Cheesecake

A slice of lemon cheesecake
Plate decorated cheesecake
Sliced New York cheesecake

A cheesecake is a dessert cake made of cheese (usually cream cheese but sometimes ricotta), eggs, and sugar. It often has a graham cracker crumb crust, sometimes held together by melted butter. The filling has a very heavy, smooth texture. It sometimes has sour cream to make it easier to shape and may have fruit flavoring such as strawberry, blueberry, or lemon. It is often topped with fresh fruit or chocolate.

History

Cheesecake is now often thought to be part of American cooking, but it has a long history. Cheese making began around 2000 Page Template:Smallcaps/styles.css has no content.bc, and scientists who study people in the past have found cheese molds almost as old.

Cheesecakes are known to go back to at least Greece.[1] In the 100s Page Template:Smallcaps/styles.css has no content.ad, the writer Athenaeus's Dinner-Table Philosophers mentioned the poet Callimachus (around the 200s Page Template:Smallcaps/styles.css has no content.bc) used to have a book by an "Aegimius" about the art of making cheesecakes (Greek: Πλακουντοπουκόν Σύγγραμμα, Plakountopoukón Sýngramma).[2] Cheesecake may have been given to the sportspeople during the Olympic Games, which started in 776 Page Template:Smallcaps/styles.css has no content.bc.

Even before the Romans took over Greece, they had begun making cheesecakes as well. M. Porcius Cato's Book on Farming (written around 160 Page Template:Smallcaps/styles.css has no content.bc) mentions three kinds of cakes—libum, savillum, and placenta—for use as offerings to the gods.[3][4][5] Placenta cakes were the closest to today's cheesecakes, since its crust and filling are made separately.[6]

Europeans stopped using yeast and started adding beaten eggs to their cheesecakes around the 1700s. This made it taste more like a dessert than a cheesebread.[7]

Cheesecake recipes were brought to the United States as people moved there from Europe. Most of today's kinds of cheesecake ("New York-style cheesecake") come from the kind created by William Lawrence of Chester, New York, in 1872. He was trying to make something like the soft French Neufchâtel cheese and ended up with a heavy, creamy "unripened cheese".[8]

Types

There is an all-garlic restaurant in Stockholm where they offer a garlic cheesecake.[9]


Other

Sonya Thomas holds the world record for eating the most cheesecakes in a given time. She ate 11 pounds of cheesecake in nine minutes.[10]

Gallery

Cheesecake Media

References

  1. "The History of Cheesecake and Cream Cheese". about.com. Retrieved 1 May 2010.[dead link]
  2. Callimachus, ap. Athen, xiv. p. 643, e
  3. Cato the Elder, De Agri Cultura, §75 & 76.
  4. "Cato's 'De Agricultura': Recipes". www.novaroma.org. Retrieved 2008-10-12.
  5. "Cato's 'De Agricultura': Recipes".
  6. "A Bit of Food History: Cheesecake" (PDF). www.culinaryschools.com. Retrieved 2008-10-12.
  7. "History of Cheesecake".
  8. Cheesecake History
  9. "Food Facts & Trivia: Cheese Cake". foodreference.com. Retrieved 1 May 2010.
  10. "Sonya Thomas, The First Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest Women's Champion!: Gothamist". gothamist.com. 6 November 2017. Archived from the original on 6 November 2007. https://web.archive.org/web/20171106064124/http://gothamist.com/2011/07/04/first_nathans_hot_dog_eating_contes.php.