Golden-fried wontons with a creamy strawberry cheesecake center are the kind of dessert that disappears fast once they hit the plate. The wrapper turns crisp and blistered in the oil, while the filling stays smooth, lightly tangy, and just sweet enough to taste like cheesecake without feeling heavy. A final dusting of powdered sugar makes them look bakery-fancy with almost no extra work.
What makes these work is the balance: softened cream cheese gets beaten until fluffy before the strawberries go in, which keeps the filling smooth instead of dense. The jam deepens the strawberry flavor and helps the fruit taste more cooked and concentrated, even though the filling never goes near the stove. The wrappers only need a small spoonful of filling, or they’ll split in the fryer before the center has time to warm through.
Below you’ll find the part that matters most — how to seal them cleanly, how to keep the oil hot, and how to avoid the soggy, greasy batch that happens when the fryer gets crowded.
The filling stayed creamy and the wrappers came out shatter-crisp. I also liked that the strawberry pieces stayed in place instead of leaking everywhere, which made them easy to fry in batches.
Save these fried strawberry cheesecake wonton bites for the dessert table when you want something crisp, creamy, and easy to dip warm.
The Reason These Wontons Stay Crisp Instead of Soggy
The biggest failure point with fried dessert wontons is a filling that leaks before the wrapper has a chance to seal. Cream cheese alone is stable, but once it’s loosened too much with fruit, it can push through the seams and spit into the oil. The fix is keeping the filling thick and using only a teaspoon per wrapper. That small amount heats fast, which means you get a crisp shell and a creamy center at the same time.
Oil temperature matters just as much. At 350°F, the wrappers brown in a couple of minutes without soaking up too much oil. If the oil runs cool, the wontons absorb grease and soften as they sit. If it runs too hot, the outside can brown before the filling warms through, leaving you with a shell that tastes done but a center that still feels chilly.
- Thin filling — The strawberries should be diced small and folded in gently. Large pieces release too much juice and make sealing harder.
- Small portioning — One teaspoon per wrapper is enough. More filling raises the chance of bursting in the fryer.
- Hot oil — A steady 350°F gives you the best balance of browning and crunch without greasiness.
- Batch frying — Crowding the pan drops the oil temperature fast, which is the fastest way to lose that crisp finish.
What the Strawberry and Cream Cheese Are Each Doing Here

- Cream cheese — This is the base that gives the filling its cheesecake character. It needs to be softened first so it beats smooth; cold cream cheese stays lumpy and won’t fold evenly with the fruit.
- Powdered sugar — Granulated sugar can leave the filling grainy. Powdered sugar dissolves quickly and helps the mixture stay silky.
- Fresh strawberries — Fresh berries give little bursts of fruit and keep the filling bright. Dice them finely so they distribute evenly instead of tearing the wrapper.
- Strawberry jam — This is the quiet ingredient that makes the strawberry flavor taste fuller. It also adds a little body, which helps keep the filling from running.
- Wonton wrappers — These fry up thin and brittle, which is exactly what you want here. Egg roll wrappers are too thick for this dessert and can end up chewy instead of crisp.
- Chocolate sauce or strawberry sauce — Either one works, but keep the dip on the side so the wontons stay crisp until the last bite. Pouring sauce over them turns the shell soft fast.
Frying Them So the Shell Stays Light and the Center Stays Creamy
Mixing the filling
Beat the cream cheese and powdered sugar until the mixture looks fluffy and smooth, with no visible lumps on the sides of the bowl. Fold in the strawberries, jam, and vanilla only until combined. If you overmix at this point, the berries break down and the filling gets loose, which makes sealing harder and increases the chance of leaks.
Folding and sealing the wrappers
Set each wrapper flat and keep the other ones covered with a barely damp towel so they don’t dry out and crack. Place the filling in the center, then brush the edges lightly with water before folding into a triangle and pressing out any trapped air. Air pockets expand in the fryer, and that’s when seams split open.
Frying to the right color
Heat the oil to 350°F and fry in small batches, turning once if needed so both sides brown evenly. The wontons are ready when they’re golden, blistered, and crisp to the touch, usually in 2 to 3 minutes. Pull them before they get too dark, because they continue to color for a moment after leaving the oil.
Finishing and serving warm
Drain the wontons on paper towels for just a minute, then dust them with powdered sugar while they’re still warm enough for it to cling. Serve them right away with chocolate sauce or strawberry sauce for dipping. They’re at their best within the first 15 minutes, when the shell is still crisp and the filling is soft but not runny.
How to Adapt These for Different Cravings and Diets
Make them gluten-free
Use gluten-free dumpling wrappers if you can find them, but watch the fry time closely because some versions brown faster than standard wonton wrappers. The filling stays the same. The texture will still be crisp, though usually a little more delicate.
Swap the fruit
Blueberries, raspberries, or finely diced peaches all work, but each one changes the filling’s moisture level. Berries with more juice should be chopped smaller and used sparingly so the wrappers don’t soften before frying.
Bake instead of fry
Brush the sealed wontons lightly with melted butter or neutral oil and bake at 400°F until crisp and browned, flipping once. You won’t get the same blistered shell as frying, but you’ll still get a crackly exterior and a warm cheesecake center with less mess.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 2 days. The wrapper softens as it sits, so they won’t stay as crisp as when freshly fried.
- Freezer: Freeze the un-fried, sealed wontons on a tray until firm, then move them to a freezer bag for up to 1 month. Fry straight from frozen and add another minute or so to the cook time.
- Reheating: Reheat cooked wontons in an air fryer or oven at 375°F until hot and crisp again. The microwave will soften the shell and make it chewy, which is the one mistake that ruins the texture.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Fried Strawberry Cheesecake Wonton Bites
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Beat the cream cheese and powdered sugar until fluffy, about 1-2 minutes, so the mixture turns smooth and light in color.
- Fold in the diced strawberries, strawberry jam, and vanilla extract until the filling is evenly speckled and cohesive.
- Place 1 teaspoon of filling in the center of each wonton wrapper.
- Fold the corners together to form a triangle, then seal the edges with water so they don’t open while frying.
- Heat vegetable oil to 350°F (170°C) in a Dutch oven until it reaches a steady frying temperature.
- Fry the wontons in batches for 2-3 minutes until golden and crispy, turning once if needed for even browning.
- Drain the fried wontons on paper towels or a sheet pan to remove excess oil.
- Dust with powdered sugar, then serve warm with chocolate sauce or strawberry sauce for dipping.


