This is the recipe I used to make a lot. It's taken from The Wholefood Book (1978) by George Seddon and Jackie Burrow. It's a baked cheesecake and once you've got the basic idea you can use more or less fruit, cream cheese, cream instead of yogurt etc. I don't remember it ever failing.
I used to love M&S cheesecake wedge in the 70's . I had a bash at making it last year using a New York cheesecake recipe but adding sultanas soaked in lemon juice then when it came out of the oven I poured a wee bit of melted butter mixed with lemon juice over it to glaze it . It was exactly then same as the M&S one !
Google this one The Good House Keeping baked lemon cheesecake. It’s what you get at a proper deli in New York it’s rich intense and gorgeous been making it for years.
I’ll see if I can fish out the recipe for Delia’s original baked cheesecake Gagajo it is exactly as you’ve described and boy is it dense! I love a sliver, and will be making one soon.
I think a New York cheesecake is more like that, Gagajo.
I'm not sure where to buy one but there are recipes online, not sure which to recommend as it's a long time since I made one like that as I make one with cream or ricotta cheese and lemon juice now.
I think ricotta with some cream cheese, eg Philly, makes a more dense cheesecake.
Believe it or not, in the 1970s I put pepper on a slice of cheesecake because, never having seen it before, I assumed it to be savoury. Later in the 70s I went to Australia where their cheesecake was absolutely delicious. In my opinion, the ones where the cheese bit is uncooked is far better than the cooked type. In other words, you basically just use cream cheese, sugar and lemon juice and chill it as I recall.
When I was a teenager, a real treat was a slice of cheesecake. It was stodgy enough to be claggy in the mouth, and sticky enough to stick to the roof of my mouth (I know it sounds disgusting, but I adored it).
Fast forward 40 years and I have no idea what happened to that type of cheesecake. 'Modern' cheesecakes look right but have nothing like the right texture.
Can anyone shed any light on this? I'd pay quite a lot to buy that kind of quality, but have never been able to find it.