This is a No Bake Cheesecake that tastes very similar to a classic Baked Cheesecake, made without the fuss of baking! It boasts an exceptionally smooth, light-yet-creamy filling and a buttery, crumbly crust that everybody is mad for.

The best no-bake cheesecake
I am fiercely loyal to my classic baked cheesecake, but a no-bake version is perfect for hot summer days or when Iβm short on time because I donβt have to fuss with baking.
That said, I have a very firm view that a no-bake cheesecake shouldnβt compromise on quality for convenience. Like a classic baked cheesecake, the filling should be rich yet light, with a silky smooth texture, but set enough to cut neat slices.
To achieve this, we need gelatin powder. Itβs affordable, widely available, and itβs essential for a successful no-bake cheesecake. Iβve tried it without, and trust meβit either doesnβt set or requires way more cream cheese, making it too dense (see FAQ for more details). There has been a LOT of cheesecake coming out of my kitchen lately!

Difference between a no-bake and baked cheesecake
This no-bake cheesecake is intentionally very similar to my classic Baked Cheesecake. However, itβs a smidge lighter because it doesnβt have egg in the filling, whereas baked cheesecake does (this is what sets the filling when it is baked).
Other than that, the texture and sweetness is very, very similar. I doubt most people could tell the difference!
My attempt at proving the creaminess of the filling to you β an elegant smear. π Thereβs a better demo in the recipe video below!

What this No Bake Cheesecake tastes like
There are endless cheesecake versions around, ranging from incredibly delicate souffle-like cheesecakes (such as the Japanese Cotton Cheesecake, thatβs my motherβs recipe BTW) to much denser, sweeter New York Cheesecake which uses four times the amount of cream cheese and 7x the amount of sugar.
My cheesecakes sit squarely in between these two. The filling texture is mousse-like, but not as delicate (else Iβd call it a mousse cake!). And when you eat it the filling becomes velvety smooth and creamy in your mouth. I aim for the same texture for both my baked cheesecakes and this no-bake one.
Hereβs a fun little table that summarises the above!
Typical ingredients | Japanese Cotton Cheesecake (recipe) | New York Cheesecake | My Cheesecakes* |
---|---|---|---|
Filling | Light as a soufflΓ© and barely sweet | Rich, dense, very sweet | Rich-yet-light |
Cream cheese | 250g (8 oz) | 1 kg (2 lb) | 500g (16 oz) |
Sugar | 35g (1.2 oz) | 260g (9 oz) | 150 β 200g (5.3 β 7 oz) |

Ingredients for No Bake Cheesecake
Hereβs what you need to make this no-bake cheesecake. Not that much actually! I find the most challenging thing is planning ahead so thereβs sufficient time for it to set in the fridge (6 hours for this one).
What you need for a no-bake cheesecake fillinG
See rant in the introduction paragraph above for why I insist we use gelatine! And remember β easy. And cheap. π

Cream cheese β I always use Philadelphia but if youβve had success with another brand, feel free to use that.
Softened at room temperature β Take it out of the fridge at least 1 hour prior so the cream cheese is softened, not fridge-cold-hard. We want to be able to beat it so itβs quite soft, smooth and fluffy so the whipped cream mixes effortlessly into it without knocking out the air (which means a lovely light aerated cheesecake filling = win!)
Blocks not tubs β This recipe calls for cream cheese blocks which are firmer than cream cheese in tubs which are softer as they are designed for spreading. If you can only get tubs, you just need to use a little more gelatine. See notes in the recipe card for quantity.
Gelatine β I prefer to use powder rather than gelatine leaves when I can because itβs simple to use, sold at regular grocery stores, cheap and (important to me) the strength is relatively universal around the world. The same cannot be said for gelatine leaves. π
Find gelatine powder in the baking aisle in small tubs (pictured above) or packets of small sachets (open and measure using a teaspoon).
Water β This is to βbloomβ the gelatine (explained in the step photos below). I use the bare minimum β just 2 tablespoons β so we donβt dilute flavour.
Whipping cream β Whipped cream helps create a lovely light textured filling. You can use thickened / heavy cream, or regular cream. Just make sure it can be whipped because not all cream is made for whipping (for example, pouring cream, dolloping cream). The label should say if it can be whipped.
Couple more cream rules:
1. No low fat! Now is not the time! Eat salad tomorrow.
2. Fridge cold! The cream needs to be fridge cold else it will not whip.Sugar β Best to use caster sugar (superfine sugar) which are finer grains than regular sugar (granulated sugar) so we can be confident it will dissolve. Itβs especially important because this is a no-bake recipe so we donβt have heat on our side here. If you only have regular sugar, thatβs ok. Just beat the cream cheese for a little longer than per the recipe and rub the mixture between your fingers to ensure thereβs no sugar grains left.
Vanilla β Please use vanilla extract which is real flavour extracted from vanilla beans (hence the name!) rather than vanilla essence which is imitation. Itβs especially important for no-bake recipes because the vanilla flavour is pure and unaltered in the recipe.
Lemon juice β Just a touch, to bring a smidge of tang to the filling. Itβs not a deal breaker if you donβt have it.
Salt β Standard baking practice these days to bring out the flavours in sweet baked goods. We use just a tiny amount so it doesnβt make it salty by any stretch of the imagination.

The buttery cheesecake crust
I am a cheesecake biscuit crust fiend! So my default is to have a biscuit wall, not just a base. If you see a cheesecake recipe of mine without a wall, there will be a reason for it!

How to make a No Bake Cheesecake
If thereβs one piece of advice I can give you, itβs to know that cheesecakes are not as fragile as you think they are! The biscuit crust will look a little loose and crumbly when you first press it into the pan. But once the cream cheese filling is in, it will absorb moisture which makes it set more, and once the filing is set, it holds the whole cheesecake together quite firmly.
So, handle the finished cheesecake with care but thereβs no need to be terrified! (Iβm talking to my 18 year old self here π).
1. inverted base (pro tip!)
To make it easier to remove finished cheesecake, flip the base of the springform pan so itβs upside down. Why? Because this way you donβt need to worry about bumping the cheesecake over the lip of the base which could cause cracks in the crust. Instead, it will glide off smoothly!

Flip the base of a 20cm/8β³ springform upside down.
Clip with excess paper sticking out β Grease very lightly with butter, just enough to hold the paper in place so itβs not sliding around when you clip the sides in. Then top with a square sheet of paper and clip the sides in so the excess paper is sticking out.
The excess paper is useful to grip to slide the cake off the base onto a serving platter. Then you simply slide the cheesecake off the paper. Easy β and no stress about cheesecake structural issues, yay!
2. Cheesecake crust
Iβm an absolute sucker for the crumbly, buttery biscuit crust of cheesecakes. So I insist on a biscuit wall. But if you want to take the easier path, just do a biscuit base and leave the sides naked.

Break biscuits up roughly by hand and put them in a food processor.
Blitz until they become fine crumbs, about 10 to 15 seconds on high, depending on how powerful your food processor is.

Add the butter, cinnamon, sugar and salt, then blitz again until it becomes wet sand.
Wet sand! It should press together when pinched between fingers.
β οΈ Not pressing together? Just add a little extra melted butter. You might have this problem if you used a drier biscuit than Digestives, or if they were a bit stale.

Roughly press β Pour the crumbs into the prepared pan, roughly spread it around the base. Push it up the walls and press it up using a rubber spatula. No need to be overly neat at first, do it roughly initially then refine it (next step).
Press and neaten β Use something with a flat base and vertical walls (I use a measuring cup) to press the crumbs firmly into the walls and the base. It will seem a little fragile at this stage but once the filling is in and the cheesecake has been refrigerated, the crust becomes firm and crispy.
Tip: For an extra neat crust, run the measuring cup (or whatever tool you use) back and forth along the corner to make it a neat 90Β° angle rather than curved. I also like to use a butter knife along the rim to tidy it up, but itβs not essential (youβll see me demo this in the video).
2. BLOOM THE GELATINE
Gelatine is simple to use if you just follow the steps Iβve provided. Thereβs a reason for every direction!

Bloom gelatine β Put the water in a small bowl then sprinkle the gelatine across the surface. Mix with a small whisk (or spoon) β it will become like lumpy jelly. Then leave it for 5 minutes. This is called βbloomingβ the gelatine.
β οΈ Donβt dump the gelatine in one place and donβt pour water into the gelatine. This can cause the gelatine to turn into a big lump immediately.
Rubbery! The gelatine should solidify into a firm rubber. If it doesnβt, then your gelatine is dead β time to get another!

Gently re-melt β Microwave for 15 seconds on high to melt it then mix until lump free.
β οΈ Do not let it boil as it can destroy the setting abilities of gelatine.
Cool for 5 minutes while you make the filling. The melted gelatine will be whipped into the filling.
β οΈ Do not pour hot gelatine into cream or anything that it could melt or deflate. Cool it first but make sure itβs still in liquid form. If it solidifies again, re-melt gently.
3. MAKE FILLING
I prefer using a handheld electric beater to make the filling as you can move it around the bowl rather than stopping and scraping down the sides like youβd need to do with a stand mixer. You also only need to use one attachment (the whisks). If you use a stand mixer, use the whisk attachment to whip the cream, then the paddle attachment for the cream cheese step (stand mixer whisk may aerate it too much = large unsightly bubbles + risk of collapse mid-setting).

Whip cream β Put the cream in a bowl and whip it on high for 2 minutes or until stiff peaks form. Weβre not looking for silky soft whipped cream, we want full on stiff whipped cream, as this makes our cheesecake beautiful light and fluffy.
Beat cream cheese β Put the cream cheese and sugar in a separate bowl and using the same whisk (no need to clean it), beat for 1 minute on high just until itβs softly smooth. Then add the vanilla, lemon, salt and melted cooled gelatine, then beat it in just until dispersed.
β οΈ Donβt beat excessively because it can cause unsightly large air bubbles in the filling (not the end of the world though, Iβm just fussy!).

Fold in whipped cream β Using a rubber spatula, fold through about 1/4 of the cream into the cream cheese filling. This lichens up the cream cheese mixture a bit before adding the rest of the cream, so less air is knocked out of the cream.
Once the initial cream is mostly mixed through, gently mix through the remaining cream. Donβt stir vigorously as you will knock air out of the whipped cream which will make the cheesecake filling denser than we are aiming for!
Pour the mixture into the prepared crust.

Smooth β Gently nudge into the corners then smooth the surface.
Set β Refrigerate for at least 6 hours (12 hours is safest) or until the filling is set. I do this uncovered but if your fridge has strong smells (garlic or marinated meats come to mind) you will want to cover it.
4. REMOVING FROM THE CAKE PAN AND DECORATING
In this step, you are going to be so grateful I insisted that you invert the base of the cake pan!

Sides first β Gently unclip then remove the sides of the springform pan.
Slide paper off base β Grip the paper overhang and slide the cheesecake off the base onto a serving platter.
β οΈ If the paper is stuck to the base, itβs because you used too much butter which, when ice cold, glues firmly to the paper! You can either warm the underside of the pan to melt the butter slightly (like putting it on a tea towel damp with warm water) or run a large offset spatula, knife or something else long and thin under the paper to loosen it.

Slice cheesecake off paper β Then slide the paper out from under the cheesecake. I sort of hold the cheesecake in place as Iβm pulling the paper out from underneath it.
β οΈYou shouldnβt have trouble with the cheesecake sticking to the paper in this step. If you do, it is probably the excess butter from the biscuit crust that has adhered to the paper when it solidified in the fridge. Just give it 5 minutes or so to soften and loosen then try again. Else, do as above and run a large offset spatula or knife under the crust.
Decorate (optional) β If youβd like to decorate your cheesecake as pictured in this post, pipe whipped cream along the edge then top every second swirl with a halved strawberry. See below for more decorating ideas.

Other cheesecake decorating ideas
Sometimes, the best cheesecake is one that is left un-adorned. Just 100% cheesecake perfection! You wonβt feel like youβre missing anything, eating a plain slice of cheesecake (at least, not one thatβs made well, which of course, ours is! π)
However, when youβve got company or if youβre taking this cheesecake somewhere, it is nice to decorate it. Here are some ideas:
Whipped cream piped along the edge with halved strawberries, as pictured;
Full coverage whipped cream β Spread softly whipped cream all over the surface, doing big beautiful swirls, then scatter with mixed berries and dust with icing sugar (powdered sugar);
Either of the above with passionfruit;
Serve slices with a dollop of whipped cream on the side and some strawberries or other berries;
Fruit compote and sauces (also see Mango Cheesecake, Strawberry and Blueberry Cheesecake, and Blueberry Cheesecake Bars);
Sauce β You could also serve with a chocolate or salted caramel sauce, though when I make chocolate or caramel cheesecakes I like to get those flavours inside the cheesecake too. They will be coming onto my website eventually! π
Sprinkle of nuts and/or chocolate shavings β Think, macadamia and white chocolate, peanuts and dark chocolate, pecans and chocolate, pistachios or almonds. Lovely addition of texture!


Thatβs cheesecake perfection, right there.
I hope you try this one of these days. Itβs such a beautiful, elegant dessert and everyone who has tried this always comments on how it tastes decadent but itβs not too rich, and borders on the βjust sweet enoughβ line.
In fact, Iβve added tips in the recipe to dial up the sweetness for people who prefer βAmerican-level-sweetβ because as a general rule, American cake recipes tend to be on the high end of sweetness compared to, say, French and Japanese which are on the lower end.
Love to know what you think if you try it! Also, extra decorating suggestions would be most welcome. I did get a little stuck of ideas! β Nagi x
No-bake Cheesecake FAQ
A classic cheesecake is baked and it is made using egg that is whipped to aerate the cream cheese filling and then sets the filling when itβs baked in the oven. No-bake cheesecakes are not baked so they donβt include egg, but instead rely on other means to set the filling. Either more cream cheese, gelatine (my preferred method) or the cheesecake is made flatter with less filling (which means making it set properly isnβt as tricky).
See the next FAQ item below for a comparison of the methods ie gelatine v no gelatine.
Basic no-bake cheese recipes just use more cream cheese (3 to 4 blocks for a 20cm/8β³ cheesecake), which is beaten with whipped cream to make the fulling. The cream cheese then firms up in the fridge and sets the filling.
But relying solely on cream cheese to set the filling means it is more dense, more costly to make (the price of cream cheese has sky-rocketed in recent years!) and the cheesecake is almost alarmingly heavy when you pick it up!
Itβs nice, but just too rich for my taste (Iβm not going to link the recipes I triedβ¦you understand π ).
Other cheesecakes will use less cream cheese so itβs not as denseβ¦but they just donβt set properly. They smear and sag when sliced, and you need to eat it immediately out of the fridge before it melts into a puddle. (Again, not going to link a recipe here. These were disappointing, I should have trusted my instincts and not bothered.)
My recipe relies on gelatine powder to set the filling. We use the bare minimum we can get away with so the filling doesnβt go anywhere near βpanacotta-likeβ. Rather, itβs light and almost mousse-like, yet cuts into neat slices and melts in your mouth into a river of velvety richness in your mouth.
Thatβs ok! You will just need to use a little more gelatine to help the filling set. This is because tub cream cheese is softer than block cream cheese as it is designed for spreading (think β bagels!), whereas block cream cheese is more often used in cooking.
It is excellent for 4 days, and still good at 7 days though the base does start to soften a bit as it continues to take in moisture. However, be mindful of the shelf life of the cream you used as you will be limited by that. ie The cheesecake shelf life will be the short of the expiry date of the cream or 7 days.
Getting the gelatine vs cream vs cream cheese balance right for the perfect texture and flavour I was seeking.
Too much gelatine = panna cotta vibes. Too little gelatine = doesnβt set enough.
Too little cream = not aerated enough. Too much cream = greasy mouth feel.
Too little cream cheese = not enough cheesecake flavour. Too much cream cheese = too dense!!
I warned youβ¦Iβm fussy about my cheesecake!
Actually, I had a no bake cheesecake recipe Iβve been making *forever* which I was perfectly happy with until I went to share it on my website. Then I got paranoid about whether it was as good as it could be, and thatβs when I started down the testing rabbit hole! The final recipe I published was actually not too different from my original recipe. The only thing I ended up changing was the gelatine (reduced from 3 teaspoons to 2 1/4 teaspoons for a softer mouthfeel).
Unfortunately not as I havenβt designed this recipe to be made with jelly crystals. Also, the setting strength of jelly crystals varies from brand to brand, so it would be hard for me to have a universal recipe. This is important to me because people from all over the world use my recipes, and Iβd hate for someone to have problems with a recipe of mine just because jelly crystals in, say, Bulgaria are stronger than here in Australia!
Watch how to make it
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No bake cheesecake
Ingredients
Biscuit crust:
- 200g/7 oz digestive biscuits (13 pieces, 1 2/3 cups crumbs), or other plain biscuits/cookies
- 90g (6 tbsp) unsalted butter, melted
- 1/2 tsp cinnamon powder (optional)
- 1 tbsp brown sugar
- Pinch of salt
No-bake cheesecake filling:
- 2 1/4 tsp (9 g) gelatin powder , unflavoured (Note 2)
- 2 tbsp cold tap water
- 1 cup thickened or heavy cream , or any whipping cream, FRIDGE COLD (Note 3)
- 500g/ 16 oz cream cheese block (not tub), well softened at room temperature (Note 4)
- 3/4 cup caster sugar / superfine sugar (Note 5)
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 1 tbsp lemon juice (not critical, can do without)
Optional decorations:
- 6 strawberries , halved (plus extra for serving)
- Whipped cream (half batch for decorating, or full batch for extra to serving on side)
Instructions
ABBREVIATED RECIPE:
- Blitz crumb ingredients. Press into 20cm/8" inverted base lined springform. Bloom gelatine in the water, re-melt. Whip cream. In separate bowl whip cream cheese + sugar, then vanilla, lemon, salt and gelatine. Fold in 1/4 cream, then remaining cream. Fill crust, fridge 6 hours.
FULL RECIPE:
Inverted cake pan:
- Invert & line β Turn the base of a 20cm/8" springform pan UPSIDE DOWN (Note 6). Grease with butter very lightly. Place a square piece of parchment/baking paper on the base. Then clip into the springform pan β excess paper will stick out.
- Line sides β Butter and line the side of the pan.
Biscuit crust:
- Blitz β Break up biscuits roughly by hand and place in a food processor. Blitz until it becomes fine crumbs (~30 seconds).
- Add butter β Add the butter, cinnamon and salt. Blitz until it resembles wet sand (~ 10 second). It should stay together when pinched between your fingers.
- Press β Pour into the prepared cake tin. Use a spatula to roughly spread it out over the base and up the walls. Then flatten and press the base and walls using something with a flat base and vertical edges (I used a measuring cup). Aim for the wall to be ~9mm (0.35") from the top of the rim (Note 7). Refrigerate crust until required.
Gelatine (Note 2):
- Bloom gelatine β Put the water in a small bowl and sprinkle the gelatine across the surface (don't dump it in one place. Whisk until dissolved then set aside for 3 minute or until it firms up like rubber.
- Melt β Microwave for 15 seconds on high or until it melts (do not let it boil). Cool for 5 minutes while you make the filling (make sure it's still liquid when you use it).
No-bake cheesecake filling:
- Whip cream β Put the cream in a bowl and whip it with an electric beater on high for 2 minutes until firm peaks form (ie not softly whipped, we want good aeration!).
- Whip cream cheese β Put the cream cheese and sugar in a separate large bowl. Using the same beater (no need to clean), beat on high for 1 minute just until it's soft and smooth. Add the vanilla, lemon and melted gelatine, then beat for 10 seconds on high to mix it through thoroughly. Don't beat excessively as we don't want too many air bubbles in the cheesecake (unsightly).
- Fold β Add about 1/4 of the whipped cream into the cream cheese mixture. Gently fold through using a rubber spatula or large spoon (don't mix aggressively, you'll knock all the air out of the cream!). Then fold in the rest of the cream.
- Refrigerate β Pour into the crust, smooth the surface. Refrigerate for 6 hours+ to set.
Serving:
- Remove sides of the cake pan. Use then overhang paper to slide cheesecake off the cake pan base onto a serving platter. Then slide the cheesecake off the paper.
- Decorate the top with whipped cream and strawberries, if desired (or just dollop whipped cream on the plate). Cut into slices and serve!
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
Life of Dozer
As promised in the last post β home movie of a day in the Life of Dozer!
I made this for my husbands birthday. Thank you for making recipes soooo easy to follow. Itβs made cooking so much more enjoyable and I have began expanding on what I can make and itβs been so fun.
This cake was so easy to make and it came together so perfectly. Delicious, quick and easy. Absolute winner!!!!
Unable to use gelatine can I substitute agar agar instead
Made this last night. OMG soooooooo delicious.
New cook book ordered!
Love your recipes Nagi and hearing about your beautiful boy Dozer!
My favorite type of cheese cake .I learned to make this cheese cake when I worked as an apprentice cook nearly 50 years ago Great work Nagi
No-bake cheesecakes are pretty great, arenβt they! π N x
This is the same as my mums recipe except we used sweetened condensed milk instead of sugar
My nan use too aswell! But i cant remember measurements exactly. Is it a whole can of condensed milk?
My mums ratios are 1 bottle of cream (600ml), 1 can of condensed milk (approx 400g) and one box of cream cheese (250g). Makes 2 cheesecakes.
Just fan girling that Nagi replied to my comment!
You have to try it, itβs delightful. Hoping by following your whipping and gelatine instructions today I have less of the gelatine lump issues I usually get and a lovely fluffy texture.
Iβve seen cheesecakes made with condensed milk, keen to try one of these days! N x
Any suggestions for a substitute for gelatin? β as veges we donβt do ground cow/pig ligaments, bones, tendons, cartilage etc
Hi!!! Iβm making this today with vegetarian gelatine will update after Iβve made it with quantity and if it works!!!!
Thanks Cale! Hope it works, I am not sure of the conversion π N x
I tried it with the vegegel I had I based it on needing 1g of gelatin per 1/4 tsp 0.5g of vegegel but you need to heat it in 200ml of liquid which would have been too much water because it should be liquid from what youre trying to set and didnt want to heat the cream upβ¦ I tried using smaller amounts and it didnβt workβ¦ but am gonna look for a different vegegel and try again will post my experiments!!!!
For years I have made the Phillidelphia cream cheese recipe of no cook cheesecake that uses lemon juice as the setting agent rather than gelatine. It also uses condensed milk in place of cream and sugar. The proportions were 250g of cream cheese, 1 can of condensed milk and 1/3 cup of lemon juice. It requires a longer time to set β 12 has at least so I would always make it the day before. Iβve made it with a gingernut biscuit base and topped it with lemon curd and with a chocolate ripple biscuit base with strawberry pieces in the cheese mix. I would add gelatine if I added fruit or if I needed the cake to set more quickly. I have found that beating the cheese really well and for longer than usual ensured a light texture.
Agar Agar is Vegan π xx
Delicious and easy. I donβt like crust on the sides so just used for the base and cheesecake was strong enough to stand independently. Another brilliant recipe, thank you! (Love, love your mango one when they are in season).
YAAAY! So glad you enjoyed it! N x
Oh thatβs good to know because I donβt like sides either. I will try it without sides as well π
I donβt do sides either, no patience hahaha
I love the home video of you and Dozer, Nagi. Hugs and kisses Dozer. xxx
Entire family are huge fans of cheesecake. Made many over the years. Looking forward to making this one this week. Looks totally delicious π
Sometimes have made a cheesecake dip, Whip up 250g cream cheese with 1/2 cup sugar and 2T lemon juice, add in 1 cup pure whipping cream. Whip till well combined and holds itβs own peaks. Top with crushed biscuit crumbs of your choice, and some berries, or your choice of toppings.
Coffee: 250g cream cheese. 1/2 cup sugar. 2T fresh coffee shot. (made from coffee machine because instant coffee is not very strong and lacks some of that fresh brewed flavour) Beat together until smooth. Add 1 cup pure whipping cream, beat until well combinedβ¦holds itβs own peaks. To serve..layer ingredients with your choice of add ins, or dollop in bowl top with your choice of crushed biscuits and some berries, even some saucy loveliness. π
Family enjoy with a coffee cake and the βdipβ used at βfrostingβ or topping.
The lemon cheesecake dip is delightful with blueberry cake.
The cheesecake dip has a family nickname of βGrandmaβs lazy cheesecakeβ :-)) xx
I LOVE HEARING THAT! I have to try it π N x
Made this for Hubz birthday, following recipe exactly, no changes, additions etc. Iβve made no bake cheesecakes before, none have come close to this one. Chilled overnight and it holds together beautifully. Itβs real creamy, buttery crust, just sweet enough. Utter perfection! Thank you Nagi!
WOW! Youβre one of the first people in the world to try this recipe, so glad you loved it Kathleen! N x
I adapted this recipe to be gluten and dairy free by using Coconut Collaborative whipping cream, two tube of Violife cream cheese alternative (no block cream cheese alternative available anywhere nearby) and Schar Spekulatius biscuits for the base. I used Flora plant butter block, and other than direct swaps I followed the instructions exactly β itβs absolutely delicious! My first ever cheesecake β thanks Nagi!
WOW! thatβs amazing it worked with those subs thanks for sharing the tips Chris! N x
I LOVE cheesecake so I can hardly wait to try this recipe.
Your movie with Dozer is great.
Hope you get a chance to try it Coco! N x
Iβm really getting into cheesecakes at the moment, so Iβm definitely going to have to try this recipe out.
Thank you Nagi!
P.S
Dozer is so cute!
Yeah, he ainβt too badβ¦ π
What a thoroughly wonderful and very detailed tutorial. Youβre emails are the first article I read in my email. Youβre doing a great job and thanks for including Dozer. Love the great dog.
Thank you for your kind words Evie! β N x
Great idea to have the βabbreviatedβ recipe at the start. And the way you set out your recipes with the bold heading at the start of each step. Your recipes are very user friendly.
Thanks Lee-Anne! I work hard on improving my recipe writing and also my post writing π Written communication skills is so important! N x
He is so beautiful and so are you AND your recipes.
Aww thanks Anita! N x
I used gingernut biscuits find it helps cut thru richness. Plus I just do the base not sides still perfect.
Oh my heart, he is a beautiful boy β€οΈ
What effect would adding more lemon have? My mum used to make a cheesecake very much like this but it was very lemony, unfortunately the recipe was lost when she passed.
Hi Steve! For more lemons flavour, add more lemon zest rather than juice (which just makes it sour). N x
Many thanks for that Iβll give it a go, Iβm currently batching and living on your easy recipes I can make on Sunday & freeze, so far, so good. Youβre a genius!
Hi Nagy,
I have had success in making a notable cheesecake with no gelatin by using more lemon. The lemon then curdles the cream, thereby thickening the cheesecake.
I have been making no bake cheesecake for years. I find it is much easier to sit the cake tin on a mug or tin and slide the sides of the cake tin down rather than up. Thanks for your lovely recipes, they are my go-to place for cooking.
GREAT TIP! Iβm going to do that next time π N x