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Paskha cheese cake with XB on the side on white plate with colored eggs and a red rose atop
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5 from 5 votes

Russian Easter Paskha- No Bake Cheesecake (Пасха)

Paskha (also spelled Pascha) is a rich, sweet and creamy Eastern European festive dessert.  It's served on Orthodox Easter, but anyone can indulge in this amazing treat! This Paskha recipe will make 2 medium sized molds (2-6" terracotta flower pots work great). If you have one large Paskha mold you will just have extra to enjoy separately. I usually make 1 large and 1 small mold.
Prep Time20 minutes
Overnight Setting12 hours
Total Time12 hours 20 minutes
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: Eastern European, Russian
Keyword: cheesecake, dessert, Easter, Eastern European, Holiday, Pascha, Paskha
Servings: 12
Calories: 482kcal
Author: Katia

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 lbs Farmer's cheese You can make your own if you can't find it at the store with Haniela's Recipe for Farmer's Cheese I make her "Large Batch" and use it all, It makes almost exactly 1.5 lbs after draining it for about 1.5 hrs. (I do not drain it the full 5-6 hrs as she says because I will drain the paskha anyway in the mold)
  • 1/2 lb 2 sticks unsalted butter, softened (not melted)
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 5 hard-boiled eggs yolks only
  • 1 cup real sour cream no low fat
  • 1 standard vanilla bean middle scraped out and the rest finely chopped (we like to use the Madagascar kind)
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1 tsp almond extract
  • Zest of 1 full lemon
  • Zest of 1 full orange
  • Juice of 1/2 lemon
  • 1 pint heavy whipping cream
  • dash salt

Optional

  • 1/4 cup almonds sliced
  • 1/4 cup raisins chopped

Instructions

  • Using a mixer with the whisk attachment, beat the butter and sugar till well combined, then add egg yolks and beat again till well incorporated.
  • Now add farmer's cheese, sour-cream, extracts and vanilla bean. Beat until well mixed.
  • Add zests, lemon juice, a dash of salt and mix once more.
  • In a separate bowl whip your heavy whipping cream until your cream has peaks and has softly stiffened. I like to use a hand mixer for this, but you do what works best for you.
  • Gently fold the cream (and sliced almonds and/or raisins if you're adding those) into your cheese mixture until it is well incorporated and you no longer see pockets of cream.

Filling the Paskha Molds

  • Place the cheese cloth over the insides of each upside down flower pot, making sure to cover all sides, leaving enough extra on top to be able to cover the tops.
  • Wet cheese cloth in pots over a sink with water. (This makes it easier to fill your pots with the paskha so that the cheese cloth doesn't keep moving and falling into the pot)
  • Fill both flower pots evenly with the Paskha cheese mixture. Leave about an inch on top unfilled. This allows for room to fit your plates and weights on top of your molds.
  • Gently fold the remaining cheese cloth over the tops of your cheese mixtures.
  • Place your small plate or bowl atop your cheese cloth covered paska.
  • Now place your weights on top of each plate to weigh down your molds. (You want your weights to be heavy enough to just push down on your molds, allowing the extra liquids to seep out of the bottoms)
  • Place your bowls under the molds to catch the liquid.
  • Place paskha molds into the refrigerator for at least 10-11 hours.  Overnight is ideal. 

Uncovering and Presenting Your Paskha Molds

  • This is the moment of truth. Only do this when you are close to presenting them to your guests, giving yourself enough time to decorate them as well. If you have room in your fridge you may do this earlier and place the molds back in your fridge after you decorate, but only do this if you truly have room for them to sit undisturbed.

Release the Paskha

  • To remove the paskha from the mold, have a plate ready that you will present and serve the paskha on. Remove the weights and dump your draining bowls.
  • Uncover the tops of your molds. Once tops free of cheese cloth, place your plate on top and gently flip over the pot onto the plate.
  • Gently tap on the pot a few times to release the molds onto the plates. Once you feel the Paskha flop down onto your plate, take a deep breath and gently lift the pots off.
  • Gently remove the cheese cloth from the forms and discard the cloth.
  • You're ready to decorate your paskha.

Decorating your Paskha

  • Get creative here, but remember sometimes simpler is more attractive.
  • You can top your paskha with flowers, line sides or bottom edges with berries, nuts or dried fruits. Besides the flowers, make sure the rest of your decor is all edible for your guests.
  • Enjoy this rich, creamy indulgence!

Notes

Paskha is traditionally served with a sweet Easter bread called, Kulich (recipe in the future)
For the Farmer's Cheese, if you're making it yourself, *I make her "Large batch" and it makes 1 lb, 10 oz. which is pretty much perfect and I use it all.*

Nutrition

Calories: 482kcal | Carbohydrates: 19g | Protein: 12g | Fat: 40g | Saturated Fat: 24g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 2g | Monounsaturated Fat: 9g | Trans Fat: 1g | Cholesterol: 193mg | Sodium: 391mg | Potassium: 94mg | Sugar: 19g | Vitamin A: 1280IU | Vitamin C: 0.4mg | Calcium: 61mg | Iron: 0.3mg