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Lotus Biscoff Cheesecake

Servings 16

Ingredients

For the base

  • 250 g Lotus Biscoff Biscuits
  • 120 g butter melted

For the cheesecake

  • 500 ml double cream
  • 130 g icing sugar
  • 400 g cream cheese
  • 100 g Lotus Biscoff Spread
  • 80 g Lotus Biscoff biscuits crushed into crumbs

For decoration (optional)

  • 100 g Lotus Biscoff Spread
  • 100 ml double cream
  • 2 Lotus Biscoff Biscuits crushed into crumbs
  • 8-10 Lotus Biscoff Biscuits

Instructions

  1. Add your Biscoff biscuits to a blender to turn them into crumbs. You can also do this by putting them in a bag and bashing them with a rolling pin.

  2. Put the crushed biscuits into a bowl and pour in your melted butter. Stir until combined and then tip them into and 8 inch baking tin. I like to use a loose bottomed one. Spread them evenly and then press them into the tin using the back of a spoon. Put this in the fridge to chill.

  3. In a clean bowl add your double cream and whisk until soft peaks form. Then sift in the icing sugar. Add in the cream cheese, biscoff biscuit crumbs and biscoff spread then fold it together until well mixed.

  4. Get your cheesecake base from the fridge and spoon your cheesecake mixture onto the top. Press it down to fill the tin and smooth the top. You know need to chill this in the fridge overnight preferably but for at least 6 hours.

  5. Once your cheesecake is set run a hot knife around the outside edge and carefully remove it from the tin. Place it onto your serving dish.

  6. Take your biscoff spread and heat it in the microwave for 10 second intervals until it is slightly runny but not hot as it will melt the cheesecake. Pour it into a disposable piping bag, snip off the end and pipe it around the edges so that some drips down the sides. pipe the rest over the top and smooth it out over the surface with the back of a spoon. If you do not have any piping bags you can just spread it out over the surface with the back of a spoon but carefully push some over the edges. This will give you drips around the side but they will not be as uniform as the piping back technique.

  7. Whip your cream to stiff peaks and then put it into a piping back with a star tip and pipe swirls onto the top in whatever style you chose. Again if you do not have piping bags and nozzles you could put your whipped cream into a sandwich bag and snip off the corner, this will give you piped blobs rather than the swirled shape but it can still look good this way.

  8. Next dot your biscuits in amongst the cream swirls, you can keep them whole or break them up. Finally sprinkle the biscuit crumbs over the top. Enjoy!