Chocolate Peanut Butter Cheesecake

Chocolate Peanut Butter Cheesecake
  • Author: Nigella Lawson

This indulgent peanut butter cheesecake is a true showstopper, with a buttery biscuit base filled with a smooth and creamy peanut butter mixture. Topped with a luscious milk chocolate layer, this dessert is a perfect balance of sweet and salty flavors. Allow it to chill overnight for the flavors to meld and intensify before slicing into this decadent treat.

— Constant Cookbook

Ingredients

  • 200g/7oz digestive biscuits
  • 50g/2oz salted peanuts
  • 100g/3½oz dark chocolate
  • 50g/2oz unsalted butter
  • 500g/1lb 1oz cream cheese
  • 3 free-range eggs
  • 3 free-range egg yolks
  • 200g/7oz caster sugar
  • 125ml/4¼fl oz soured cream
  • 250g/9oz smooth peanut butter
  • 250ml/9fl oz soured cream
  • 100g/3½oz milk chocolate
  • 30g/1¼oz soft brown sugar

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to 170C/325F/Gas 3.
  • For the base, process the biscuits, peanuts, dark chocolate chips and butter in a food processor. Once the mixture comes together in a clump, turn it out into a 23cm/9in springform tin and press it into the bottom of the tin and up the sides, using your fingers, to make a crunchy crust. Chill in the fridge while you make the filling.
  • For the filling, process the cream cheese, eggs and egg yolks, sugar, soured cream and peanut butter in a food processor, whizzing to a smooth mixture.
  • Pour and scrape the filling mixture into the cheesecake base in the chilled springform tin and cook for 1 hour, checking after 50 minutes. The top – only – should feel set and dry. When cooked, take the cheesecake out of the oven while you make the topping.
  • For the topping, warm the soured cream and chocolate chips with the brown sugar gently in a small saucepan over a low heat, whisking to blend in the chocolate as it melts. Once the mixture is melted and well combined, take off the heat.
  • Spoon and spread the topping very gently over the top of the cheesecake, being as careful as you can in case you break the surface of the cheesecake. (Not that anything bad will happen; you’ll just have chocolate marbling the cake a bit.) Put it back in the oven for a final 10 minutes.
  • Once out of the oven, let the cheesecake cool completely in its tin, then cover and put into the fridge overnight. When you are ready to eat the cheesecake, take it out of the fridge slightly in advance, just to take the chill off: this will make it easier to spring from the tin. Don’t let it get too warm, though, as it will become a bit gooey and be hard to slice.

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Cook Time

2H

Prep Time

PT30M

Yield

Serves 10-12