The
other day I had the urge to bake a cheesecake.
I have no idea where that came from. There are only about five, or
probably less than that, recipes that I make which are desserts. One is a
classic cheesecake. Now it's called Vintage.
This is one of those recipes that probably has thousands which have been
written over the years. I would classify
it in the same category as roasted chicken, lasagna, roasted chicken, lasagna,
or roasted chicken, lasagna, or meatloaf (not a typo).
I
did not open any of my cookbooks or peruse the Internet. Why bother when I had THE
classic vintage cheesecake recipe typed on an index card in my 3"x5 1/2"
plastic recipe box from yesteryear. The original
recipe was written on the back of the Argo Cornstarch box more than 30 (or,
more likely, 40) years ago.
So
I looked at my faded typed tattered index card with misspellings (still
misspell today--even with spell-check. Some things never
change) and made a list. Then I headed to the local grocery store to
visit the "baking" isle.
First
on the list was graham cracker crumbs.
Non-existant. So, I went to a
larger major grocery store. Still
non-existant. Okay. My only alternative at this point was to visit
the cookie isle and "hope" that the traditional graham cracker
cookies were still being sold. They were.
The cookies could easily be processed into crumbs and those remaining could
be used for dipping into milk. Wow.
We're going way back.
The
next surprise was Argo Cornstarch. No
box. Now it's sold in a plastic container
with a screw-top cap. And, of course,
this justifies the price of....Nevermind... And no cheesecake recipe is found
on it.
And
margarine? No. Haven't used margarine in more than 30 years,
so it's gonna be butter. (again, not a typo).
However, we will try and adapt the recipe to be more health and heart conscious. Well, try. We used all "low fat" cheese products and cut down on the sugar. Is it more health and heart conscious? Don't know, but it sounds good and the result was better than good. Here goes.
1/4
cup graham cracker crumbs
2
8 oz. packages of low fat cream cheese1 pound low fat cottage cheese
3/4 cups sugar
4 eggs
2 Tablespoons fresh lemon juice
1 vanilla bean, split and seeds extracted
1/3 cup cornstarch
1/2 cup butter, melted
1 pint sour cream
Preheat oven to 325 degrees.
Grease one 9" round spring-form pan with butter. Dust with graham cracker crumbs. Process the cottage cheese in a mixer on high speed. Add cream cheese and continue to process until creamy. Add sugar and eggs. Continue beating on high speed. When well blended, reduce speed to low. Add lemon juice, vanilla beans, and cornstarch. Add butter and sour cream. Beat until well blended. Pour batter into pan. Put cheesecake in the oven for about one hour, or until brown forms around edges. Turn oven off and let cake sit (or rest) for another two hours.
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