Ube Japanese Cheesecake Recipe: Make a fluffy, jiggly and bouncy Ube Japanese cotton cheesecake with me! — Phil and Mama (2024)

Ube Japanese Cheesecake Recipe: Make a fluffy, jiggly and bouncy Ube Japanese cotton cheesecake with me! — Phil and Mama (1)

Ube cotton cheesecakes are usually dense and dry; this one is bouncy, fluffy, jiggly and soft! It took me three years of trial and error baking to perfect my...

Ube Japanese Cheesecake Recipe: Make a fluffy, jiggly and bouncy Ube Japanese cotton cheesecake with me! — Phil and Mama (2)

Hi friends! After three years of baking, I’ve finally discovered the techniques and ways to bake a fool-proof Japanese souffle cheesecake. I added one ingredient to my basic Japanese soufflé cheesecake recipe, and that’s 1 teaspoon of ube extract to create a beautiful purple ube Japanese cheesecake! Ube is a purple yam from the Philippines. Ube extract makes your cakes and baked goodies beautifully and vibrantly purple.

Japanese souffle cheesecake is also known as Japanese cotton cheesecake or just Japanese cheesecake. It is a mix between a regular cheesecake (Basque or NY Style) mixed with a chiffon cake. It’s airy, fluffy, and less dense than cheesecakes. It’s the perfect offspring of a cake, and I’m sharing my baking secrets with you! Happy baking! This ube Japanese cheesecake is less dense, it is softer, it is fluffy, tall, jiggly and bouncy!

PREP TIME: 20 minutes COOK TIME: 25+45 minutes TOTAL TIME: 90 minutes

MAKES: One 8-inch cake or two 6-inch cakes

Ingredients

  • 5 egg yolks 🥚

  • 8 oz cream cheese (1 bar)

  • 1/4 cup unsalted butter

  • 1/2 cup milk

  • 1/4 cup fine sugarfor the batter

  • 1/4 cup fine sugar for the white egg/meringue + 1/4 tsp cream of tartar

  • 2 tbsp corn starch (magic ingredient)

  • 1 tsp ube extract

  • 1/4 cup all purpose flour (use rice flour or Mochiko instead to make a gluten-free Japanese Cheesecake)

  • (Vanilla extract or powder or lemon juice for extra flavoring are all optional)

  • Optional toppings: strawberries, confectioner sugar, fruits of your choice, honey, matcha powder, etc...


INSTRUCTIONS

  1. Full instructions are in the video above. You can start by separating 5 eggs. (If you want the cake to be even fluffier or taller, you can use 6 eggs.) Place the egg yolks in a bowl, and the egg whites in a mixer bowl.

  2. Place the butter, cream cheese and 1/4 cup of fine sugar into a pot over low-heat. Allow the ingredients to melt, and mix together into a beautifully smooth batter mixture.

  3. Remove the pot from heat, and add the egg yolks into the batter mixture. Mix well, but gently.

  4. Add the cornstarch and flour. Once again, mix well. Clumps should disappear.

  5. Add the milk and optionally add vanilla extract or other flavors of your choice.

  6. Mix well. The batter should be smooth and liquid-y. This is not a thick cake batter and it’s okay! Add 1 teaspoon of ube extract. Mix well again. You won’t have to strain this mixture. (See video) If you want pandan flavor, you can addd 1 teaspoon of pandan extract instead of the ube extract.

  7. Set aside the cake batter as you beat the egg whites into stiff peaks (see below for egg beating tips). Egg white meringue requires the 1/4 cup sugar and 1/4 tsp cream of tartar. Please scroll below to see proper egg white beating steps. Properly beating egg whites into stiff peaks requires at least 8-10 minutes.

  8. Pre-heat your oven to 330F. Depending on your oven, you may want to either lower the temperature to 325 or raise to 340F. Prepare a bain-marie by putting water in a deep rectangular baking pan or dish. Place into the oven.

  9. Prepare baking pans— with these ingredients, you can bake one 8-inch cake or two 6-inch cakes. Line the bottoms of the baking pans with circular parchment paper, and the inside sides with rectangular strips of parchment paper. (Not wax paper.)

  10. Once you achieve stiff peaks, place some beaten egg white into the batter and mix together.

  11. Repeat the above step two more times.

  12. You don’t want to over mix the batter. Pour the batter into the rest of the egg whites and mix together using folding techniques. You don’t want to over-mix or under mix. If you over mix, the cake will not rise. If you under-mix, your cake will be uneven. The egg white will float to the top and you’ll have meringue-like cake at the top, and a dense cheesecake at the bottom.

  13. Pour the well incorporated, but not over-mixed batter into the baking pan(s).

  14. Bake bain-marie style for 25 minutes 330F (Depending on your oven, you may have to adjust the temperature.) If you see the cake is not rising at all, this temperature may be too low. Raise the temperature by 10 degrees. If your cake rises meteorically, then you may have under-mixed your final batter, and your cake top will likely crack.

  15. After 25 minutes, your cake should rise. If it has not risen yet, allow it to stay at the same temperature and give it time to rise. Once it rises nicely, crack open the oven door slightly and keep it opened for 10 seconds (approximately). Lower the oven temperature to about 245-265F, depending on your oven and bake for an additional 45 minutes.

  16. Allow your cake to rest in the oven after baking for about 10 minutes.

  17. Remove from the oven. Be careful and use oven mitts as needed. Place a sheet of parchment paper over the cake. Place a plate over the cake and parchment paper. Flip the cake upside down so the top of it is now the bottom, while resting on the parchment paper over the plate. Remove the cake from the pan by sliding it out, or gently shaking it out.

  18. Remove the wet parchment paper from the cake, replace the bottom parchment paper of the cake.

  19. Now place another plate— the presentation or serving plate, on top of the cake. It should be on top of the bottom of the cake. Flip the cake again, carefully.

  20. Play with the bouncy jiggly-ness of the cake. Serve when still warm, or chill in the fridge. It won’t be bouncy or fluffy after chilling though!

Japanese Cheesecake Troubleshooting:

  • If your cake does crack, the heat may have been too high. Just decorate over the crack. It’s okay, baking does not have to be perfect! Your cake will still taste good!

  • If your cake is airy and fluffy at the top, and dense on the bottom, then you did not incorporate your final batter well enough. Too much of the beaten egg whites have not been mixed into the yolk batter. Next time, make sure your final batter is well-mixed, thick, and creamy with little to no beaten egg white streaks.

  • If you cake has not rise at all in the oven, then your heat is too low, or your egg whites were over or under beaten (you want glossy beautiful stiff peaks), or you have over-mixed your final batter. Try raising your temperature, if you are sure you had mixed your batter well.

Tips

🥚To beat egg whites into stiff peaks, gradually increase the mixer speed, starting at medium, to medium-high, to high, each speed taking around 2-3 minutes.

🥚Add cream of tartar when you see some egg foam. Gradually add fine sugar when the beaten egg whites have become very white and foamy.

🥚Baking tip! Bake (bain-marie style) for 25 minutes on higher heat (320-345F depending on your oven), then crack open the oven door for about 10 seconds and bake for 45 minutes on lower heat (245-265F depending on your oven.)

🥚Your baking powder and cornstarch should be gluten-free. To make your Japanese cheesecake gluten-free, substitute all purpose flour with sweet rice flour (Mochiko).

Happy baking, my friends! Let me know what you think of my recipes <3

Cakes made from this recipe!

Ube Japanese Cheesecake Recipe: Make a fluffy, jiggly and bouncy Ube Japanese cotton cheesecake with me! — Phil and Mama (4)

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Ube Japanese Cheesecake Recipe: Make a fluffy, jiggly and bouncy Ube Japanese cotton cheesecake with me! — Phil and Mama (2024)

FAQs

Why is my Japanese cheesecake not fluffy? ›

If the oven isn't hot enough, the egg whites will deflate and the cheesecake will be dense and heavy instead of light and airy, so turning on the oven is always the first thing I do.

Why is the bottom of my Japanese cheesecake dense? ›

Over mixed batter - With meringue based batter, it is crucial to not over-mix. Over-mixing the batter will deflate the meringue, creating a dense cake and separation in the Japanese cheesecake. That's when you see a super dense layer of rubbery cake, usually at the bottom.

What is the difference between Japanese cheesecake and cheesecake? ›

One thing that makes Japanese cheesecake different and special is its unique texture. Unlike traditional cheesecakes, which are dense and heavy, Japanese cheesecakes are light and airy. With a combination of whipped egg whites and cream cheese, this dessert takes on the perfect balance of smoothness and fluffiness.

Why is my cheesecake bouncy? ›

An underbaked cheesecake will ripple and jiggle noticeably. The key to a perfect cheesecake is a subtle wiggle—not a sloshy jiggle.

What causes cheesecake to puff up? ›

If your ingredients are cold you will have to mix them longer which will whip too much air into your batter. If the cake has too much air, it will rise too much in the oven and then the middle will sink when cooling. Nobody wants a sad, sunken cheesecake.

Should cheesecake be dense or fluffy? ›

Some cheesecakes are firm and dense, like a classic New York-style cheesecake. Others are rich, lush, and creamy, almost like a thick custard. Still others are as light and airy as meringue. It was clear from the beginning that there could be no single ideal cheesecake recipe.

What happens if you put too much gelatin in cheesecake? ›

What happens if you put too much gelatin in cheesecake? It ends up like rubber. The more gelatin, the firmer the end product, and if you over do it the end product can be pretty solid.

Why is my cheesecake jiggly in the middle? ›

If the cheesecake looks nearly set and only a small circle in the center jiggles slightly, it's done. You might worry a runny middle means raw cheesecake, but it's totally safe and normal. The center will firm up as it cools on a cooling rack, resulting in the smooth surface you want.

Is Japanese cheesecake healthier than regular cheesecake? ›

Japanese cheesecake recipes also call for much less sugar than other cheesecakes, thus making it a great choice of cake for those who are conscious about their sugar and calorie intake.

What brand of Japanese cheesecake is famous? ›

Uncle Tetsu's Cheesecake (Japanese: てつおじさんの店, Tetsu-ojisan no mise) is a Japanese bakery chain that sells cheesecake as its signature dish. It originally opened in Japan in 1990 as a bakery shop on Oyaf*ckou Street in the ward of Hakata-ku in the city of f*ckuoka.

Should Japanese cheesecake be refrigerated? ›

Storage. If you want to have the best Japanese cheesecake experience, you should eat it the same day it's made. These cakes are best fresh out of the oven or steamer. However, you can store them in the fridge for a couple of days.

What is Japanese Ube cake? ›

Ube cake is a traditional Filipino chiffon cake or sponge cake made with ube halaya (mashed purple yam). It is distinctively vividly purple in color, like most dishes made with ube in the Philippines. Ube cake. Alternative names. Purple yam cake, Ube sponge cake, Ube chiffon cake, Purple cake.

Why are Japanese cakes so soft? ›

The super soft (and usually very very jiggly) comes from beating the white egg until it's fluffy. They are airy and spongy, and it melts in the mouth. This is a very pleasurable and satisfying feeling when eating or even just looking at a cake, no wonder everyone loves it!

What is Japanese cheesecake supposed to taste like? ›

This classic Japanese dessert is a delightful fusion of lightness and creaminess, achieved through the meticulous combination of egg yolk custard with whipped meringue to create that signature bounce. Adding cream cheese, butter, and milk to the custard provides a rich and indulgent dimension to each bite.

Why is my cheesecake not dense? ›

Those that are a mixture of cream cheese and whipped cream will have a lighter texture but will be slightly soft. The cheesecakes that are set with gelatine may have a fairly smooth texture or a very mousse-like texture but will not be dense.

Does Japanese fluffy cheesecake need to be refrigerated? ›

How long will they last? Our Japanese Cheesecakes can stay in room temperature for up to 12 hours. We recommend putting them in the fridge as soon as possible, and they can last refrigerated for up to 3 days.

Why is my souffle not rising? ›

If the temperature is too low, the souffle won't rise properly. If the temperature is too high, the souffle will rise just like a popover with big air pockets inside. Ideally, bake the souffle in the lower third of the oven.

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