Strawberry shortcake cheesecake sushi rolls land somewhere between a tea party dessert and a bakery case treat, and that odd little mash-up is exactly why they work. The cake stays soft enough to roll, the filling turns light and creamy instead of dense, and the strawberries give each slice a bright, fresh bite that keeps the whole thing from tasting heavy. Cut into rounds, the spiral makes every serving look more polished than the effort it takes.
The trick is keeping the cake thin, the filling fluffy, and the roll snug without smashing the fruit. A pound cake or sponge cake gives you a flexible base that holds together after chilling, and the whipped cream folded into the cream cheese keeps the center from turning thick or pasty. The short chill after rolling matters, too. It firms the filling just enough that you can slice clean spirals instead of squashed ribbons.
Below, you’ll find the small details that make these rolls slice neatly, plus a few swaps that help if you want to change up the fruit or make them ahead for a party.
The filling stayed light and the rolls sliced clean after chilling. I used a serrated knife and every piece held its spiral without squishing the strawberries.
Save these strawberry shortcake cheesecake sushi rolls for the dessert table when you want clean spirals, fresh berries, and a chilled cream filling.
The Roll That Fails If the Cake Is Too Thick
The biggest mistake with dessert rolls like this is using cake slices that are too thick or too dry to bend. A 1/4-inch sheet gives you enough structure to hold the filling without cracking at the first turn, and the cream mixture needs to stay thin enough to spread without tearing the cake. If the cake starts to split, it usually means it was sliced unevenly or the filling was piled on too heavily near the edge.
The second thing that matters is the border. Leaving a bare strip on one long edge gives the roll a place to seal, which keeps the filling from squeezing out when you slice it. Chill the finished log before cutting. That rest time firms the cream and helps the spiral stay neat instead of collapsing into a messy swirl.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in These Rolls
- Store-bought pound cake or sponge cake — This is your structure, and it needs to be flexible. Pound cake gives a richer, tighter crumb; sponge cake is lighter and usually rolls with less resistance. If the cake seems dry, trim only the outer edges rather than adding extra filling, which makes slicing harder later.
- Cream cheese — This creates the cheesecake flavor and the body of the filling. Full-fat cream cheese holds up best and gives the cleanest slice. Soften it fully before beating, or you’ll end up with tiny lumps that never disappear.
- Powdered sugar — This sweetens the filling without graininess. Granulated sugar won’t dissolve the same way here and can leave the cream filling a little gritty. Add it after the cream cheese is smooth so it blends in evenly.
- Whipped cream — This is what turns the filling from dense to light. Fold it in gently so you keep the airiness; vigorous mixing deflates it and makes the center heavier. If you only have extra whipped topping, it works in a pinch, but the flavor is a little less clean.
- Fresh strawberries — Fresh berries matter here because they give you texture and juiciness without turning the filling watery. Slice them thin so the roll closes cleanly. If the berries are very soft, blot them lightly before laying them down.
- Strawberry jam — The drizzle adds concentrated berry flavor and makes the finished plate look polished. Warm it slightly so it flows instead of clumping. If your jam is thick, loosen it with a teaspoon of water.
- White chocolate shavings — These are for finish, not structure, but they add a sweet snap and a little contrast on top. Use a bar instead of chips if you want nice curls. Chips tend to crumble instead of shaving.
Rolling, Chilling, and Slicing Without Squashing the Spiral
Preparing the Cake Sheets
Slice the pound cake lengthwise into thin, even sheets first, because the roll only works when the cake bends instead of fighting back. If one side is noticeably thicker, trim it down now rather than forcing the roll later. Lay each piece flat before spreading the filling so you can keep the layer even from edge to edge.
Whipping the Cheesecake Filling
Beat the softened cream cheese and powdered sugar until it looks smooth, light, and a little aerated. That takes about two minutes and removes the stiff, blocky texture that makes the filling drag on the cake. Fold in the whipped cream at the end. If you stir hard here, the filling gets looser and won’t hold its shape as well once rolled.
Building the Roll
Spread a thin layer of filling over each cake sheet, stopping about an inch from one long edge. Arrange the strawberry slices in a straight line so the center of the spiral looks neat when cut. Use the plastic wrap to help you lift and roll the cake tightly, but don’t squeeze so hard that the filling leaks out the sides.
Chilling Before the First Slice
Wrap the log and refrigerate it for 30 minutes. That short rest firms the filling and gives the cake time to settle around the fruit. If you slice too soon, the swirl will smear and the jam drizzle will slide off the top instead of sitting neatly on each piece.
Make It With Different Fruit
Swap the strawberries for thin slices of raspberries, peaches, or kiwi if you want a different color and flavor. Softer fruit works best when sliced thin, while juicier fruit should be patted dry so it doesn’t seep into the cream filling. The texture stays the same, but the flavor shifts from classic strawberry shortcake to something brighter or more tart.
Dairy-Free Version That Still Rolls Cleanly
Use a dairy-free cream cheese and a stable whipped topping made for folding. The flavor will be a little less tangy, but the structure stays close enough for neat slices. Check that the substitute cream cheese is firm, not spreadable, or the center can turn loose after chilling.
Gluten-Free Shortcut
Use a gluten-free sponge-style cake that bends without cracking. Some gluten-free pound cakes are too crumbly for rolling, so test a corner before you commit the filling. If the cake tears easily, turn the filling into little parfait cups instead of forcing a roll.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store the sliced rolls in a covered container for up to 2 days. After that, the cake starts to soften around the filling and the strawberries lose their fresh bite.
- Freezer: These freeze better as a whole log than as individual slices. Wrap tightly and freeze for up to 1 month, then thaw in the refrigerator before slicing. The berries soften a bit after freezing, so the texture is best when frozen only once.
- Reheating: No reheating needed. Serve chilled or slightly cool from the fridge. Letting them sit too long at room temperature makes the filling loose and the spiral less defined.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Strawberry Shortcake Cheesecake Sushi Rolls
Ingredients
Method
- Slice the pound cake lengthwise into 1/4-inch thick sheets, keeping the slices even so the roll stays tight. Set aside the cake sheets for filling.
- Beat the softened cream cheese with powdered sugar until light and fluffy, about 2 minutes. Look for a smoother, slightly thicker texture before you stop mixing.
- Fold the whipped cream into the cream cheese mixture until no streaks remain. Stop when the filling looks airy and uniform.
- Spread a thin layer of the cream mixture onto each cake slice, leaving a 1-inch border on one long edge. Use enough to coat but not so much that it squeezes out.
- Arrange the strawberry slices in a line along the filling-covered cake. Keep the layer consistent so each slice shows strawberries in the cross-section.
- Roll the cake tightly into a log using plastic wrap as an aid. Apply gentle, even pressure and seal the seam so it holds together.
- Wrap the log in plastic and refrigerate for 30 minutes. Chill until firm enough to slice cleanly without squishing.
- Slice the chilled log with a sharp knife into sushi-roll-style pieces. Aim for neat, even rounds or coins so the spiral interior is visible.
- Serve the slices drizzled with strawberry jam and finished with white chocolate shavings. Add the garnish right before serving for a crisp, defined look.