Chocolate Fantasy Cheesecake
Submitted by echerry
Triple chocolate cheesecake on a chocolate cookie crust, made with cream cheese, melted semisweet chocolate, grated German chocolate, and a splash of creme de cacao. Slow-baked low and slow for a velvety, crack-free finish.
YIELD
16 servingsPREP
15 minCOOK
2½ hrsREADY
3 hrsA Triple-Chocolate Cheesecake With Crack-Proof Technique
Three types of chocolate. That’s the move that earns this cheesecake its fantasy label: melted semisweet for backbone, grated German chocolate for sweet-creamy depth, and creme de cacao for that liqueur-laced finish you’d taste at a fancy dessert restaurant. The result is a deeply chocolate cheesecake that still tastes like cheesecake, not just frozen mousse.
The technique is what really sets this apart. The two-stage bake (15 minutes at 350°F (175°C), then a long, gentle finish at 200°F (95°C)) is the professional pastry move that prevents the surface cracks that ruin most home cheesecakes. Running a knife around the edge after baking gives the cake room to contract as it cools without splitting down the middle. The 2-hour cool-down inside the turned-off oven is what makes the texture velvety instead of dense.
Is it more work than a quick cheesecake? Yes. Is it the difference between a homemade dessert and one that looks like it came from a pastry case? Absolutely.
Pro Tips
- All cold ingredients (cream cheese, eggs, sour cream) need to be at room temperature. Cold cream cheese leaves lumps you can’t beat out without overmixing the batter.
- Don’t overbeat after adding the eggs. Excess air causes cracks and a souffle-like rise that collapses.
- Wrap the springform pan in foil and place in a water bath for even more insurance against cracks.
- The cheesecake should still jiggle slightly in the center when you turn off the oven. It firms up during the cool-down and chill.
- Overnight chill is essential. Cutting into a warm cheesecake gives you a soupy mess.
Variations
- Substitute Frangelico, Kahlua, or Bailey’s for the creme de cacao for different liqueur notes.
- Top with a chocolate ganache glaze for an extra layer of decadence.
- Use a graham cracker crust instead of chocolate cookie for a classic finish.
Ingredients
Directions
CRUST: In a small bowl, stir together crushed cookies and melted butter until well combined.
Press crumb mixture evenly onto the bottom of a greased 9- inch springform pan or a square baking pan.
FILLING: In a large bowl, combine cream cheese and sugar.
Beat with an electric mixer until smooth.
Add eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition.
Stir in sour cream, whipping cream, creme de cacao, and vanilla extract.
Stir in melted semisweet chocolate and grated German chocolate.
Pour the cream cheese mixture over the crust.
Bake at 350℉ (180℃) F for 15 minutes.
Lower the temperature to 200 degrees F and bake for 1 hour and 10 minutes or until the center no longer looks wet or shiny.
Remove the cake from the oven and run a knife around the inside edge of the pan.
Turn the oven off; return the cake to the oven for an additional 2 hours.
Chill, uncovered, overnight.
Serve with cocoa powder dusted on top or shaved chocolate if desired.
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