Pumpkin Coffeecake Buns are here to warm up your fall breakfast table!

The crumb bun is a classic New Jersey staple and was one of my best sellers when I owned a bakery
Now I’ve filled it with pumpkin and warm fall spices for a breakfast treat everyone will love.

Light and airy pumpkin buns — not to be confused with crumb cake or coffeecake
This is a yeast bun, similar to cinnamon bun dough, baked in a pan, layered with a spiced pumpkin filling and finished with a generous, crunchy streusel topping.

Making yeast dough can feel intimidating, but this recipe is straightforward
Follow the steps and you’ll find the dough simple to work with. A video tutorial demonstrates the entire process from start to finish.
WATCH HOW TO MAKE THESE PUMPKIN COFFEECAKE BUNS!

Notes for Success:
If you don’t have pumpkin pie spice for the dough, substitute: ½ tsp cinnamon, ¼ tsp nutmeg, 1/8 tsp cloves and ¼ tsp ginger.
Solid canned pumpkin is common in the U.S. but can be harder to find elsewhere. If you can’t get canned pumpkin, make homemade pumpkin puree using a simple roasted pumpkin recipe and let it cool before using.

Pumpkin Coffeecake Buns
Pin Recipe
Ingredients
For the Bun Dough
- 14 Tbs Plant Milk 207ml
- ¼ cup Softened Vegan Butter 60ml
- ½ cup Granulated Sugar 100g
- 1 teaspoon Dry Yeast
- ½ cup Canned Pumpkin 110g
- 3 cup All Purpose Flour 375g
- 2 teaspoon Pumpkin Pie Spice
- ½ teaspoon Salt
For the Streusel Topping
- ⅓ cup Light Brown Sugar 70g
- ½ cup Granulated Sugar 100g
- ½ teaspoon Salt 3g
- ½ teaspoon Ground Cinnamon
- 10 Tbs Vegan Butter 140g
- 1½ cup Cake Flour + 2 Tbs 195g
For the Pumpkin Layer
- 1 cup Solid Pumpkin 226g
- ½ cup Light Brown Sugar 100g
- ½ teaspoon Cinnamon
- ¼ teaspoon Nutmeg
- ½ teaspoon Ginger
- ⅙ teaspoon Ground Clove
Instructions
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Prepare the bun dough: combine the dry yeast with warm plant milk and a pinch of sugar. After about 5 minutes the mixture should be frothy, indicating the yeast is active.
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Place all dough ingredients, including the frothy yeast milk, in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook. Mix on low for 2 minutes, then stop to scrape the bowl so the dough incorporates evenly.
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If the dough is very sticky and won’t cleanly gather into a ball, add one or two tablespoons of flour, a little at a time.
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Mix another 5 minutes, then turn the dough onto a well-floured surface and knead about 30–40 strokes until smooth. Add flour sparingly so the dough remains soft and elastic.
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Place the dough in a lightly oiled bowl, cover, and let it rest at room temperature for about 1 hour.
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While the dough rests, mix the pumpkin filling ingredients in a bowl and set aside.
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Prepare the streusel by creaming cold vegan butter with the brown and granulated sugars for about 2 minutes.
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Add cinnamon, salt and the flour to the butter-sugar mixture and mix just until combined. Place the streusel in the freezer until you are ready to use it.
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After the dough has rested for an hour, preheat the oven to 375°F (190°C). If you have a pizza stone, place the pan on it for the first part of baking for a crisper bottom.
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Turn the dough onto a lightly floured surface, gently press out the gases, and roll it into a rectangle sized to fit a greased 9″ x 13″ pan (no parchment).
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Dock the dough lightly with a fork to allow steam to escape while baking.
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Spread the pumpkin filling evenly over the dough.
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Distribute the streusel across the top using a light, fluffy motion—don’t press it into the dough. Aim to cover the entire surface evenly.
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Bake on the center rack (on the pizza stone if using) at 375°F for 30 minutes. Then reduce the temperature to 325°F, move the pan off the stone to another rack, and bake an additional 15–20 minutes until the streusel is fully baked and not doughy in the center. Check by moving a larger streusel piece aside with a fork to ensure the filling beneath is set.
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Allow to cool until warm, slice into portions, and optionally dust with powdered sugar before serving.
Video
Notes