Cheesecakes can be broadly categorized into two basic types:
baked and unbaked. Some do not have a crust or base. Cheesecake comes in a variety of styles based on region:
Africa cheesecake One popular variant of cheesecake in
South Africa is made with whipped cream, cream cheese,
gelatin for the filling, and a buttered
digestive biscuit crust. It is not baked, and is sometimes made with
Amarula liqueur. This variant is very similar to British cheesecake. This cheesecake is more common in
British South African communities.
Asia Japanese cheesecake, or soufflé-style or cotton cheesecake, is made with cream cheese, butter, sugar, and eggs, and has a characteristic wobbly and airy texture, similar to
chiffon cake. No-bake cheesecakes are known as
rare cheesecake (Japanese: レアチーズケーキ). The most prominent version of cheesecake in the
Philippines is
ube cheesecake. It is made with a base of crushed
graham crackers and an upper layer of cream cheese and
ube halaya (mashed
purple yam with milk, sugar, and butter). It can be prepared, baked, or simply refrigerated. Like other ube desserts in the Philippines, it is characteristically purple in color.
Europe Basque cheesecake, composed of burnt custard and no crust, was created in 1990 by Santiago Rivera of the La Viña restaurant in the
Basque Country, Spain. It achieved popularity online in the 2010s, helped by a recipe published by the British food writer
Nigella Lawson.
Crostata di ricotta is a traditional Italian baked cheesecake made with
ricotta cheese, chocolate chips, and eggs. Many cakes and desserts are filled with ricotta, like
cassata Siciliana and
pastiera Napoletana. Swiss
Chäschüechli (
ramequin in French-speaking parts of the country) are small cheesecake tartlets, savory rather than sweet. , with meaning "cheese", is a baked Polish cheesecake dating back to the 17th century. It uses (traditional Polish quark) and is based more on eggs and butter, without cream or sour cream. Variations include (
Kraków-style), with a lattice crust on top, (royal), made from cocoa crust on the top and bottom of the cheesecake filling, and (Vienna-style), which is crustless. (Russian "pulled" cake) is a German baked cheesecake with a cocoa crust base and edge, with chocolate dough scattered over the cheesecake filling. A nutritional survey of cheesecake served in restaurants and hotels in Northern Ireland found that the portion sizes were large, with larger servings containing more sugar, fat, saturated fat, energy and salt. The average serving of cheesecake was estimated to contain the equivalent of 5.5
cubes of sugar and 10% of the maximum guideline daily amount of salt.
Cottage cheese zapekanka (East Slavic cuisine). File:Nagoya Bar Basque cheese cake 2020-06 ac (1).jpg|Basque cheesecake File:Tarte au fromage blanc.png|French cheesecake (
tarte au fromage) File:Oberkrämer 23.05.2015 13-21-03.JPG|German cheesecake (
Käsekuchen) File:Italian style cheesecake.jpg|Italian-style ricotta cheesecake File:7dcp5132544-russischer-zupfkuchen.jpg|Russischer Zupfkuchen File:2023 Sernik polski (1).jpg|Polish-style cheesecake with raisins (
sernik)
North America The United States has several different recipes for cheesecake, and this usually depends on the region in which the cake is baked, as well as the cultural background of the person baking it. Chicago-style cheesecake is a baked cream cheese version that is firm on the outside with a soft and creamy texture on the inside. These cheesecakes are often made in a greased cake pan and are relatively fluffy in texture. The crust used with this style of cheesecake is most commonly made from shortbread that is crushed and mixed with sugar and butter. Some frozen cheesecakes are Chicago-style. New York–style or Jewish-style cheesecake uses a
cream cheese base.
Gil Marks traces the origin of the New York-style or Jewish cheesecake in
Ashkenazi Jewish cuisine to the 1930s, made famous in such establishments as
Reuben's Restaurant and
kosher-style Jewish deli Lindy's, opened by German-Jewish immigrant Leo Lindermann in 1921. Earlier cheese pie recipes called for
cottage cheese. Cream cheese was invented in 1872 and made its way into
American Jewish cuisine by 1929 according to Arnold Reuben, owner of the namesake restaurant, who claims credit for the recipe (as well as the
Reuben sandwich) and is said to have won an award at the 1929 World's Fair in Barcelona.
Junior's, established by Harry Rosen in 1950, is another NY Jewish establishment famous for New York-style cheesecake. Charles W. Lubin, a Jewish baker in
Decatur, Illinois, created the
Sara Lee brand of supermarket cheesecakes and expanded into other cakes such as
coffee cake, being sold in 48 states. == See also ==