Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 6

http://www.craftpassion.

com

Page 2: Japanese Cheesecake


craftpassion.com/light-japanese-cheesecake/2/

April 30, 2017 by Craft Passion 492 Comments April 30, 2017
Watch “How-To-Bake” Video

Japanese Cheesecake
Watch on Youtube

Japanese Cheesecake
Makes 8″ round cake pan
Prep Time: 30 mins | Bake Time: 78 mins
Recipe slightly modified from I Eat I Shoot I Post

INGREDIENTS:

Cream cheese batter


250 gram Philadelphia cream cheese
6 egg yolks (Update: I measured mine, it was about 118g in total for the yolks)
70 gram castor sugar (This is half of the total 140 gram)
60 gram unsalted butter
100 ml full-cream milk or whole milk
1 Tbsp lemon juice
2 tsp lemon zest
60 gram cake flour / superfine flour
20-gram cornstarch
1/4 tsp salt

Meringue
6 egg whites (Update: I measured mine, it was 264g for the whites of 6 eggs)
1/4 tsp cream of tartar
70 gram castor sugar (This is half of the total 140 gram)

METHOD:

1. Pre-heat oven to 200°C / 392°F (Top and bottom heat, no fan force)
2. Grease 8″ x 3″ cake pan with butter, line bottom with baking paper
3. Whisk cream cheese till smooth over a warm water bath
4. Add yolks and whisk
5. Add half the sugar (70 gram) and whisk
6. Warm milk and butter in microwave (high, 1 min) or stove, whisk into batter
7. Add salt, lemon juice, lemon zest, and whisk
8. Remove from the water bath, sift cake flour and corn starch and fold into mixture
9. Whisk whites at low speed till foamy
10. Add cream of tartar and beat at high speed till bubbles become very small but still visible
11. Gradually add the balance 70 gram of sugar and beat till soft peaks
12. Fold whites into batter 1/3 at a time
13. Pour into the cake pan and tap the pan on the counter to release air bubbles
14. Bake with water bath on the bottommost rack in a preheated 200°C / 392°F for 18 mins,
then lower to 140°C / 284°F for another 30 mins (let the heat in the oven to drop gradually
with door closed) and turn off the oven and leave cake in the closed oven for another 30
mins. Remove water bath and open the door of the oven slightly at the end of the baking
for another 30 mins for the cake to cool.

COOK’S NOTE:

1. Egg – Size: large. I separate the yolk and white by using cold eggs. By the time you’ve
finished preparing the cream cheese batter, the egg whites are just nice to beat into the
meringue.
2. Cream Cheese – I used Philadelphia throughout all my Japanese cheesecakes, hence, I
am not sure how other brands of cream cheese work for this recipe.
3. Sugar – you may reduce the sugar to 120g in total if you prefer to reduce some calories
intake. Caster sugar is slightly finer than fine granulated sugar if you cannot find caster
sugar, lightly grind the fine granulated sugar to break them smaller. Do not use powdered
sugar as it contained cornstarch.
4. Cake pan – I recommend that you use a 3″ tall non-black round cake pan of an 8″ (maybe
this cake pan is a good fit, found in Amazon). If you cannot find a 3″ high cake pan, then
replace it with a 9″ round cake pan with at least 2.5″ tall. Use a 1-piece punch out cake
pan, not springform pan or any other seamed pan.
5. Grease & Pan Lining – grease the side of the pan with butter and line only the bottom of
the pan. Do not line the side of the pan, it will cause a crumple side. This is because when
the cake shrinks, it will drag the paper down and cause the crease.
6. Batter – the cream cheese batter after adding flours and before folding into meringue
should be a little warm, about 40-50 °C.
7. Meringue folding *** VERY IMPORTANT *** – folding egg white meringue to cream
cheese batter needs to be gentle to minimize the deflation of tiny pockets of air in the
meringue. Make sure both batter and egg whites are well incorporated and come together.
8. Batter filling – only fill Japanese cheesecake batter about 15mm (1/2″) from the rim, if
you have extra batter (it shouldn’t be a lot left), discard it.
9. Water bath- Use a roasting pan of about 2″ high and at least 11″ diameter. Place a small
towel on it to act as a layer of thin insulation for the cake pan so that the bottom is well
protected from direct heat. Fill hot water to about 1″ high after placing the cake pan on the
roasting pan and send into the oven.
10. Oven – this is crucial and very important. The temperature stated in the recipe is in-oven
temperature. Each oven is different so if you are not too sure if the temperature inside
your oven is accurate as what you have set at the control panel, get an oven thermometer
to check. The brand of my oven is Electrolux (model EOB307X-1), it is measured with 10
°C shy, so I have to set 10 °C higher at my control panel in order to get the required baking
temperature.
11. Cool-down – After the cool down period with the door closed for 30 mins, I open the oven
door to remove the water bath, put the cake back into the oven and open the oven just a
tiny bit (about 10mm). I use a mitten to stop the door from closing back. Removing the
water bath is optional but I find that it will prevent the bottom of the cake being wet by the
condensation. *Note: if you want a jiggling cake and do not bother to have a cake with
wrinkle top and sides, you may take the cake out without having sitting for this extra 30
mins cool down time.*
12. Unmold cake – The cake pan should be able to handle by bare hand after cooling off in
the oven with door slightly open for 30 mins. Use a cake board to cover the cake pan,
invert the pan and carefully remove the pan. Remove the bottom liner and place another
cake board or plate on the bottom of the cake, invert it back. The cake should be soft and
fluffy and jiggly when it is still warm. Leave it to cool before sending it into the fridge. The
final cake size after shrinkage is about 7.5″ x 3″ (highest point)
13. Cake serving – Decorate the top with snow powder or icing sugar. Cut the cake with a
warm knife, wipe the knife clean before the next cut. Buy Hello Kitty Cake Stencil, here
(Update: this one has sold out, get the equivalent.).

Conversion:
For your convenience, please use this unit conversion, powered by UnitConversion.org to
convert the measurement to other units.

You might also like