April Daring Bakers:Maple Toffee Crunch Cheesecake Pops
So I am ungodly late for the April Daring Baker’s Challenge (seeing as how it’s May already…), but I figured since I did actually make them, I’d still post, even if it’s very tardy. Not much to say about this recipe. I used Maple Syrup instead of sugar, dark chocolate for coating, and toffee shards to give exterior crunch. Absolutely delicious and many thanks to my fellow Daring Bakers Elle and Deborah for coming up with this great challenge!
Note: feel free to be creative with the recipe below, but be warned, if you use maple syrup as I did, the cheesecake will be slightly more dense than if you use white granulated sugar. Enjoy! : )
Innards!
Cheesecake Pops
Makes 30 – 40 Pops
5 8-oz. packages cream cheese at room temperature
2 cups sugar
¼ cup all-purpose flour
¼ teaspoon salt
5 large eggs
2 egg yolks
2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
¼ cup heavy cream
Boiling water as needed
Thirty to forty 8-inch lollipop sticks
1 pound chocolate, finely chopped – you can use all one kind or half and half of dark, milk, or white (Alternately, you can use 1 pound of flavored coatings, also known as summer coating, confectionary coating or wafer chocolate – candy supply stores carry colors, as well as the three kinds of chocolate.)
2 tablespoons vegetable shortening
(Note: White chocolate is harder to use this way, but not impossible)
Assorted decorations such as chopped nuts, colored jimmies, crushed peppermints, mini chocolate chips, sanding sugars, dragees) - Optional
Method
1.Position oven rack in the middle of the oven and preheat to 325 degrees F. Set some water to boil.
2.In a large bowl, beat together the cream cheese, sugar, flour, and salt until smooth. If using a mixer, mix on low speed. Add the whole eggs and the egg yolks, one at a time, beating well (but still at low speed) after each addition. Beat in the vanilla and cream.
3.Grease a 10-inch cake pan (not a springform pan), and pour the batter into the cake pan. Place the pan in a larger roasting pan. Fill the roasting pan with the boiling water until it reaches halfway up the sides of the cake pan. Bake until the cheesecake is firm and slightly golden on top, 35 to 45 minutes.
4.Remove the cheesecake from the water bath and cool to room temperature. Cover the cheesecake with plastic wrap and refrigerate until very cold, at least 3 hours or up to overnight.
5.When the cheesecake is cold and very firm, scoop the cheesecake into 2-ounce balls and place on a parchment paper-lined baking sheet. Carefully insert a lollipop stick into each cheesecake ball. Freeze the cheesecake pops, uncovered, until very hard, at least 1 – 2 hours.
6.When the cheesecake pops are frozen and ready for dipping, prepare the chocolate. In the top of a double boiler, set over simmering water, or in a heatproof bowl set over a pot of simmering water, heat half the chocolate and half the shortening, stirring often, until chocolate is melted and chocolate and shortening are combined. Stir until completely smooth. Do not heat the chocolate too much or your chocolate will lose it’s shine after it has dried. Save the rest of the chocolate and shortening for later dipping, or use another type of chocolate for variety. Alternately, you can microwave the same amount of chocolate coating pieces on high at 30 second intervals, stirring until smooth.
7.Quickly dip a frozen cheesecake pop in the melted chocolate, swirling quickly to coat it completely. Shake off any excess into the melted chocolate. If you like, you can now roll the pops quickly in optional decorations. You can also drizzle them with a contrasting color of melted chocolate (dark chocolate drizzled over milk chocolate or white chocolate over dark chocolate, etc.) Place the pop on a clean parchment paper-lined baking sheet to set. Repeat with remaining pops, melting more chocolate and shortening (or confectionary chocolate pieces) as needed.
8.Refrigerate the pops for up to 24 hours, until ready to serve.
Enjoy!
-M : )
















May 7th, 2008 at 8:13 am
Wow, they look great! Terribly tempting!
Cheers,
Rosa
May 7th, 2008 at 9:18 am
I saw a lot of those cheesecake pops from you daring bakers and I have to say, yours look fantastic!
May 7th, 2008 at 10:28 am
I have never thought of substituting maple syrup for sugar - what a great idea! They look fantastic and make me wish I had some more to snack on right now!
May 7th, 2008 at 10:52 am
Yum! I love the idea of the maple and toffee. I think I might have left out the chocolate all together, though I know you couldn’t with the challenge. Did you make the toffee?
May 7th, 2008 at 10:58 am
Thanks everyone!
Maggie: I have to say the dark chocolate does overpower the maple flavor a little, so I would probably use white chocolate for the coating next time, but regardless, these are seriously delicious. I did make the toffee, actually…funny story. I had toffee shards left over from my sweet and spicy mixed nuts (recipe on the Recipes page), so I saved them and used them here! Any toffee though, would be yummy here.
-Maddy
May 7th, 2008 at 5:55 pm
You may be late… but the maple makes up for it!
May 12th, 2008 at 8:01 pm
Very nice! I wish I could make sweets like this. Was it difficult? So can you send me 2 dozen via UPS?
May 13th, 2008 at 5:24 pm
Chef Eric- Don’t be silly! You can make sweets like this- it’s so easy! P.s. I’m mixing up another batch to ship your way right now
-Maddy
May 19th, 2008 at 8:59 am
Love that toffee crunch idea! WOW! Bet these were delicious.
May 19th, 2008 at 4:27 pm
My good Lord, those look great. Great job, Maddie. Who cares if you were late for Daring Bakers? I don’t even LIKE chocolate and I love these!
October 21st, 2008 at 3:46 am
Oh my god.. looks so great ! thanks for this recipe
March 7th, 2009 at 12:09 pm
Interesting site, i have bookmarked your blog for future referrence
March 27th, 2009 at 3:06 pm
BOOKMARKING!!! Wow. just wow.