Cream cheese stuffed mini peppers (the cutest Easter appetizer that takes 15 minutes)

Total Time: 18 mins Difficulty: Beginner
No cooking, no stress, and everyone at the table will think you tried really hard
Orange mini sweet peppers halved and filled with herby cream cheese mixture topped with fresh dill sprigs to look like little carrots arranged on a white rectangular platter on a soft linen surface pinit

Every Easter I tell myself I am going to put together an impressive spread without losing my mind in the kitchen — and every year that goal gets tested about thirty minutes before guests arrive.

This recipe was born out of one of those moments. I had a bag of orange mini peppers, a block of cream cheese, some fresh herbs, and exactly fifteen minutes before people started showing up.

I halved the peppers, mixed up a quick herby filling, piped it in, and stuck a little sprig of fresh dill at the narrow end of each one. When I set them on the platter they looked exactly like tiny carrots.

My guests genuinely thought I had planned this. I had not planned this. But that is the beauty of a recipe that looks far more intentional than the effort behind it.

These stuffed mini peppers have been on my Easter table every year since that day — and they show up at pretty much every spring gathering I host because they are just that good. Crunchy, creamy, fresh, and almost too cute to eat. Almost.

Why you’ll love this recipe

  • It requires zero cooking. No oven, no stovetop, no heat whatsoever. You mix, you fill, you garnish, and you’re done. This is the kind of recipe that saves you on a busy holiday when every burner on your stove is already occupied.
  • It looks absolutely stunning on a platter. Orange mini peppers shaped like little carrots, filled with creamy white filling, and topped with a sprig of fresh dill — they look like something a professional caterer put together. Nobody needs to know it took you fifteen minutes.
  • It’s endlessly customizable. The cream cheese filling is a blank canvas. Add garlic, chives, smoked salmon, sun-dried tomatoes, everything bagel seasoning — the base recipe works with almost any direction you want to take it.
  • It works for almost every guest. Gluten free, vegetarian, egg free, and nut free — this appetizer fits around almost every dietary restriction without any modifications. That alone makes it worth having in your rotation.
  • Kids absolutely love them. They look like little carrots, they’re fun to eat, and they’re not intimidating. Getting kids excited about vegetables — even if they’re just the vessel — is always a win. FYI, these disappear from the kids’ table even faster than the adults’.

Ingredients with key notes

For the stuffed peppers:

  • 12 orange mini sweet peppers — halved lengthwise and seeds removed. Orange is the color you want here because it’s what makes them look like carrots. The shape of mini sweet peppers is naturally tapered at one end, which adds to the carrot illusion. Look for peppers that are roughly similar in size so your platter looks uniform and intentional.
  • 8 oz cream cheese, softened — full fat block cream cheese gives you the creamiest, most pipeable filling. Take it out of the fridge at least 30 minutes before you start so it softens properly. Cold cream cheese is hard to mix and even harder to pipe. Low fat cream cheese works if that’s your preference but the filling will be slightly less rich.
  • 2 tablespoons fresh chives, finely chopped — adds a gentle oniony brightness that cuts through the richness of the cream cheese beautifully. Green onion tops work as a substitute if you don’t have chives.
  • 2 tablespoons fresh dill, finely chopped — goes into the filling and doubles as the garnish. Dill and cream cheese are one of those flavor combinations that just works every single time. If you’re not a dill fan, fresh parsley or fresh basil are both good alternatives.
  • 1 clove garlic, finely minced or grated — just one clove, but it makes a real difference. It adds a subtle savory depth without overpowering the fresh herb flavors. If raw garlic feels too strong for you, garlic powder works — use about a quarter teaspoon.
  • 1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice — brightens the entire filling and keeps it tasting fresh rather than heavy. Don’t skip it.
  • 1/4 teaspoon onion powder — adds a background savory note that rounds out the flavor.
  • Salt and white pepper to taste — white pepper keeps the filling looking clean and white without black specks. Regular black pepper works fine if that’s what you have — it just shows up as little dots in the filling, which honestly looks fine.

For the garnish:

  • Fresh dill sprigs — one small sprig per pepper half, tucked into the narrow pointed end to mimic carrot tops. This is the finishing touch that transforms these from ordinary stuffed peppers into the most charming Easter appetizer on your table. Make sure your dill sprigs are fresh and perky — wilted dill won’t hold up or look as good.

Step-by-step instructions

Step 1: Prep your peppers

Wash and dry your mini sweet peppers thoroughly. Halve each one lengthwise from stem to tip. Use a small spoon or your fingers to remove the seeds and any white membrane from the inside. The cleaner the cavity, the neater your filling will sit. Pat the inside of each pepper half dry with a paper towel — excess moisture can make the filling slide around. Arrange them on your serving platter cut side up and set aside.

Step 2: Make the cream cheese filling

In a medium bowl, beat the softened cream cheese with a hand mixer or a sturdy fork until it’s completely smooth and fluffy — no lumps. This step matters. A smooth filling is what makes these look polished and professional. Add the chopped chives, chopped dill, minced garlic, lemon juice, onion powder, salt, and white pepper. Mix until everything is evenly combined. Taste the filling and adjust — a little more lemon, a pinch more salt, or an extra handful of herbs if it needs it.

Step 3: Fill the peppers

You have two options here. The easy option is to use a small spoon to scoop the filling into each pepper half and smooth it out with the back of the spoon. The slightly more impressive option is to transfer the filling to a piping bag or a zip-lock bag with one corner snipped off and pipe it in a neat line down the center of each pepper. The piped version looks cleaner and more polished on the platter — and honestly it’s not that much more work. Either way, fill each pepper generously so the filling sits slightly mounded above the edges.

Step 4: Add the dill garnish

Take a small, fresh sprig of dill and tuck it into the narrow pointed end of each filled pepper half — the part that represents the top of the carrot. Press it in gently so it stands upright. This is the detail that pulls the whole carrot illusion together. Step back and look at your platter. Satisfying, right?

Step 5: Chill and serve

If you’re not serving immediately, cover the platter loosely with plastic wrap and refrigerate for up to 2 hours before serving. The filling firms up slightly in the fridge which makes them even easier to eat. Serve cold directly from the platter.

Serving suggestions

These stuffed mini peppers are stars on their own but they also play very nicely with other dishes on a holiday spread.

  • Arrange them on a large white platter as the centerpiece of your Easter appetizer table. Surround them with other finger foods like deviled eggs, crackers, and olives for a full spread that looks like you put serious thought into it — even if you didn’t.
  • Serve alongside a charcuterie board for a mix of flavors and textures that keeps guests happy while the main meal finishes cooking. The freshness of the stuffed peppers balances the richness of cured meats and aged cheeses.
  • Pair with sparkling water or a light white wine for an elegant spring gathering feel. These appetizers have a clean, fresh flavor profile that pairs well with anything crisp and light.
  • Include them in a kids’ Easter snack spread alongside fruit skewers, cheese cubes, and mini sandwiches. They’re fun, colorful, and approachable for younger guests who might be skeptical of more unfamiliar foods.
  • Serve at brunch alongside quiche, a fruit salad, and mimosas for a complete Easter brunch spread that covers all the bases without overwhelming the cook — which is you, and you deserve a mimosa too.

Storage tips

Refrigerator: Store filled peppers in an airtight container or on a platter covered tightly with plastic wrap in the fridge for up to 2 days. The filling holds up well and the peppers stay crisp. Add the dill garnish right before serving if you’re making them ahead — the sprigs can wilt overnight in the fridge.

Make ahead tip: You can make the cream cheese filling up to 3 days in advance and store it in an airtight container in the fridge. When you’re ready to serve, prep the peppers, fill them, and garnish. This splits the work nicely and takes the pressure off on the day of your gathering.

Freezer: Not recommended. The texture of both the peppers and the cream cheese filling changes significantly after freezing. These are best made fresh or a day ahead at most.

Leftover filling: If you have leftover cream cheese filling, it makes an excellent spread for bagels, crackers, or toast the next morning. Consider it a bonus recipe that comes free with this one.

Closing

Not every recipe has to be complicated to be memorable.

Sometimes the most impressive thing on the table is the simplest thing — the one that makes people smile before they even take a bite. That is what these stuffed mini peppers do every single time. They look deliberate, they taste fresh and delicious, and they take fifteen minutes from start to finish. That is a pretty good deal by any measure.

Whether you make these for Easter, a spring brunch, or just a Tuesday when you feel like doing something a little fun with food — I hope they bring the same kind of easy joy to your table that they bring to mine.

Drop a comment below and let me know how they turned out. Share a photo of your platter or tag me on Pinterest — I genuinely love seeing your takes on these recipes. Every photo makes my day.

Until next time — keep it simple, keep it delicious, and never underestimate what fifteen minutes in the kitchen can do.

With gratitude, Kip

Cream cheese stuffed mini peppers (the cutest Easter appetizer that takes 15 minutes)

Difficulty: Beginner Prep Time 18 mins Total Time 18 mins
Estimated Cost: $ 8

Description

Sweet orange mini peppers halved and filled with a creamy, herby cream cheese mixture, topped with a sprig of fresh dill to look just like little carrots. The most adorable Easter appetizer you'll ever put on a table — and the easiest one you'll ever make. No cooking required, ready in 15 minutes, and gone before you know it.

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Halve and seed the mini peppers. Pat dry and arrange on a serving platter.
  2. Beat softened cream cheese until smooth and fluffy.
  3. Add chives, dill, garlic, lemon juice, onion powder, salt, and pepper. Mix until fully combined. Taste and adjust seasoning.
  4. Fill each pepper half with the cream cheese mixture using a spoon or piping bag.
  5. Tuck a small fresh dill sprig into the narrow end of each filled pepper to mimic carrot tops.
  6. Refrigerate for up to 2 hours before serving or serve immediately.
Keywords: Easter appetizer, cream cheese stuffed mini peppers, Easter carrot appetizer, stuffed mini peppers, no cook appetizer, Easter party food, easy Easter recipes
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Tag #recipesbykip and #deliciousrecipesbykip if you made this recipe. Follow @recipesbykip on Instagram for more recipes.

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Frequently Asked Questions

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Can I use a different color mini pepper?

Orange is strongly recommended here because it's what makes these look like carrots — which is the whole charm of this recipe. Red mini peppers can work in a pinch and still look festive. Yellow peppers are a distant third option. Green peppers will taste fine but they won't give you the carrot effect that makes this appetizer so visually striking at an Easter table.

Can I make these the night before?

Yes, with one small adjustment. Fill the peppers and store them covered in the fridge overnight — the filling holds up beautifully. Just wait to add the dill garnish until right before serving since fresh dill can wilt and discolor overnight in the fridge. Everything else can be fully assembled the night before.

What can I add to the cream cheese filling to change things up?

Quite a lot, actually. Crumbled smoked salmon and capers make an elegant, more sophisticated version. Everything bagel seasoning stirred into the filling adds a fun flavor twist. Finely diced sun-dried tomatoes and basil give it a Mediterranean angle. Crumbled bacon bits and cheddar make it more indulgent and crowd-pleasing. The base cream cheese mixture is neutral enough to go in almost any direction you want.

My cream cheese filling is too stiff to pipe — what do I do?

This usually means the cream cheese wasn't soft enough before mixing. Add a teaspoon of sour cream or a small splash of milk to the filling and beat again until it reaches a smoother, more pipeable consistency. A minute in the microwave at very low power — about 10 seconds — also helps if the cream cheese is still too cold and firm.

Can I make this recipe dairy free?

Yes. Dairy free cream cheese alternatives work reasonably well in this recipe — brands like Violife and Kite Hill have options that blend smoothly and hold their shape when piped. The flavor profile will be slightly different but still very good with the herbs and lemon. Just make sure your dairy free cream cheese is at room temperature before mixing for the best texture.

How many peppers should I plan per person?

For an appetizer spread with other dishes, plan on about 3-4 pieces per person. If these are one of only a few appetizers on the table — or if your crowd is particularly enthusiastic about them, which is likely — plan on 5-6 per person. They go fast. Make more than you think you need. You have been warned.

A self-taught Cook, Filmmaker, and Creative Director

Most days you can find me in the kitchen experimenting with new recipes or behind my camera capturing the stories food tells. What I’m most passionate about is creating dishes that are quick, comforting, and surprisingly healthy—and sharing them with you.

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