My all time favorite fruit in the world is passion fruit. In Kenya I could buy a 2 kilo bag of fresh passion fruit for about 80 KSH, which is roughly the equivalent of $1 at the time. Today, in Rochester, I have to pay $2.50 for one single solitary piece of passion fruit. This makes me very, very sad, as I could sit down and eat 8 passion fruits for breakfast (but obviously I don't do that, as that breakfast would cost me $20- expensive!). The alternative to fresh (and expensive) passion fruit, when making dessert, is frozen passion fruit puree. So puree it is.
The other favorite flavor of mine is coconut! I love coconut. Yum, yum yum coconut. I like coconut in all forms, fresh out of the shell, in a drink, dessert, curry, soup, shredded, dried, sweetened, I've even had coconut deep fat fried (I feel like the shrimp guy from Forrest Gump). I remember when I was a kid, as a family we would go on vacation to Mombasa, and when you arrived at wherever you were staying, you would be greeted with a coconut drink, meaning they would drill 3 holes in the top of a new coconut put a straw in it and enjoy. The actual water in a coconut is a bit bland to me, but not too bad. And when you sit by the pool, staring at the beautiful, white sandy beach, somebody will climb a tall coconut palm with a machete to hack down the ripe coconuts. Watch out for falling coconuts!
Anyways, when I saw the Hay Hay It's Donna Day! theme of cheesecake hosted by Culinary Concoctions by Peabody, I said 'self, you should participate'. And here it is. This cheesecake is a creation that I played around with, and I got some of my inspiration from Epicurious.com.
Passion & Coconut Tropical Cheesecake
To prepare the pan:
Using the bottom of a 10 inch springform pan, trace an outline of it onto parchment paper and then cut out the parchment paper circle. Assemble the springform pan back together. Grease the bottom and sides of pan, then lay parchment round on the bottom and grease the parchment also.
In a food processor grind until a coarse meal:
1 cup salted, roasted cashews
¼ cup packed brown sugar
Pour cashew mixture into a bowl and add:
¾ cup flour
¼ tsp cinnamon
Cut/stir in until all the butter is incorporated and mixture is coarse and sandy:
6 Tbl butter, softened, almost melted
Stir to combine:
1 egg yolk
Coconut Filling
In a large mixing bowl, beat together:
2 8-oz packages of low-fat cream cheese or Neufchatel cheese
2/3 cup sugar
pinch of salt
1 tsp vanilla extract
Then add:
1 15-oz container of part skim ricotta cheese (drained in a cheesecloth lined sieve over a bowl for 5 hours, or overnight, then once all liquid is removed, press cheese through a sieve to help to reduce the graininess)
1/3 cup low fat sour cream
1/3 cup coconut milk
¼ cup rum (preferably a nice golden brown rum- not white rum)
1 ½ Tbl coconut rum
2 Tbl flour
1 ½ Tbl cornstarch
Beat in, one at a time:
5 eggs and the egg white leftover from the crust
Fold in:
½ cup toasted coconut (I use a combination of sweetened shredded coconut and unsweetened desiccated coconut)
Pour filling into the prepared, cooled crust.
Sprinkle over the top:
¼ cup toasted coconut (sweetened, shredded kind)
Passion Fruit Sauce
In a small sauce pan combine:
2 cup frozen passion fruit puree, thawed (I use Goya brand)
¾ cup sugar
Bring to a simmer over medium heat, stirring frequently, and simmer for about 15 minutes or until the sauce is nice, thick, and syrupy.
Stir in:
1 Tbl rum (the golden brown kind)
If you happen to have fresh passion fruit on hand, you can stir the seeds/pulp of one or two fruit into the sauce if you like.
Allow sauce to cool. Cover and refrigerate.To Serve:
Loosen the sides of the chilled cheesecake from the pan with a knife. Remove sides of the springform pan from the cheesecake. Gently use a spatula to lift or slide the cake on the parchment paper off of the springform pan bottom and slide the cake onto a serving plate. Drizzle passion fruit sauce over cake. Serve cake with the bowl of extra passion fruit sauce for your guests to add to their own dessert.
Enjoy! Cake, if covered well, can last for a few days or so in the fridge (provided that nobody gobbles it down late at night).
11 comments:
That cheesecake looks delicious, wow! It also presents very well...
Yeah, your presentation is killer! Gorgeous! Isn't it a shame about missing your favorite foods when you move abroad? The good thing is that you can (hopefully) discover new ones.
OMG that looks fabulous!! And did you say Rochester! Delighted to bump into a fellow-foodie online :-) Passionfruit cheesecake - No wonder it feels like spring has arrived :-D
Smita
THat is an absolutely delicious combination of flavours!
OMG what a wonderful looking cheesecake! It must taste divine!
Rosa,
Thank you, that makes me so happy!
Susan,
Thanks! Yes, it is a shame to miss my favorites, but you are right in that moving abroad always gives one new culinary opprotunities.
Smita,
Yes it is great to see food lovers here in Rochester!
Brilynn,
Thanks, the passion fruit and coconut certainly do make for an exciting party in your mouth!
Dagmar,
Thanks, and yes it was heavenly!
This looks delicious. I love the nut crust combined with the passion fruit, which I gobble up like crazy when i can find some. Excellent!
Wow! Great flavor combination! Looks great! :)
ers. This looks fab. Thanks for entering.
Thanks Helene,
Yeah I love to gobble passion fruit too!
Thank you Joey!
Thanks Barbara!
My gosh, this looks so beautiful it makes me want to cry but alas tears might change the taste of the Guava cheesecake i am partaking in. Hey maybe I mysteriously grew up in Kenya too and not Guyana. I too like coconut in all forms and even demanded to have coconut water to drink during delivery of my LO instead of regular water. Yup, made sure I packed it before going :). Anyway thanks for this yummy idea.
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