Monday, October 17, 2011

Cotton Soft Japanese Cheesecake



Cotton Soft Japanese Cheesecake
Recipe adapted from Diana's Desserts                                                                             [printable version]
Yield: One 8" cheesecake


Ingredients CHECKED!Enough for me to bake another 10 cakes wtf!
Thats why is kinda waste if you are just gonna bake for just once in a while.
I will get nagging from the "refrigerator owner" (my mom)  for keeping all this ingredients 
for over a year and not baking anything for the past one year. =_=


Recipe and guideline from the website....


Cover it with aluminium foil to avoid over-bake..
Just learned about this. Such a noob. No wonder all my cakes are over-bake on the outside
but unbaked inside wtf.


Baking in process.... weee...


it looks pretty perfect here.


Until I add the green-tea powder and it looks like fungus is blooming on top of my cake.
So, bad idea. I scrapped it all away after that. 
The cake texture was still ok. It tasted like...... A cake. 
But it tasted more like a cheesecake after one day. 
(Emm. i don't know why, but it always happens this way)

So, cheers. Enjoy the recipe below. Although i kinda fail.
Will do it again some day before i start work!


9 oz. cream cheese (one 8 oz. brick plus 1 oz. of another brick)
4 tablespoons unsalted butter
1/3 cup fresh, whole milk
6 eggs, room temperature - whites and yolks separated
1/4 tsp. cream of tartar
1/2 cup plus 1/8 cup extra fine granulated sugar
1/3 cup plus 1 tsp. cake flour
3 tbsp. corn starch                                 

Note:  Do not substitute homemade cake flour (regular flour mixed with cornstarch) for this recipe.  
  1. Melt cream cheese, butter and milk in a heat-proof bowl over a pot of simmering water.  Stir occasionally to break up cream cheese and combine the ingredients.  Remove bowl from heat and allow to cool. Mixture will be thick.  If lumpy, use a whisk to vigorously beat the mixture until smooth. Set aside.
  2. When mixture has cooled, fold in the egg yolks, flour and corn starch.  Fold until thoroughly incorporated.
  3. Preheat oven to 325 degrees.
  4. In a large bowl, whisk egg whites with an electric mixer until foamy.  Add the cream of tartar and mix again, gradually adding the extra-fine sugar a little at a time until soft peaks form.  Note: Soft peaks:  mixture should be white and opaque, and meringue will fall onto itself when the beaters are lifted from the bowl.
  5. Add the cheese mixture to the egg white mixture and fold together until well incorporated.  
  6. Pour into an 8-inch round spring-form pan that has been lightly greased and lined (sides and bottom) with parchment paper.  Place a piece of aluminum foil over the top of the cake so it does not brown.
  7. Bake in a water bath for 1 hour 10 minutes.  When timer sounds, bake for an additional 10-15 minutes with the oven door cracked.
  8. Carefully remove pan from water bath and let stand until cake pulls away from the sides of the pan.  Remove spring-form ring and serve.

Notes:  
  • Substitutions are not recommended for this recipe.  Be sure to use whole milk, cake flour and extra-fine sugar.  If you can't find extra-fine sugar, grind regular sugar finer in a food processor.  
  • One tablespoon of lemon juice may be added to the cooled cheese/butter/milk mixture for flavor.
  • Sprinkle matcha green tea on finished cake, or top with fresh fruit for serving.



3 comments:

shuyee said...

LIKE!!!

Qianyingc said...

Faster. Give u recipe! you have to do toooooo~ lol

shuyee said...

hahaha...give me some time ya..i will do it someday..hahaha..