Irish Curd Cake
Submitted by rittdebra
Irish curd cake: a traditional sieved cottage cheese cheesecake in a shortbread crust with lemon zest and a sugar-butter glaze. Light alternative to heavy American cheesecake.
YIELD
10 servingsPREP
15 minCOOK
35 minREADY
60 minIrish curd cake is the old-country cousin of the cheesecake you know. Instead of cream cheese, this recipe uses cottage cheese pressed through a sieve, which gives you a lighter, tangier, almost souffle-like dessert sitting on a buttery shortbread base. This is the kind of cake you find in Irish farmhouse kitchens and traditional tea shops, and it bakes in half the time of a New York-style cheesecake.
Sieving the cottage cheese is where most shortcut-hunting bakers go wrong. Dumping cottage cheese straight into the batter gives you a lumpy, pebbly cake. Push it through a sieve with the back of a spoon to break up the curds into a smooth, fine puree. This takes five minutes and makes the difference between a rustic farmhouse cake and a sloppy one.
Separated eggs are the other key. Yolks beat into the cheese base for richness. Whites whipped to stiff peaks and folded in last give the cake its lift, since there is no baking powder or soda. The painted egg wash on the crust seals it against the wet filling and is the classic British-Irish baker’s trick for preventing soggy bottoms.
Pro Tips
- Use full-fat cottage cheese (4% milk fat). Low-fat cottage cheese has too much water and the cake ends up watery.
- Fold the egg whites in gently with a rubber spatula in three additions. Deflating them turns the cake dense and flat.
- Do not overbake. The top should be golden and the center should have just barely stopped jiggling. Overbaked curd cake cracks and dries out.
- Cool completely at room temperature, not in the fridge. Cold-shocking a warm curd cake can cause the top to crack.
Variations
- Swap the lemon zest for orange zest and use fresh orange juice for a citrus-forward version.
- Fold in a handful of plump raisins or currants soaked briefly in hot water for a more traditional Irish tea-time flavor.
- Top with a spoonful of Irish whiskey-laced whipped cream or a drizzle of honey for a celebratory finish.
Ingredients
Directions
Preheat the oven to 350℉ (180℃).
Press the cottage cheese through a sieve.
In a large mixing bowl, beat together the cheese, sugar, butter, lemon rind, lemon juice and 2 large egg yolks.
Beat the 2 egg whites until they form stiff peaks and then blend them into the cheese mixture.
Beat the remaining egg, then use it to paint the crust to prevent to prevent sogginess.
Mix any remaining beaten egg with the sugar, butter and flour to make the glaze.
Pour the cheese mixture into the prepared crust then pour the glaze over the top.
Bake the cake for about 35 minutes, or until the top is golden.
Cool to room temperature and serve.
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