Strawberry shortcake tiramisu lands in that sweet spot between nostalgic and elegant: creamy mascarpone, juicy strawberries, and coffee-soaked ladyfingers that soften just enough without turning soggy. Each spoonful gives you cool cream, bright fruit, and a little bitterness from the coffee, which keeps the dessert from reading as heavy or one-note.
What makes this version work is the balance. The strawberries sit with sugar long enough to release their juices, then those juices get layered back into the dessert instead of being drained away. The coffee and strawberry liqueur or jam add depth, but the ladyfingers only get a quick dip, so the layers hold their shape after chilling. That resting time matters as much as the mixing.
Below, you’ll find the exact point where the mascarpone needs to be smooth, how long to dip the ladyfingers, and a few smart swaps if you want to adjust the alcohol, the coffee, or the presentation.
The mascarpone filling stayed fluffy after chilling, and the strawberry juices soaked into the top layer just enough without making the whole pan soft. I used jam instead of liqueur and it still tasted balanced.
Save this strawberry shortcake tiramisu for the nights when you want a layered dessert with bright berries, mascarpone cream, and an easy cross-section reveal.
The Trick to Keeping the Layers Distinct Instead of Slumping Together
The biggest failure in layered tiramisu desserts is too much liquid. Ladyfingers are thirsty, and once they cross from dipped to drenched, they collapse into the cream and the whole dessert turns muddy. A fast dip in the coffee mixture gives you flavor without sacrificing structure, which is what lets each slice hold those clean stripes.
The other place people lose the texture is in the mascarpone mixture. If the cream gets overmixed after it’s folded in, the filling can turn loose and grainy instead of plush. Stop folding as soon as the mixture looks uniform and billowy. Then let the fridge do the setting work instead of trying to whip it into submission.
- Quick-dip ladyfingers — One second per side is enough. They should look moistened, not saturated.
- Cold rest — The four-hour chill is not optional if you want clean slices. Overnight is even better.
- Layering order — Strawberries go between cream layers, not just on top, so the fruit flavor runs through the whole pan.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Dessert

- Mascarpone — This is the backbone of the filling. It gives you that rich, smooth tiramisu texture that cream cheese can imitate but not fully replace. If you must swap, use full-fat cream cheese, but expect a tangier, denser result.
- Heavy cream — Whipped cream lightens the mascarpone and gives the filling lift. Anything lighter won’t hold the same structure after chilling.
- Fresh strawberries — These bring the shortcake side of the dessert to life. Slice them evenly so they soften at the same rate and release juice in a controlled way.
- Cooled coffee — Coffee keeps the dessert from tasting flat. It should be strong and fully cooled; warm coffee will melt the filling and over-soften the cookies.
- Strawberry liqueur or jam — This is the bridge between the coffee and the berries. Liqueur adds a sharper, more grown-up note, while jam gives you concentrated strawberry flavor without alcohol.
- Ladyfingers — They’re the structure here. Dry, airy ladyfingers absorb liquid fast, which is why the dip has to be brief and the layering has to move quickly.
Building the Dessert So the Filling Stays Light and the Cookies Stay Intact
Whipping the Mascarpone Base
Beat the mascarpone and powdered sugar first until the mixture turns smooth and loose. If the mascarpone is still cold and stiff, it can look lumpy for a minute, so give it time before you add the whipped cream. In a separate bowl, whip the cream and vanilla to stiff peaks; when you lift the beater, the peak should stand straight without drooping. Fold the whipped cream into the mascarpone gently, or you’ll knock out the air and lose that mousse-like texture.
Soaking the Strawberries
Let the sliced strawberries sit with sugar until they look glossy and juicy. That short rest draws out liquid that becomes part of the dessert instead of leaking out later. Don’t skip this step for the sake of speed, because dry strawberries on top of a chilled cream layer taste flat compared with fruit that has had a little time to macerate. If your berries are very ripe, they may only need a few minutes.
Layering Without Over-Softening
Mix the cooled coffee with strawberry liqueur or jam in a shallow dish so the ladyfingers can be dipped quickly and evenly. Lay them into the dish in a single layer, then spread on half the cream and half the strawberries with their juices. Repeat with the second layer, working efficiently so the cookies don’t sit in the liquid long enough to collapse. A light hand here gives you defined layers instead of a pudding-like pan.
Chilling for a Clean Slice
Cover the pan and refrigerate it for at least four hours, though overnight gives the best slice and the deepest flavor. The filling firms, the cookies finish softening, and the strawberry juices settle into the cream. Add the shredded dark chocolate right before serving so it stays textured on top instead of melting into the surface. If you cut too early, the layers will slump and the dessert won’t hold its shape.
How to Adapt This Dessert for a Lighter Pan, an Alcohol-Free Version, or a Bigger Crowd
Alcohol-Free Strawberry Tiramisu
Use strawberry jam instead of liqueur in the coffee mixture. It adds sweetness and a fuller strawberry note without changing the texture, though the flavor will be a little softer and less sharp than the liqueur version.
Gluten-Free Version
Swap in gluten-free ladyfingers if you can find them. They should be dipped just as briefly as the regular ones, since gluten-free cookies can soften even faster once they hit the coffee mixture.
More Berry, Less Coffee
If you want the dessert to lean closer to strawberry shortcake, reduce the coffee a little and add an extra spoonful of jam to the soak. You’ll lose some of the classic tiramisu bitterness, but the berry flavor gets brighter and the dessert tastes more playful.
Make-Ahead Storage
Cover the assembled dessert tightly and refrigerate for up to 2 days. The texture stays excellent through the first day and still holds well on day two, though the ladyfingers soften more as it sits. This dessert doesn’t freeze well because the mascarpone and berries can turn grainy and watery after thawing.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Strawberry Shortcake Tiramisu
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Beat mascarpone and powdered sugar together until smooth, then stop and scrape down the bowl to remove any lumps (cooling not required).
- In a separate bowl, whip heavy cream and vanilla until stiff peaks form, then fold the whipped cream into the mascarpone mixture until no streaks remain.
- Toss sliced strawberries with sugar and let sit for 10 minutes to release juices, then stir once so they coat evenly.
- Combine cooled coffee with strawberry liqueur or jam in a shallow dish so the mixture is ready for dipping ladyfingers.
- Dip ladyfingers briefly in the coffee mixture and arrange in a single layer in a 9x13 baking dish, using a light touch and laying them snugly together.
- Spread half the mascarpone cream over the ladyfingers, then top with half the strawberries and their juices for a thick, glossy layer.
- Repeat with another layer of dipped ladyfingers, then finish with remaining mascarpone cream and strawberries.
- Cover and refrigerate for at least 4 hours to set the layers, keeping the dish chilled until ready to serve.
- Before serving, top with shredded dark chocolate as a fresh visual cue on top of the chilled tiramisu.


