A good no bake cheesecake recipe should be creamy, simple, and reliable. It should set properly in the refrigerator, slice cleanly, and taste like real cheesecake instead of sweet cream cheese in a crust.
This version uses a buttery graham cracker or digestive biscuit crust, a smooth cream cheese filling, cold whipped cream for lift, and enough chill time for clean slices. Because the filling is not baked, the recipe depends on the right dairy, the right mixing method, and patience in the refrigerator.
More importantly, this guide shows you how to control the details that usually make or break a no bake cheesecake: which cream cheese to use, how stiff to whip the cream, how long to chill it, when gelatin helps, and what to do if the filling feels too soft.
Table of Contents
Use this guide to make the cheesecake first, then troubleshoot, choose toppings, try variations, store it, and serve it confidently.
Make the Cheesecake
Fixes, Toppings & Storage
Quick Answer: How Do You Make No Bake Cheesecake?
No bake cheesecake is made by pressing a graham cracker or digestive biscuit crust into a springform pan, spreading in a cream cheese and whipped cream filling, and chilling it until firm. Since there is no oven involved, this cheesecake recipe depends on full-fat cream cheese, cream whipped to stiff peaks, gentle folding, and at least 6 to 8 hours in the refrigerator.
Think of it this way: the crust chills, the filling firms in the refrigerator, and the oven stays off completely.
In other words, no bake cheesecake does not set like baked cheesecake. It does not use eggs or oven heat. Instead, it sets through the firmness of cream cheese, the structure of whipped cream, and enough time in the refrigerator.
No Bake Cheesecake at a Glance
Before you start, check the pan size, cream type, and chill time. Since this cheesecake sets without baking, these details decide how cleanly it slices.
| Detail | Best Choice |
|---|---|
| Pan | 9-inch / 23cm springform pan |
| Crust | Graham cracker crust or digestive biscuit crust |
| Cream cheese | Full-fat block-style cream cheese if available |
| Cream | Cold heavy cream or whipping cream that can whip to stiff peaks |
| Chill time | 6 to 8 hours minimum |
| Best texture | Overnight / about 12 hours |
| Gelatin | Optional, not required for the main recipe |
| Oven | Not needed |
| Eggs | Not used |

Why This No Bake Cheesecake Recipe Works
Because this cheesecake recipe skips baking, each part has a job. The cream cheese gives the filling body, the whipped cream makes it lighter, and the long chill helps everything firm into a sliceable cheesecake.
The crust is also designed to hold. Since the crust chills instead of baking, fine crumbs, melted butter, and brown sugar create a compact base that firms in the refrigerator. As a result, the cheesecake slices cleanly instead of crumbling apart as soon as you lift a piece.
Finally, the recipe keeps the flavor classic. Sour cream or thick Greek yogurt adds tang, lemon juice brightens the filling, vanilla rounds it out, and a small pinch of salt keeps the sweetness from feeling flat.

Ingredients for No Bake Cheesecake
The ingredients matter more in this cheesecake recipe because there is no oven heat to set a loose filling. Therefore, the cream cheese, cream, and crust crumbs need to be chosen carefully.
You can make the crust with graham crackers or digestive biscuits. Graham crackers give a classic American cheesecake flavor, while digestive biscuits are a practical substitute in many places where graham crackers are harder to find.

For the Crust
Graham Cracker Crust
- 2 cups / 240g graham cracker crumbs
- 1/3 cup / 67g brown sugar
- 1/2 cup / 113g unsalted butter, melted
- Pinch of salt, optional
Digestive Biscuit Crust
- 270g digestive biscuit crumbs
- 40 to 70g brown sugar, depending on biscuit sweetness
- 1/2 cup / 113g unsalted butter, melted
- Pinch of salt, optional
For the Filling
- 1 1/4 cups / 300ml cold heavy cream or whipping cream
- 24 oz / 678g full-fat cream cheese, softened
- 3/4 to 1 cup / 90–120g powdered sugar or icing sugar, to taste
- 1/4 cup / 60g sour cream or thick Greek yogurt
- 2 teaspoons fresh lemon juice
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- Pinch of salt, optional
Graham Cracker Crust or Digestive Biscuit Crust?
Use graham crackers if you want the classic cheesecake crust flavor. However, digestive biscuits work well when they are easier to find. Both can hold the filling as long as the crumbs are fine, the butter is evenly mixed, and the crust is chilled before filling.
Because digestive biscuits vary more in sweetness and texture, adjust the sugar slightly. If your biscuits are already quite sweet, use the lower amount of brown sugar.

If you like chilled desserts with a biscuit base, you may also like this Banoffee Pie Recipe, which uses a similar no bake base-and-chill idea with bananas, caramel, and whipped cream.
How the Crust Mixture Should Feel
Before pressing the crust into the pan, squeeze a small handful of the crumb mixture. It should feel like damp sand and hold together when pinched.
| Crust Texture | What It Means | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Too dry | Crumbs scatter and will not hold when squeezed. | Add 1 tablespoon melted butter at a time, then test again. |
| Just right | Mixture feels like damp sand and holds together when pinched. | Press firmly into the pan and chill before filling. |
| Too wet | Mixture feels greasy, heavy, or paste-like. | Add more crumbs until the texture loosens and no butter pools. |

Important Ingredient Notes
- Cream cheese: Full-fat block-style cream cheese is best because it firms well when chilled. Spreadable cream cheese can be softer and may make the filling looser.
- Cream: Use cold cream that can whip to stiff peaks. Otherwise, the filling has no eggs or oven heat to help it set later.
- Sugar: Powdered sugar or icing sugar dissolves smoothly and helps the filling stay creamy. Use 90g for a lighter, tangier cheesecake or 120g for a sweeter dessert-style cheesecake.
- Sour cream or Greek yogurt: Use thick, full-fat versions. Thin yogurt can loosen the filling.
- Lemon juice: This is for brightness and balance, not a strong lemon flavor.

Equipment You Need
You do not need complicated equipment for this cheesecake recipe. However, a springform pan and mixer make the texture much easier to control because the filling sets in the refrigerator rather than the oven.
- 9-inch / 23cm springform pan
- Electric hand mixer or stand mixer
- Mixing bowls
- Spatula
- Food processor or rolling pin for crushing crumbs
- Flat-bottom measuring cup or glass for pressing the crust
- Offset spatula or back of a spoon for smoothing the filling
- Sharp knife for slicing
A springform pan makes the cleanest cheesecake because the sides release easily. If you do not have one, you can use a deep pie dish, but the slices will be harder to remove neatly.
How to Make No Bake Cheesecake
The method is simple: make the crust, whip the cream, beat the cream cheese, fold, fill, and chill. Since this cheesecake sets in the refrigerator, the final texture depends on proper mixing and enough cold time.

Step 1: Make the Crust
First, crush the graham crackers or digestive biscuits into fine crumbs. Then mix the crumbs with brown sugar, salt if using, and melted butter until the mixture looks like damp sand.
Next, tip the mixture into a 9-inch springform pan. Press it firmly into the base and slightly up the sides. A flat-bottom measuring cup helps you compact the crust evenly without using too much pressure.
After that, refrigerate or freeze the crust while you make the filling. This helps the butter firm up and gives the base a better hold.
Step 2: Whip the Cream
Add the cold heavy cream or whipping cream to a chilled mixing bowl. Then beat until stiff peaks form. The cream should hold its shape when you lift the beaters.
Do not stop at soft peaks. Since the filling is not baked, stiff whipped cream is one of the main things that helps it hold its shape.

Step 3: Beat the Cream Cheese
Meanwhile, beat the softened cream cheese in a separate bowl until smooth and creamy. Add the powdered sugar, sour cream or Greek yogurt, lemon juice, vanilla, and salt. Then beat until smooth.
If the cream cheese is too cold, the filling may become lumpy. If it is too warm, the filling can become loose. Therefore, softened but still cool cream cheese is ideal.

Step 4: Fold the Filling
Add the whipped cream to the cream cheese mixture in two additions. Then fold gently with a spatula until no large streaks remain.
Avoid beating aggressively at this stage. Instead, keep the air in the whipped cream because that air helps the cheesecake feel light while still setting properly.

Step 5: Fill the Crust
Spoon the filling into the chilled crust. Next, smooth the top with an offset spatula or the back of a spoon. Tap the pan very gently on the counter once or twice to remove large air pockets, but do not overdo it.

Step 6: Chill Until Set
Cover the cheesecake loosely and refrigerate for at least 6 to 8 hours. The filling needs a long chill because it sets without eggs or oven heat. For the cleanest slices, chill it overnight.
Also, do not rely on the freezer as the only setting method. Freezing can make the cheesecake firm temporarily, but the best texture comes from a proper refrigerator chill.
Step 7: Slice and Serve
Once chilled, run a thin knife around the edge of the cheesecake before releasing the springform ring. For clean slices, dip a sharp knife in hot water, wipe it dry, cut one slice, and then wipe the knife again before the next cut.
Finally, serve the cheesecake cold. It can sit out briefly while serving, but it should not be left at room temperature for long, especially in warm weather.

No Bake Cheesecake Recipe
This creamy no bake cheesecake recipe uses a graham cracker or digestive biscuit crust, full-fat cream cheese, whipped cream, and a 6 to 8 hour refrigerator chill, preferably overnight, for clean, sliceable pieces without an oven or eggs.
Ingredients
For a Graham Cracker Crust
- 2 cups / 240g graham cracker crumbs
- 1/3 cup / 67g brown sugar
- 1/2 cup / 113g unsalted butter, melted
- Pinch of salt, optional
Or, for a Digestive Biscuit Crust
- 270g digestive biscuit crumbs
- 40 to 70g brown sugar, depending on sweetness
- 1/2 cup / 113g unsalted butter, melted
- Pinch of salt, optional
For the Filling
- 1 1/4 cups / 300ml cold heavy cream or whipping cream
- 24 oz / 678g full-fat cream cheese, softened
- 3/4 to 1 cup / 90–120g powdered sugar or icing sugar, to taste
- 1/4 cup / 60g sour cream or thick Greek yogurt
- 2 teaspoons fresh lemon juice
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- Pinch of salt, optional
Instructions
- Make the crust. Mix the crumbs, brown sugar, melted butter, and salt until evenly moistened.
- Press into the pan. Press the mixture firmly into the base of a 9-inch springform pan and slightly up the sides. Then chill or freeze while you make the filling.
- Whip the cream. Beat the cold cream until stiff peaks form. Set aside.
- Beat the cream cheese. In another bowl, beat softened cream cheese until smooth. Add powdered sugar, sour cream or Greek yogurt, lemon juice, vanilla, and salt. Beat until creamy.
- Fold gently. Fold the whipped cream into the cream cheese mixture in two additions. Stop once combined.
- Fill the crust. Spoon the filling into the chilled crust and smooth the top.
- Chill. Cover and refrigerate for at least 6 to 8 hours, preferably overnight.
- Slice. Release the springform ring, then slice with a hot, wiped knife for clean pieces.
Notes
- Use full-fat cream cheese for the best set.
- Use 90g powdered sugar for a lighter, tangier cheesecake or 120g for a sweeter dessert-style cheesecake.
- Do not use low-fat cream or cream that cannot whip to stiff peaks.
- For best results, chill the cheesecake overnight because the filling needs time to firm without baking.
- For a firmer party cheesecake, see the gelatin option below.
- For cheesecake cups or jars, the same filling can be chilled for a shorter time because it does not need to slice cleanly.

What Makes No Bake Cheesecake Set?
A cheesecake recipe without baking sets through chilled dairy and structure, not through eggs or oven heat. Since there are no eggs and no oven heat to firm the filling, you need the right ingredients and enough chill time.
For another tested baking reference, King Arthur Baking’s no bake cheesecake also uses cream cheese, sour cream, cold heavy cream, and confectioners’ sugar for a creamy refrigerator-set filling.
Use Full-Fat Cream Cheese
Cream cheese is the backbone of the filling. Full-fat cream cheese firms in the refrigerator and gives the cheesecake its body. Spreadable or tub-style cream cheese may work in some cases, but it is often softer and can make the filling less stable.
Whip Cold Cream to Stiff Peaks
Cold cream whips better and holds more structure. Stiff peaks mean the cream stands up when you lift the beaters. If the cream is only softly whipped, the cheesecake may taste good but slice poorly.
Fold Gently
Once the cream is whipped, fold it into the cream cheese mixture with a spatula. Beating too hard can knock out the air and make the filling heavier or looser.
Chill Long Enough
The refrigerator does the final work. First, the crust firms. Then the cream cheese tightens. Finally, the filling becomes sliceable. A short chill may work for cups or jars, but a full cheesecake needs more time.
Freezing Is Not the Same as Setting
The freezer can make a soft cheesecake feel firm quickly, but that firmness is temporary. Once the cheesecake thaws, a poorly set filling may soften again. For the best texture, chill the cheesecake properly in the refrigerator and use the freezer only for storage or brief firming before serving.

How Long Does No Bake Cheesecake Need to Chill?
For this cheesecake recipe, skipping the oven does not mean skipping the wait. The filling still needs at least 6 to 8 hours in the refrigerator, and overnight is better if you want neat slices for serving.
| Chill Time | Result |
|---|---|
| 2–3 hours | Usually too soft for clean slices |
| 4 hours | May work for cups or jars, but often soft for a full cheesecake |
| 6–8 hours | Sliceable for most cheesecakes |
| Overnight / about 12 hours | Best clean slices and firmest creamy texture |
| Freezer only | Temporary firmness, not a substitute for proper setting |

How to Cut Clean Slices
For clean slices, chill the cheesecake overnight and serve it cold. Then run a thin knife around the edge before releasing the springform ring.
Next, dip a sharp knife in hot water, wipe it dry, and cut one slice at a time. Wipe the knife between slices. This small step makes a big difference, especially with a creamy no bake cheesecake filling.

No Bake Cheesecake Filling
If you only need the filling from this cheesecake recipe, no bake cups, jars, parfaits, pie crusts, cake layers, cupcakes, and simple chilled desserts are all good options. However, the texture you need depends on how you plan to serve it.

For a Whole Cheesecake
Use the recipe as written. A whole cheesecake needs enough structure to slice, so do not reduce the cream cheese or shorten the chill time too much.
For Cheesecake Cups or Jars
The same filling works well in small cups or jars. Because you are not slicing it, the chill time can be shorter. Plan on at least 2 to 4 hours, depending on the size of the cups.
For Cake Filling or Piping
For cake layers or piping, the filling should be thicker. Therefore, use full-fat cream cheese, whip the cream to stiff peaks, reduce loose ingredients like sour cream or yogurt slightly, and chill the filling before using it. Powdered sugar also helps the filling feel smoother.
How to Make Cheesecake Filling Thicker
- Use full-fat cream cheese.
- Whip the cream separately to stiff peaks.
- Chill the filling before piping or spreading.
- Avoid watery fruit puree in the filling.
- Reduce sour cream or yogurt slightly if needed.
- Use the gelatin option if you need extra stability.

Best Toppings for No Bake Cheesecake
The safest way to flavor a no bake cheesecake is to keep the filling stable and add most of the fruit, compote, curd, or sauce on top. That way, the cheesecake still slices cleanly, while the topping adds color, freshness, and extra flavor.

If using a cooked fruit topping, cool it completely before spooning it over the cheesecake. Warm topping can soften the filling and make the surface loose.

| Topping | Best Use |
|---|---|
| Strawberry topping | Best classic fruit topping; use thick cooked sauce or fresh berries added close to serving. |
| Blueberry topping | Works well as a cooked compote because it stays glossy and spoonable without making the filling loose. |
| Mango topping | Use thick mango puree, mango compote, or diced mango. Avoid thin puree unless it is reduced or stabilized. |
| Lemon curd | Best for a sharper lemon cheesecake flavor without adding too much juice to the filling. |
| Chocolate ganache | Best when you want a richer dessert-style cheesecake. Let the ganache cool slightly before spreading. |
| Caramel sauce | Use lightly because the cheesecake is already sweet. Salted caramel usually balances better. |
No Bake Cheesecake Variations
Once the classic version makes sense, the variations become much easier. You can keep the same basic cheesecake and adjust it for fewer ingredients, a sweeter shortcut, a firmer slice, or a brighter lemon flavor.

3 Ingredient No Bake Cheesecake
A 3 ingredient cheesecake recipe can also be no bake, but it usually trades some flavor balance and slice quality for speed. Most versions use cream cheese, sweetened condensed milk, and either whipped cream or lemon juice.
Use this shortcut when speed matters more than perfect texture. However, use the main recipe when you want a more balanced cheesecake flavor, a lighter filling, and cleaner slices.
Simple 3 ingredient formula:
- 16 oz / 450g cream cheese, softened
- 14 oz / 397g sweetened condensed milk
- 3/4 cup / 180ml cold heavy cream, whipped to stiff peaks

Optional additions like vanilla or lemon juice make the flavor better, even if they technically take it beyond three ingredients.
No Bake Cheesecake with Condensed Milk
Condensed milk makes no bake cheesecake sweeter, creamier, and easier to mix. It is a useful shortcut, but it gives a different texture from the classic whipped cream version.
If you want to compare a classic condensed milk method, Martha Stewart’s no bake cheesecake uses cream cheese, sweetened condensed milk, vanilla, and lemon in a press-in graham cracker crust.
For a condensed milk version, use:
- 16 oz / 450g cream cheese, softened
- 14 oz / 397g sweetened condensed milk
- 2 to 4 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- Prepared crust of choice

Lemon juice is not only for flavor here. It balances the sweetness and helps the filling thicken. For cleaner slices, chill a condensed milk cheesecake overnight.
Gelatin vs No Gelatin in No Bake Cheesecake
This main recipe does not require gelatin. A no-gelatin cheesecake is creamy, simple, and easier for most home cooks. However, optional gelatin can help if you want very firm slices, need the cheesecake to sit out a little longer, or are serving it in warm weather.
Still, gelatin should be optional, not the default, because the main recipe is designed to set cleanly with full-fat cream cheese, stiff whipped cream, and enough refrigerator time.
As written, the main recipe is eggless and gelatin-free. If you add gelatin, it will no longer be suitable for readers avoiding animal-derived gelatin unless you use a tested vegetarian setting method. Agar-agar behaves differently from gelatin, so do not swap it 1:1 without following a tested agar method.
Optional gelatin method:
- Use 2 teaspoons unflavored gelatin.
- Sprinkle it over 2 tablespoons cold water.
- Let it bloom for 5 minutes.
- Warm gently until dissolved.
- Let it cool slightly, then mix it into the cream cheese base before folding in the whipped cream.
Do not add hot gelatin to cold filling, and do not sprinkle dry gelatin directly into the cheesecake mixture. Both can cause clumps.

No Bake Lemon Cheesecake Variation
For a lemon no bake cheesecake, add the zest of 1 to 2 lemons and increase the lemon juice to 2 to 3 tablespoons. If the filling feels loose, reduce the sour cream or Greek yogurt slightly.
For stronger lemon flavor without weakening the filling, use lemon curd as a topping. Too much lemon juice inside the filling can make the cheesecake softer, so zest and topping are safer ways to build flavor.

For a thicker cooked fruit topping idea, see this Apple Pie Filling Recipe. The same principle applies here: thick fruit works better than watery fruit.
More Easy Variations
| Variation | Best Approach |
|---|---|
| Berry no bake cheesecake | Add berry topping after chilling instead of mixing watery puree into the filling. For a fruit cheesecake example, see this No-Bake Blueberry Cheesecake. |
| Mango no bake cheesecake | Use a thick mango topping or swirl. Avoid thin puree unless it is reduced or stabilized. |
| Chocolate no bake cheesecake | Fold in cooled melted chocolate or use a chocolate cookie crust. |
| Cheesecake cups | Spoon crust and filling into cups or jars, then chill until set. |
| Cheesecake bars | Use a square pan, line it with parchment, and chill overnight before slicing. |
| Mini no bake cheesecakes | Use a muffin tin with liners and chill until firm. |
For another easy no-oven dessert with a soft, chilled set, try this No-Bake Banana Pudding.
Why Your No Bake Cheesecake Didn’t Set
The Most Common Setting Problems
If your no bake cheesecake did not set, the problem is usually one of four things: soft cream cheese, under-whipped cream, too much liquid, or not enough chill time. Fortunately, most issues are easy to understand and prevent next time.
If the filling feels loose, remember that there is no baking step to firm extra liquid later. Therefore, ingredient thickness, whipped cream structure, and enough chilling matter more than they would in a baked dessert.

Quick Fixes for Texture, Crust, and Slicing Issues
| Problem | Likely Reason | What to Do |
|---|---|---|
| Filling is runny | Cream was not whipped to stiff peaks, or too much liquid was added. | Chill longer. Next time, whip the cream separately and avoid loose yogurt or watery fruit puree. |
| Cheesecake is soft after chilling | It did not chill long enough. | Refrigerate overnight. No bake cheesecake needs time to firm properly. |
| Filling is lumpy | Cream cheese was too cold. | Use softened cream cheese and beat it smooth before adding the other ingredients. |
| Slice collapses | Cheesecake is under-set or too warm. | Chill longer and serve cold. Also, use a hot, wiped knife for cutting. |
| Crust falls apart | Crumbs were too coarse or not packed firmly enough. | Use fine crumbs and press the crust firmly with a flat-bottom cup. |
| Crust is greasy | Too much butter for the crumb type. | Add more crumbs next time or reduce the butter slightly if using very buttery biscuits. |
| Filling tastes too sweet | Condensed milk, sweet toppings, or too much sugar. | Add lemon, salt, or use the classic recipe instead of a condensed milk version. |
| Fruit made the filling loose | Watery puree was mixed directly into the filling. | Use fruit as a topping or reduce puree before adding it. |
| Too soft in hot weather | No stabilizer and a warm serving environment. | Use the optional gelatin method and keep the cheesecake cold until serving. |

When to Serve It in Cups Instead
If the cheesecake tastes good but will not slice cleanly, do not waste it. Spoon the filling into cups or jars, add crumbs and topping, and serve it as a no bake cheesecake dessert instead. It will still taste good, even if it is too soft for neat slices.

Storage and Freezing
This cheesecake recipe stores well because the no bake filling improves after a long refrigerator chill. As a result, it is a strong make-ahead dessert for parties, holidays, and warm-weather meals.
Refrigerator
Store no bake cheesecake covered in the refrigerator for 4 to 5 days. However, the texture is usually best during the first 2 to 3 days, while the crust is still firm and the filling tastes fresh.
Freezer
You can freeze no bake cheesecake whole or in slices. First, chill it until firm. Then wrap it tightly and freeze for up to 2 months. Finally, thaw overnight in the refrigerator before serving.
Serving
Serve no bake cheesecake cold. In warm weather, keep it refrigerated until close to serving time. If the cheesecake needs to sit out for a party, the optional gelatin version will hold more firmly than the no-gelatin version.
For outdoor serving, summer parties, or very warm kitchens, keep the cheesecake chilled until the last possible moment. If it needs to sit out longer, use the optional gelatin method or serve the filling in cups instead of slicing a full cheesecake.

No Bake Cheesecake vs Baked Cheesecake
No bake cheesecake and baked cheesecake are both creamy desserts, but they set in different ways. Instead of eggs and oven heat, this refrigerator version firms with cream cheese, whipped cream, and chill time. By contrast, baked cheesecake usually relies on eggs and a low oven to set the filling.
| No Bake Cheesecake | Baked Cheesecake |
|---|---|
| No oven needed | Uses oven heat |
| No eggs in this recipe | Usually made with eggs |
| Sets in the refrigerator | Sets while baking and then chilling |
| Lighter, creamier texture | Denser, richer texture |
| Beginner-friendly | More technical |

Do not bake this no bake cheesecake filling. It is designed to set in the refrigerator, not in the oven.
If you are working with baked pies instead of refrigerator desserts, this Apple Pie Crust Recipe explains how a baked crust behaves differently from a no bake crumb crust.
FAQs
What makes this cheesecake recipe reliable without baking?
This cheesecake recipe works without baking because it uses full-fat cream cheese, whipped cream, a firm crumb crust, and enough refrigerator time to set cleanly.
Is this no bake cheesecake eggless?
It is eggless because the filling sets in the refrigerator instead of baking with eggs. The main recipe is also gelatin-free, so it works well for readers who want a creamy cheesecake without eggs or gelatin.
How does no bake cheesecake set without gelatin?
Full-fat cream cheese, stiff whipped cream, and enough refrigerator time give the filling structure. Gelatin is optional for a firmer slice or extra stability in warm weather, but it is not required for the main recipe.
Why did my no bake cheesecake not set?
The most common reasons are under-whipped cream, soft or spreadable cream cheese, too much liquid, watery fruit puree, or not enough chill time. Therefore, chill it overnight if it feels soft, and next time use full-fat cream cheese and cream whipped to stiff peaks.
How long does no bake cheesecake need to chill?
It needs at least 6 to 8 hours in the refrigerator. Overnight, or about 12 hours, gives the cleanest slices and best texture.
What can I use instead of graham crackers?
Digestive biscuits work well for a no bake cheesecake crust. Use about 270g digestive biscuit crumbs with 113g melted butter and 40 to 70g brown sugar, depending on how sweet the biscuits are.
Which cream works best for no bake cheesecake?
Cold heavy cream or whipping cream that can hold stiff peaks works best. Very low-fat cream will not give the same structure and may make the filling too soft.
Is whipped topping okay here?
Whipped topping works as a shortcut, but the filling will taste sweeter, lighter, and less classic than a version made with freshly whipped cream. For the best cheesecake flavor and a cleaner slice, use cold cream whipped to stiff peaks.
How does condensed milk change no bake cheesecake?
Condensed milk makes the filling sweeter, creamier, and easier to mix. It is useful for shortcut versions, but the classic recipe gives a more balanced flavor and usually slices more cleanly.
What is the best way to freeze no bake cheesecake?
First, chill the cheesecake until firm. Then wrap it tightly and freeze it whole or in slices for up to 2 months. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator before serving.
How should I use only the cheesecake filling?
The filling works in cups, jars, parfaits, cake layers, cupcakes, or pie crusts. For piping or cake filling, keep it thick, cold, and stable by using full-fat cream cheese and stiff whipped cream.
How do I get clean slices?
Chill the cheesecake overnight, serve it cold, and use a sharp knife dipped in hot water and wiped dry between cuts.
Once you understand the setting logic, no bake cheesecake becomes much easier to control. Keep the cream cheese full-fat, whip the cream properly, give the cheesecake enough time in the refrigerator, and use the troubleshooting table whenever the texture needs adjusting.
