I love it when my readers give rave reviews to one of my recipes, and I really appreciate when they send me a photo of their results (above).
To follow is a repost for Cheese Flan. Enjoy
Flan
can be traced as far back as ancient Rome. The Romans, having
domesticated chickens, found themselves with a surplus of eggs for which
they developed new recipes, one of which turned out to be a custardly
concoction known as flan. Flan survived the fall of the Roman Empire and
the transition between ancient times and the Medieval.
Eventually, flan found two different outlets: In Spain it became a sweet
custard generally made with caramelized sugar. The Moors introduced
citrus and almonds which are commonly found to flavor flan. Once
Christopher Columbus found America the rush to the riches of the region
brought the richness of flan with it. Nearly all of Central and South
America loves flan in its various custardly forms. England, with its
love for pastry crusts, went its own way and developed a different kind
of flan. This one makes use of a pastry shell with an open top filled
with custard and often mixed with nuts or fruit.
I have found that Americans are not too fond of flan, they don't like
the consistency or the "egginess" of it; however, they do love
cheesecake. The following is a variation of Flan ... Cheese Flan which
is delicious and a proven success with Americans.
6 oz. cream cheese
1 can evaporated milk
1 can sweetened condensed milk
3 eggs
1 tsp vanilla
1 cup sugar for caramel syrup
- Preheat oven to 300 degrees F (I like to bake Flan at a low heat for a longer time period).
- In an aluminum bread pan (you can use any other aluminum baking
dish) over medium-low heat, melt sugar until liquefied and golden in
color. Carefully tilt the pan to evenly coat the bottom and sides. Set
aside to cool.
- In a blender beat all ingredients until smooth.
- Pour mixture into cooled baking dish.
- Place the baking dish with the flan mixture into a larger rectangular pan that is at least 2 inches deep.
- Place both of these into the oven and pour hot water into the larger pan to about half way full.
- Bake for approximately 2 hours, until a knife comes out clean when inserted into the center of the flan.
- Let cool and refrigerate.
- When ready to serve, carefully invert the flan onto a serving plate. The caramel syrup will cover the flan.