Mum wows foodies by baking the 'world's best cheesecake' at home - and reveals the two secrets to achieving the perfect flavour
- A mother has followed Stephanie Alexander's recipe for New York cheesecake
- She called it the 'best ever' and said it never fails to look and taste great
- The trick is to bake in a tray of water and bring ingredients to room temperature
- The Melbourne chef's recipe is described as 'exceptionally creamy'
- She has been feeding Australians since her first restaurant opened in 1966
Home cooks can make a professional-standard dessert in their own kitchens by using Australian chef Stephanie Alexander's recipe for the 'best-ever' cheesecake.
A mother shared photos of a New York-style baked cheesecake in a cookery group on Facebook, telling members how she followed the 79-year-old Melbourne chef's instructions on Good Food which 'never fail' to make it 'look and taste great'.
The secrets to Ms Alexander's 'exceptionally creamy' cake that cooks without a single crack is bringing ingredients to room temperature before mixing them and baking the cheesecake in a tray of water.
The added moisture prevents the surface from cracking just like moisturisers hydrate and strengthen skin.
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A New York-style baked cheesecake, made from Melbourne chef Stephanie Alexander's recipe
Ms Alexander eliminates the risk of lumpy texture - the second major hurdle chefs encounter in baked cheesecakes - by leaving eggs and cream cheese out of the fridge for 10 to 20 minutes before cooking.
This allows them to reach room temperature where fats and dairy mix faster and smoother.
Unlike cracks, which don't affect flavour, lumps are a sign of poor or incomplete mixing which taints the taste of a cake, so bringing ingredients to room temperature is an important step to follow when making any type of baked dessert.
But it's equally important to avoid mixing the filling too vigorously or for too long.
Ms Alexander warns that over-beating the sugar, cheese, butter and cornflour can cause the cake to sink in the oven as the extra air whisked into the cheese deflates under heat.

The secret to an 'exceptionally creamy' cake with a smooth top is to bring ingredients to room temperature before mixing and baking the cheesecake in a tray of water, as shown here
Her baked cheesecake is one of hundreds of personal recipes featured online and in the 17 cookery books she has authored.
The restaurateur has been feeding Australians for 54 years since she opened her first restaurant, Jamaica House, in her native Melbourne in 1966 at the age of 23.
Beset with a string of financial hardships linked to an ill-fated decision to open a second branch, Ms Alexander left Jamaica House and started working in the kitchen of renowned restaurateur, Mietta O'Donnell.
By 1976, she was back at the helm of another restaurant, the eponymous Stephanie's in Fitzroy, which was a star of the Melbourne food scene throughout the 1980s.
On January 26, 1994, Ms Alexander was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia in recognition of her service to the hospitality and tourist industry, chiefly for her longstanding commitment to training and encouraging young apprentices.

Stephanie Alexander with celebrity chef Curtis Stone on February 12, 2020, at an event celebrating the partnership between Coles supermarket and the Stephanie Alexander Kitchen Garden Foundation which helps children to access food education programmes in Australia
In February 2004, she established the Stephanie Alexander Kitchen Garden Foundation, a non-profit that develops culinary programmes for schools across Australia.
She was appointed an Officer of the Order of Australia on January 26, 2014 for her work in championing education around healthy food.
The Foundation announced a partnership with Coles supermarket in February 2020 to help children access food education so they can learn how to grow, harvest and cook their own ingredients.
The recipe for the baked cheesecake can be found here.