Cheese Danish. Who doesn’t love cheese Danish? Living in New York City for about 40 years, The One and I have had our pick of them. Within a stone’s throw of our apartment, we have no less than 10 bakeries, diners, and delis that offer all kinds of danish. The best of which, in The One’s not-so-humble opinion, is Zabar’s at Broadway and 80th Street.
But get this: He said this recipe is better than those at the venerated Upper West Side store. Hands down.
And he’s right. Eaten while still warm, the pastry is marvelous crisp, the filling is creamy and custard-like, and the fruit jam is oh-so-perfectly softened.
If I’d baked this 15 years ago, I would’ve hunched over the counter for hours making puff pastry from scratch. But these days, I’m more than happy to turn to frozen puff pastry. My pastry of choice is Dufour, discussed in the FAQs below. It’s an all-butter product that puts all other commercial puffs to shame. Truly.
What Makes This Danish Different
Dough
Danish dough starts with flour, yeast, milk, eggs, and ample butter for a rich, tender base. Repeated folding of the butter creates those crave-able flaky layers. My recipe calls for puff pastry, saving time and giving it a different, crisper texture.
Filling
This filling stands out for its simplicity, focusing on the classic cream-cheese flavor. It omits common additions like sour cream, lemon, or almond extract. Using room-temperature cream cheese and only the egg yolk creates a smooth, less sweet filling, letting the fruit preserve shine.
What You’ll Need to Make This
- Puff pastry–The cheese Danish recipe was designed with readily available Pepperidge Farms puff pastry in mind. If you make your own pastry or use Dufour (my preference), you may need to trim or roll it slightly to get the correct dimensions.
- Cream cheese–Use full-fat cream cheese for the best flavor. Don’t use whipped cream cheese as it can become grainy when melted.
- Fruit jam–You can use your favorite fruit jam here. If you’re looking for inspiration, homemade raspberry jam is spectacular in this pastry. If your jam is very thick, give it a 20-second zap in the microwave to loosen it.
How to Make Cheese Danish
- Preheat the oven to 400°F. Beat the cream cheese, egg yolk, sugar, vanilla, and salt until smooth. Set aside.
- Flour a nonstick silicone mat or piece of parchment paper that’s roughly the size of a baking sheet.
- Roll out the pastry, flouring as you go, until you have a 12-by-15-inch rectangle.
- Rotate the pastry so the short side is facing you and lightly score the pastry into 3 columns.
- Spread the cream cheese filling over the center section of the pastry.
- Spread the jam over the cheese filling.
- Fold the top of the pastry over the filling to seal it, then cut strips on the left and right columns.
- Braid the strips in an alternating pattern to cover the filling.
- Beat the egg white in a small bowl.
- Brush the pastry with egg wash and sprinkle with sugar. Bake until golden brown. Serve warm.
Recipe Variations
- Citrus cheese Danish–For a light citrus pastry, replace the jam with a teaspoon or two of finely grated lemon, lime, or orange zest.
- Goat cheese Danish–Replace the cream cheese with goat cheese to create a tangy cheese Danish.
- Jammy Danish–Use your favorite preserve in the filling: raspberry, blueberry, lemon curd, marmalade, you name it.
- Nut Danish–For a bit of crunch, fold sliced almonds, crushed pistachios, crushed and toasted pecans or hazelnuts into the filling.
- Fruit Danish–Consider adding raisins, currants, dried cranberries, chopped apricots, or prunes, too.
- Glazed Danish–Instead of sprinkling the top of the pastry with sugar, mix 1 cup (120 g) powdered sugar, 2 to 3 tablespoons milk, and 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract until smooth. Drizzle over the warm Danish, then devour!
Recipe FAQs
Of course, you can! This recipe uses store-bought dough, which I fully support, but I know that my readers often like to do it themselves. And we have an excellent recipe for quick puff pastry. Give it a try and tell me what you think.
The hardest thing about store-bought puff pastry is waiting until it’s fully thawed. If you use it too soon, the dough will crack as you unfold it. Wait too long, and the dough will get too warm—making it limp, and you risk the butter starting to melt. Your best bet is to take the frozen dough out of the box and let it thaw overnight in the fridge.
In one word—carefully. Use a light touch with puff pastry, just enough to shape it and get rid of any bumps from the packaging. Otherwise, you risk losing those buttery, flaky layers. If your dough gets too warm, slide it on a baking sheet and pop it back into the fridge.
The most available and affordable brand is Pepperidge Farm, and I created this with Pepperidge’s dimensions in mind. Opt for this, and you’ll end up with a perfectly acceptable, The One-approved cheese Danish.
But if, like me, you want puff pastry made with real butter and just a handful of natural ingredients that puffs into über flaky and crisp layers, then you want the slightly pricier Dufour brand.
If you use a 1-pound package of Dufour, note that Dufour’s dimensions are different than Pepperidge Farm. So, you’ll need to trim a couple of inches from one side of the square dough to obtain a rectangle.
Helpful Tips
- Leftover cheese Danish can be stored, wrapped in foil, in the refrigerator for up to 3 days or frozen for up to 3 months. Reheat in a 350°F oven until heated through.
- If you have extra filling, use it to fill puff pastry turnovers or hand pies.
Why Our Testers Loved This
My testers loved that this cheese Danish was easy to put together and had a rich, creamy filling. Linda P. said it best with her comment, “This cheese Danish is better than any I have ever had from a bakery.” Makes you want to try it, doesn’t it?
More Great Pastry Recipes
Write a Review
If you make this recipe, or any dish on LC, consider leaving a review, a star rating, and your best photo in the comments below. I love hearing from you.–David
This cream cheese Danish recipe turned out to be very easy to make. And it’s delicious!
ginny
Cheese Danish
Ingredients
- 10 ounces (1 1/4 cups) full-fat cream cheese, room temperature
- 1 large egg, separated
- 1/4 cup granulated sugar, plus more for sprinkling
- 2 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 1/3 cup your favorite fruit jam
- 1 sheet frozen puff pastry, fully thawed (instructions below are for Pepperidge Farm puff pastry; if using Dufour, see the FAQs above)
- Flour, for dusting
Instructions
- Crank the oven to 400°F (200°C).
- Plop the cream cheese, egg yolk, sugar, vanilla, and salt in a medium bowl and beat with a handheld mixer until smooth. Set aside.
- Lightly sprinkle a nonstick baking mat or a piece of parchment with flour.
- Unfold the puff pastry on the parchment paper, and with a rolling pin, roll it out to a 12-by-15-inch (32-by-38-centimeter) rectangle. Check frequently so it doesn't stick.
- Make sure the 12-inch side of the pastry is nearest you. Lightly press a ruler into the dough, making three 4-inch-wide vertical columns, being careful not to press completely through the dough.
- Spread the cream cheese filling on the center column, leaving a 1-inch (2 1/2-centimeter) border on the top and bottom edges of the column.
- Spoon a column of jam down the middle of the filling.
- Fold the top edge of the pastry down to cover 1/2 inch (2 centimeters) of the filling.
- Cut 3/4-inch horizontal slits (or fringe, if you will) down the left and right columns.
- Now, it's just a matter of simply plaiting. Fold the top right strip diagonally across the filling. Do the same with the top left strip, overlapping the right strip.
- Repeat this right-left, right-left folding down the Danish until the last two strips.
- Fold the bottom lip of the pastry up 1/2 inch (2 centimeters) over the filling to seal it, then cross the last 2 strips over each other upward.
- Beat the reserved egg white and lightly brush it on the pastry.
- Sprinkle lightly with sugar. Slide cheese Danish and baking mat onto a baking sheet.
- Bake until golden brown, 30 to 35 minutes. Transfer the sheet to a rack to cool. Serve warm.
Video
Notes
- Storage–Leftover cheese Danish can be stored, wrapped in foil, in the refrigerator for up to 3 days or frozen for up to 3 months. Reheat in a 350°F oven until heated through.
- Extra filling–If you’ve got extra filling, use it to fill turnovers or hand pies.
- Puff pastry brands–The above recipe was designed with the Pepperidge Farm brand in mind. If you use a different brand of pastry, note the weight and dimensions. You may need to trim it slightly to work with the recipe.
An LC Original
View More Original RecipesNutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
Recipe Testers’ Reviews
This puff pastry cheese Danish is better than any I have ever had from a bakery. The store-bought puff pastry makes a light and airy crust with plenty of buttery flavor. The homemade filling is spot-on in terms of flavor and creaminess.
If you follow the instructions for preparing the dough and assembling the pastry, it will turn out looking as beautiful as the photo. You may have to read the directions more than once, but follow them precisely and you will have a perfect, professional-looking pastry.
If I had known how easy this would end up being, I’d have been making Danish forever ago. In the span of just about 1 hour, I had a lovely treat to take to a family celebration.
The filling was easy to put together, and since the day was warm, I didn’t bother to pull out the electric mixer but used a little elbow grease and mixed it by hand. The filling was lovely and slightly citrusy, and the puff pastry was easy to work with.
My only difficulty came when doing the final crossing of the pastry onto the cheese. Scoring the pastry and laying the cheese into the center was simple enough. Where I ran into trouble was making the pastry pattern. Should it be pulled to the other side across the cheese or only halfway? When it finished baking after 35 minutes, it wasn’t pretty, but it smelled divine.
I made a second one with goat cheese with the second sheet of puff pastry. It was equally tasty but the filling was a little more crumbly. One taster commented that it was like having little bits of cheesecake, and another couldn’t pick a favorite between the two of them. They were both good enough that none came home.
I can’t wait to make this again, maybe with a rum or almond flavoring with the cheese or apple bits added in. The possibilities seem endless.
Can I use whipped cream cheese?
I wouldn’t recommend it, Charlene. When baked, whipped cream cheese can take on a wet and grainy texture.
Can this danish be set several hours ahead of time and refrigerated before baking?
Hi JK, I would go ahead and bake the danish. You can store in the fridge for up to 3 days or freeze for up to 3 months and briefly reheat before serving.
Hi, could you advise how to reheat? TIA.
Catherine, you’ll want to wrap it in foil and reheat in a 350°F oven until warmed through. This could take anywhere from 5 to 15 minutes, depending on how cold it is when you start.
Thank you so much. My favorite thing to do is cook but baking always makes me nervous 🙂 You’re the best!
Thanks, Catherine!
I recently made this recipe and then made it again because it’s just that good. And easy! I took one to my Mum on a snowy Sunday morning and she was thrilled but I couldn’t be convinced to part with the second one, for reasons of covetousness. The filling recipe does make quite a bit more than I found I needed, so I used the leftovers for a smaller version.
The only change I made was to reduce the amount of lemon–my ambivalence to lemon is legendary by now, I suspect–and added tonka bean to the filling. It was divine. I have never seen Dufour puff pastry so I used my go-to brand, President’s Choice, which worked perfectly.
Sounds delicious, Jenny. President’s Choice is a good, er, choice. DuFour’s is a US brand, is the closest I’ve seen to professional-grade puff pastry.