Holiday Almond-Toffee Cheesecake!

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crevicetool

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 4, 2010
Messages
392
Location
Snellville Ga.
I made this last night for this evening's festivities. It's a little bit of work (ain't sampled it yet,) but all indications point to it being very good. It weighs about eighty-seven pounds and is sure to play havoc with one's cholesterol stats - but hey....

Naturally, presentation is half of the culinary art, so enjoy the visual portion until I post the recipe later - if you're interested. I'll also post a review (unbiased of course!)

crevicetool++12-25-2014-10-05-34.jpg
 
I am always amazed at the quality of these "concotions" that members whip up in their kitchens. That cheesecake looks as good or better than anything a professional baker could make using pricey professional equipment. It's almost too pretty to slice into!
 
You would have to post a "SCREEN SIZED" pic of a piece of that delectable morsel that you've concocted to tempt all of us with. It's not fair that you have it there and all of us are whereever we may be.

So I'm pretty sure that I can feel confident in saying I'm not the only one who is thinking the thought-

I WANT THAT.....FEED ME NOW!!!

Happy Holidays!
 
Hi. My name is Mike and I am a sugar addict. If the taste is one half as nice as it looks in the photo, I would be in heaven. This looks and reads very yummy! I also agree, with the comment above , this does look like a master baker's work. Yummmmmm
 
Ok - first the review...

The cheesecake was well received by my guests and in fact took some home with them. It IS tasty. It's kinda caramel(ish) tasting - but definitely could distinguish between the almond and toffee flavorings. I THINK it could have used a couple of tablespoons of flour in the filling. I might try it next time. It didn't set up quite as firm as I like it and was afraid to push the baking time any longer (see below). It did stand up however, so its not as if it resembled pudding -just could have been a little firmer. I felt it necessary too to tell folks that there were candy bits in the filling - unlike most cheesecakes - so you do have to chew a little! LOL...Everyone said they would like it again! I'm pleased.

No, a KitchenAid mixer. No Universal smalls...
 
Recipe....

Ingredients:
Crust:
1 ½ Cups graham cracker crumbs
½ cup sliced almonds finely chopped
½ cup Heath* English toffee pieces finely chopped
2 tablespoons (well packed) dark brown sugar
¼ teaspoon salt
7 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted

Filling:
4 8-ounce packages cream cheese softened
1 cup (well packed) dark brown sugar
4 large eggs
1 tablespoon vanilla extract
¼ teaspoon almond extract
8 ounces Heath* English toffee pieces

Topping:
1 16 ounce container sour cream
½ cup granulated sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Assorted candies and sprinkles (M&M’s, gumdrops etc.)
*I found these Heath Bar bits in the baking section and they were perfect.

Directions:
Crust:
Preheat oven to 350 degrees (F). Mix the dry ingredients for the crust well and add the melted butter mixing until all are moistened. Press mixture into a ten inch spring form pan lined on the bottom with parchment paper leaving a small fold (my idea and will explain later) on bottom and 1 inch up the sides. Prepare the pan for a water-bath by wrapping in one large heavy-duty wide sheet of aluminum foil taking care not to tear any holes in it. Bake for about seven minutes and set aside.
Filling:
Reduce oven temperature to 325. Beat cream cheese and sugar until blended. Add eggs one at a time blending well with each addition and finally beat in both extracts. Pour about a third of the mixture over the crust then sprinkle toffee bits, cover with more filling, bits, and finally filling. The bits will stay suspended in the filling (which surprised me). Place the spring form pan within the foil into a large roasting pan filled with HOT water half-way up the sides of the spring form pan. Bake for approx. one hour (*however, mine didn’t set quite the way I like it to and I went about an hour and ten minutes…and I think it could have used another 7-8 minutes). You want the center barely set and the edges puffed. The recipe I have doesn’t call for a water bath but I find they tend to split when done dry.
While the filling is baking prepare the topping: Mix sour cream, sugar and vanilla until smooth. Set aside. When the cake is just minutes away from being completely set, spread topping over hot cheesecake and continue baking another 5-7 minutes or just until topping is set and starting to “color”.
Transfer to cooling rack and cool ten minutes then refrigerate overnight.
Now, time to get that cake out of the pan. I leave a little “finger-grip” amount of parchment paper outside of the pan (assemble pan over it). Then, place a knife between cake and pan loosening it from the sides. Remove the sides of the pan, and with a long spatula, loosen the cake from the paper. (You get the idea…) Carefully then, slide the cake from the paper into position onto your cake plate gripping the “handle” of the paper. This way you are not leaving the pan bottom on the display plate or damaging it with a sharp knife/server!
Arrange the candy pieces around the outer edge or decorate however you want – or don’t use any at all.

Enjoy!
 

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