Monday, March 12, 2012

Orange squash & persimmon cheesecake






Persimmons are attractive, vivid orange fruits with sweet, slightly tangy flesh. They come in two commonly available types ; the fuyu and the hachiya. The hachiya is considered to be astringent and must ripen before eating, whereas the fuyu can be eaten while unripe. The variety above and below is the fuyu, picked up at a market more out of curiosity than culinary appeal.
 

Recipe : Squash and persimmon cheesecake. 
A nice combination of slightly tart squash and sweet as honey ripe persimmon helped this cheesecake attain a balance with the creamy cheese and digestive biscuit crust.

Crust
10 digestive biscuits
1/4 cup melted butter

Filling
the flesh from one small - medium pumpkin or orange squash
1 persimmon, peeled, cored and flesh cut into chunks
2 250g cartons of Philadelphia or other cream cheese
2 large eggs
1 cup of sugar
1 tsp each of ground cinnamon and nutmeg
1 tsp vanilla essence
pinch of salt


To make the crust first place the biscuits in a zip loc or other bag, seal and bash with a wooden spoon or other heavy object until the mixture resembles cake crumbs. 


Place in a bowl and pour the melted butter over the crumbs. Mix well to thoroughly combine and then press the crumbs into the bottom of a baking dish which has been lined with parchment paper and lightly greased. Place in the fridge for about 30 minutes to harden while you make the filling.




For the filling, first pre heat the oven to 350oF. Puree the squash or pumpkin and persimmon together in a blender or processor, (or push through a sieve) and add to a bowl with the cream cheese, salt, cinnamon, nutmeg, vanilla and sugar.



Beat together well by hand or with an electric mixer and then add the eggs, one at a time, continuing to mix between each addition. Pour the mixture into the baking dish with the crust and bake for 1 hour and 20 minutes. Remove from the oven, let cool and then transfer to a rack to cool a little longer. Cheesecake is best eaten after being chilled in the fridge for at least 4 hours or preferably overnight.



We usually pour a little cream over our cheesecake and if it is particularly moist and dense, it's interesting to watch the cream become completely absorbed by the cake. Other people favour a topping of sour cream, sometimes even spread over the top of the cake before chilling to create an extra layer.


Another idea would be to puree another persimmon or a little of the squash, mix with sugar to taste and spread this over the top before chilling. A dusting of icing sugar would finish the look and make the cheesecake look more professional. The top can become quite dark as you can see in the images, which I like as it adds a little chewiness.

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