Ackee Honey Cheesecake is a dream: honey sweetened silky ackee custard, topped with toblerone whipped cream and baked in a honey graham crust.

The honey is layered throughout from crust to topping but subtly so. The flavour is there, but the final product is not overly sweet.

Topped-with-Toblerone-whipped-cream-this-honey-sweetened-cheesecake-features-ackees-as-the-main-ingredient

Can ackee be used for sweet applications?

Whenever met with disbelief that ackee can be used in sweet applications, my recommendation is always the same. Take a piece of ackee, sprinkle it with a tiny bit of sugar and taste the possibilities.

The hubster (Web, my husband) purchased some honey from a retired coworker who to simply say is a lover of bees is the understatement of the year! He never bores of speaking of the little guys and what they can do and was even nice enough to take Web on an impromptu field trip to meet some of his bees 😂. The honey is delicious on its own and I’ll generally enjoy a spoonful by itself or drizzled on buttered toast 😍.

Ackee and honey

Applying my usual advice, I tasted a bit of ackee with honey and said ooooh SNAP!!! I’ve gotta try this in a cheesecake. So not only have I used it to sweeten the filling, I put just a tad in the crust also.

When it comes to cheesecake, I’ve found that oftentimes the crust is overlooked. It’s so easy to make being essentially cookies crumbs and melted butter at its simplest. But adding even just a splash of good vanilla extract can elevate your standard crust to something special. Other additions include ground espresso, cinnamon or citrus zest, let your imagination take you away!

How to make Toblerone whipped cream

Now to the crown of this cheesecake: Toblerone whipped cream. Yup, I pulverised a chocolate bar and added it to whipping cream. I found myself in the chocolate and candy aisle in the grocery store. Which is somewhat strange for me as I typically don’t venture down that one and if I do I never linger there. Because believe it or not, I don’t keep snacks or sweets in my house.

But there I was and I happened to be standing in front the bars of Toblerone (which I developed a thing for when I worked in the Rockies) and thought hmmm, I’m making ackee cheesecake with honey, Toblerone is milk chocolate with honey (and nougat) why not? and so the idea was born. The Toblerone pieces give a nice speckled effect to the whipped cream and as the it melts on your tongue so too the chocolate pieces, which candy bar shall I pulverise next 😏

What do you think? As always, feel free to share your thoughts in the comment section below, if you make this or any of the recipes from this site be sure to #amazingackee so I can see your posts across social media.

Until next time, thanks for stopping by.

Ackee Honey Cheesecake with Toblerone Whipped Cream

Chantal
Silky honey sweetened ackee cheesecake baked in a honey graham crust and finished with Toblerone whipped cream
5 from 2 votes
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour
Total Time 9 hours 15 minutes
Servings 4

Ingredients
  

For the crust

  • 200 g Honey graham cracker crumbs about 2 cups
  • 113 g Unsalted butter, melted 1 stick
  • 2 tsps Honey

For the cheesecake

  • 350 g Cream cheese
  • 200 g Parboiled ackee
  • 100 g Honey* see recipe notes
  • 1 Egg
  • 1 Yolk
  • 2 tsps Flour** optional, see recipe notes

For the whipped cream

  • 1 cup Heavy whipping cream
  • 2 tsps Honey
  • 1/2 bar Toblerone, cold (that’s the 3.5oz/100g bar)

For serving

  • Honey as needed

Instructions
 

For the crust:

  • Mix together all ingredients and press into a lined 6-inch baking tin or springform pan
  • Chill while working on the filling

For the cheesecake filling:

  • Preheat the oven to 350F
  • Add ackee to food processor and blend till smooth. Then add cream cheese and honey blending till smooth.
  • Scrape the sides of the food processor then blend in the eggs. Do not over mix. Pour the batter into the chilled crust
  • Bake in a water bath: Place cheesecake in a larger pan or roasting dish with enough room to fit water to come up to the side of the pan. Put both pans in oven then fill the larger pan with warm water.
  • Bake for 20 minutes then reduce the temperature to 300F and bake for another 40 minutes till set, the cheesecake should have a dainty jiggle towards the centre
  • When done, run a knife around the edge of the cheesecake to help release the cake from the edge of the pan and prevent cracking as it cools.
    Turn off oven and use a wooden spoon to prop the oven door open. Let the oven cool completely before removing the cheesecake (this residual heat continues to cook the cheesecake)
  • Once the oven has cooled off. Remove cheesecake from water bath and chill overnight till set

For the whipped cream

  • Break Toblerone up and blitz in food processor into tiny chips
  • Combine whipping cream and honey in the bowl of a stand mixer with the whisk attachment.
  • Begin whipping cream, once the cream starts to thicken with the whisk leaving trails as it mixes add the Toblerone then whip to medium-stiff peaks

To finish:

  • Decorate the top of the cheesecake with the Toblerone whipped cream and drizzle or serve the cheesecake slices with honey

Notes

* I’ve used this amount of honey here keeping in mind that I would be serving the cheesecake with more honey drizzled over it. You will find that the batter is not very sweet for it to be had on it’s own. If you like you can taste the batter at this point before adding the eggs and add more honey to achieve your desired level of sweetness, how much you need to add will also depend on how sweet the honey you are using is in the first place.
**This recipe makes a very light, silky custard type cheesecake. If you prefer a firmer cheesecake, add the flour when adding the cream cheese and honey to the mix
Other notes:
This recipe makes enough for a 6-inch round cheesecake. You can multiply the recipe by 1.5 to make a 9 inch round, in that case use 2 eggs.
If you don’t want the crust to come all the way up the sides, make half the recipe and that should be enough to cover the base of the pan
Unless I’m going to be using a sour cream topping I never bake my cheesecakes in a springform pan, I simply line the base with parchment paper. Once the cheesecake is thoroughly chilled, I heat the bottom of the pan either on the stove or with the torch and invert onto a flat plate