermometer is the most important tool you can own for this recipe.
The second secret is the star-tipped piping nozzle. Traditional Spanish churros have a distinct ridged profile created by an open-star tip — typically a 1M or 6B size. Those ridges aren't just decorative: they dramatically increase the surface area in contact with the hot oil, which means more crispiness per churro. A smooth round tip will produce a softer, more bread-like result. If you're serious about making authentic crispy churros, the star tip is a non-negotiable investment that costs less than two dollars.
The third factor is batch size. Dropping too many churros in the oil at once causes the temperature to plunge, and you end up frying at the wrong temperature for the first minute or two. Limit yourself to four or five churros per batch, let the oil return to temperature between batches, and every single one will come out uniformly golden and crispy.
Understanding the Choux Dough
Churro dough is made using the choux (pronounced "shoo") method, which sounds fancy but is one of the most forgiving doughs in pastry cooking. You start by boiling water with butter, sugar, and salt until the butter melts completely. Then you dump all the flour in at once and stir furiously until the dough comes together into a smooth ball. This initial cooking step is called the panade, and it's important: it pre-gelatinizes the starch in the flour, which is what allows the dough to absorb a large number of eggs without becoming too wet to pipe.
After the panade, you cook the dough on the burner for another minute or two, stirring constantly. This step drives off extra moisture from the dough — the drier the dough at this stage, the more eggs it can take on, and the puffier and lighter the final churros will be. You'll know it's ready when the dough starts to pull away from the sides of the pan in a clean ball and a thin film forms on the bottom of the pan.
Adding the eggs is where beginners sometimes lose confidence, because the dough looks like it breaks apart when you add the first egg. Keep beating. The gluten structure in the flour is what eventually pulls everything back together into a smooth, glossy dough. By the time you've added all three eggs, you'll have a thick, pipeable paste that holds the ridges of the star tip perfectly under pressure.
The Chocolate Dipping Sauce
The classic Spanish accompaniment to churros is thick hot chocolate — a drink so thick it's almost a sauce, served specifically for dunking. This recipe takes that concept and turns it into a proper dipping sauce using a ganache technique: hot cream poured over chopped dark chocolate, then stirred until smooth. The ratio of cream to chocolate (1:2 by weight) produces a sauce that's thick enough to coat but still fluid enough to dip into easily.
Use good-quality dark chocolate in the 60–70% cacao range. Anything lighter than 60% will be too sweet next to the already-sweet cinnamon-sugar coating; anything above 75% can taste bitter in this context unless you add a touch more sugar. The tablespoon of butter stirred in at the end adds a glossy sheen and a subtle richness that makes the sauce look and taste like something from a professional chocolatier. The pinch of cinnamon connects the sauce to the churro coating and gives the whole dessert a cohesive, unified flavor profile.
The sauce can be made up to three days in advance and reheated gently in a small saucepan over low heat or in a microwave in 20-second intervals, stirring between each. It will thicken as it cools and needs to be warm — not hot — for the best dipping consistency.
Serving Ideas and Variations
Classic churros con chocolate is the gold-standard presentation, but there's a lot of room to riff on this recipe. Dulce de leche is a wonderful substitute or companion for the chocolate sauce — its caramel richness pairs perfectly with the cinnamon sugar coating. Vanilla pastry cream is another excellent option for a lighter, less intense dip. For a completely different flavor direction, skip the cinnamon in the sugar coating and roll the churros in plain sugar, then serve with a matcha white chocolate sauce.
For a dessert platter presentation, pile the churros in a rustic heap on a wooden board, dust with extra powdered sugar, and arrange two or three small ramekins of dipping sauces alongside. Churros are a crowd-pleasing party dessert precisely because they're best eaten communally and with your hands — the informality is part of their appeal.
Mini churros (about 3 inches long) make excellent bite-sized party appetizers. Pipe them smaller, reduce the fry time to about 90 seconds per side, and serve on a tray. They disappear at a rate that will make you question why you didn't make a double batch.