I’ve always thought pumpkin cheesecake sounded delicious and considered making it for Thanksgiving, but ended up going with the more traditional pumpkin or pecan pie. This year, it was a no-brainer, given the relative ease of making it low carb. I took a recipe from The America’s Test Kitchen Family Baking Book as my guide, although I modified more than just the sweetener. The carb-filled graham cracker crust had to go, so I replaced it with ground pecans and almonds. The filling called for 3 bricks of cream cheese, and I cut this back to 2, and reduced the other ingredients accordingly. I am glad I did, as the final result was big enough and filling enough as it was. But I did use their trick of drying the pumpkin puree between paper towels to reduce moisture and make the whole cake less mushy.
I dressed up the final product with toasted pecans and a caramel bourbon glaze made with erythritol. The thing to know here is that while erythritol will caramelize nicely when hot, it will start to harden back up quickly as it cools. You aren’t going to get a nice, soft caramel sauce here. You need to pour it onto the cake while it is still quite hot, and let it cool and harden. If it hardens while still in the pan, just heat it back up again and add a little more cream or liquid to get it soft again.
My whole Thanksgiving meal was a resounding success, even with my low carb changes. My son asked for seconds of only the stuffing made with my low carb quick bread! And I got some of the lowest post-meal blood sugar readings that I’ve had in a while – after Thanksgiving dinner, the ultimate in over-the-top feasts. Okay, so I ran a 5k turkey trot in the morning, which likely helped, but I know that my planning ahead so that I could indulge played a huge part. With Christmas, my favourite holiday, looming ahead, it’s a relief to know that I can find ways to indulge as much as the next person without going too far off track and putting my health at risk.
Now, if someone can just tell me how to release my cheesecakes from the bottom of the spring-form pan so that I can put them on pretty serving dishes, I would be forever in your debt!
Pumpkin Bourbon Cheesecake with Spiced Pecan Crust
Crust:
¾ cup pecans
½ cup almonds
1 ½ teaspoon granulated erythritol or xylitol
½ teaspoon ground ginger
½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
¼ teaspoon ground cloves
4 tablespoon butter, melted plus extra for brushing pan
Filling:
1 15oz can pumpkin puree
1 lb cream cheese, softened
½ cup erythritol
½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
½ teaspoon ground ginger
¼ teaspoon ground cloves
⅛ teaspoon ground allspice
¼ teaspoon salt
25 drops stevia extract
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
3 tablespoon bourbon
3 large eggs, room temperature
½ cup heavy cream
Topping:
24 pecan halves, toasted
2 tablespoon butter
3 tablespoon granulated erythritol
1 tablespoon heavy cream
½ teaspoon vanilla
1 tablespoon bourbon
For the crust, preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Grind pecans and almonds in a food processor until they resemble a coarse meal. Pour into the bottom of a 9-inch springform pan and stir in sweetener and spices until combined. Pour melted butter over and stir until thoroughly combined, then press mixture firmly and evenly into bottom of pan.
Bake until just beginning to brown, about 10 minutes. Let cool until pan isn’t too hot to touch, and then wrap outside of pan with two sheets of heavy duty foil. Set in a large roasting pan. Bring a kettle of water to a boil.
For the filling, line a baking sheet with a tea towel and then two layers of paper towel. Spread pumpkin puree out evenly on paper towel and then top with two more layers of paper towel. Press until top layer is saturated with moisture. Set aside.
In a large bowl, beat cream cheese with an electric mixer until smooth. Beat in erythritol and spices until incorporated. Beat in dried pumpkin puree, stevia, vanilla and bourbon. Beat in eggs, one at a time, until fully incorporated. Beat in heavy cream. Scrape down beaters and sides of bowl as needed.
Brush inside of springform pan with extra melted butter, being careful not to disturb baked crust. Pour filling over crust. Set the whole roasting pan with cheesecake inside on the middle oven rack and pour boiling water into roasting pan until it reaches about halfway up sides of springform pan. Bake cheesecake until set, about 1 to 1 ½ hours.
Let cheesecake cool in roasting pan for 45 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack to cool further, running a sharp knife round edges of cake every hour or so. Remove sides of pan, cover with plastic wrap and chill in refrigerator about three hours.
For the topping, place toasted pecans around edges of cake. Melt butter in a small saucepan over low heat. Stir in erythritol and raise heat to medium. Bring to a boil, stirring continuously, until light amber in colour, about 1 minute. Remove from heat and stir in cream, vanilla and bourbon. Mixture will bubble and froth. Stir vigorously and place back over heat, stirring continuously until all ingredients are combined.
Remove from heat and cool until just beginning to thicken, then pour over chilled cake, allowing it to drip down sides. If it begins to harden up, place back on heat and add a splash of cream and stir, then pour over cake.
Serves 12. 18g total carbs per serving, but only 7g if you subtract erythritol.
Stephanie says
I just want to lick that frosting off! I haven't had an overdose of pumpkin yet this year, so I'm definitely okay ogling that cheesecake. Looks really yummy.
mangocheeks says
Absolutely decadent. I especially love the spiced pecan crust.
Dawn says
Oh. Yum. I will now have to go and make my own pumpkin puree so I can try this recipe. (No canned pumpkin here.) I just made a batch of your blondies today using Lindt 90% for the chocolate chunks. Wow! So delicious, and they looked just like your picture. 🙂
whatsfordinneracrossstatelines says
This is so pretty it almost makes me want to faint! I wouldn't of guessed it was low carb.
-Gina-
Indie.Tea says
Wow, this sounds INCREDIBLE! I think, perhaps the best Thanksgiving-ish pumpkin-y dessert I've seen this year. YUM.
baking.serendipity says
I don't think I've had my fill of pumpkin yet, after seeing this cheesecake! It looks fantastic 🙂
Torviewtoronto says
beautiful cheesecake lovely addition of spices
Ang says
Wow! This looks incredible. I love reading your posts. My husband lost 50 pounds doing low Carb foods. Thanks for giving me ideas and recipes. I often run out of ideas to keep things lower Carb for him:)
Dimah says
Fabulous job, it looks absolutely stunning!
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Sommer J says
When I first heard of this I knew I'd looooooove this!! Will have to try! love the use of ground almonds and pecans for the crust! Sounds amazing!! Will try this as part of my Christmas
Kim - Liv Life says
I have never been able to get my cheesecake off of the bottom of the pan, I just put cake with the pan bottom on a pretty plate and am good to go. Good for you with the low pre-meal dinner! I know that my mom's and MIL's were probably not where they were supposed to be.
You can never post too much pumpkin! IMHO, pumpkin goes all year round!
Lovely cheesecake!
Jara says
I'm not a big fan of things pumpkin flavoured but I will say that the photography of this makes it something I'd definitely be willing to try. It looks soooo good!
Amy Bakes Everything says
Holy crap, gorgeous! I promise if I was at your holiday table I would eat 3 pieces. Great job!
melissa says
Wow, Carolyn, this is incredible! I can only imagine how good this would be with a cup of coffee after a great Thanksgiving meal.
Pretend Chef says
This looks decadent! I wish I had a slice in front of me now to go with my coffee. I am so happy for you that you got to enjoy the holiday and indulge yourself as well!
Megan says
Morning! What a gorgeous job you did! Just beautiful! I just love how you keep coming up with non-traditional ways to keep eating wonderful food!
I have a spring-form pan with a glass bottom. When I quick release from the pan I just place the entire cheesecake on the serving dish as you don't really see the glass… or you could put a circle of parchment on the bottom of the pan pan on the bottom (first grease the bottom of pan and then grease the parchment…. I think you could get a nice slide off of your pan… possibly)//… I just use my glass bottomed spring-forms as they are beautiful. and blend right in with the pie/cake/cheesecake)
Jeanine says
You had me at bourbon. Wow, that is such a fantastic looking cheesecake. Great job!
Tes says
Wow look at the toing dripping away! This just looks so amazing 🙂
Sugar Free Low Carb says
That is one nice looking cheesecake!
Charlie @ SweetSaltySpicy says
This cheesecake looks so good! The crust sounds great; nutty & spicy! A nice change from the regular graham crust ;).
MILDRED says
I think it would be easer if you put some butter on the bottom of the ring mold and befoe that mix all the ingredientes of the crust together and then you put inside the pan pressig the mixture firmly to the bottom.
LC says
The easiest way to get the crust off the bottom of the spring form pan is to either put a parchment doily on it or just a round piece of parchment on the bottom. Once the cake is cooked just slide it off the bottom of the pan.