Cheesecake with Pepper

Posted Tue, 05/11/04

 

The Star Chefs web site has a page featuring the chef Marcus Samuelsson, along with his cookbook Aquavit and the New Scandinavian Cuisine. One of the recipes on display was his rather unusual cheesecake:

 

Black Pepper Cheesecake

1-1/2 tsp. black peppercorns

3/4 LB Philadelphia cream cheese, room temperature

1/3 C sugar

1 vanilla bean, split lengthwise

3/4 C Crème Fraîche, sour cream or whole milk yogurt

2 TBS freshly-squeezed lemon juice

2 large eggs

1-1/2 C heavy cream

 

Preheat oven to 250-degrees F. Spray an 8-inch round cake pan with nonstick cooking spray. Line bottom of pan with parchment paper and spray parchment paper. (If using a spring form pan, wrap pan in a double layer of foil to keep it watertight.) Blanch peppercorns in a small pot of boiling water for one minute; drain. Repeat two more times. Drain and pat dry with paper towels. Spread peppercorns out in a small baking pan and dry them in the oven until thoroughly dry, about fifteen to twenty minutes. Remove from oven and cool. Raise oven temperature to 350-degrees F.

 

Grind peppercorns medium-fine in a spice grinder, clean coffee grinder, or mortar and pestle; set aside. In a large bowl, beat cream cheese and sugar with an electric mixer on medium-high speed for about three minutes, until very smooth and light. Scrape seeds from vanilla bean and add them to the cream cheese mixture. Beat in the Crème Fraîche or sour cream or yogurt, as well as the lemon juice, and scrape down sides of bowl. Add eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition and scraping down sides of bowl. Beat in cream and peppercorns.

 

Scrape batter into prepared pan. Set pan inside a large shallow baking pan and pour about one inch of hot water into the pan. Bake for one hour, or until the sides of the cake are set but the center is still a little loose. Transfer cake pan to rack to cool completely. When the cheesecake is cool, cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight. To un-mold the cheesecake, run a thin knife or spatula around the sides of pan. Set the pan on a hot burner for about twenty seconds, shaking the pan gently from side to side to release the cake. Invert cake onto a cake plate, peel off parchment, and serve. Yield: 6-8 Servings.

Marcus Samuelsson was named "Best Chef: New York City" in 2003 by the James Beard Foundation, and is said to incorporate "his Scandinavian culture and his grandmother's cooking techniques to create flights of fancy with astute culinary vision."

 

Blog Tags: Desserts

 

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