I have made
Japanese cheesecake before. But I wanted to try to make it again since we are about
to head to Japan and I was seeing videos about this famous cheesecake in Osaka-
Rikuro’s|Freshly Baked Cheese Cake Best
Seller.
·
Preheat 325
·
Spray and line springform pan with parchment paper
· Separate 6 eggs. Store egg whites in fridge until you are ready to whip them.
·
Make egg yolk mixture. Soften cream cheese and
butter with microwave. Mix with heavy
cream and sugar. Did not heat. Use hand mixer. Mix in egg yolks one at a time.
Mix in lemon zest and lemon juice. Sift in cake flour.
·
Boil hot water to get it ready for later
·
Whip egg whites with sugar until stiff peaks
·
Combine egg whites with yolk batter
·
Pour cake batter in lined springform pan
·
Line springform pan with 2 layers of foil and
put in another pan. Add hot boiling water.
·
Baked 325 at 60 min
·
Baked 300 at 10 min
·
Turn off oven. Let cakes stay in oven with door
ajar for 20 min
Japanese
Cheesecake スフレチーズケーキ • Just One Cookbook
INGREDIENTS
1
Tbsp unsalted butter (for greasing the pan and parchment paper)
6
large eggs (50 g each w/o shell) (10.6 oz, 300 g without shell)
10.6
oz cream cheese
4
Tbsp unsalted butter
¾
cup heavy (whipping) cream (¾ cup + 4 tsp, to be precise) (used
¾ cup)
4½
Tbsp sugar (for the cream cheese mixture)
⅔ cup cake flour (did
not weigh)
½
lemon (for the zest)
2
Tbsp lemon juice (from ½ large lemon)
½
cup sugar (for beating the egg whites)
2
Tbsp apricot jam (for the glaze) (did not use)
2
tsp hot water (for the glaze) (did not use)
INSTRUCTIONS
Before
You Start
I
highly encourage you to weigh your ingredients in metric using a kitchen scale
for this recipe. Click on the “Metric“ button at the top of the recipe to
convert the ingredient measurements to metric. If you‘re using a cup
measurement, please follow the “fluff and sprinkle“ method: Fluff your flour
with a spoon, sprinkle the flour into your measuring cup, and level it off.
Otherwise, you may scoop more flour than you need. Please read the blog post
for more detailed information that I shared about this recipe.
To
Prepare the Cake Pan
1.
Use a 9-inch (23-cm) cake pan
that is 4 inches (10 cm) high. Cut parchment paper to line the bottom and sides
of the cake pan. Cut one circle 9 inches (23 cm) in diameter for the bottom and
one rectangular strip 4 x 30 inches (10 x 76 cm) for the sides of the cake pan.
In addition, cut two strips of paper 2 x 30 inches (5 x 76 cm) each. We will
use these as “straps” to lift the baked cake from the pan. (I tried this, but don’t
think it’s needed next time)
2.
With 1 Tbsp unsalted butter,
grease the cake pan and the parchment paper (for the bottom and the sides only;
grease the paper on one side). You don‘t need to use all the butter
3.
Place the two parchment paper
“straps” crisscross on the bottom of the cake pan so they form an “X.” Allow
the excess paper to hang over the sides. Then, line the bottom and sides with
the greased parchment paper. The greased side of the paper circle should face
up, and the greased side of the rectangular strip should face in toward the
center of the pan.
To
Preheat the Oven and Prepare a Double Boiler
1.
Preheat the oven to 350ºF
(180ºC). For a convection oven, reduce the cooking temperature by 25ºF (15ºC).
Note: You will be baking at 320ºF (160ºC). However, when you open the oven to
place the cheesecake, you’ll lose some heat, so we’ll start off a bit higher.
2.
Prepare a double boiler: Set a
medium saucepan filled with 2 inches (5 cm) of water over high heat and bring
to a simmer. Once simmering, cover and reduce the heat to maintain a steady
simmer.
3.
To Gather the Ingredients
4.
Gather all the ingredients.
Please note that it is very important to measure all your ingredients before
starting. Separate 6 large eggs (50 g each w/o shell) into yolks and whites.
Refrigerate the egg whites.
To
Make the Cake Batter
1.
In a large bowl, add 10.6 oz
cream cheese, 4 Tbsp unsalted butter, ¾ cup heavy (whipping) cream, and 4½ Tbsp
sugar. Rest the bowl on the saucepan above the simmering water. (did not do this over heat)
2.
Using a silicone spatula, mash
the cream cheese and butter. Once they are melted, use a whisk to blend
everything together. Remove from the heat.
3.
While whisking, add the egg
yolks into the warm cream cheese mixture, one at a time. Make sure each yolk is
blended well with the cream cheese mixture before adding the next one.
4.
Using a fine-mesh strainer, sift
⅔ cup cake flour into the batter. Whisk and blend together.
5.
Then, pass the batter through
the same fine-mesh strainer into a clean large bowl. This creates a silky
texture for the batter.
6.
Add the zest of ½ lemon into the
batter. Make sure you only zest the flavorful yellow part and not the bitter
white pith. Into a separate small bowl, squeeze the juice from the lemon.
Measure 2 Tbsp lemon juice and add it to the batter. Whisk well to blend and
set aside.
To
Set Up the Bain-Marie (did not do this)
1.
Put the baking sheet inside the
preheating oven and pour in hot water until it is halfway up the sides or ½
inch deep. Close the oven door.
To
Beat and Incorporate the Egg Whites
2.
Add the cold egg whites into the
dry, clean mixing bowl of a stand mixer. Make sure there is no oil or water in
the bowl. If you have space in your refrigerator, I highly recommend keeping
the mixing bowl cold until you’re ready to use it. Start whisking on medium
speed (Speed 4) until the egg whites become opaque, foamy, and bubbly, about 2
minutes. Then, slowly add ½ cup sugar, one-third of it at a time, while the
mixer runs.
3.
Once you’ve added all the sugar,
increase the mixer speed to high (Speed 8–9) and beat the egg whites until you
have firm peaks. When you lift the whisk and turn it upside down, the egg
whites should still cling to the whisk and hold their shape fairly well, but
the tip of the peak folds back on itself.
4.
Using a hand whisk, mix
one-third of the egg whites into the cream cheese mixture until incorporated.
Then, gently fold another one-third into the mixture.
5.
Lastly, pour the mixture back
into the mixer bowl (with the last one-third of the egg whites still in it) and
fold very gently until just combined.
6.
Pour the mixture into the cake
pan all at once, avoiding air pockets while pouring. Tap the cake pan a few
times on the kitchen counter to release any air pockets in the batter.
To
Bake the Cheesecake
1.
Open the oven and place the cake
pan onto the baking sheet with the bain-marie. Reduce the oven temperature to
320ºF (160ºC)—25ºF (15ºC) lower for a convection oven—and bake for 70–75
minutes. Then, reduce the oven temperature to 300ºF (150ºC) and bake for
another 10 minutes, or until the top is golden brown. To test if the cake is
done, open the oven door slightly and insert a skewer into the cake. If it
comes out without a wet liquid batter, it‘s done.
To
Cool
2.
Turn off the oven and leave the
oven door slightly ajar for 15–20 minutes with the cake inside. If you take the
cake out immediately to the kitchen counter, the sudden change in temperature
could cause the cake to collapse. You want the cake to slowly shrink down to
half the height, roughly from 4 inches to 2 inches high. After 15–20 minutes,
remove the pan from the oven. Gently pull out the cake from the cake pan using
the two parchment paper straps (with help from another set of hands).
3.
Place the cake on a plate.
Remove the parchment paper around the sides of the cake (but leave the bottom
paper). Combine 2 Tbsp apricot jam and 2 tsp hot water in a small bowl. Brush
the apricot mixture over the top of the cheesecake. Let cool to room temperature.
To
Serve
1.
You can serve the cake at room
temperature (fluffiest!) or chill the cake for 1–2 hours before serving.
To
Store
1.
You can store the cake in the
refrigerator for up to 3–4 days or in the freezer for 3–4 weeks. Defrost the
cake overnight in the refrigerator. The cold cheesecake is dense, so leave it
on the counter until just chilled or at room temperature before serving.
NOTES
All-Purpose
Flour vs. Cake Flour:
All-purpose
flour and cake flour do not perform the same. Cake flour is more delicate, and
if you use all-purpose flour instead of cake flour, the texture will be dense
and tough. If you can’t find cake flour, use this substitution:
To
Make Cake Flour:
Take
one level cup of all-purpose flour, remove 2 Tbsp, and then add 2 Tbsp of corn
starch back in. (1 cup of AP flour – 2 Tbsp of AP flour + 2 Tbsp of cornstarch
= 1 cup of cake flour). Be sure to sift the flour 3–4 times to distribute the
cornstarch well.
Tips
for Beating Egg Whites:
Make
sure your beaters and mixing bowl are clean and dry. A speck of oil, water, or
egg yolk on either one can minimize the volume of the beaten egg whites.
Avoid
plastic bowls—even clean ones may hold oily residue that can affect the
successful whipping of the egg whites.
Use
a bowl that’s wide enough to keep the beaters from being buried in the egg
whites.
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