The best gochujang basque cheesecake I’ve ever made and it’s gluten-free
Dear friends,
Growing up, my mother and I never baked cookies together. Our oven was the de facto house for all our pots and pans, and I kid you not, we did not own any baking sheets. While baking was a rare activity in my childhood home back in Coney Island, my mother did bake two western desserts. One was cheesecake and the other an airy chiffon cake (it was my grandmother, Ah Ma’s recipe, may she rest in peace).
While Mom’s cheesecake never won her any awards, everyone who ate it loved it. It was smooth and creamy. And her secret? Well, she just used the recipe published in the back of a Philadelphia original cream cheese box—you know, that silver box with blue letters. But she added one extra thing, which was lots of lemon juice.
As an avid baker these days, I channel my mother’s energy in the kitchen and often add more flavor to standard recipes. Take a basque cheesecake, for example. A vanilla-flavored one is stellar, as is, with the caramelized burnt top and the creamy center. But what if you add a little gochujang to the mix? Thanks to fermentation, this spicy condiment from Korea is so flavorful and nuanced, adding depth and complexity to cheesecake. Plus, it adds this vibrant orange, making one think they’re about to slice into a whole baked wheel of cheddar cheese.
You can blend cocoa powder to elevate this cheesecake further, but I recommend trying it as is first. And if you don’t have a blender, be sure to soften both the cream cheese and butter first, and you can do so in a microwave. You want to cream the butter and cream cheese together until super fluffly and creamy before mixing in the other ingredients. A blender, like my refurbished Vitamix, makes everything easier.
For those of you who can’t do dairy or need a vegan cheesecake recipe, I’ve got you. Check out my vegan gochujang basque cheesecake recipe.
Happy baking, dear friends!
xoxoxo,
Kat
PS: My mom made this cheesecake, by the way! <3
Gochujang Basque Cheesecake (gluten-free recipe) by Kat Lieu
Ingredients
Instructions
Notes
Skip the gochujang and add in other flavors like matcha powder or cocoa powder, or black sesame paste, to change the cake's flavor and color.
VARIATIONS:
Omit the gochujang and add miso and 2 tablespoons of lemon juice and 1 teaspoon lemon zest for a tangy cheesecake.
Omit the gochujang and add matcha powder or other food powder.
Swap out the gochujang with ube halaya or ube extract to. make an ube basque cheesecake