thewayne: (Default)
[personal profile] thewayne
Hey, it's a holiday, and would have been my parent's 67th anniversary. The first with both of them gone.

I made the cheesecake last Saturday with a kludge of two recipes. It's really annoying looking for a cherry cheesecake recipe: they're almost entirely for cheesecakes with cherry sauce poured over them! Not at all what I wanted. I wanted cherries incorporated into the body of the cheesecake!!! I was griping about this with Russet, she suggested I look up pumpkin cheesecake recipes. At which I thought a blueberry cheesecake recipe would be a closer match to what I want, and struck gold!

I started with two cups of halved, de-pitted cherries, run thru the food processer, these were reduced with 2 tbsp sugar and some lemon juice by about half over medium heat. This was only the third cheesecake recipe that I've made: the first was a graham cracker crust, which was good. The second was a 'nilla wafer crust, which was good. This one was a graham cracker/'nilla wafer crust, with chocolate chips added, and was very good.

The cherry reduction was mixed into the whipped cream cheese and baking happened.

Problems encountered. The center of the cheesecake was less done than the outer rim. I think a longer bake at a lower temperature would improve things, instead of 350f for 35 minutes, 325 for 45ish. The crust pre-bake was a little funky, again, I think lower and slower would be the solution. The chocolate chips added too much oil in addition to the butter and when I pulled it out of the oven, the center had a circle of about 3" or so that was not bubbly, the rest was bubbly.

So DARN, guess I'll have to make another in a month or so!

It tastes very yummy regardless and is disappearing rapidly. Very high evaporation rate, as I like to say.

The croissants are from Trader Joe's and are AMAZING.

You take them out of the freezer and let them sit overnight to thaw and rise, then throw them in the oven, bake them, and let them cool. You can do an egg wash if you want a more glossy finish.

Now, I've always loved a good chocolate croissant. And frankly, I'm disappointed in most that I buy. It's rare that I get one that's really good.

And as I said, as chocolate croissants go, THESE ARE AMAZING!!! Very flaky and buttery, as croissant should be, and an excellent chocolate blend that hits just the right notes.

Sunday night I thawed a chocolate croissant and baked it Monday morning. I'm working a double shift this week and was up at 5am to be out the door at 7. Russet texted me later and said the smell of that croissant was SINFUL. I thought she had baked one of the almond croissants, turned out she hadn't.

So today I did both. She worked last night, she now has half of each waiting for her.

The almond is also quite good. It has some sort of almond butter as a filling, and almonds on the outside. The recommended bake time is 30 minutes, and they specify 'until brown and firm to the touch, otherwise the interior is likely to be underbaked'. I went with 32 minutes based on yesterday's experience. I think maybe the almond one should come out at the 30 minute mark as the almonds were a bit too brown, IMO.

Anyway, the almond butter is yummy, and the almonds on the exterior add a bit of a crunch.

But the chocolate croissants rule. I mean... CHOCOLATE. Right?

If you have a Trader Joe's nearby and they carry these in the frozen aisle, I strongly recommend them.

Date: 2023-07-04 07:10 pm (UTC)
motodraconis: (Default)
From: [personal profile] motodraconis
A fantastically indulgent breakfast!

Date: 2023-07-04 07:13 pm (UTC)
elayna: (Ewan OMG!)
From: [personal profile] elayna
I feel I should check out TJ's soon!

And totally concur on fruit inside the item, somewhere along the way blueberry pancakes became pancakes with blueberry compote on top, which is...NO. I'm always really happy when I find blueberry pancakes with the blueberries inside.

Date: 2023-07-05 12:13 am (UTC)
bibliofile: Fan & papers in a stack (from my own photo) (Default)
From: [personal profile] bibliofile
I've had TJ's almond croissants but not recently. They were okay but not wonderful. I haven't tried the chocolate ones yet.

Mmm, cheesecake.

Date: 2023-07-05 12:48 am (UTC)
disneydream06: (Disney Happy)
From: [personal profile] disneydream06
Pass the chocolate this way. lol.........
Hugs, Jon

Date: 2023-07-05 02:48 am (UTC)
kaishin108: waves by hwm (Default)
From: [personal profile] kaishin108
I am going to have to try those chocolate croissants. I go to Trader Joe's once a week!

That is the thing with cheesecake, they don't always turn out like we want them to but they still get eaten! Funny how that works! :-D

Date: 2023-07-06 10:00 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] fairy69
YUM all around though, I'm sorry...I live in France now so I can not justify Trader Joe's as a good source for croissants but having said that, I DO MISS Trader Joe's on so many levels!

Date: 2023-07-07 07:02 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] fairy69
the problem here is getting anything close...for instance, something as simple as chicken sausage - Trader Joe's chicken sausage is low-fat. Hell, even in a US supermarket, you can find chicken sausage which is low fat -mainly because I imagine they are using white meat. Here, if you do come upon them, they contain thigh meat and more so the fat content is through the roof. Also, I just miss so much of their prepared foods - polenta and spinach for one. France doesn't "do" low-fat or low-sugar options for many things at all.

Date: 2023-07-06 11:40 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] acelightning73
YOu need to bake the cheesecake in a water bath so it cooks evenly. Before putting in the creamy filling, wrap the springform pan very tightly in a double layer of heavy-duty aluminum foil. Find a pan that's big enough to put the cheesecake pan inside of, and pour hot water around the cheesecake until it's halfway up the sides of the springform pan. And don't take it out of the oven too soon; it's okay if the middle jiggles just a bit.

Date: 2023-07-07 02:01 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] acelightning73
A 12" round pan will do.Or a deep enough roasting pan, just make sure the foil is good and tight around the cheesecake pan. When it seems to be done, turn off the oven and let it stand in the residual heat for half an hour or so. Removed from oven and set springform pan on cooling rack. Let cool to room temp. Refrigerate before attempting to remove from pan.

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