Traditional Polish Cheesecake

One of the most popular cakes in Poland is sernik, serowiec or cheesecake. There are endless variations, but a typical Polish cheesecake is made with twaróg (a curd cheese) and bakalie (dried fruits and nuts).
If you’re living in Ireland, you can find twaróg in any Polish shop, or even in Tesco or Fresh. It comes with different fat content – full fat, half fat, and non-fat. For cheesecakes, the best one is full fat. In the US, farmers cheese or ricotta, processed until very smooth, is a good substitute.
To use twaróg in cheesecake, you need to grind it two to three times in a meat grinder to make it smoother. You can also find pre-ground cheese in shops, but be careful because some of these products add butter, sugar, and other extras you don’t really want.

A package of Twaróg Łowicki half fat soft cheese, featuring a colorful design with a traditional Polish figure and a floral background.

Bakalie is the word I miss so much. It’s a mix of raisins, walnuts, hazelnuts, almonds, candied orange zest, dry apricots, and plums. There are no rules on proportions; it’s always to your liking. So, it’s a very useful word – you mention adding a handful of bakalie into a cake or muffins, and you don’t have to list everything.

My mum loves cheesecake with a big amount of raisins. As a child I always removed them, now I can take it, but if I am one to decide what to add, I will go for candied orange zest and almonds.

Anyway, this cheesecake is really delicious — moist and rich, very festive. Like all cheesecakes, it has a tendency to lower itself after cooling down, but it is typical and tastes delicious anyway, so don’t worry. So come on, try it. It is worth it!

Other cheesecakes you may like:

Traditional Polish Cheesecake (Sernik)

Recipe from Moje wypieki

Ingredients

* 1 stick (125 grams) unsalted butter, softened
* 3 cups (650 grams) farmers cheese or ricotta, finely processed, if you have access to Polish produce buy full fat twarog
* 5 large eggs, separated
* 1 cup (225 grams) granulated sugar
* 3 Tbsp semolina flour (Polish – kasza manna)
* 8 teaspoons (20 grams) instant vanilla pudding mix
* 2 teaspoon vanilla extract
* 1/2 cup heavy cream
* 1/4 cup your favorite dried fruits (raisins or candied orange peel)

Directions

  1. Preheat oven to 325°F (170°C).
  2. Beat the butter with an electric mixer until light and fluffy.
  3. Gradually add the cheese, beating until smooth.
  4. In a separate bowl, beat egg yolks with sugar until pale and creamy. Add to the cheese mixture and mix until just combined.
  5. Add the semolina flour, pudding mix, and vanilla extract to the cheese mixture. Mix until just combined.
  6. In a bowl, whip heavy cream until stiff peaks form.
  7. In another bowl, beat egg whites until stiff peaks form.
  8. Gently fold whipped cream, beaten egg whites, and dried fruits into the cheese mixture.
  9. Grease a 9-inch (23-cm) springform pan and line the bottom with parchment paper.
  10. Pour the cheesecake mixture into the prepared pan and spread evenly.
  11. Bake for about 60 minutes, or until the top is golden brown and the center is just set.
  12. Turn off the oven and let the cheesecake cool in the oven with the door slightly ajar for about 1-2 hours.
  13. Remove from the oven and refrigerate overnight.
  14. Decorate as desired. Keep refrigerated for up to 5-7 days. Slice with a thin, sharp knife and enjoy!
A close-up of a perfectly baked Polish cheesecake, showcasing its golden-brown crust and smooth surface.

Tried this traditional Polish cheesecake? Share your baking stories or photos in the comments – I’d love to see how your sernik turned out!


Discover more from Magda’s Cauldron

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

19 responses to “Traditional Polish Cheesecake”

  1. I make baked cheesecakes myself, the ‘New-York’ kind – but that one looks really good! It seems like a lot of eggs but I will try it if I can find the right ingredients in the Polish food shop locally. I agree about the raisins, I don’t like too many.

    Like

  2. Amee, it has a lot of eggs because it is festive, traditional recipe. I don’t know about old Irish cakes recipes, but Polish ones always had a lot of eggs. I have a lot of cheesecakes with smaller amount of eggs, but this one was sooo good 🙂 For Christmas I will make this one. Less traditional, but looks so beautiful. I hope it will succeed 😀 http://www.kwestiasmaku.com/desery/serniki/sernik_tiramisu/przepis.html

    Like

  3. Mmmmmmmm, I usually bake a cheesecake with Philadelphia, I was always afraid to bake traditional Polish one, don’t know why? It looks sooo yummy!

    Like

  4. Magda, it is yummy and you bake it as any other cheesecake. The only bad thing that can happen is when it cracks, maybe it won’t be as pretty, but it will be still delicious.

    Like

  5. Just a short note to let you know that I mentioned this post on Bigos UK, hope you don’t mind 😉 http://bigos-uk.com/sernik-polish-cheesecake/

    Like

    1. No I don’t mind, Thank you for featuring my blog Gocha 🙂

      Like

  6. […] is just a boy. Anyway, the filling is creamy and sweet and as usual it uses Polish cheese – twarog (also known as curd cheese, […]

    Like

  7. Having eaten many varieties of cheesecake in Polska I gave your recipe a go and I was not let down, it was very tasty and enjoyed by all the family.

    Like

    1. Glad to hear it Riccardo 😀

      Like

  8. I live in the U.S. in a city with a very large Polish community, and grew up eating all that wonderful food. However, there are no longer any polish grocers here, and I’m wondering if I could substitute cottage cheese, yogurt cheese, ricotta, etc. Any thoughts would be much appreciated. I love your site.

    Like

    1. Hi Pat, nice to meet you. I would try substituting twarog with ricotta and maybe add a little bit less cream. Also there is a recipe for twarog – http://www.bakingobsession.com/2007/11/22/curd-cheese-russian-tvorog/ My favourite Polish food blogger tried it and she was really happy with results. From the recipe you will get less than 400g of twarog so you may need to multiply the quantities.
      Good luck and let me know how it goes.

      Like

  9. My husband is of Polish heritage, his father was raised in London after his family escaped Poland during WW2, his mother brought her recipe with her and it was a guarded family secret!!! She eventually gave it to my Father in Law on the promise that he’d only give it to his wife and sons wife’s only. I was giving after 3 yrs of dating my now hubby. I was terrified of cooking it Family heirloom that it was. I eventually braced it about 3 yrs ago and it turned out lovely. Only thing I didn’t have was the fruit mix because my mil gave me her version of the cake( everyone adds their own twist, she takes out the fruit and uses 1/2 goats cheese ). Thankfully my fil gave me a hand written translation a few months before my hubby’s 40th. She has a pastry base to hers and then the mix. I made it exactly to her recipe for my husbands birthday. My fil was given 2nd slice after the birthday boy. And later that night he came to me and said I nearly cried it was just like Babcia used to make and got one of the biggest hugs ever.

    Like

  10. […] recipe 1 – VIDEO / recipe 2 / recipe 3 [image below from […]

    Like

  11. Hello Magda,

    I actually was baking today the traditional polish cheesecake with the amount of ingredients mentioned on the website and ended up having the mixture for about 3 cakes instead of one… I am still not sure why..?

    Does it go 1kg and 300 gr of cottage cheese? I didn’t have semolina and used all purpose flour and regular sugar – 450g, it’s like 3 cups of sugar, right?.

    I was wondering if there is a video for this particular cheesecake available? Thanks.

    Like

  12. Hi Victoria, it looks like you did everything well. Your pan was probably smaller than mine and it’s a big portion as we love cheesecake. At the beginning of the recipe it states, it’s a big portion and either you end up with for a two 23-cm spring form cakes or one big 23x35cm baking tin.
    No there is no video.

    Like

  13. hi Magda….Kasza mana means cream of wheat and the substitute for custard powder is pudding. They use the vanilla cooked pudding not the instant one.
    Enjoy seeing these Polish recipes on line. We have an excellent kitchen that we should take pride in.

    Like

  14. […] looks to have great puddings. I really fancied having a go at the cheesecake, Sernik, but the recipe I found online called for 10 eggs and over a kilo of cream cheese which seemed a little excessive. They did have […]

    Like

  15. Sharon Alshefski Avatar
    Sharon Alshefski

    Hi Magda

    My name is Sharon your cheese cake looks delicious and I was wondering if you could substitute the polish cheese for farmers cheese? I really don’t understand the gram measurements I use cups and teaspoons and tablespoon measurements!!! But thank you for posting the recipe.

    Like

    1. Hi Sharon, looking at what farmers cheese is I would say yes, you can substitute. And good point on cups and teaspoons, I often jump between different measurment units, but it’s time consuming

      Like

Leave a reply to Victoria Cancel reply