Pressure Cooker Blue Cheese Cheesecake with Strawberry Spinach Salad and Balsamic Vinaigrette
Blue cheese cheesecake served with strawberry spinach salad and drizzled with a sweet balsamic vinaigrette. This savory cheesecake recipe for the pressure cooker is beyond delicious!
Hey everybody! This is Marci, part of the sister duo over at TIDBITS. I have learned so much from Barbara over the past couple of years and it is such a honor to be posting on her blog today!
For my first contributor post here at Pressure Cooking Today, I’m bringing it big with a savory cheesecake recipe! Dessert cheesecakes have been a huge hit in the pressure cooking world, but today I’m taking it down a savory road with this AMAZING Blue Cheese Cheesecake over a Strawberry Spinach Salad, drizzled with a sweet Balsamic Vinaigrette!
Savory Blue Cheese Cheesecake
This can be served as a side dish to your dinner, or as a light meal all by itself.
Now, before I go any further, let us pause for a moment and talk about blue cheese. Blue cheese falls into a category I like to call “Risky Foods.” You know those certain foods that you present a bit hesitantly to people because it’s either a love it or hate it kind of food? Think cilantro, seafood, spicy food, tofu, pineapple on pizza (lookin at you hubby), green food (my kids greatest fear), sushi, etc, etc.
I can’t even put a number on how many times people have tried to convince me that this recipe or that recipe is gonna convince me that I actually do love seafood. I’ve tried it, I still find it stinky and disturbing, and for now, I’m staying in my stubborn ways!
So although I’m not budging on seafood quite yet, I am here to tell all you blue cheese haters out there to not be like me because I am about to change your stinky, moldy cheese minds forever!
Making Blue Cheese Cheesecake in an Instant Pot
The Instapot cheesecake has a warm, creamy, flavor explosion of cheesecake, blue cheese, buttery pecan crust, sweet strawberries, and balsamic vinegar! It’s heaven, and it’s already proven to change minds in my own circle of blue cheese hating family and friends.
Now to all you blue cheese lovers out there, the ones that look at restaurant menus and see only blue cheese salad dressing, blue cheese burgers, and buffalo blue cheese whatever: you are going to love this!
It’ll be a whole new spin on our funky smelling friend that you will make again and again to impress all the lovers and haters in your lives.
If you’d like to check out some of our other Pressure Cooking recipes, don’t miss TIDBITS most popular recipe, Homemade Yogurt in the Instant Pot.
And if you are as passionate about pressure cooking as we are, sign up for TIDBITS FREE eCourse called “Unleashing the Potential of the Electric Pressure Cooker” where we share all we know about pressure cooking. We are a tad bit obsessed 😉
Thanks again Barbara for this opportunity! Enjoy everybody!
Pressure Cooker Blue Cheese Cheesecake with Strawberry Spinach Salad and Balsamic Vinaigrette
Cheesecake for dinner, anyone? Try this savory blue cheese cheesecake with a strawberry spinach salad and drizzled with a sweet balsamic vinaigrette.
Ingredients
- ¾ cup whole wheat panko bread crumbs
- ¾ chopped Pecans
- 2 Tablespoons butter
- 8 oz whipped cream cheese, at room temperature
- 4 oz crumbled blue cheese, at room temperature (I prefer the more mild varieties like Gorgonzola and Danish Blue)
- 2 eggs at room temperature
- 1 clove of minced garlic
- 1 Tablespoon of fresh rosemary
- Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
- Spinach
- Sliced Strawberries
- Pecans
- 3 Tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
- 3 Tablespoons balsamic vinegar
- 1 ½ Tablespoons honey
- 1 clove of garlic, finely chopped
- salt and pepper
Instructions
In the bowl of a food processor, pulse the bread crumb and pecans until the nuts are finely chopped. Melt butter in a small skillet over medium heat. Pour in panko and pecan mixture and stir until lightly browned and fragrant. Press the mixture onto the bottom and halfway up the sides of a lightly greased 7-inch springform pan. Place in freezer for at least 30 minutes. (This step can also be done a few days in advance if needed).
In a mixing bowl, beat cream cheese and eggs until very smooth. And crumbled blue cheese, garlic, rosemary, salt and pepper and combine well. Scrape cheese mixture into the crust, being careful that the blue cheese crumbles get distributed throughout the mixture.
Pour 1 cup of water into the pressure cooker and place the trivet in the bottom. Place the filled pan on top of the trivet.
Lock the lid in place. Cook the cheesecake at High Pressure for 15-20 minutes. 15 minutes will give you a creamier texture where the center may ooze a bit when you cut it open (which I love!) and 20 minutes will be a firmer slice but still very creamy and delicious. When the beep sounds, turn off the pressure cooker and allow the pressure to release naturally for 10 minutes. At this point you can release the rest of the pressure and remove the lid.
Place the pan on a wire rack, blot any excess water from the top of the cheesecake with a paper towel and cool for 10 minutes.
While the cheesecake is cooling, make the balsamic vinaigrette by combining all the ingredients in a jar with tight fitting lid and shake vigorously until smooth. This could also be done in a blender which works well if you double it (which you certainly wouldn't regret).
Slide a knife around the side of the cheesecake and slowly remove the outer covering of the spring form pan being sure to pause if any of the cake is sticking to the pan and run a knife around those areas.
Place spinach on a plate, sprinkle with sliced strawberries and whole pecans. Place a slice of warm blue cheese cheesecake next to the spinach and drizzle all of it with the vinaigrette. The cheesecake is also wonderful eaten cold in the same manner.
I made this recipe several months ago and have made many other recipes on your site and they are all wonderful. We have a co-worker leaving our office soon. I asked her what her favorite out of everything I had brought in to share was and she chose this recipe so I will be making this as her farewell surprise. It was loved by other co-workers as well. Thank you so much for sharing all your wonderful recipes. Your website is such a delight.
That’s quite a compliment she chose it as her farewell surprise. Thanks so much for sharing this story.
This looks fabulous and were gonna make it tomorrow. Quick question…. All my other instant pot cheesecakes have taken more like 25-27 minutes on high pressure. I’m a little reluctant to go 20?🤔. Perhaps I’ll check the ingredients as this could if course make the difference. Anyway, thanks for posting. Looking forward to this savory one!!
Hi Brent – definitely go with the 20 minutes. Enjoy!
This recipe turned out lovely. Mild blue cheese flavor when, as you suggested, using Gorgonzola. Thank you.
Funny story – the instructions do not say to put the stainless steel bowl inside the instant pot with the trivet inside the bowl and thecheesecake inside of that. It was only the second thing I made in my new instant pot and the water just ran through the pot and out the bottom….well I needed the inner bowl. Lesson learned. You may want to amend the instructions since it is titled as an instant pot recipe. I’ll make it again – with the bowl. 😊
Hi Vaughnie – glad you loved the cheesecake. You never cook in the Instant Pot without the inner pot. Here’s my getting started guide https://www.pressurecookingtoday.com/getting-started-with-your-new-electric-pressure-cooker-or-instant-pot/ and also my Which Button to Use post https://www.pressurecookingtoday.com/instant-pot-duo-and-smartcooker/ that you’ll find very useful. Have fun!
I found your blog this morning looking for a way to PC spaghetti squash. I began exploring and found this recipe (I love bleu cheese!) and I actually have all the ingredients…gonna be a busy cooking day! I was given an electric Cuisinart PC when a friend moved and can’t imagine how I cooked without it, but knew there had to be many other ways to use it. (I had a Presto before and rarely used it.) This PC is my most favorite kitchen appliance now, so you’re an angel to provide such a bounty of information and ideas. Thank you! Thank you!! Thank you!!!
Hi Catherine – so glad you found me! Let me know how you like the cheesecake 🙂
HI,
This sounds amazing and I can’t wait to try it. Can you elaborate on what kind of trivet can go in the pressure cooker? I have an electric pressure cooker and am new to this whole process.
Thanks!
Hi Sumner – typically a trivet / rack will come with your pressure cooker, But if yours didn’t, here’s a link to one on Amazon that’s pretty inexpensive. http://amzn.to/2a7Qi9D
Blue cheese lover here!!! i cant wait to try this cheesecake!
I feel like we’re friends already, blue cheese lovers have a special bond 😉 Let me know if you try it!
If this cheesecake was set on a plate with crackers, could it be used to spread or slice on crackers? It looks like it would have the right consistency and a great taste. I would use the milder cheese. I am attending a party and this sounds like a perfect addition.
Sorry if this response got to you too late. Yes, it could be served that way. For the 4th of July I made it for a party and we ate bites of it with our steak (Oh, my heavenly!). The cracker idea sounds amazing. You could drizzle the whole cake with the balsamic dressing and serve crackers on one side and strawberries on the other side. I’m gonna have to use your idea!
Bleu (or blue) cheese is my favorite! I’ve made a bleu cheesecake but not in my pressure-cooker. I cannot wait to give it a try… It really is good for more than tenderizing tough meat 🙂 Great post!
Hi Marci…your cheesecake is lovely served with that pretty salad. I’ll confess, I’m one of the blue cheese naysayers (you made me laugh when you mentioned your husband and the pineapple on pizza thing-don’t get me started on what MY husband says about that combo-eesh), and have really tried to like it in different recipes…so far the only place I’ll say it’s OK is blue cheese dressing in Buffalo Chicken Dip-maybe because the hot sauce kills the taste? Anywho-I’d be willing to give it a spin in a savory cheesecake as long as it’s served with something else to counteract the taste-like that delicious salad and balsamic dressing. Thanks so much for recommending mild ones too- I’ll start there. I was always baffled when I stood at the specialty cheese counter and tried to decipher which one would be the best to try? My Dad always loved blue cheese-the stinkier the better-my question to him….How do you know when it’s gone bad since it already looks moldy? Don’t think I ever got an answer! 🙂
Carol, let me know if you try it. I’d love to hear back from a blue cheese hater ? I promise you the combo is heaven (but I won’t be offended if I don’t win you over). My husband was happy to hear there’s another with a pineapple on pizza issue. I told him that makes 2 ?