Cheese Cake Water Bath

aking with a water-bath technique may bring to mind a delicate egg custard, a souffl?, cheesecake, pate or terrine. However, the technique is quite versatile: It can also be used to keep cooked foods ...

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The Washington Post: For creamy cheesecake with no cracks — or water bath — bake it low and slow

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What makes a good cheesecake? Is it tall and fluffy, or dense and creamy? What’s the right balance of sweet and tangy? Can you make it without a water bath? Is it fast or foolproof? Does it really ...

For creamy cheesecake with no cracks — or water bath — bake it low and slow

Food & Wine: This Foolproof Technique Is the Key to Flawless Cheesecakes

On 4/18/2024 at 1:47 PM, voyager said: Cheese is difficult. It is alive and constantly morphing. Like they say you never dip your foot in the same river, you never eat the same cheese. We've had cheese that was very disappointing that we somehow neglected to toss, only to find it buried in the cheese bin later, now ethereal, if a little stinky.

Beaufort Alpages: a really nice Alpine raw-milk cheese, firm but not in the crumbly state. $47.99/lb, though. Bleu d'Auvergne: a cheese made for port, this is a brawny, powerhouse blue, possibly a bit too intense. Another raw-milk cheese. We'll probably have the rest with one of our new muscadine jellies.

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A cheese event at a vast warehouse in Queens. Multiple bars, cheese-related events on stage and a massive, endless all-you-can eat cheese buffet curated by Tia Keenan. I ate as much as I could. Didn’t make myself ill, but I did feel weird afterwards. Some kind of cheese drunkenness. Sad bit, I remember running into Anne Saxelby there. 😢