September 16, 2009

Japanese Cheesecake

eating a slice of Japanese cheesecake is like eating a piece of cloud

The Japanese are very creative and innovative when it comes to breads and cakes. Last year I read that their cheesecake is softer and lighter than the cheesecake we know. I have always wanted to make it since and recently found in my opinion the best recipe. It has only half a pound of cream cheese, lots of eggs, and a little bit of cake flour and cornflour. Whipping the egg whites to soft peaks produces a chiffon cake-like cheesecake that is cotton soft, melt-in-your mouth, and light as cloud but tastes exactly like cheesecake. I love that the recipe doesn't have too much sugar and the sweetness to me is just perfect. As usual, I used calamansi juice in place of the lemon juice. This cheesecake is just heavenly.

Japanese Cheesecake
8 ounces cream cheese
4 tablespoons butter
3 ounces milk
6 egg yolks
1 tablespoon lemon juice
2 ounces cake flour
1 ounce cornstarch
¼ teaspoon salt
6 egg whites
¼ teaspoon cream of tartar
¾ cup sugar
  • Grease and line with parchment paper the bottom and sides of an 8-inch x 2 inch round cake pan, set aside.
  • Melt cream cheese, butter, and milk over a double boiler, stirring with a rubber spatula, set aside to cool. When cool, fold in the flour, cornstarch, egg yolks, lemon juice, and salt; mix well.
  • Beat egg whites with cream of tartar until foamy. Add in the sugar and beat until soft peaks form.
  • Add the cheese mixture to the egg white mixture and mix well. Pour into the prepared pan and bake in a bain marie in a preheated 325°F oven for 1 hour and 10 minutes. Let cool on a wire rack. Transfer into a serving plate. Enjoy!
bake until top is golden

18 comments:

  1. Hahahaha...eating a piece of cloud! Makes me hungry !

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  2. This looks so soft and fluffy... just like a cloud! I'm wondering if this is similar in texture to Filipino 'mamon'?

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  3. It looks like a mamon. I wonder if it takes like one.

    -Cel

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  4. Sidney, made you laugh.:D

    Joelen and Cel, yes, it has the texture but not the flavor of mamon. It is also a lot lighter than mamon and regular cheesecake, it literally melts in my mouth.

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  5. hi oggi - wow, it does look like a giant mamon! i'm glad i saw this because i like cheesecake, but not the heaviness of it.

    just a question - what if i don't have a double boiler, is there another method in which to melt the first few ingredients?

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  6. R, me too, I can only take a few bites of cheesecake, I also find it too heavy and creamcheesy.:)

    A glass bowl on top of a saucepan is what I use for melting chocolates, making custards, and for this recipe. Make sure the bottom does not touch the simmering water.

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  7. hi oggi
    thanks for the tip. i can make do with that! :)

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  8. I MUST do this! Just by looking I can tell I'd love this... :D Thanks!

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  9. I love, love, love Japanese cheesecake. It is really like eating clouds. Thanks for the recipe.

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  10. Raissa, it's better than regular cheesecake...so soft and light.

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  11. Hi oggi. what do you mean bake in a bain marie? Thanks :)

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  12. A, place the baking pan with the cake batter in a larger pan filled with hot water that comes halfway up the sides of the smaller pan.

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  13. Oh my gosh this is so gorgeous! I bet you can make a matcha-flavored version *wink* *wink*

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  14. AnnMarie,
    Matcha flavored sounds great. I'll make it soon. Thanks.:)

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  15. Hi oggi! Can you tell me the equivalence of like an ounce. I cant seem to follow like 2 ounces of flour (dry) or 3 ounces of milk (wet)! How will i measure those? I'd really like to perfect this like i did w/ ur sansrival! Tnx!

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  16. I use weight measurement for flours specially cake, rice, or corn flour to be more precise. If you don't have a kitchen scale, look for conversion to cups of these items in Google or here. For the liquid, use a measuring cup with ounces/ml.

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  17. Im not sure ıf ı made mıne wrong.... ıs ıt supposed to be wet lıke a normal cheese cake? or ıs ıt suppose to be more of a whıte cake texture??

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  18. It's a moist light cake similar to chiffon, not the American-type cheesecake.

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