Cannoli Bites

Published April 10, 2013. Updated March 18, 2020

This post may contain affiliate links. Read our disclosure policy.

All the flavors of cannoli in mini oven baked treats. Made with a crisp pastry shell, filled with a sweet ricotta filling and finished with chocolate chips. Who could resist this tempting treat?

Cannoli Bites {Cooking Classy}

Make these Cannoli Bites. Devour these Cannoli Bites. That is all I have to say. Okay not really all I have to say because these are my dream dessert, I have such a soft spot for Italian and French pastries so, really I have plenty to say about these.

First of all, the cups for these are made from a cannoli dough (I made it a bit thicker than I would for a cannoli shell that would be wrapped around a flute and fried, simply so it could hold it’s shape a little better). The cups are baked in mini muffin cups, not fried.

So, to add a bit of that fried flavor I sprayed them with vegetable oil before baking (so I suppose if you want to be a bit healthier you could leave it off, but I think it’s nearly a must).

I’m not a traditional cannoli filling kind of person, I need a cannoli filling with Mascarpone to be completely satisfied with this dessert. There is just so much Mascarpone has to offer that Ricotta doesn’t, so whenever I make cannoli anything I always use a combo of both. Mascarpone is probably the best cheese this world has to offer. Okay along with cheddar, I am American. It’s like cream cheese meets royalty.

Cannoli Bites {Cooking Classy}

It’s utterly creamy texture and delicate sweetness is something no other can imitate. I’d call it the cheese of Heaven. Anyways, yes cannoli needs Mascarpone but it is not the most traditional way. Another cannoli must I’d say is some form of chocolate.

IMG_6171

Whether you dip the shells in chocolate or sprinkle these with mini chocolate chips (or chopped chocolate or even chocolate curls), please don’t leave the chocolate out.

And If you really want to make these fancy, dip and coat the shells with pistachios. It makes them not only irresistibly decadent but also pistachio cannolis are such an Italian classic.

IMG_6174

If you have sweet Marsala wine on hand you can use that in place of the juice and vinegar (so just omit both of those and replace it with 1/2 cup Marsala wine).

Take these to your next party and they may likely become the highlight of the gathering. I don’t care who’s there or what awaits for dinner, I just want cannoli bites =). Enjoy!

cannoli cups

Cannoli Bites {Cooking Classy} cannoli bites19
Cannoli Bites {Cooking Classy}

16 Quick & Easy 30 Minute Recipes! (plus weekly recipe updates)

4.12 from 9 votes

Cannoli Bites

All the flavors of cannoli in mini oven baked treats. Made with a crisp pastry shell, filled with a sweet ricotta filling and finished with chocolate chips. Who could resist this tempting treat?
Servings: 48 bites
Prep30 minutes
Cook12 minutes
Ready in: 2 hours

Ingredients

Cannoli cups:

Cannoli Filling

  • 12 oz whole milk Ricotta cheese , strained
  • 8 oz Mascarpone cheese
  • 1/2 cup powdered sugar**
  • 1/3 cup mini semi-sweet chocolate chips
  • powdered sugar , for dusting (optional)
  • Optional toppings:
  • Melted chocolate , chopped pistachios, sprinkles, toasted sweetened coconut

Instructions

  • For the cannoli cups:
  • Add flour, granulated sugar, cocoa powder, cinnamon, nutmeg and salt to a food processor and pulse until blended. Pour in melted butter and pulse until well combined then add egg white and pulse until blended.
  • In a bowl combine juice and vinegar, with processor running slowly pour in juice mixture and pulse just until mixture begins to come together.
  • Divide dough into two pieces, shape into balls and transfer to a resealable bag. Chill in refrigerator 30 minutes - 1 hour. Preheat oven to 400 degrees during last 10 minutes of refrigeration.
  • Meanwhile prepare filling. In a mixing bowl, using a rubber or silicone spatula, blend together Ricotta and Mascarpone cheese while running and pressing mixture along bottom of bowl to remove any lumps. Fold in powdered sugar. Cover and chill 30 minutes (or until ready to use).
  • Roll each chilled dough out on a lightly floured surface (dust top with flour too) into a 14-inch circle, to about an 1/8-inch thickeness. Cut into circles using a 2 1/2-inch round biscuit cutter.
  • Transfer rounds to an ungreased mini muffin tin, pressing evenly into sides and bottom of muffin well. Spray tops evenly with vegetable oil spray (I just poured vegetable oil in to my Misto to spray).
  • Bake in preheated oven 11 - 13 minutes until lightly golden (I liked these best crisp). Remove from oven and transfer to a wire cooling rack to cool completely. Once cool dip tops in chocolate if desired then into coating if using (such as pistachios) and allow chocolate to set.
  • Remove cannoli filling from refrigerator, transfer to a piping bag fitted with a tip (or you can use a large resealable bag and cut the tip of the end). Pipe filling into cups and sprinkle with chocolate chips and dust with powdered sugar. For best results serve within 2 hours. Store in refrigerator.
  • *Update - some have mentioned their dough being too thick and not elastic enough to keep a shape when rolling and cutting, so I'v updated it to be 6 - 8 Tbsp of juice rather than just 6 Tbsp.
  • **You can add 2 Tbsp more if you'd like it a little sweeter.
  • Recipe Source: Cooking Classy, inspiration from Cooking with Sugar

Notes

Please note nutritional information does not include the optional toppings.
Nutrition Facts
Cannoli Bites
Amount Per Serving
Calories 78 Calories from Fat 36
% Daily Value*
Fat 4g6%
Saturated Fat 2g13%
Cholesterol 10mg3%
Sodium 42mg2%
Potassium 23mg1%
Carbohydrates 7g2%
Sugar 2g2%
Protein 1g2%
Vitamin A 125IU3%
Calcium 24mg2%
Iron 0.4mg2%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.
Nutrition values are estimates only. See full disclaimer here.
Cannoli Bites | Cooking Classy

Leave a Comment

Rate this recipe




This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

206 Comments

  • Mackenzie Miller

    Hi!
    These look so yummy and I really want to make them! The problem is I don’t have a food processor (or even a blender). I was wondering if you know an alternative method to this?

    Thanks!

    • Jaclyn

      Jaclyn Bell

      You could just do it by hand with a fork in a mixing bowl. I hope you love them Mackenzie!

    • Jaclyn

      Jaclyn Bell

      Usually it’s in the specialty cheese section of the grocery store, near the deli.

  • Lee Ann Halvorson

    My husband loves cannoli, so I was excited to try this recipe. Even though both the shells and filling tasted great, I some how made my shells too thick and over cooked and the filling runny. I saw some of the other posts so I hope I can fix my mistakes and make them awesome. I did want to find out, can you freeze the dough? also how long does the filling keep? Excited to try again, great recipe- idea!

    • Jaclyn

      Jaclyn Bell

      I imagine you could freeze the dough – I haven’t tried it yet but it seems like it should be fine. As far as the filling goes, it should keep for about 2 or 3 days.

  • Natasha

    Do you recommend using white grape juice or could you try with red grape? Which type or juice/marsala wine did you use in your attempt?

    • Jaclyn

      Jaclyn Bell

      Hi Natasha – I just used apple juice because it’s what I had on hand, but I would probably use white grape (if grape juice is the route you go) just for color.

  • Lisa

    Hi – I just made these and I ruined it somehow. I followed the directions but my filling was like liquid. I added more sugar and it did nothing. What did I do wrong? Im a pretty good baker and follow directions well so I don’t know what happened.

    • Jaclyn

      Jaclyn Bell

      So sorry about that Lisa! You may have had a fairly wet batch of ricotta so I’ve listed above to strain the ricotta and hopefully that is the solution if you make this again. You can do it overnight with cheesecloth but what I usually do is just strain a lot out with many layers of paper towels several times (although I didn’t strain it when I created and listed this recipe but will try it out next time).

    • Grace

      Lisa: I recommend straining the ricotta to the extreme, adding an extra few tablespoons of powdered sugar, and, if you really need it, adding in sifted cornstarch. Also, mix with beaters rather than a spatula. This worked perfectly for me!

  • A little homesickness sparks some good home cooking » The American Paris in Europe

    […] again would be great!  Unfortunately, I am not thoroughly satisfied with the shells for these cannoli bites, but I will continue to experiment.  Filling of sweetened ricotta and mascarpone  is going to […]

  • dawn roberts

    i tried these:
    the shell was to thick and the filling not hard enough, it was thin and nasty..
    what did i do wrong

    • Jaclyn

      Jaclyn Bell

      I’d recommend adding a little more liquid to the dough then rolling thinner, then for the cannoli filling try straining the ricotta first. Hopefully that helps!

  • Jen Lewis

    So excited to try this today but last night I did a quick run of the filling and mixed by hand. The more I mixed and more I added sugar the runnier it became. I was thinking more sugar would make it thick like icing .refriged over night and it is still soupy. . Help!

    • Jaclyn

      Jaclyn Bell

      Next time I would recommend straining the ricotta and possibly try less sugar- sorry yours was runny!