This cake was inspired by an article in a Finnish magazine about someone from the Finnish Gastronomic Society making a cheesecake; the cake was flavoured with some orange flavour and white chocolate. A cake like that would be perfect for an Easter dessert I thought, after reading the whole thing, and thus I decided to try it out. The article did not have a recipe included, unfortunately, but it is not hard to make a cheesecake.
I found the making to be quite easy and fast, if you do not include the time needed for the setting of the gelatine. The taste is just beyond good in my opinion, much of it was due to the fact that the only sweetness in the cake came from the white chocolate, no sugar was needed in my opinion - many times a dessert is ruined with too much sweetness, sugar can either heighten flavours or mask them, when too much is used it sucks all the flavour out of the dessert.
The base was made with these cookies, but you can of course use any kind of cookies you like, something like Oreos (Dominos) would be good, if you can tolerate gluten. I do not know much about the ready made gluten-free cookies, so I can not state an opinion about them here, but I am sure that almost any kind of cookies would do.
I might make some alterations when making this on Easter; I will probably add some quark instead of the cream cheese, just because quark belongs together with Easter. The other thing I would change -if there were sugar loving people at the table - would be adding a bit sugar to the cake, not much, maybe 1/4 cup would do.
A White Chocolate and Orange Cheesecake
Please try using a good quality white chocolate which means that it has cocoa butter in it, not some other vegetable oil. There is a big difference in the way chocolate behaves and it mostly depends on the oil used in it. Chocolate with cocoa butter will melt just the right way. I usually use Fazer’s white chocolate, it is no Valrhona, but it is good and only has cocoa butter as the fat in it.
The ingredients,
-approximately 180 grams/ 6 ounces cookies
-50 grams/1,7 ounces butter
-100 grams/3,5 ounces white chocolate
-the zest and juice of one orange
-200 grams/7 ounces cream cheese (I used Philadelphia)
-2 dl/ 3/4 cup whipping cream
-4 gelatine leaves
-1 tsp vanilla extract
Line a springform pan with baking paper. Crush the cookies and mix them with the melted butter. Place them evenly on the bottom of the springform pan. Leave the pan into the fridge while you make the filling.
Place the gelatine leaves into some cold water. Melt the white chocolate. Whip the cream and mix it with the white chocolate and the cream cheese. Add the vanilla extract and the orange zest.
Place the orange juice into a saucepan on medium heat and melt the gelatine leaves into it. Let it cool a bit.
Mix the orange juice after it has cooled with the whipped cream mixture. Pour it into the springform pan and leave to sit in the fridge for at least 3 hours.
Take a springform pan and line the bottom with some baking paper.
I have found that greasing the bottom with some butter before placing the paper on it is helpful.
Crush the cookies; I usually use my Bamix mill for something like is. The Bamix blender I have is probably the smartest purchase I have ever made for my kitchen, I got so tired with bying a new blender every now and then and finally decided to get a Bamix. I has served me well for years now.
Melt the butter and mix with the crushed cookies. Then place them into the springform pan evenly. Place the cake base into the fridge while you start with the filling.
Take the gelatine leaves and place them into some cold water. Leave them for a while.
Grate the orange and squeeze the juice from it.
Whip the cream and add the vanilla extract to it. Melt the white chocolate in a bain-marie, or in a microwave oven. Add the cream cheese to the whipped cream and then add the white chocolate.
Mix them all together before adding the orange zest.
Place the orange juice into a small saucepan on medium heat. Take the gelatine leaves and squeeze them dry.
Add the leaves to the juice and let them melt together.
Take the juice and let it cool before mixing it with the whipped cream mixture.
Pour the mixture into the springform pan and let it rest in the fridge for at least three hours, or more.
Have a great Easter everyone!
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WheatFreeMeatFree 04.08.09 at 1:25 am
Any chance you’ll share how to make the chocolate egg? It’s so cool.
Arwen from Hoglet K 04.08.09 at 5:01 am
I love your photos with the daffodils. It’s great that you made your own biscuits for the base. You’re so right about chocolate needing cocoa butter too.
Kelly 04.08.09 at 2:44 pm
The egg is awesome!
I’m guessing you just blew it out and then filled it?
linda 04.09.09 at 12:05 pm
Your cheesecake looks so pretty with the daffodils and chocolate egg!
I’m sure they just put too much white chocolate in it. Love that you added orange to it, and the idea of adding quark sounds very good too!
I had white chocolate cheesecake in the US and it was beyond heavy and I’m both a fan of cheesecake and white chocolate
Alisa - Frugal Foodie 04.10.09 at 3:53 pm
The recipe is beyond off limits for me (no dairy), but the photo and egg look so awesome that I just had to comment
naomi devlin 04.10.09 at 7:43 pm
The whole thing looks fantastic and the photos give such a lovely sense of the process. Everything you do looks so full of care and beauty. Fin decided he wanted to fill some eggs with chocolate (100% cacao) for easter - not sure ours will turn out quite so perfect though!
I gave you a blog award for being so creative and fabulous. You can find it here:
http://milkforthemorningcake.blogspot.com/2009/04/seven-things-i-love.html
x x x
Katie 04.13.09 at 12:22 am
That cheesecake looks delicious - and that egg impressive! How did you do that?
I have a springform pan that I use for cheesecakes and I find it to be really good, but I struggle to fit the greaseproof paper neatly in the bottom, so I do a Nigella trick which is to simply put the pan together with the greaseproof paper inside (and sticking out all around), then rip the paper to size. Works every time!
Emilia 04.14.09 at 9:54 am
Kalinda,
Unfortunately I can’t share the making of the egg since it is an Mignon egg, I should probably have mentioned it, but I sometimes forget that Fazer doesn’t sell its products everywhere, sorry about that
I have also been under the impression that other chocolate companies do something like this too.
I found a wiki page for Mignon eggs http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mignon_(chocolate_egg)
I would really recommend trying one if you are able to find them, they are also dairy-free, and delicious of course, although very heavy with all the chocolate
Arwen,
Thanks! I also liked the look of the daffodils; I do like chocolate and marzipan decorations, but usually I find real flowers to be the prettiest decorations
The chocolate thing is important, I have been reading a swedish chocolate book recently and therefore tried to remember mentioning the chocolate and cocoa butter issue. I am hoping to make a post about the book, it is so good! It also has some naturally gluten-free chocolate recipes, like for example a recipe for a tequila and chocolate cake which seems beyond delicious.
Kelly,
I didn’t make it, but it is a regular egg which has had the insides just blown out and then it is filled with some chocolate and sealed with some rice protein (I really don’t know why it is sealed with rice protein). I don’t know how hard it would be to make this yourself, I would guess that it would be hard to get the chocolate filling inside the egg just right?
Linda,
I do know what you mean with the heaviness, sometimes cheesecakes are not my favourite thing because of the heaviness, but this one was more fresh I think and everyone who ate this commented on how fresh it was despite it being a cheesecake, maybe because there was so little of the white chocolate in it?
Although I said that I was making it with quark, I ended up making this exactly like in the recipe here when it was time for an Easter dessert. I think that the quark would have added more freshness, but maybe it would have needed some more sugar then to balance out the tartness of the quark? We had many different kind of quark desserts on the table, so I thought that this with quark would have been too much. Someday I will definitely finally try this with some quark.
Alisa,
Thanks for taking the time to comment
Naomi,
Thanks! That was nice of you to say and thank you for the award
Katie,
Thanks for the tip! This will be very useful in the future and so easy compared to how I am used to fitting the paper
And the paper never fits perfectly when doing it the way I do it, but now it will!
Ida 04.14.09 at 3:21 pm
I tried this and it was delicious!
Sonia sin gluten/Gluten Free 04.22.09 at 12:31 am
Ummmm assurance that to my girl him(her) gustaria.
Thank you very much
Sonia Gluten Free
Emilia 04.24.09 at 1:21 pm
Glad you liked it Ida
What did you use for the base?
Ida 04.26.09 at 3:16 pm
I used your cookies for the base, it worked really well.
Mable 05.11.09 at 9:35 am
How adorable!
I love the touch of daffodils. So innocent. So sweet. So young.
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