It is a rare thing when you sit down with another person and instantly know that you are both thinking the same thing at the same moment. From the smile on our faces, the sparkle in our eyes, to our upraised shoulders, my husband and I were completely in sync when the astonished words finally tumbled out of our mouths at the same time: “We made a cheesecake!”
The last few years we have celebrated Valentine’s Day
(usually a few days late) by cooking a meal that we have never made before. This year we decided to
experiment with Chicken Parmesan and make a simple cheesecake for dessert. We
considered making a fancy cheesecake like some of the ones served at the
Cheesecake Factory, but decided we should start with a basic one before getting
too fancy. I found Our Best Cheesecake Recipe online and found the same recipe listed on other
websites all using “best” and “favorite” in the title and hoped that this description
would be true in our own concocting.
As I looked for recipes, I wasn’t sure whether I should go
with one that called for sour cream or strictly stay with cream cheese. There are so many different styles of basic cheesecake recipes that it was hard to pick. (A future post may discuss the differences between New York Style, Manhattan Style, and any other styles I come across, but for now I will focus on the recipe I chose.) I read somewhere that the sour cream adds a tartness that pairs well with the
creaminess of the cream cheese. For some
reason this idea wasn’t appealing mentally; however, every time I thought about
the tartness my salivary glands reacted and eventually changed my mind. Who knew that the salivary gland would have
this much power!? It may be mind over
matter, but salivary secretions over mind? Weird.
And so after we finished eating our not so impressive Chicken
Parmesan, we delved into our cheesecake with much enthusiasm. We each tasted a
creamy bite with warm cherry almond sauce, looked into each others’ eyes, and
with much love and excitement somehow muttered “We made a cheesecake!” before
quickly filling our spoons with a much bigger portion and eating it too.