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26 Comments

    1. Carol,

      Great question! Ricotta cheesecake needs a slightly higher pull temperature. Bake your ricotta cheesecake until its internal temperature reaches 160°F. Let us know how it goes!

      Thanks,
      -Kim

  1. Can you just substitute some ricotta cheese for the cream cheese? Would it be equal weight that you replace? I.e. 1 1/4lb cream cheese and 1 1/4lb of ricotta? Mix the same and everything else?

  2. So I apparently bought a 10.25nch springform pan. Would you just adjust the cooking time for the cheesecake?

    1. Alan,

      Exactly! Your springform pan’s diameter is wider than the one used in our recipe, so the cheesecake will be thinner. It will likely bake faster than ours did. Start checking it about 10–15 minutes sooner.

      Thanks,
      -Kim

  3. I enjoyed reading your articles. This is truly a great read for me
    I have bookmarked it and I am looking forward to reading new articles. Keep up the good work!

    1. This is the first recipe that incorporates goats cheese. Is it absolutely necessary? In my family it’s a turn off

  4. Great recipe and tutorial, going to give this a try . Do I use top and bottom heating elements when baking the cheesecake or just bottom . Thanks

  5. could you use a Thermoworks needle probe in the center of the cheesecake to determine when it is at 145 F instead of checking it with an instant read thermometer?

    1. Once it has set up some, yes, you could. Butyou should still verify the temp with an instant read, as probre placement in a custard like that may be…sketchy.

  6. Not sure what happened but I baked the cheesecake at 250f for well over 65min. I’d say 105min just trying to get it to reach 145f in the middle. I chilled it overnight and had it the next evening. It was VERY soft in the middle it didn’t firm up at all. I’m pretty meticulous when it comes to measuring. Are you sure you’ve got the recipe written correctly?? I don’t have trouble with other baking so it’s not a problem with oven calibration.

    1. This SOUNDS like an oven calibration issue, but it IS odd. I’m quite certain the recipe is written correctly, though I have only made the recipe for the “lighter, poofier” version, starting at 450°F. The instruction comes from a very reliable source, though.

  7. Hi,
    At what temperature and how long would you bake a cheesecake in a
    convection oven? Or you would not and why?
    Regards

  8. If cheesecake should only be baked until 145*, what is your take on “Basque Cheesecakes”, which are said to be done at about 185*? I made one and it was fairly lite and creamy, and yet structured enough to slice nicely after refrigeration over night (about 12 hours).

    1. I am not sure, but I imagine the Basque version has a slightly different makeup/moisture content that helps account for that, but I should do a practice or two to figure it out.

  9. I came to the website to see what the proper internal temperature for cheesecake needs to be and ran across this recipe. I am looking to make frozen chocolate cheesecake push ups, baking them in the mold. With the exception of starting with ingredients at room temperature, I can’t disagree with techniques in this recipe more. Cheesecake, like creme brulee, is a custard and should be baked in a water bath. The end product should be perfectly flat all the way across the cake–not high and dry along the edges. The oven temperature should be turned down half way through baking. I prefer the baked, shortbread like crust from Nick Malgieri’s “How to Bake” cookbook. Lastly, I have found making the batter in a food processor works better than a mixer–it doesn’t whip air into the batter. About 20 years ago I won the People’s Choice Award two (2) years in a row at the Michigan State University’s Chocolate Party handing out 1,000 samples of chocolate cheesecake with whipped cream and a shot of raspberry sauce each year.

  10. So, once the internal temperature hits 145F, for the cheesecake baked at 250F for its full cooking time, do I then remove the cheesecake immediately and allow it to cool on a counter-top, or do I leave it in the oven for a period of time, with the oven door closed, or slightly ajar so that it cools down more slowly?

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