Pecan-lovers: you’ll love these ultra-creamy mini cheesecakes swirled with caramelized pecan praline and topped with a white chocolate praline glaze. There’s more pecans in the sweet and salty cookie crust too!
There’s no denying that mini-sized is more delightful, not to mention better for holiday entertaining, which is why these muffin-sized pecan praline cheesecakes are so perfect: everyone gets their own personal cheesecake, no big knives or serving plates or even forks required.
I initially set out to make a mashup between a pecan pie and a cheesecake.
Which sounds amazing in theory, but, as it turns out, those two things aren’t necessarily compatible (and trust me, I tried, I really did).
But as I was trying to find a solution, bumbling around the Internet, I came across something called paté praline, or praline paste.
And YOU GUYS.
It is a revelation.
Once I discovered the magic of praline paste I knew that was going to make for a much better final product than problematic pecan pie filling.
So here we are… in a pecan lover’s dream.
There’s ground up pecans in the crust.
I’ve swirled some of the praline paste directly into the cheesecake batter.
(I considered stopping here, because the swirled cheesecakes are quite pretty all on their own. But, when it comes to this praline paste especially, if a little is good, more is better.)
So I topped it with a white chocolate pecan gianduja (melted white chocolate mixed with my homemade praline paste). The white chocolate softens the intensity of the praline and also allows it to set up into a perfectly toothsome topping not unlike a ganache. (Also, I think it would be fabulous with milk chocolate too).
Oh, and the cherry on top is a single candied pecan. If only so unsuspecting tasters know right off the bat what’s inside.
Not to be confused with pecan pralines, the classic Southern confection.
Instead, imagine your favorite nut butter, but made with caramelized nuts. (I know, right?)
It’s most commonly made with hazelnuts (although it can really be made with any nut), and it is in fact this paste that forms the foundation for gianduja (a smooth chocolate and nut-based spread, Nutella would be the most common variation).
Making it isn’t all that hard, and can be broken down into 3 steps:
I tasted a bit when it came out of the blender, and the first thing that came to my mind was this tastes like teddy grahams.
You guys, I legit made teddy graham butter out of little more than pecans and sugar. WHAT.
Homemade praline paste isn’t quite as smooth as the commercially made stuff (and yes, you can buy cans of pre-made hazelnut praline paste), but for this recipe, a rustic texture really isn’t an issue.
This recipe will make more praline paste than you need for the cheesecakes (but you really need a full 2 cups of pecans for the butter to come together smoothly, less than that and the blender will struggle to grab hold of it).
But I’m sure you’ll have no trouble putting the leftovers to good use. ;)
The homemade praline paste keeps quite well in an airtight container at cool room temperature; you can also refrigerate it for longer term storage (whether it will even last that long… well, that’s highly doubtful).
So, you know when your cheesecake puffs up, soufflé-like, in the oven? Which looks all nice and pretty and all until it sinks miserably within minutes of taking it out.
Turns out, that rise-and-fall is caused by extra air beaten into the batter.
The first batch I made puffed impressively… and equally impressively sunk, forming less-than-pretty concave tops (although those tops make perfect receptacles for glaze, so if yours do end up sinking a bit, don’t despair).
After a bit of sleuthing I realized that the culprit was excess air in the batter, caused by over-beating the eggs.
I like making my cheesecake batters in a food processor, which incorporates much less air than a stand mixer, but, even so, I had managed to get enough air by mixing the eggs in the food processor to cause my cheesecakes to puff and collapse.
The solution was simple: beat everything BUT the eggs in the food processor. Then scrape it out into a bowl and whisk in the eggs by hand. It’d take a heck of a lot of work to incorporate much air into the batter that way (if you’ve ever whipped cream or egg whites by hand you’ll know what I mean).
This simple change resulted in perfectly flat topped cheesecakes, hopelessly smooth and just begging for that luscious white chocolate praline glaze.
Make sure your ingredients are at room temperature. This means get your cream cheese out of the fridge AT LEAST an hour before baking (more if if’s cold). Eggs too! If you’re in a rush, the soften setting on the microwave works quite well for cream cheese, and you can put your eggs in a bowl of warm water for 20 minutes to bring them up to temperature.
Add a smidge of flour to the batter. The starch in the flour protects the proteins in the eggs, essentially.
Don’t whip it. Feel free to beat the heck out of your cream cheese, sugar and other ingredients, but mix in your eggs by hand. I even recommend beating the eggs with a fork to mix them up a bit before adding them to the batter, then gently whisk until completely smooth and incorporated.
Don’t overbake the cheesecakes (they should be just a bit jiggly in the middle, harder to tell on cupcake-sized ones but I’m sure you’ll manage) and then turn off the oven and let the cheesecakes cool for 30 minutes in the oven with the door cracked. This brings the temperature of the cheesecakes down slowly, preventing sinking and (especially on larger cheesecakes) cracking.
I made these as mini cheesecakes in muffin tins (I also tried a batch in a mini cheesecake tin but I didn’t think they looked quite as finished, oddly enough). My thought being mini cheesecakes are much more practical for holiday entertaining (no big knives, plates or even forks required).
Helpful tip: save your fingers, and use a flat-bottomed juice glass to compact the cookie crumbs into the muffin tins. For smaller sizes a shot glass works well too!
I have not personally tried this as a full cheesecake but the base recipe is pretty standard as far as cheesecakes go, so I don’t see why it wouldn’t work. A single batch should fill a 7-inch springform pan, double it for a 9 or 10-inch one (just the crust/filling, there’s enough praline paste for a double recipe already).
Ultra-creamy mini cheesecakes with a pecan cookie crust, swirled with caramelized pecan praline and topped with a white chocolate praline glaze. If you are a pecan lover you will love this cheesecake recipe!
*It is essential that your ingredients be at room temperature if you want a smooth cheesecake. Get out your cream cheese and eggs AT LEAST 1 hour before you start baking.
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