Ingredients
- 200g custard cream biscuits
- 50g unsalted butter, melted
- 500g mascarpone
- 100g thick vanilla custard, we used Taste the Difference
- 80g icing sugar, sifted
- 100ml double cream
- 4 tbsp rhubarb conserve
To decorate
- 100g caster sugar
- 6 large rhubarb stalks, trimmed
Step by step
Get ahead
The cheesecake keeps for up to 3 days in the fridge.
- Line the base of a 20cm springform cake tin with a circle of baking paper, then add the custard creams to a food processor and blitz to fine crumbs. Tip into a bowl and add the melted butter. Mix well until it looks like damp sand and pack into the cake tin, pressing down with the back of a spoon to make a smooth base. Transfer to the fridge.
- To make the filling, mix the mascarpone, custard and icing sugar with an electric hand whisk until well combined and starting to thicken. Add the cream and whisk until thickened again; it needs to be very thick, but be careful not to overwhisk the mixture when the double cream goes in. Fold through the conserve so it ripples through the mix.
- Spoon onto the chilled base and smooth over the surface with a spatula. Cover with clingflim and chill for 2 hours.
- Put the caster sugar and 200ml water in a wide pan, and bring to a gentle simmer, stirring until the sugar dissolves. Using a vegetable peeler, shave the rhubarb into long thin strips – you want the really pink outer layers so stop as soon as you hit the white middle, and keep that for a crumble. Gently lower 4 or 5 strips at a time into the sugar syrup for 45-60 seconds to soften. Remove with a draining spoon and leave to cool, then spread out on a baking paper-lined tray until completely cool. Repeat with the remaining strips.
- Slide a knife around the edges to loosen the cheesecake then unclip and remove the tin, and transfer to a serving plate. Gently layer up the rhubarb strips, overlapping slightly, over the top of the custard, hanging over the edges of the cheesecake. Trim the rhubarb with a pair of scissors around the edge to get a neat finish. Chill again until ready to serve.
- To serve, use a very sharp knife to gently cut through the lattice, or snip first with scissors, depending on how robust your rhubarb is. The cheesecake is quite mousse-like, so use a sharp knife dipped in hot water to slice it neatly.
source:https://www.sainsburysmagazine.co.uk/recipes/cheesecakes/rhubarb-and-custard-cheesecake?
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