Strawberry Cheesecake
Move over all you strawberry shortcakes! Here comes a strawberry cheesecake you’ll never forget!
After getting my four wisdom teeth extracted, I could eat only soft foods. Unfortunately (and fortunately), the majority of the allowable food items were high in sugar and/or fat such as pudding, ice cream, and mashed potatoes. For some reason, I was craving healthier food items, so I supplied myself with plenty of baby food canisters of applesauce and pears since they are puréed more finely than the adult versions (you want to make sure you don’t get food particles on your newly-revealed gums. I even had to avoid rice dishes until later).
Anyway, once my teeth had healed a bit, I was craving something delectable, so I made a cheesecake since it is soft and on the approved list. I added the strawberries on top, but if you decide to eat this a day or two after a tooth extraction, you must omit the fruit or make a coulis version (i.e., purée the strawberries and strain out the seeds) of it.
I used my go-to recipe for cheesecake. I will never stray from this recipe because it doesn’t require sour cream or flour, two things I don’t like to put in my cheesecakes. It is so smooth and amazing and never creates a crack (at least on my watch).
I also whipped some heavy cream, sugar, and vanilla extract and placed some on top of individual slices. I hope you make this soon. If you are out of strawberries, try this with cherries. That was how I was going to make it originally, but I remembered the strawberries I had frozen a few months ago. I also didn’t feel like pitting cherries.
Don’t be discouraged by the length of the recipe. Most of the time making this dessert involves the oven and refrigerator. Also, I always make half of the cheesecake recipe (and the full recipe for the crust) since I live alone. It is still more than enough. Enjoy!
1 3/4 – 2 cups graham cracker crumbs
3 tablespoons sugar
Pinch of salt (I always use kosher)
1/2 stick (4-5 Tbsp) unsalted butter, melted
Cheesecake:
1 lb (two 8-ounce boxes) cream cheese, at room temperature
1/2 cup + 2 Tbsp + 2 tsp granulated sugar
1/4 tsp salt (I always use kosher)
1 tsp vanilla extract
2 large eggs, at room temperature
1/2 cup + 2 Tbsp + 2 tsp heavy cream or sour cream, or a combination of the two
Make the crust:
- Butter a 9-inch springform pan – 2 3/4 inches high – and wrap the bottom of the pan in a double layer of aluminum foil; put the pan on a baking sheet.
- Stir the crumbs, sugar and salt together in a medium bowl. Pour over the melted butter and stir until all of the dry ingredients are uniformly moist. Turn the ingredients into the buttered springform pan and use your fingers to pat an even layer of crumbs along the bottom of the pan and about halfway up the sides. Don’t worry if the sides are not perfectly even or if the crumbs reach above or below the midway mark on the sides—this doesn’t have to be a precision job. Put the pan in the freezer while you preheat the oven.
- Center a rack in the oven, preheat the oven to 350°F and place the springform on a baking sheet. Bake for 10 minutes. Set the crust aside to cool on a rack while you make the cheesecake.
- Reduce the oven temperature to 325°F.
To make the cheesecake:
- Put a kettle or large pot of water on to boil.
- Working in a stand mixer, preferably fitted with a paddle attachment, or with a hand mixer in a large bowl, beat the cream cheese at medium speed until it is soft and lives up to the creamy part of its name, about 4 minutes. With the mixer running, add the sugar and salt and continue to beat another 4 minutes or so, until the cream cheese is light. Beat in the vanilla. Add the eggs one by one, beating for a full minute after each addition—you want a well-aerated batter. Reduce the mixer speed to low and stir in the sour cream and/or heavy cream.
- Put the foil-wrapped springform pan in the roaster pan.
- Give the batter a few stirs with a rubber spatula, just to make sure that nothing has been left unmixed at the bottom of the bowl, and scrape the batter into the springform pan. The batter will reach the brim of the pan. (If you have a pan with lower sides and have leftover batter, you can bake the batter in a buttered ramekin or small soufflé mold.) Put the roasting pan in the oven and pour enough boiling water into the roaster to come halfway up the sides of the springform pan.
- Bake the cheesecake for 1 hour and 30 minutes, at which point the top will be browned (and perhaps cracked) and may have risen just a little above the rim of the pan. Turn off the oven’s heat and prop the oven door open with a wooden spoon. Allow the cheesecake to luxuriate in its water bath for another hour.
- After an hour, carefully pull the setup out of the oven, lift the springform pan out of the roaster, and remove the foil carefully. Allow the cheesecake come to room temperature on a cooling rack.
- When the cake is cool, cover the top lightly, and chill the cake for at least 4 hours or overnight.
- Remove the sides of the springform pan, and set the cake, still on the pan’s base, on a serving platter. The easiest way to cut cheesecake is to use a long, thin knife that has been run under hot water and lightly wiped. Keep warming the knife as you cut slices of the cake.
1 pint of strawberries, cut and hulled
1-2 Tbsp cornstarch, if you want it to be thicker
1/4 cup or less of sugar, depending on how sweet your berries are
half of a lemon
In a medium saucepan, boil all of the ingredients until thick. Pour the mixture on top of the chilled cheesecake. [If making a coulis, omit the cornstarch. Pour the cooked ingredients into a blender and puree or use an immersion blender until smooth. Then, drain the mixture with a strainer.]
To store: Wrapped well, the cake will keep for up to 1 week in the refrigerator or for up to 2 months in the freezer. It’s best to defrost the still-wrapped cheesecake overnight in the refrigerator.
Mini Chocolate Mousse Cheescakes
After making the chocolate mousse cheesecake for my birthday, my friend wanted me to make one for her birthday. She requested a mini version, so I used my mini springform pans and gave both of them to her.
For the rest of the batter, I used a rectangular tart pan and kept that for myself (No photos of it. Sorry!). It took me over a week to finish eating the cheesecake, and it still tasted good. I hope to post some new stuff very soon. I just accepted a second job working on a research project, so I will be doing more work. Nevertheless, I do have some culinary “projects” in the works. Have a great weekend!
The recipe is here.
(Not as) Tall & (Still) Creamy Cheesecake…Again
Last weekend I flew to Los Angeles to visit my girlfriend and her two daughters. While my girlfriend is not that crazy about sweets, there is one dessert she likes – cheesecake. Since we would be staying in a hotel, I thought I’d surprise her by making the same cheesecake I always make for her when a kitchen’s available – Tall & Creamy Cheesecake by Dorie Greenspan. In fact, I’ve blogged about this cheesecake before.
Instead of making the cheesecake in my springform pan, I halved the recipe and baked it in a square pan to make cheesecake bars (I didn’t get to make pictures of them because I made them late at night). In order to keep the cheesecake cold, I placed the bars in wax paper, foil, small ziploc bags, and then they were all placed in one big ziploc bag. I then put in a bunch of ice in the big bag and stuffed it in my backpack. After teaching my two classes, I went directly to the airport. I didn’t change out the ice until my layover in Dallas. The guy who filled the bag asked me what I was packing, and I laughingly told him that it was cheesecake, and he raised his eyebrows and smiled.
When I arrived at the hotel, I put more ice in the bag and continued to hide the cheesecake in my backpack. I didn’t want her to know that I had brought it until the kids were gone later that night. When I showed the cheesecake to her, she was pleasantly surprised. I then proceeded to feed her as she comfortably watched television. As usual, she enjoyed the cheesecake very much (as well as other family members who got a taste of the other bars later). After she ate one bar, I tried one. It was so good! It was better than usual. As soon as that taste was planted in my mouth, I thought to myself, “I’m so going to make this cheesecake when I get home.”
As soon as I got back home and stepped into my apartment, I took out the eggs so that they could come to room temperature. I unpacked, rested a bit, and then made the cheesecake. I didn’t get to eat any of it until the next day. While it was very good, it didn’t taste as good as the one I took to LA. Maybe because it wasn’t my own cheesecake haha.
Anyway, this is by far my favorite cheesecake recipe. The texture of the cheesecake is perfect, creamy, and heavenly. Putting it all together is super easy. I almost always half the recipe, but I make the full recipe for the crust, and it’s always more than enough. The only difficult part is waiting for it to cool and refrigerate.
I love the graham cracker crust, so I made sure to make enough to allow them rise up on the sides in the springform pan. I also used my homemade strawberry jam as a topping and made some whipped cream with the leftover cream. It was perfect. If you have never tried this recipe, try it out very soon.
Tall and Creamy Cheesecake
source: Dorie Greenspan, Baking: From My Home to Yours
recipe copied and adapted from Smells Like Home.
Crust
- 1 3/4 cups graham cracker crumbs
- 3 tbsp sugar
- pinch of salt
- 1/2 stick (4 tbsp) unsalted butter, melted
- Butter a 9″ springform pan – choose one that has sides that are 2 3/4″ high (if the sides are lower, you will have cheesecake batter left over) – and wrap the bottom of the pan in a double layer of aluminum foil.
- Stir the crumbs, sugar and salt together in a medium bowl. Pour over the melted butter and stir until all of the dry ingredients are uniformly moist. ( I do this with my fingers.) Turn the ingredients into the springform pan and use your fingers to pat an even layer of crumbs over the bottom of the pan and about halfway up the sides. Don’t worry if the sides are not perfectly even or if the crumbs reach slightly above or below the midway point on the sides. Put the pan in the freezer while you preheat the oven. (The crust can be covered and frozen for up to 2 months.)
- Center a rack in the oven, preheat the oven to 350 degrees F and place the springform on a baking sheet. Bake for 10 minutes. Set the crust aside to cool on a rack while you make the cheesecake..
- Reduce the oven temperature to 325 degrees F.
Cheesecake
- 2 lbs (four 8oz boxes) cream cheese, at room temperature
- 1 1/3 cups sugar
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 2 tsp pure vanilla extract
- 4 large eggs, at room temperature
- 1 1/3 cups sour cream or heavy cream, or a combination of the two
- Put a kettle of water on or a very large pot on to boil.
- Working with a stand mixer, preferably fitted with a paddle attachment, or with a hand mixer in a large bowl, beat the cream cheese at a medium speed until soft and creamy; about 4 minutes. With the mixer running, add the sugar and salt and continue to beat for another 4 minutes or so, until the cream cheese is light. Beat in the vanilla. Add the eggs one by one, beating for a full minute after each addition – you want a well-aerated batter. Reduce the mixer speed to low and mix in the sour cream and/or heavy cream.
- Put the foil-wrapped springform pan into a roasting pan that is large enough to hold the pan with some space around it.
- Give the batter a few stirs with a rubber spatula , just to make sure that there is nothing left unmixed at the bottom of the bowl, and scrape the batter into the springform pan. The batter will reach the rim of the pan. (If you have a pan with lower side and have leftover batter, you can bake the batter in a buttered ramekin or a small soufflé mold.) Put the roasting pan in the oven and pour enough boiling water into it to come halfway up the sides of the springform pan.
- Bake the cheesecake for 1 hour and 30 minutes, at which point the top should be browned (and perhaps cracked) and may have risen just a little above the rim of the pan. Turn off the oven and prop the oven door open with a wooden spoon. Allow the cheesecake to luxuriate in its water bath for another hour.
- After 1 hour, carefully pull the setup out of the oven, lift the springform pan out of the roaster – be careful, there may be some hot water in the aluminum foil. Let the cheesecake come to room temperature on a cooling rack (about 1 hour).
- When the cake is cool, cover the top lightly and refrigerate for at least 4 hours; overnight is better.
- At serving time, remove the sides of the springform pan (Greenspan suggests using a hairdryer to do this) and set the cake on a serving platter or leave it on the pan.
- 2 pounds fresh strawberries, hulled
- 4 cups white sugar
- 1/4 cup lemon juice
- 1/2-1 peeled and sliced Granny Smith apple (for natural pectin)
In a wide bowl, crush strawberries in batches until you have 4 cups of mashed berries. In a heavy-bottomed saucepan, mix together the strawberries, apple slices, sugar, and lemon juice. Stir over low heat until the sugar is dissolved. Increase heat to high, and bring the mixture to a full rolling boil. Boil, stirring often, until the mixture reaches 220 degrees F (105 degrees C). Transfer to hot sterile jars, leaving 1/4 to 1/2 inch headspace, and seal. Process any unsealed jars in a water bath. If the jam is going to be eaten right away, don’t bother with processing, and just refrigerate (or freeze).
1 cup heavy cream
1/4 cup sugar
1 tsp vanilla extract
Beat heavy cream in a chilled bowl with chilled beaters until soft peaks form. Add the sugar and vanilla. Continue to beat until stiff peaks form. Do not overbeat, or you’ll end up with sweet butter and buttermilk.
Tall & Creamy Cheesecake
For last month’s Daring Bakers’ challenge, we had to make a cheesecake that had me longing for my go-to cheesecake from Dorie Greenspan’s “Baking: From My Home to Yours”. Since I live alone, I knew it would not be a good idea to make the cheesecake unless others were around. Fortunately, my stepmother, her husband (I still call her my stepmother even though she divorced my father and remarried many moons ago), and my half-brother wanted baked cheesecake. I brought down my stand mixer and new springform pan (which claims to be leakproof) to Houston and made the cheesecake for them.
I also made some homemade whipped cream to accompany the cheesecake. It was so good that my half-brother, who usually can eat forever without getting full, knew he had to stop eating more after one small slice in order to eat the bbq and sides my stepmom made (yes, he ate dessert first haha).
It was very rich. It was perfection.
My stepmom added a little bit of store-bought
strawberry glaze to my cheesecake, but I knew I couldn’t say anything about it haha. I just smiled, thanked her for her contribution, and took pictures of it.
An imperfect, yet perfect slice of cheesecake. YUM!
You MUST try this cheesecake. I’m serious. The recipe can be halved easily. I wish I could make some more right now. *sigh*
My opinions about the springform pan:
When I first bought this pan, I tested it out by submerging it in water to see if it would leak. Since it didn’t, I made this cheesecake without foil. I noticed that the crust was a bit moist when I took off the sides of the pan (see pic below).
That could just be from condensation, though. Next time, I’m going to put on one layer of foil to see if it makes a difference. The crust was not soggy; it tasted just fine. So, I’m happy with this pan. I bought it for about 10 dollars from Wal-Mart.
In the photo above, you can see how the sides are flushed into the bottom of the pan to prevent leaks. You can also see the condensation on the sides of the pan.
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Tall and Creamy Cheesecake: A Basic
source: Dorie Greenspan, Baking: From My Home to Yours
recipe copied and adapted from Smells Like Home.
For the Crust
- 1 3/4 cups graham cracker crumbs
- 3 tbsp sugar
- pinch of salt
- 1/2 stick (4 tbsp) unsalted butter, melted
For the Cheesecake
- 2 lbs (four 8oz boxes) cream cheese, at room temperature
- 1 1/3 cups sugar
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 2 tsp pure vanilla extract
- 4 large eggs, at room temperature
- 1 1/3 cups sour cream or heavy cream, or a combination of the two
To Make the Crust
- Butter a 9″ springform pan – choose one that has sides that are 2 3/4″ high (if the sides are lower, you will have cheesecake batter left over) – and wrap the bottom of the pan in a double layer of aluminum foil.
- Stir the crumbs, sugar and salt together in a medium bowl. Pour over the melted butter and stir until all of the dry ingredients are uniformly moist. ( I do this with my fingers.) Turn the ingredients into the springform pan and use your fingers to pat an even layer of crumbs over the bottom of the pan and about halfway up the sides. Don’t worry if the sides are not perfectly even or if the crumbs reach slightly above or below the midway point on the sides. Put the pan in the freezer while you preheat the oven. (The crust can be covered and frozen for up to 2 months.)
- Center a rack in the oven, preheat the oven to 350 degrees F and place the springform on a baking sheet. Bake for 10 minutes. Set the crust aside to cool on a rack while you make the cheesecake..
- Reduce the oven temperature to 325 degrees F.
To Make the Cheesecake Batter
- Put a kettle of water on or a very large pot on to boil.
- Working with a stand mixer, preferably fitted with a paddle attachment, or with a hand mixer in a large bowl, beat the cream cheese at a medium speed until soft and creamy; about 4 minutes. With the mixer running, add the sugar and salt and continue to beat for another 4 minutes or so, until the cream cheese is light. Beat in the vanilla. Add the eggs one by one, beating for a full minute after each addition – you want a well-aerated batter. Reduce the mixer speed to low and mix in the sour cream and/or heavy cream.
- Put the foil-wrapped springform pan into a roasting pan that is large enough to hold the pan with some space around it.
- Give the batter a few stirs with a rubber spatula , just to make sure that there is nothing left unmixed at the bottom of the bowl, and scrape the batter into the springform pan. The batter will reach the rim of the pan. (If you have a pan with lower side and have leftover batter, you can bake the batter in a buttered ramekin or a small soufflé mold.) Put the roasting pan in the oven and pour enough boiling water into it to come halfway up the sides of the springform pan.
- Bake the cheesecake for 1 hour and 30 minutes, at which point the top should be browned (and perhaps cracked) and may have risen just a little above the rim of the pan. Turn off the oven and prop the oven door open with a wooden spoon. Allow the cheesecake to luxuriate in its water bath for another hour.
- After 1 hour, carefully pull the setup out of the oven, lift the springform pan out of the roaster – be careful, there may be some hot water in the aluminum foil. Let the cheesecake come to room temperature on a cooling rack (about 1 hour).
- When the cake is cool, cover the top lightly and refrigerate for at least 4 hours; overnight is better.
- At serving time, remove the sides of the springform pan (Greenspan suggests using a hairdryer to do this) and set the cake on a serving platter or leave it on the pan.
Daring Kitchen Challenge: Abbey’s Infamous Cheesecake
Interesting Daring Kitchen conversation about the name of this cheesecake:
Daring Baker (DB) 1: Are you sure you mean infamous and not famous? Infamous means “having a reputation of the worst kind: notoriously evil’! Big Grin”
DB2: Ha, you haven’t met my friend Abbey. *grin*
Me: Then if Abbey is the infamous one, shouldn’t it be called “Infamous Abbey’s Cheesecake”? The cheesecake is not the infamous one, unless you are personifying it.
DB3: hahaha. I love the vocabulary battle!
So yeah, I still don’t quite understand why this cheesecake is being referred to as infamous, but that is the name! haha
The April 2009 challenge is hosted by Jenny from Jenny Bakes. She has chosen Abbey’s Infamous Cheesecake as the challenge.
This was my first Daring Kitchen challenge, and I was hoping to get something more difficult and new like the lasagne from last month. At least I got to try another cheesecake recipe! Also, I was afforded the opportunity to jazz up a plain cheesecake, which aside from strawberry toppings or glazes, was something I had never done before. This was the first time I’d ever used a real piping bag, as opposed to a Ziploc bag. So, I will need to practice a lot more to get it perfect.
Since I already have a go-to cheesecake, I was sort of doubting that this cheesecake was going to knock my socks off.
I decided to spruce it up by making it a key lime cheesecake. It was good, but not great. In fact, I gave almost the entire cheesecake to my neighbor/colleague. If I had never been exposed to Greenspan’s Tall and Creamy Cheesecake, I think I would have really enjoyed this cheesecake, though. It was creamy, and the crust was really good. I doubled the crust and halved the filling because I love graham crackers!
As you can see, I didn’t put much effort into decorating it because we are nearing the end of the semester, and I have way too many other things to do. Aside from adding 1/4 cup of key lime juice and some lime zest, I followed the recipe exactly. You may get the full recipe here.
Thanks, Jenny! Be sure to check out the other Daring Bakers results: Daring Bakers Blogroll

































