This blueberry cream cheese pie combines a crunchy buttery graham cracker crust, mousse-like cheesecake filling, and homemade blueberry topping. The filling isn’t as heavy as pudding-based cream pies like coconut cream pie. Rather, it’s light and whipped like no-bake cheesecake. The blueberry topping is jammy and sweet and you can make it with frozen blueberries, so this is a wonderful year-round dessert.
If you love baking pie as much as I do, you’ll find plenty of recipe inspiration over in my Pie Recipes category and in my roundup of favorite Thanksgiving pie recipes. I have recipes for all the classics like apple pie and pumpkin pie, and unique favorites like fudge brownie pie and caramel apple cheesecake pie. There are new pie recipes added nearly every month, so make sure you subscribe via email so you don’t miss any. 🙂
Tell Me About This Blueberry Cream Cheese Pie
- Texture: There are 3 layers and each has a different texture. Enjoy the crunchy graham cracker crust, ultra creamy and light mousse-like filling, and jammy blueberry topping in every single bite. A homemade whipped cream garnish is optional, but certainly convenient because it uses ingredients you already need for the pie.
- Flavor: If you enjoy fruity and creamy pies, today’s blueberries & cream pie is right up your alley. The filling is similar to no-bake cheesecake and has a delicious tang from the cream cheese and lemon juice. Blueberries are a natural choice with cheesecake-like desserts and taste wonderful with these layers.
- Baking: The crust sets up in the oven and the filling and topping set up in the refrigerator. Bake the crust for about 15 minutes, cool slightly, and then spread in the filling and add the cooled blueberry topping. This is the same process we use to make strawberry cream cheese pie.
- Time: The hands on work takes much less time than making a traditional blueberry pie. Between the topping, crust, and filling, prep time is about 45 minutes. The filling takes at least 8 hours to set up in the refrigerator, so plan ahead. This pie is a great choice if you don’t have time to make dessert the day of your gathering/meal because it’s best made a day ahead!
10 Ingredients + 3 Separate Layers
You need 10 ingredients total for this cold and refreshing pie and it’s important to make the layers in the following order:
- Blueberry Topping: Cook the blueberry topping on the stove first so it has time to cool down before layering onto the pie. It takes awhile to cool, so you can absolutely make the topping 1-2 days ahead. It’s thicker than my blueberry sauce recipe, and pretty similar to the blueberry swirls used in this blueberry cheesecake and this lemon blueberry tart, so if you’ve tried either recipe before you know it’s easy. Ingredients required include blueberries, cornstarch, lemon juice, and sugar. Use frozen blueberries when it’s not berry season.
- Graham Cracker Crust: I always love a traditional graham cracker crust with creamy pie fillings. You need graham cracker crumbs, sugar, and melted butter. Bake the crust as you work on the filling. It’s ideal that the crust is still slightly warm when you spread in the filling so the filling can adhere.
- Whipped No-Bake Cheesecake: You need heavy cream, cream cheese, confectioners’ sugar, vanilla, and lemon juice. Prepare this layer right before spreading it into the slightly warm crust.
Not pictured: the butter and graham crackers needed for the crust.
Overview & Photos: How to Make the No-Bake Cheesecake Filling
Have you ever made cookies & cream pie, peanut butter pie, or no bake pumpkin cheesecake? We’re doing something similar here. Whip heavy cream into peaks, then set aside. (Pictured below, left.) This unsweetened whipped cream adds a stable, yet creamy foundation. There’s no need for gelatin or other thickening ingredients in the cheesecake filling.
After that comes the cream cheese, confectioners’ sugar, vanilla, and lemon juice. (Pictured below, right.)
Then fold the whipped cream into the cream cheese mixture:
Spread into the baked graham cracker crust. I like using a large or small offset spatula to make the job easier. Spoon the cooled blueberry layer on top, and then let the entire pie set up in the refrigerator for at least 8 hours.
Blueberry cream cheese pie prefers to be made ahead so it sets and slices neatly. 🙂
Homemade whipped cream adds a beautiful finishing touch and I piped it on in a zigzag design using a Wilton 1M piping tip. The whipped cream uses some of the same ingredients you need for the filling, so pick up a pint of heavy cream and use half for the filling and half for the whipped cream garnish.
This recipe is part of Sally’s Pie Week, an annual tradition where I share a handful of new recipes that fit into the pie/crisp/tart category. Join the community below!
PrintBlueberry Cream Cheese Pie
- Prep Time: 45 minutes
- Cook Time: 15 minutes
- Total Time: 9 hours (includes refrigeration)
- Yield: one 9-inch pie
- Category: Dessert
- Method: Whipping
- Cuisine: American
Description
This blueberry cream cheese pie is best made ahead so the filling and topping can set and the pie slices neatly. The blueberry topping is jammy and sweet and you can make it with frozen blueberries, so this is a wonderful year-round dessert.
Ingredients
Blueberry Topping
- 2 teaspoons cornstarch
- 2 teaspoons lemon juice
- 2 and 1/4 cups (around 315g) fresh or frozen blueberries (do not thaw)
- 2 Tablespoons (25g) granulated sugar
Graham Cracker Crust
- 1 and 1/2 cups (180g) graham cracker crumbs (about 12 full sheet graham crackers)
- 1/4 cup (50g) granulated sugar
- 6 Tablespoons (85g) unsalted butter, melted
Filling
- 1 cup (240ml) cold heavy cream
- 12 ounces (339g) full-fat brick cream cheese, softened to room temperature
- 3/4 cup (90g) confectioners’ sugar
- 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
- 1 teaspoon lemon juice
- optional for topping: homemade whipped cream
Instructions
- Make the blueberry topping first so it can cool: Using a fork, mix the cornstarch and lemon juice together in a small bowl until the cornstarch has dissolved. Set aside. Warm the blueberries and sugar together in a small saucepan over medium heat. Cook for 3 minutes stirring occasionally to help them thaw or break down some juices. Stir in the cornstarch mixture. Cook for 2 more minutes as the topping thickens and simmers, stirring occasionally. Remove from heat and set aside at room temperature until step 5. (Must completely cool, so transferring to a bowl out of the saucepan helps speed that up. Feel free to refrigerate.)
- Preheat oven to 350°F (177°C).
- Make the crust: If you’re starting out with full graham crackers, use a food processor or blender to grind them into fine crumbs. Stir the graham cracker crumbs and granulated sugar together in a medium bowl, and then stir in the melted butter. The mixture will be thick, coarse, and sandy. Try to smash/break up any large chunks. Pour the mixture into an ungreased 9-inch pie dish. With medium pressure using your hand, pat the crumbs down into the bottom and up the sides to make a compact crust. Do not pack down with heavy force because that makes the crust too hard. Simply pat down until the mixture is no longer crumby/crumbly. For more shaping technique tips, see the graham cracker crust recipe page. Bake the crust for 15 minutes, remove from the oven, and cool for just 15 minutes as you prepare the filling in the next step.
- Make the filling: Using a hand mixer or a stand mixer fitted with a whisk attachment, whip the cold heavy cream into stiff peaks on medium-high speed, about 4 minutes. Set aside. Using a hand mixer or a stand mixer fitted with a whisk or paddle attachment, beat the cream cheese on medium speed until smooth and creamy. Scrape down the sides and up the bottom of the bowl with a silicone spatula as needed. Add the confectioners’ sugar, vanilla extract, and lemon juice and beat on medium-high speed until combined. Make sure there are no large lumps of cream cheese. If there are lumps, keep beating until smooth. Using your mixer on low speed or a rubber spatula, fold the whipped cream into the cream cheese mixture until combined. This takes several turns of your silicone spatula. Combine slowly as you don’t want to deflate all the air in the whipped cream.
- Assemble layers: Spread filling into slightly cooled crust. Use an offset spatula to smooth down the top. Spoon cooled blueberry filling evenly on top.
- Cover with plastic wrap or aluminum foil and refrigerate for at least 8 hours and up to 2 days. The longer refrigerated, the better the pie will set up. You could also freeze the pie for up to 3 months. Thaw in the refrigerator before serving.
- Feel free to garnish the pie with whipped cream right before or a few hours before serving (keep pie refrigerated after adding whipped cream). I used Wilton 1M piping tip for the whipped cream in the pictured pie. Using a clean sharp knife, cut into slices for serving. For neat slices, wipe the knife clean between each slice. Tip: The first slice is never pretty! Much easier to slice after that 1st piece is out.
- Cover and store leftover pie in the refrigerator or freezer for up to 5 days.
Notes
- Make Ahead Instructions: You can prepare the blueberry topping (step 1) 1–2 days in advance. Cover and refrigerate before using. It’s easiest to spread if it’s at room temperature, so bring to room temperature before spreading on top of filling. You can also freeze the topping for up to 3 months. Thaw, bring to room temperature, then use in the recipe. You can prepare the crust (step 3) up to 2 days in advance. Cover and store baked and cooled crust at room temperature. It must be slightly warm when you spread in the filling so the filling can adhere, so warm in a 350°F (177°C) oven for 1–2 minutes before adding the filling. You can prepare the filling (step 4) 1 day in advance before spreading into the crust in step 5. Cover and refrigerate until ready to use.
- Special Tools (affiliate links): Food Processor (for graham cracker crust) | Glass Mixing Bowls | 9-inch Pie Dish | Electric Mixer (Handheld or Stand) | Silicone Spatula | Offset Spatula | Piping Bag (Reusable or Disposable) | Wilton 1M Piping Tip
- Cream Cheese: Make sure you are using brick cream cheese and not cream cheese spread. Bricks of cream cheese are typically 8 ounces (226g) each, so you need 1 and 1/2 bricks.
- Other Pie Crust: Feel free to swap the graham cracker crust for traditional pie crust. This is my favorite pie crust and I also have this all butter pie crust too. You will need to fully par-bake the pie crust shell.
- Other Fruit Topping: Feel free to make my strawberry cream cheese pie version instead. Or you can replace the blueberries in this recipe with quartered cherries. If using cherries, I recommend adding another 1/2 teaspoon of cornstarch. Raspberries and blackberries get a little too juicy, so I recommend avoiding those unless you do a mixed berry topping with those, blueberries, and strawberries.
- Non-US Readers: If graham crackers are not available where you live, we have also tested this pie with a crust made from digestive biscuits, and it turned out great. Use 200g ground digestive biscuit crumbs (about 2 cups; 13–14 biscuits), 1/3 cup (67g) granulated sugar, and 6 Tablespoons (85g) melted butter. Pre-bake the crust for a bit longer, about 16-17 minutes. And from what I understand, spreadable cream cheese sold in a tub in countries outside of the US is a little different from the spreadable cream cheese in the US. It’s thicker, sturdier, and more solid and should be OK to make this pie. I have no experience with it, but this is what I’ve heard from other non-US readers. If you try it, let us know how it turns out!
You mention that pie can be frozen for 3 months, but then it says leftovers can be frozen for 5 days. Is that because of whipped topping or because the pie has been sliced?
Hi Nichole, yes, because of the whipped topping, we recommend only freezing for up to 5 days.
I live in an area where the majority of the houses don’t have air conditioning … we live at 6,000 feet in the Sierra Nevada mountains and don’t need it except for a few days a year. It has been unusually hot this year and my husband has a raging sweet tooth. Baking is just not an option unless you do it at 5:00 am and use fans to prevent the heat from harboring in the house. This recipe was an absolute hit! I did have to bake the crust (I couldn’t find one premade) but that was it. I’m putting this in my travel trailer cookbook. It is a perfect recipe for “glamping”.
This was fantastic. I have been wanting to make this for ages. And it even got me to pipe withe one of my open star tips. Thanks Sally.
Can I use frozen berry mix or does it have to be blueberries?
Hi Savannah, Raspberries and blackberries get a little too juicy, so we recommend avoiding those unless you do a mixed berry topping with those, blueberries, and strawberries.
This was fanatic. I am baking multiple times a week and the verdict was this is the best pie I have made so far!!
I have made this several times in a rectangular pan. I doubled it once to take to a party. It wasn’t enough lol. I’ve also found a great gf crust recipe, which I have used with this.
This pie is so so delicious! My family all said the best Blueberry pie they ever had. I agree!
Whipped this up with my homegrown blueberries I keep stashed in my freezer. Very tasty! Easy to follow recipe as well. Might try lime instead of lemon next time for variety
This is my favorite pie in the whole world! I have made it many times but recently, I made adjustments to make it keto and diabetic friendly even though I am not diabetic. I have been cutting back on my sugar/carbs intake where I can. So now I use a baked cream cheese custard to eliminate the heavy cream and powdered sugar and I substitute Truvia in both the filling and topping in place of sugar. It’s really good and despite a very slight aftertaste, I truly enjoy my new less guilty pleasure.
This is my favorite pie in the whole world! I have made it many times but recently, I made adjustments to make it keto and diabetic friendly even though I am not diabetic. I have been cutting back on my sugar/carbs intake where I can. So now I use a baked cream cheese custard to eliminate the heavy cream and powdered sugar and I substitute Trivia in both the filling and topping in place of sugar. It’s really good and despite a very slight aftertaste, I truly enjoy my new less guilty pleasure.
This was so so good! I made it twice in a week. Super easy and lasts well for a few days. I’m going to try with another topping – maybe lemon curd? Highly recommend. Thanks for the recipe!
Can’t wait to try this. If I need to hurry the firming process can I pop it in the freezer for a short time?
Absolutely. But be careful and keep an eye on it, because it can set/chill unevenly, and some spots may freeze!
This pie is absolutely delicious and sooooo easy to make! I made this for the holidays last year, and the whole family loved it! It was so good, that this year I made two pies. One to share, and one for me and my hubby to keep! We didn’t get any leftover last year, and lesson learned! Always make two!
I was looking for a blueberry pie recipe that would come together quickly without a lot of baking time, to use some of my fresh blueberries. I doubled the compote recipe and folded about half of it into the filling with the cream cheese and whipped cream, then spread the rest on top. It’s really good. It’s great to have a good no-bake recipe (I used a store-bought graham cracker crust) since blueberries ripen in the heat of the summer!
Hi Sally,
I love love love all your recipes. I really appreciated the last bit for non US readers in this particular recipe. I also wanted to note in the UK we do not have block cream cheese. I’ve made a few cheesecake recipes from your site and sadly they all failed because we only have cream cheese spread. I have however, discovered the any recipe that calls for block cream cheese I use Mascarpone cheese as a sub and they turn out amazing. Not sure if it’s worth giving it a go on your end to try it for yourself but it’s the best sub I can find.
Kait, what helpful advice for any readers who cannot get their hands on block cream cheese. It would be so great if my team and I could test some recipes that call for cream cheese with mascarpone instead. We’ll absolutely be doing that for some of our most popular ones. Thank you for your comment!
This was soooo good! My brother proclaimed this his “new favourite dessert!” I will be making this again and again. Thank you!
Do you have any suggestions on how to make these as mini-pies? Like your mini key lime pies? Thanks!
Hi Karin, We haven’t tried it but you certainly can! We are unsure of the bake time needed but you can use the mini key lime pies as a guide.
Made this today for my family and it was absolutely phenomenal. The filling was so light and airy and the blueberry topping and graham cracker crust complimented it perfectly. The hardest part of this whole recipe was 1) Waiting for it to set, and 2) Fighting off my family who each wanted third helpings. Will be making this again for sure.
My husband made this for my birthday today. It was good except it was way too sweet, so sweet I could barely eat it. Shockingly even my son said it was almost too sweet to eat. Any reason why decreasing the sugar wouldn’t work?
This recipe has far too few reviews. This pie is amazing. It goes together quickly and tastes great. It was probably my favorite pie this Thanksgiving. We enjoyed it so much that we made another one a couple days after the first.
I made this pie for Thanksgiving and everyone loved it. The only thing I might change is to increase the amount of graham cracker crumbs and butter to make a slightly thicker crust. Otherwise, a terrific recipe.
Sally, I’ve been following your recipes for years and have gotten tons of compliments (and referrals to your content). Made this for my bf’s birthday (he LOVES pie… and blueberries). It’s our new favorite pie. Almost like a creamy cheesecake with a delicious juicy blueberry kompot topping and the right amount of crunch. YUM. Thank you so much!!
We’re so glad to hear this pie was a hit, Josie! Thanks so much for making and trusting our recipes.
I made this pie for a family get-together yesterday, and it was a tremendous hit. As always, your instructions were clear and helpful. Many thanks for sharing your knowledge and creativity!
I made this today and we love it! We have been trying to cut our sugar intake and this pie sounded like it wouldn’t be as sweet as most recipes.I will definitely keep this Blueberry cream pie in my favorite recipe box.
This was beyond delicious!!!!! Loved it from start to finish!
This was delicious. Followed recipe exactly. One of your best pie recipes and we’ve tried many. Thanks Sally.
I have a blueberry cheese pie recipie that is almost identical to this one, we love it! My fiancee is a diabetic, so instead of real sugar, i use splenda where it calls for it. For such a simple recipie it really does pack a taste bud watering dessert!!
This sure looks and sounds good. Fresh blueberries that actually taste good can be found year round now and they are my favorite.
You can never go wrong with your recipes Sally. The instructions are wonderful. Thank you for everything you do.
This looks delicious and it’s gluten free, which I like to track for serving to friends with celiac. A great addition to my recipe file. I look forward to making it.
Correction. Of course, only the filling is GF unless you use GF crackers in the crust.
I was thinking the same thing! What gluten free crust would you use?
I’m making it right now. I used gluten-free granola. I ground it in my coffee grinder & carried on from there. We shall see how it works.
Was looking for a pie recipe to bring to Thanksgiving dinner. I think this might be it!! Looks and sounds delicious!!!