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Let’s talk about how to make a water bath for a cheesecake! They aren’t hard to set up and the extra step will give you a beautiful, creamy cheesecake free of cracks! Plus, I’ll share with you my tricks for no leaks!
There’s no doubt that I’m a huge fan of cheesecake. The sheer number of cheesecake recipes on my site gives me away. I love the classics and I love unique twists. And with all the cheesecake baking I’ve done over the years, I’ve learned a lot and my number one tip for success is a water bath. If you want a beautiful cheesecake free of cracks, over-browned edges and a sunken middle, you need to use a water bath.
What is a Water Bath?
Cheesecake is basically a custard-based dessert and therefore needs to be treated differently. A water bath, also known as a bain marie, is our secret to the perfect cheesecake. It produces steam that wafts throughout the oven, helping to ensure that the cheesecake cooks evenly and stays nice and creamy. It also moderates the heat on the sides of the pan so that they edges don’t cook much faster than the center.
Why Use a Water Bath?
The benefits of a water bath are plenty. It gives you a cheesecake that:
- Is free of cracks.
- Doesn’t over cook or over brown on the edges.
- Doesn’t sink in the middle while cooking.
- Stays super smooth and creamy.
However, water baths can often be confusing, leak and generally be a pain. So I’m excited to share my methods with you today because they aren’t complicated, won’t leak and it is SO much better than not using a water bath. You spend so much time making a cheesecake – don’t skip this final step and end up with an underwhelming result.
What You’ll Need
I’m going to share a few ways of setting up a water bath. You have options! The first requires the least amount of equipment, but is most likely to leak. The other two will keep you leak-free and really depend on preference. Here’s what equipment you’ll need.
- Springform Pan: You’ll need a 9 inch springform pan for most recipes.
- Large Pan: “Large” is a little vague, but ultimately you need a pan larger than the springform pan that the water will actually go in. It can be a large roasting pan or a large cake pan (I use a 12 inch cake pan).
- Aluminum Foil: This is optional depending on the method you choose. I recommend to long, heavy duty foil.
- Slow Cooker Bags: These are optional depending on the method you choose, but can help prevent your water bath from leaking.
- Large Silicone Pan: This is also optional depending on the method you choose, but it is the easiest method and most likely to prevent leaking. You have to buy the pan, but if you bake a lot of cheesecakes, it will totally be worth it.
- Hot Water: To fill your larger pan.
How to Set Up A Water Bath
Setting up the water bath is a few step process. The wrapping of the pan happens after you bake the crust and adding the hot water happens just before you bake it.
- Make your crust: The first thing you need to do for any cheesecake is properly prep your pan and add your crust. I typically use a graham cracker crust or Oreo crust. I typically pre-bake my crust a bit.
- Prep your pan for the water bath: After you bake your crust, you can go ahead and prep your pan for a water bath using one of the 3 methods below. After prepping the springform pan, place your springform pan into the larger roasting pan or cake pan.
- Add cheesecake filling: Now you can make your cheesecake filling and add it to the crust.
- Add hot water: Bring your pan close to the oven so prevent moving a pan full of water all over the place, then add the hot water to the outer large pan.
- Bake cheesecake: Place your cheesecake and it’s water bath in the oven and bake as directed.
- Cool Cheesecake: When your cheesecake has baked, you can remove it from the water bath, but leave it in the springform pan. You can set the cheesecake on a cooling rack to cool to room temperature and then refrigerate it, or just place it straight in the fridge to cool completely. If you don’t want any condensation forming on top, let it cool to room temperature before refrigerating it.
Three Water Bath Methods
Method 1: Aluminum Foil
For this method, you’ll use aluminum foil around the outside of your springform pan. I’d recommend two or three layers to try to prevent leaking. You also don’t want to crinkle the foil too much at the bottom. It can cause little cracks to form in the foil, which can cause leaking. Leave it a touch looser around the bottom.
Set your foil-wrapped pan in your larger pan and fill the larger pan with hot water that comes about half way up the side of the springform pan. The water can boil a touch during baking, so you don’t want it to come up too high or the water could “jump” over the foil. Finally, bake your cheesecake according to your recipe.
Method 2: Slow Cooker Bags
I have been using this method for a long time. It was my original method for a leak-proof water bath and I’ve been doing this for years. Slow cooker bags can hold up to the heat and won’t form little holes or cracks, like aluminum foil. For this method, first wrap your springform pan in the slow cooker bag. The bag will be a little big, so tie a knot with the excess.
Wrap a layer of foil around the outside of the slow cooker bag, then place the pan in the larger pan. Fill the larger pan with hot water that comes about half way up the side of the springform pan, then bake your cheesecake.
Method 3: Silicone Pan
This is my most recent method. After getting a lot of questions about using a silicone pan in place of the slow cooker bag and foil, I decided to try it. I totally fell in love with this method! No need for wrapping and unwrapping, and no need to worry about leaking. Another plus is that the silicone pan is reusable so you won’t have to buy foil and bags over and over.
So for this method, just set your springform pan in the silicone pan. Place that into the larger pan that will hold the water, then add your hot water and bake. Just keep in mind that the water should only be about halfway up the sides of the silicone pan. You don’t want it to come up too high. The water could boil a touch while baking and you don’t want it to “jump” over the sides of the silicone pan and get into your crust.
Compare: Cheesecake Baked With and Without a Water Bath
I’ve told you what happens when you bake a cheesecake without a water bath, and showed you how to set one up. Now let’s look at the final result with and without a water bath. Results could vary a bit between recipes (I used my Classic Vanilla Cheesecake), but this is generally what the difference looks like.
Cheesecake Baked with Water Bath
Cheesecake Baked Without Water Bath
Can I Just Put A Pan Of Water On The Rack Below?
I get this question quite a lot, so I tested it. While your results may vary depending on the recipe, I found that the result was kind of in the middle. It still browned a little more than when you use a water bath and still fell a bit, which you can see in the sides, but otherwise it did well. It didn’t fall in the center and it didn’t crack. So if you’re really averse to using a water bath and don’t mind the slight imperfections, this would certainly be an option.
When do I NOT Need a Water Bath?
If you’re using a recipe that doesn’t call for one, then that should be fine. Mini cheesecakes also don’t require a water bath, nor do 9×13 cheesecakes. Their smaller and thinner size means they bake more evenly without having to use a water bath. And of course a no-bake cheesecake doesn’t need one either.
Pro Tips For a Great Cheesecake
- Don’t over or under bake your cheesecake. Check out my post on how to tell when your cheesecake is done baking.
- Add the water to your water bath pan with the pan near the oven. Trying to carry a heavy pan full of water and a cheesecake without it splashing around is not easy.
- Cool it slowly. All of my cheesecake recipes call for a two step cooling method that allows the cheesecake to bake fully while not over baking. It also helps to avoid cracking.
- Let your cheesecake chill and firm up before removing it from the springform pan. When you’re ready, check out my tutorial and video for how to remove a cheesecake from the springform pan.
- When you’re ready to store your cheesecake, check out my post on storing it, freezing it, etc.
- If you want to bake a cheesecake in a size other than a 9 inch pan, check out my guide to adjusting cheesecake sizes.
Now that you know how to do a cheesecake water bath, here are some amazing cheesecake recipes to try:
- Strawberry Cheesecake
- Best Oreo Cheesecake
- New York Style Cheesecake
- Dark Chocolate Cheesecake
- Turtle Cheesecake
- Cinnamon Roll Cheesecake
- Amaretto Cheesecake
- S’mores Cheesecake
- Mint Oreo Cheesecake
- Apple Cinnamon Cheesecake
- German Chocolate Cheesecake
- Red Velvet Cheesecake
- Caramel Apple Cheesecake
- Pumpkin Cheesecake
How to Bake Cheesecake in a Water Bath
- Prep Time: 45 minutes
- Cooling Time: 4 hours
- Cook Time: 2 hours 15 minutes
- Total Time: 7 hours
- Yield: 12-14 slices
- Category: Dessert
- Method: Oven
- Cuisine: American
Description
Let’s talk about how to make a water bath for a cheesecake! They aren’t hard to set up and the extra step will give you a beautiful, creamy cheesecake free of cracks! Plus, I’ll share with you my tricks for no leaks!
Ingredients
- Springform pan
- Aluminum foil, optional depending on method
- Slow cooker bags, optional depending on method
- Large silicone pan, optional depending on method
- Large pan (Like a roasting pan or a 12 inch cake pan)
Instructions
- Make your crust: The first thing you need to do for any cheesecake is properly prep your pan and add your crust. I typically use a graham cracker crust or Oreo crust. I typically pre-bake my crust a bit.
- Prep your pan for the water bath: After you bake your crust, you can go ahead and prep your pan for a water bath using one of the 3 methods discussed above. You can either: 1. Wrap your pan in two or three layers of aluminum foil, 2. Wrap you pan in a slow cooker bag and one layer of foil, or 3. Place your springform pan in a slightly larger silicone pan. Place your springform pan into the larger roasting pan or cake pan.
- Add cheesecake filling: Now you can make your cheesecake filling and add it to the crust.
- Add hot water: Bring your pan close to the oven so prevent moving a pan full of water all over the place, then add the hot water to the outer large pan.
- Bake cheesecake: Place your cheesecake and it’s water bath in the oven and bake as directed.
- Cool Cheesecake: When your cheesecake has baked, you can remove it from the water bath, but leave it in the springform pan. You can set the cheesecake on a cooling rack to cool to room temperature and then refrigerate it, or just place it straight in the fridge to cool completely. If you don’t want any condensation forming on top, let it cool to room temperature before refrigerating it.
I know this method (usually) works, I started using it myself after I released the clasp on the springform pan and opened the flood gates! A beautiful ruined pumpkin cheesecake. I have been reading about using a silicone cake pan obviously larger than the pan you’re baking the cheesecake in and adding your water to it. Sounds like a great idea. I think it would be more secure than the bag/foil method. Actually there is a silicone pan made specifically for this purpose that has a bump out to facilitate adding your water to the pan but i’ve only seen it offered in one size so if your baking a 10″ cake I think your out of luck. I will look into getting one that will work for my 8 & 9 inch pans.
I actually have the silicone thing you mention and it’s pretty neat, however it doesn’t fit all 9 inch springform pans. Your pan needs to have straight sides and quite a few have a part that sticks out around the bottom.
I followed ALL of your directions and my cheesecake turned out perfectly! No leakage after using the oven plastic bag, foil and waterbath….and best of all, NO CRACKS! SHEER PERFECTION! I wish I could share a picture of it!
Just made the lemon raspberry cheesecake. Taste is fantastic…..but the darn thing leaked. I used the plastic bag, then the foil. Did it sweat? I am not sure what I did wrong and it is so frustrating. I hope the crust will firm up a bit in the fridge.
I wish there was a reply to this comment because mine did the same thing. I thought maybe the cake sweat a little. I just put it in the fridge so I guess I will have to wait and see how the crust comes out.
Love it.
Thanks for the tip! I just made a couple of cheesecakes for the first time and had a problem w leakage- the filling was delish, but the crust was wet- I’ll try this next time 😊
Hi, yr cake looks yummy with ceeam topping. I Have tried others recipe of banana cheesecake but not yrs. Yrs look special with cream topping. I will give a try on this Thursday as I have a birthday celebration going on this Friday.
Btw, a question to ask. Can I use other plastic wrap instead of d slow cooker liners.
Thanks and hope to hear from u soon.
You would want to use the slow cooker liners so that the plastic doesn’t melt. Other plastic may melt b if not built for high temperature.
Dear Lindsay, I am forever in your debt. Trying this tip tomorrow, or as soon as I can find some liners. I can’t say that I’ve ever seen them while shopping. I’ve only made two cheescakes and the water bath leaked both times. Not terribly, the cakes dried out and were delicious. But I knew there must be a better way than foil to keep them dry. But what? Google to the rescue. Er, Lindsay to the rescue. TNX!
I like the the cake banana pudding cheesecake I’ll like to know when do i put it in the refrigerator or the freezer and how do I cover it
After the cooling process in the oven, you can put it straight in the fridge or let it cool to room temperature on the counter. Either way is fine. But if you put it straight in the fridge out of the oven, I wouldn’t cover it right away because it will create more condensation. Wait until it’s completely cool before covering it.
I’ve been a huge fan of your website for several years and I’ve learned SO much while having SO much fun baking your fabulous cakes. I spend hours just reading your recipes and watching your tutorials! However, I’ve never baked any of your “fantasy” cheesecakes because I’ve never figured out how to remove the bottom of the springform pan! I’ve never seen anyone do it either—-
PLEASE make a video tutorial on this so I can get taste one of these cheesecakes!!
Thanks for your wonderful recipes!
I’m so glad to hear you’ve enjoyed this site and recipes! You can actually see how I remove the cheesecake from the springform pan in this video. https://www.lifeloveandsugar.com/lemon-blueberry-cheesecake/
This did not work for me. I used the springform pan, slow cooker liner and three layers of aluminum foil. When I unwrapped my cheesecake there was water inside the plastic bag. I am not sure what went wrong.
I was looking for a way to make my banana pudding I thought of using my springform pan.
Always looking for new ways to bake or cook 🙂
Thank you for this!!
I love making Cheesecake and I am a slow cooker gal!! I’ve use the lining in the slow cooker for years because it makes cleaning up such a breeze. This is one of the BEST cake hacks I have ever seen for baking a Cheesecake in a water bath! The last Cheesecake I made in a water bath was almost 10 years ago (Eggnog Cheese) using the water bath method. The water soaked right thru the crust (basically the crust was like a cooked hot cereal), and I have not used the water bath method of wrapping and putting the cake pan with aluminum foil in water. I make my cakes using two racks, the lower rack with a pan of water and the top rack with the cheesecake wrapped in foil. Well I used your hack yesterday and today after removing the cake from the pan I was SUPER EXCITED, it was PERFECT!!. Lindsay, thank you for such an excellent idea, now I can go back using the water bath method, THANK YOU, THANK YOU!!!
Have you ever mad a cannoli cheesecake? With real homemade cannoli shells as the crust? And what would the ricotta cheese filling need?
I have. Here’s the Cannoli Cheesecake recipe. It doesn’t use cannoli shells, but you could try to find some and use them and see how it turns out.
Have you ever put your springform pan inside another pan that is only maybe an inch bigger instead of wrapping it with foil and a slow cooker bag? I do this! I sell cheesecakes and I use a 9” springform and put that inside a 10” cake pan. I then put both in a roasting pan filled with water and no worries at all about leaking. I
I used these silicone lids which usually are used to cover food to use instead of the foil and it worked! The different sizes really helps for all my different sized pans. Silicone lids for cheesecake water bath!
Silicon great idea! have silicon bakeware! Ingenious idea!!
I bought an Oster electric roaster for Thanksgiving 5 years ago. It made the best dang turkey I ever made! It occurred to me that if set my cheesecake on the rack and put water in the bottom of the roasting pan that would suffice as a water bath. It was the best dang cheesecake I ever made!
What a neat idea! Glad it worked out!