Apologies to the other Daring Bakers who actually had their posts on the appropriate day. My cheesecake was actually done, but I am experiencing technical problems. If you are reading this, it means I finally won! Persistence pays.
This month’s Daring Bakers Challenge is Cheesecake Pops from a nifty little dessert cookbook intriguingly called Sticky, Chewy, Messy, Gooey by Jill O’Connor. I don’t own this book (yet) but on several trips to the local bookstore, I have thumbed through it drooling over the yummy-sounding recipes therein. Our hostesses were Deborah at Taste and Tell and Elle at Feeding My Enthusiasm. Thanks ladies, great job!
Being no stranger to baking cheesecake, I was eager to tackle a different recipe for what has become one of my very favorite desserts. The cheesecake went together like a dream–the batter was silky smooth and the cheesecake baked perfectly without cracking. So, what was the problem? The weather. We have been socked in with rain for several days and with posting date approaching and the dew point hovering around 70 degrees, I knew the dipping process would be challenging. I scooped my cheesecake balls and froze them, but by the time I had the third one dipped into the chocolate and rolled in the pistachios, the first one was coated with a fine dew. returning them to the fridge did nothing to alleviate the problem and sitting an hour at room temp didn’t help either. So nothing to do except snap a few pix and eat dessert.
After scooping the cheesecake balls, the pan of cheesecake with Swiss cheese holes made a wonderful parfait with fresh strawberry coulis. Just too good to waste any bits! BTW, the recipe halved beautifully–I used three whole eggs, low-fat cream cheese (Neufchatel), and an 8-inch pan. Because it went together so quickly and was sooooooo creamy and delicious, I think this will become my default recipe. I think it would work wonderfully in a pie crust topped with fruit, or in a graham crust as a traditional cheesecake. The possibility for flavorings is endless.
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 – 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
Position oven rack in the middle of the oven and preheat to 325 degrees F. Set some water to boil.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Refrigerate the pops for up to 24 hours, until ready to serve.





I’m glad you got the technical issues worked out so that you could post! Your pops are gorgeous, despite working with uncooperative weather!
you pops look wonderful, despite the bit of trouble. Great job!
I had to deal with a too warm kitchen also. I would love to have had a helper hand me a pop from the freezer, me dip it and another to put it in the fridge. An assembly line if you will.
The pop you got a photo of is beautiful.
I also loved this recipe and this serving size!!
Congrats Texana!
Hi Texana! I’m glad your up and running today.
I stopped by yesterday to see your pops..I was wondering where my compadre who started with the DBer’s the same time I did was!
I LOVE pistachio’s..great choice! I bet they tasted as wonderful as they look.
Ciao,
Laurie
Nice pops! I’ll bet the pistachios were wonderful.
I had a bit of trouble with the process, but it wasn’t the weather.
I think your pops look wonderful and the cheesecake recipe might also become my default recipe. It was so yummy!
Now, why didn’t I think of crushed nuts? This is killing me because I’m nuts about nuts! Great job, Texana!
Congrats on getting these posted – pisatachio green is one of my favorite colors and these look divine! Sadly, I did not have to deal with a warm kitchen, but I found this to be challlenging nonetheless!
Great job overcoming technical difficulties to get your post up. Your pops turned out beautifully! I like your choice of pistachios for dipping.
Lovely photos of your perfect pops! I think the pistachios look great for a color and texture contrast. Well done!
Glad you overcame the tech problems…we have all been there. Your pops are worth waiting for…so cute and pistachios is a great combo with the cheesecake and chocolate. Great job on the challenge!
Nice job on the challenge, despite the technical difficulties!
Those look so fantastic. I love the topping, and all lined up in a row of tastyness! Fantastic!
I had plans for my leftover cheesecake too but when I came home that evening I caught my boyfriend and his friend stuffing their faces!!
So sorry you got all the rain and humidity too.
I think they are lovely! Great combo with the nuts and chocolate.
The parfait sounds pretty derned good too!
This has become my default cheesecake recipe as well. I’m also considering buying the cookbook. If they are all this good it will be a well worn favorite soon.
Nice job!
I love the pistachios! And totally agree about the filling working in a crust with fruit. Great to know this halved well as my freezer couldn’t take the freezing step! And I’m so jealous you mixed the leftovers into a parfait. Fantastic idea!
Your pops look perfect! I love the pistachios….. dang, why didn’t I think of that? How lucky you are to have a warm kitchen & a great excuse to have dessert – I will use that one for sure.
xoxox Amy
Your pops turned out great! Congrats!
great idea w/the pistachios! they look great!
i do, was very sad when i saw the condensation on my pops b/c i then realized that my pics were ruined
that’s partly when i decided to do the caramel/white choc/cinnamon sugar combo – i knew those wouldn’t have that problem! only my problem w/those was that it was hard to get the caramel on them nicely so they were a little “goopy” at the bottom as they settled before freezing and weren’t pretty/round.
oh well, it all tasted good, right?
Thank you so much for the lovely DB comment on my blog!
Your cheesecakes are gorgeous!! Your photographs are truly inspired works of art, as well… WOW!
I love the crushed pistachios! Nice job!
Great choice with the pistachios! The green looks so pretty against the chocolate. Great Job!
I had the “dewey” pop problem, too.
Your pops look lovely and I’ll bet the pistachios were a wonderful accent!
your pops look fab! Don’t worry about being late, I still haven’t postedmine! tutut me!
Your pops are cute! I’m sorry about the humidity playing havoc with your dipping- that’s a real challenge. You were very brave to stick with it! Glad you did and thanks for coming by to see mine
Using pistachios for these crossed my mind, but the thought was lost. They look great! I think eating them frozen was our favorite. Kind of an interesting “ice cream” right? Congrats on your first challenge!
Lol…persistance does indeed pay off, doesn’t it! These look marvelous…love the crushed nuts on top!