Mango cheese pie

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First of all, I apologize for the disappearance of Pinoy Cook from 8.00 a.m. to 4.00 p.m. today, Manila time. I exceeded my bandwidth allocation and I did not find out until late in the afternoon.

I had to do the house chores before turning on my computer. Bad decision especially considering that I normally turn on my computer after my first cup of coffee for the day. Site traffic has been rather heavy since Thanksgiving and getting mentioned in the New York Times brought the traffic to pre-Christmas levels and I exceeded my bandwidth allocation. It feels like I can’t ever have the good without the bad.

Anyway… it’s still a baking party in my house. The success of yesterday’s apple pie was so encouraging that my 12-year-old daughter Alex and I embarked on another baking adventure earlier today. I wasn’t planning on making another cheesecake until New Year’s Eve but, what the heck, we can bake still another cheesecake on New Year’s Eve.

mango cheese pie

I used the same cheesecake recipe for the lemon orange cheesecake that I got from Nigel Slater’s The Kitchen Diaries. There are three differences, however.

1) I baked the cheesecake in a pie shell instead of the usual graham cracker crumb crust.

2) I used no rinds but I added chopped fresh mangoes.

3) The mango cheese pie was baked in direct heat — no baine marie.

We just had it for dessert and, oh my! The term dessert heaven comes to mind. :)

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Comments

18 Responses to “Mango cheese pie”

  1. poppycock on December 29th, 2006 9:22 pm

    yehey, connie i’m so proud of you. :) a new york times mention sounds like big deal to me. no wonder why your detractors envy you so much. ;p

    this sounds like a good recipe. when i get into baking i’ll come back to this one.

  2. rose on December 29th, 2006 10:43 pm

    hi connie…wow…filipinas magazine…then new york times…
    congrats…..enjoy na enjoy ako sa blog mo….mom din ako
    with 2 kids….happy new year to you and your family….

  3. Emily on December 30th, 2006 1:20 am

    Wow! Our very own Connie Veneracion kicking some major butts! Eat your hearts out haters. Who could ever expect that lutong Pinoy would get such recognizion along side American and European cuisines. That’s a wonderful way of wrapping 2006 up and I hope your will have ( if possible) a happier still and more fruitful year. Hmmm, how do young people says it? Oh yeah..You rock! Keep it coming and congratulations.

  4. Eva on December 30th, 2006 1:51 am

    This pie looks delicious. I am a TH (trying hard) baker myself. I don’t eat desserts but I love making them. I am more of a cupcake baker, I make everything in individual portions. I will definitely try to make this for our media noche. Manila mango is not always available here in US, can I substitute it with different kind of mango? or a preserved mango maybe?
    Have a fruitful 2007.

  5. Tiny on December 30th, 2006 6:05 am

    Thanks for sharing this mango cheese pie recipe. Ive never been good in baking but this recipe sounds easy to make…even more sound yummy too. My husband and I are having some friends friends during New year’s eve and I plan to surprise them with this pie for dessert.

    By the way, Ive been an avid fan of your website. Even sent u some pictures some years ago with my girlfriends as I celebrated my birthday. Your website trully inspires me to do a lof of home cooking and share it to my fellow pinays here who miss having pinoy food.

    THANK U Connie for sharing your time, effort and your recipes to everybody. You’re such an inspiration and youre making all pinoys so proud of your recipes and your stories too :))

    Have a great New year ahead.

  6. sun on December 30th, 2006 6:37 am

    hello sassy…happy new year…
    we enjoy reading your blog….

  7. Rico on December 30th, 2006 6:52 am

    Wow! That looks great! Since I don’t have a tart pan, I’m thinking of trying it the more ghetto French way “a la galette”. ;) Like this:

    http://www.foodstylernyc.com/nectarinegallette.htm

    But, I have a feeling the filling mixture might be too runny to stay still in such a free-form crust, but I’ll let you know how it turns out. Did that pre-baked mixture have a pasty consistency? Or was it more liquid like?

  8. brenda on December 30th, 2006 7:02 am

    i envy you… i wish i could also bake… the only dessert that i can make is leche flan. can you make egg pie next?

  9. Julie on December 30th, 2006 11:21 am

    This reminds me of the cheese pies that my friends & I used to buy in our cafeteria at school…of course, yours has the added mango in it, the combinations seems very unique to me! And on a different note, KUDOS on being mentioned in the NY Times article! I am tickled pink by it, so I can imagine how *you* must feel! I was very pleased that Pinoy Cook & another food blog I love (Chocolate & Zucchini) had a special mention. Advanced Happy New Year!

  10. Connie on December 30th, 2006 1:36 pm

    Thanks, poppycock. Oooh you’ll love baking. It’s less stressful than cooking.

    Happy new year, Rose!

    Thank you, Emily. And I do intend to keep rocking LOL

    Eva, I’m not familiar with non-Filipino mangoes. I’m not sure if preserved mangoes (dry variety) will soften as the pie cooks.

    Tiny, you’re Christine from Norway? Oh my gosh, I had an entry with your pics but I had a database disaster last year and I’m not sure I was able to reproduce that entry. Happy New YEar, anyway.

    Happy new year, too Sun.

    Rico, the consistency is similar to a thickened sauce. Very much pouring consistency. So I’m not sure if a crust like that can hold the filling.

    Egg pie is on the list, Brenda. My kids love egg pie!

    Julie, same old me — trying to add a decided Pinoy flair to very non-Pinoy dishes. Happy new year to you too.

  11. Tiny on December 30th, 2006 10:39 pm

    Hi again!
    You guessed it right. Impressive memory!
    Though Ive been lurking most of the times, just want to let you know I check your website on a daily basis and when I make the dishes from your site…and share it with other pinays here, I ALWAYS proudly say that I got the recipes from you ;) with matching endorsing pa sa website mo,www.pinoycook.net, hehehe.

    By the way, I dont mean to invade your privacy or something…but is it possible to have your address or cel.nr? I really really want to share some ready-mix-sauces with u :smile:. With all the recipes you have been sharing thru the years, the least I can do is share something to you and your famiy too. I can either send them thru postal mail or send it thru a friend.

    Have a great New Year Weekend!

    Sincerely,
    Tiny

  12. Connie on December 31st, 2006 8:50 am

    I knew it, Tiny! :) Thank you for the word-of-mouth. Satisfied readers are always the most honest form of advertisement. :) I’ll e-mail you.

  13. sam on December 31st, 2006 4:57 pm

    I have three letters for you: Y U M, and three !!!. I will definitely try it and let you know the results. I am bummed that there are no fresh Philippine mangoes in our markets but I’ve heard from a co-worker that soaking very good quality dried Cebu mangoes (available at most Costco stores in Southern California) in a cup of warm water will yield acceptable results, and wash out some of sodium preservatives and sugar. (Ooopsss..don’t forget to drain the water before adding the mangoes to whatever you are cooking)! I tried baking with dried mangoes but it came out chewy instead of soft and luscious (maybe I did it wrong?). Happy New Year and let me express again that I am so proud of your site, and whenever non-Filipinos ask about our food, I make sure I name-drop your site. Most of the time, they are thrilled to read through. Ms. C, you provide not only food information and recipes, but valuable education on contemporary Filipino community life. Here’s to a wonderful 2007! Maraming salamat!
    N.B. I hope you still remember me. Sam with the sweet butter-fried banana dessert from a few years back. :)

  14. Connie on January 1st, 2007 12:34 am

    Sam, of course I remember you! How can I forget when the recipe you gave was a big hit. :) Thanks again.

  15. Tiny on January 5th, 2007 6:03 am

    Tried the recipe and it was a success! I couldnt get hold of Philippine mango so i just grabbed whatever mango I saw in the market. It was brazilian mango,wasnt as sweet as our very own:sad:…so I improvised( a friend actually advised me to do this :wink:), added an extra tablesppon of sugar and it did the trick. Thanks again for sharing this recipe.:smile:

  16. Connie on January 5th, 2007 11:11 am

    Tiny, that’s great. Nakaka-addict, ano? My husband was just asking me last night when I would be making cheese cake again. :wink:

  17. grz on July 6th, 2007 8:36 pm

    hi! nice site tlga! very helpful, most specially to newly weds like me, almost evryday i visit your site to get easy & delicious recipe, my husband is so shocked that he did not expect me i can cook daw pla.. tenx ate connie.. ask ko lng po since we dont have oven yet, can i use turbo broiler to bake?

  18. melisa on October 28th, 2007 1:58 pm

    hehe… it’s me again ma’am… I also want to ask the same question… could I use a turbo broiler to bake since we don’t have an oven? Thanks… More power! God bless!

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