Pumpkin Whoopie Pies with Maple-Cream Cheese Filling

My fall baking moods seem to take on themes during certain months. Once September hits, I feel like I need to eat and bake with as many apples as possible. Even though they’re available throughout the fall and winter months, I feel a surge in September. It starts to wane towards the end of the month, and then October hits. For me, October is the month of the pumpkin. I know that Thanksgiving is typical pumpkin pie day, but by then I’m already full-on excited and planning for Christmas, so my pumpkin lust starts early. Plus, October gives us Halloween (pumpkin carving and pumpkin seed roasting!) and, more importantly, it gives us “It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown”. I’m a sucker for holiday programming and feel very strongly that I should be baking (or, at the very least, eating) something seasonal during every Charlie Brown special or any of the following: Rudolph (the old school one, with the Land of Misfit Toys), Christmas Vacation, Elf or A Christmas Story. Well, October is only a couple of days away so let’s get moving with these whoopie pies!
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You may remember me talking about the whoopie pies vs. gobs nomenclature conundrum when I gabbed about s’mores whoopie pies over the summer, but I’ll lay it out there again. It’s weird for me to call these whoopie pies; I grew up calling all cookies of this type ‘gobs’. It’s regional. It’s Pittsburgh. But I also realize it’s a minority. So no matter what you call these, let’s be clear: you need to make and eat these! To celebrate October, of course. And the pumpkins. And Charlie Brown. The cookie-cakes themselves are soft and light and absolutely packed with spicy, seasonal flavors. Your house will smell like Thanksgiving while these are baking. And paired with a maple cream cheese filling? Heaven. An old colleague of mine shared this recipe with me years ago and I’ve been enjoying them ever since. They should become part of your fall baking rotation too!

Two years ago: Cream of Mushroom Soup
Three years ago: Cinnamon Rolls

Pumpkin Whoopie Pies with Maple Cream Cheese Filling
Ingredients
For the Whoopie Pies:
- 3 cups (375 g) all-purpose flour
- 2 tablespoons cinnamon
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon ground ginger
- ½ teaspoon (0.5 teaspoon) ground nutmeg
- 1 cup (200 g) granulated sugar
- 1 cup (220 g) dark brown sugar
- 1 cup (218 ml) canola or vegetable oil
- 3 cups (735 g) chilled pumpkin puree, canned pumpkin
- 2 eggs
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
For the Maple-Cream Cheese Filling:
- 3 cups (360 g) powdered sugar
- 8 ounces (226.8 g) cream cheese, at room temperature
- 4 ounces (113.4 g) unsalted butter, at room temperature, (½ cup )
- 3 tablespoons maple syrup
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
- 1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Line baking sheets with parchment paper or a silicone baking mat.
- 2. In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, cinnamon, baking powder, baking soda, salt, ginger and nutmeg. Set aside.
- 3. In a separate bowl, whisk the granulated sugar, the dark brown sugar, and the oil together. Add the pumpkin puree and whisk to combine thoroughly. Add the eggs and vanilla and whisk until combined.
- 4. Gradually add the flour mixture to the pumpkin mixture and whisk until completely combined.
- 5. Use a small cookie scoop or a large spoon to drop a rounded, heaping tablespoon of the dough onto the prepared baking sheets, about 1 inch apart.
- 6. Bake for 10 to 12 minutes, making sure that the cookies are just starting to crack on top and a toothpick inserted into the center of a cookie comes out clean. The cookies should be firm when touched. Remove from the oven and let the cookies cool completely on a cooling rack.
- 7. To make the filling, beat the butter on medium speed until smooth with no visible lumps, about 3 minutes. Add the cream cheese and beat until smooth and combined, about 2 minutes. Add the powdered sugar a little at a time, then add the maple syrup and vanilla and beat until smooth.
- 8. To assemble the whoopie pies: Turn half of the cooled cookies upside down. Pipe or spoon the filling (about a tablespoon) onto that half. Place another cookie, flat side down, on top of the filling. Press down slightly so that the filling spread to the edges of the cookie. Repeat until all the cookies are used. Put the whoopie pies in the refrigerator for about 30 minutes to firm before serving.
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No matter if they are called whoopie pies or gobs I want one right now, OMG my mouth is watering
These look fantastic. Just got a couple of questions – I’m living in New Zealand and we can’t get pumpkin puree in a can … can I just cook some pumpkin and stick it in my blender until it’s smooth, or are there spices etc added to the can too? Also, is it ok to substitute the dark brown sugar with light/golden brown sugar and Tbs of Molasses? I don’t think there’s anywhere standard over here where I can get dark brown sugar…it’s not available in supermarkets at least.
Hi Pip, For the pumpkin question, you don’t need to add spices, but you can definitely make your own. Here is a how-to on making your own pumpkin puree:
http://penniesonaplatter.com/2009/10/11/pumpkin-puree/
As for the sugar – you can substitute light brown sugar, no problem.
Hello, fall! Wonderful way to celebrate both whoopie pies and the fall!
Yum Yum Yum! heaven indeed (: These look wonderful and so soft and comforting. I adore your site, thanks for everything!
-Amalia
I love it. We need to eat these whoopie pies to preserve Halloween and fall. Sort of the Grease 2 “do it for your country” approach! Lol. I wouldn’t need any special sort of initiative to dive into these. They look great!
I have yet to have awhoopie pie. Yours looks so good.
good heavens! Those look so outstanding!!
Yum! I don’t care what you call them, they look delicious! :) I think my son’s parents day out class may need to get sugared up by these for their Halloween party this year, lol.
What a fun snack! Stunning photos!
This recipe is almost word for word the recipe someone above mentioned. I personally believe that even if it was given to you by someone else, it is STILL someone else’s recipe. And the way you have placed it here makes it seem like you are claiming it as your own. As you have been blogging for quite some time, I am sure you know this, but it is copyright infringement when you do not place the source.
Please people, there are sooo many recipes that have been around for years, that are so similar ,my Mom had a recipe for a Plum cake she made for 60 years I’ve been seeing it all over the blog world ,so is that my Moms recipe and should I tell everyone my Mom should get credit for it ?! Relax people!!!!
Susan, copyright infringement is very different when it comes to recipes. The recipe itself (i.e. ingredients) cannot be copyrighted. It can be patented, but the patent office almost never gives out a patent, and it costs a lot of money.
So long as you change the wording of the directions, the recipe can be posted by you.
Regardless of all that, if you’re a regular reader of Michelle’s blog, you would know that she DOES always credit the source if it is from somewhere trackable: be it blog, book, or person. This was passed down from a friend of a friend of a friend, so how on earth would she credit it?
I’m pretty sure we all make chocolate chip cookies roughly the same way, with roughly the same ingredients. But I use my grandma’s recipe. For all I know, she got it from the chocolate chip bag. But if I post that recipe, I’m crediting my Nanny, not anyone else.
Wow. I think this recipe was made for me ;) There is just one word. YUM! And Whoopie Pies are so in right now!
Yum!! That’s all I can say. These look amazing and I wish I had one right now. They are everything I adore about fall baking…pumpkin and maple. Yum!
P.S. I’m a huge lover of Charlie Brown’s Halloween special…the best!
Yum, yum, yum, I think that pretty much covers it! I could devour one right now!
I definitely agree with you about starting in October with pumpkin – I’m usually phased to Christmas goodies by the time Thanksgiving rolls around, too!
Would the filling be ok if I DON’T add the syrup? I’m not the biggest fan of that flavor.
Hi Tania, Definitely! A plain cream cheese frosting will be just as good!
Yum…..Pumpkin Gobs!!!!! I also get into the pumpkin thing come October. We are going to the Bloomsburg Fair Fri. and I hope to buy pure Maple syrup there ,then I can make these for the Steelers game Sun!! Thanks for another great recipe !
Yay for gobs!! And Go Steelers! :)
These look HEAVENLY! I totally empathize with seasonal baking that coorelates to seasonal tv specials. It’s been a long-standing tradition in my house that we watch Christmas Vacation while baking Christmas cookies… even if we loop it all day and bake 500 cookies :D
Whoopie for these Whoopie pies. I’ve never had one but now I want to get my Whoopie on!
pumpkin, cream cheese, and maple…mmmm such a great flavor combo! these look absolutely delightful!
Can’t wait to try these. Only problem is I have a “Maple Hater” at home. I can get away with it — If he doesn’t know it is in there.
Mary Lynn:
I was thinking a plain cream cheese filling would be delish as well.
You had me at maple…no wait, maple and cream cheese! I have got to stop looking at blog posts before breakfast, now my bowl of Cheerios pale seriously in comparison…I want one of these please?
I’m so with you on the seasonal; been big on the apple desserts lately too since I have a tree in my yard but the cooler it gets, the more I start gravitating towards the warmth of dishes with pumpkin. Seriously…mouth is watering!
Yum this is the best recipe for pumpkin whoopie pies. I made these ones last fall and I think I am gonna make them again this week. Just a reminder you might want to post the source from where you got the recipe. I believe the original source is from Peabody’s blog or the book Baked: New Frontiers in Baking by Matt Lewis and Renato Poliafito. :)
Hi Lindsey, This recipe was actually passed along to me years ago by a friend I worked with who thought I would like it, as she had received it from someone else (friend or mom, I can’t remember). Where the original person in the chain got the recipe, I am not certain. When I make or adapt a recipe that I got from another blog or cookbook I always attribute credit.
My great aunt was Pennsylvania Dutch (German) and died in her 90’s. I was always told it was a family recipe. She used to make them and so did her mother. Who knows where it actually originated.
Who cares? What a negative comment.
Um, wow. I’m all over these! Plus, I know I’ll get them all to myself because hubby doesn’t like anything maple (I suppose I could be nice, and make a regular cream cheese filling for some of them…I’ll think about it). ;-)
I might just leave work and make these right now! I love anything pumpkin in a baked good, so delicious. So pretty too!
Whoa. I love you.
Its the big OU/Texas game this weekend…. these might have to part of the watch-party menu. Thanks for the recipe; I haven’t had a recipe of your’s fail me yet!
I so want one of these for breakfast. Is that wrong? :)
Yum! I am a big October pumpkin girls too, and like you, need to bake with it before Thanksgiving! Isn’t holiday programming just the best?!
This looks amazing, I am going to cook this on Friday, I’ll report back and let you know if they looked as good as yours do.
when you make whoopie pies, how do you store them? does the cake come out sticky?
Hi Lauren, since these have cream cheese frosting, if you won’t be eating them all at one time, I would store them in an airtight container in the refrigerator. Let them come to room temperature before serving. The cake is not sticky.
I made these and they were AMAZING…but they cake/cookie was very sticky. I was wondering if I cooked them longer if they would be less sticky. They were definately cooked through, but maybe I didnt keep them in the oven long enough?
Mine also came out very sticky – every surface I put the Whoopie Pies on would rip pieces of the cookie off. Any way to trouble-shoot?
I pureed my own pumpkins since I couldn’t find canned pumpkin in Denmark (and tried to address the moisture issue through straining), and also substituted fresh ginger, but otherwise followed the recipe exactly.
P.S. Super delicious recipe – thanks for posting!
Hi Gloria, There is definitely more moisture in fresh pumpkins than in canned, so that certainly could have been the issue.
Gloria see my comment under vicvan, I think it might answer your question.
I have been searching for your comment on how to rectify the stickiness that has been reported to be a problem…but I can’t find your comment..Please reply..thanks..
I used fresh pumpkin as well but I made sure to drain thoroughly. Some people have suggested using a fine mesh strainer but that doesn’t get it dry enough for me. I put my cooked and pureed pumpkin in cheesecloth (specifically butter muslin, which is really fine cheese cloth) and squeezed until the pumpkin was very, very dry. For reference; from a 4.5lb pumpkin after straining I got exactly 1 1/2 cups, with about 2 cups of water draining out. For me the cake came out perfectly!
Hi.I’m a kid and I’m 12 and I have a passion for baking.i was just wondering
1 stick of butter ?
1 cup of butter ?
Coz in asia,1 stick is 227 or 250 grams but I heard American butter is 113 per stick.Could you help me?And also,could you post carrot whoopie pies?Oh and how do you make frosting form peaks because my frosting always melts.
I stick of butter is about 113 grams and 1 cup of butter is about 240 grams
I made these whoopie pies and they were AMAZING!!! Everyone raved about them. They are pretty big so I cut them in half when serving. In most cases my guests would ask for the other half.
Lauren see my comments under vicvan below. I think I can answer your question. Sorry, I’m new at this…
Lauren see my comments under vicvan, I think I may answer your question.