Marble Cheesecake
- 4 ounces chocolate cookie crumbs
- 2 tablespoons melted butter
- 2 1/2 pounds cream cheese, room temperature
- 1 3/4 cups sugar
- 3 tablespoons flour
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 2 yolks
- 5 eggs
- 1 teaspoon vanilla
- 3/4 cup sour cream, plus 1/4 cup
- 6 ounces semisweet chocolate, melted and slightly cooled
- Preheat oven to 450 degrees F. Grease a 10-inch spring form pan.
- If needed, use a rolling pin with the cookie crumbs in a sealable plastic bag to crush them.
- Blend the cookie crumbs with the melted butter, press it into the bottom of the pan, and chill.
- In a mixer with a whisk attachment, place the softened cream cheese and whip it.
- Add the sugar and continue to mix until blended.
- Add the flour and salt and blend.
- Add the yolks and eggs gradually, scraping in between then add the vanilla.
- Add 3/4 cup of the sour cream and mix in.
- Take off 2 cups of the mixture and set aside.
- In a small bowl, whisk the remaining 1/4 cup sour cream with the cooled melted chocolate then whisk it into the reserved 2 cups of filling.
- Pour a layer of the vanilla filling into the bottom of the pan about 1-inch thick.
- By large spoonfuls, alternate the 2 fillings to fill the spring form pan.
- Using the flat face of an icing spatula, swirl the 2 batters slightly to marbleize it.
- Bake at 450 degrees F for 15 minutes, then turn the oven down to 250 degrees F and bake for 1 more hour.
- Then, turn the oven off and let it cool in the oven 1 hour.
- The cake will still shimmy, but it is done, it will set up as it chills.
- Refrigerate the cake overnight.
- Remove from the spring form pan, slice with a hot, dry knife, and serve.
- Notes about the recipe: I had to make 6 cheesecakes a day when I was pastry chef at the Strathallen Hotel in Rochester New York.
- Just to rotate them halfway through the baking was a major production.
- I didn't have may own baking oven so had to use the ones on our very busy hot line.
- It was a trick just to keep the guys (cooks) from changing the temperatures on my ovens because they always last them to 500.
- And then to get them to move so I could kneel in front of the ovens to juggle the cakes around...forget it.
- So I'd have to yell out "ROTATE!"
- and get everyone away from the oven while I kneeled in front of them to do the rotation ballet of hot shimmying cheesecakes with dry towels (a hot commodity in kitchens).
- My knees on my chef's pans were always dirty and that was why.
chocolate cookie crumbs, butter, cream cheese, sugar, flour, salt, yolks, eggs, vanilla, sour cream, chocolate
Taken from www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/marble-cheesecake-recipe0.html (may not work)