We wonât mince words. This is the best cheesecake recipe weâve ever met. Itâs wonderfully rich, flavored with a whole vanilla bean (plus a bit of lemon zest for brightness), and sports a buttery crust you can customize to your liking.
According to former BA senior food editor Dawn Perry, using full-fat cream cheese, preferably Philadelphia brand, is critical for this New Yorkâstyle cheesecake. While ricotta and mascarpone can be used to delicious effect for certain types of cheesecake, this isnât the place for them. To ensure the filling is evenly mixed, the cream cheese, sour cream, and eggs must be room temperature before you start, so pull them out of the refrigerator at least 2 hours before combining. A food processor will deliver the smoothest batter since it incorporates less air than alternatives; if you donât have one, combine the cheesecake ingredients with a stand mixer using the paddle attachment (or a hand mixer) on medium-low speed.
Classic cheesecake recipes often get a graham cracker crust (which we fully support), but here weâll grant you some leeway. Venture into your grocerâs cookie aisle to discover the many possibilities: Choose vanilla or chocolate wafers, gingersnaps, Oreos, shortbread, animal crackers, fortune cookies, or any cookie or cracker that looks good to you (Again, if you donât have a food processor, crush the cookies in a zip-top bag using a rolling pin, or look for pre-ground graham cracker crumbs at the grocery store.) For an even crust, press the cookie mixture into the side of the pan before tamping down the base.
Note that the oven temperature is lowered from 350° (for the crust) to 325° for the final bake. Baking the cheesecake at a low temperature means fussing with a hot water bath is unnecessary. Youâll know itâs done when the edges of the creamy cheesecake filling are set and the center has a slight jiggle. But donât rush the cooling process: If your kitchen is very cold, leave the cheesecake in the turned-off oven with the oven door ajar to avoid thermal shock.
The cake can hold in the refrigerator, loosely covered with plastic wrap or aluminum foil, for several days. No cracks should form, but if they do, top with hot fudge or caramel sauce, fruit compote, or whipped cream and fresh fruit, and no one will ever know.
Recipe information
Total Time
3 hours (includes cooling)
Yield
Makes one 9" cake Servings
Ingredients
Crust
9
1
¼
½
Cheesecake and Assembly
20
¾
¼
1
â
¼
2
Special Equipment
Preparation
Crust
Step 1
Preheat oven to 350°. Pulse 9 oz. graham crackers, chocolate wafer cookies, vanilla wafer cookies, or gingersnap cookies, in the large bowl of a food processor until fine crumbs form (you should have about 2 cups). Add 1 Tbsp. raw sugar and ¼ tsp. kosher salt and pulse just to combine. Add ½ cup (4 oz.) melted butter and pulse until mixture is the consistency of wet sand.
Step 2
Transfer mixture to springform pan and, using a measuring cup, press crumbs firmly onto bottom and 2" up sides of pan. Bake crust until fragrant and edges just start to take on color, 12â15 minutes. Transfer to a wire rack and let cool.
Cheesecake and Assembly
Step 3
Preheat oven to 325°. Pulse 20 oz. cream cheese (2½ 8-oz. bars), room temperature, ¾ cup granulated sugar, and ¼ tsp. kosher salt in the large bowl of a food processor (no need to clean it first), occasionally scraping down sides of the bowl, until smooth. Scrape in the seeds from 1 vanilla bean, split lengthwise (save pod for another use), or add 1 Tbsp. vanilla extract. Add â cup sour cream, room temperature and ¼ tsp. finely grated lemon zest and pulse until smooth. Add 2 large eggs, room temperature and pulse to combine. Scrape cheesecake batter into cooled crust and bake until edges are set but center is still wobbly, 35â40 minutes. Transfer to a wire rack and let cool. Chill until firm, at least 2 hours.
Do ahead: Cheesecake can be made 3 days ahead. Cover and chill. Bring to room temperature before serving.Â
Editorâs note: This recipe was first printed in May 2015 as part of BAâs Best, a collection of our essential recipes. Head this way for our favorite chocolate cheesecake, a yogurt-enriched version with a cherry-pie-filling-like topping, or a pumpkin cheesecake with a nut-and-seed crumble.