Kaesekuchen (German Cheesecake)
I just love the blogsphere. I received an email from a reader, Lea, who was enquiring after my apprentice pastrychef-ing experience. After a few exchanged emails, she offered me this Kaesekuchen recipe, which is a German Cheesecake (Lea hails from Germany herself). I really love a baked cheesecake, and what I like about this one is that it’s not too rich. Too often cheesecakes are uber rich/sweet, leaving you only able to consume a few mouthfuls (well, that is where one should stop if they were intelligent, but one still manages to eat a whole piece, feeling completely stuffed afterwards!).
This recipe uses Quark as the cheese component, which is basically a European style cottage / cream cheese. It is easily obtainable from the dairy section of most major supermarkets. The quark adds a nice tartness and smooth mouth feel to the cheesecake, and with the slightly sour cherries, it’s a dynamic combination. Very yummy.
This recipe provides for 6 decent serves. Lea’s original recipe was for double the quantity as outlined below, so feel free to make a bigger cake should you have more mouths to feed.
Thanks for the wonderful recipe Lea. And good luck with your pastrycheffing career!
Kaesekuchen (German Cheesecake)
500g quark
3 eggs
125g sugar
3 tablespoons custard powder
Zest and juice of 1 lemon
Dark pitted cherries (canned) - or you can used apricots, pears, whatever
Butter and hazelnut meal for the tin
Preheat oven to 180 degrees celsius and butter a 20cm springform tin and coat with hazelnut meal. The traditional recipe called for breadcrumbs in this step - but I didn’t have any, so thought a nut meal might make a great substitution.
Separate the eggs and whisk the egg whites until they hold stiff peaks.
Place egg yolks, sugar, custard powder, quark, lemon juice and zest into a separate bowl and mix well. Gently fold in egg whites (in two batches to maintain lightness) and then spread into the prepared tin.
Decorate with the drained pitted cherries in a somewhat attractive pattern and bake for 1 hour.
Now if I were a smart girl who thinks ahead, I would have reserved the canned cherry juice, reduced and perhaps thickened it slightly with some corn starch, and served it alongside the cheesecake. Alas, I didn’t think of this till after I drained the cherries into the sink. So you get the benefit of my lack of foresight on this occasion.
Either way, serve with a good creme fraiche.




July 20th, 2006 at 10:35 am
Yes, you must have perfected your baking skills. Wow!! And your previous lemon tarts (I haven’t had a chance to visit for a while!)… hmmm.
PS Thanks for the post about Brunetti creperia!
July 20th, 2006 at 10:27 pm
Hey there Belinda! Thank you for the feedback. I really do enjoy the whole process of baking. The only difficulty is finding an excuse to make something. I reckon I’d bake every day if I had a hungry hoard to feed. It is too much temptation to cook and have it sitting around the house, taunting you constantly
July 20th, 2006 at 11:35 pm
This looks fantastic, I grew up on home made baked cheesecake from my nanna, sadly she never would give us the proper receipt thus it is lost forever, I will try this & see how it compares
July 21st, 2006 at 11:54 am
Hey there Ange! Keep me posted on how this compares with your food memories. Would be interesting to hear.
July 21st, 2006 at 4:26 pm
now this is a cheesecake to put all the other cheesecakes to shame. Wonderful!
July 23rd, 2006 at 11:13 am
Thanks for that jenjen! All kudos to Lea for providing the recipe!