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Recipes

Pumpkin Cheesecake So Simple You Can Make It in Your Dorm Room

This article is written by a student writer from the Spoon University at Skidmore chapter.

As someone who ran her own baking business, the lack of a full kitchen (no oven or stove) at my college makes my life very difficult. I have to create food somehow. So over the past semester I have been gathering a folder of recipes on my computer and adapting them to be college kitchen friendly. This recipe is part of a series of recipes I have determined dorm friendly that feed my stress baking need. I present to you dorm pumpkin cheesecake.

pumpkin cheesecake ice chocolate
Sam Jesner

While pumpkin tends to be a fall treat, it can be found pretty much anywhere all year round and it’s a pretty cheap ingredient. The cheesecake and whipped cream lighten the pumpkin making it a great treat for any time of year. Plus pumpkin is actually pretty good for you.

When I made these, I used graham crackers, although a later trail proved that gingersnaps make a much better crumb layer. If you can find gingersnaps I fully encourage you to use those, but graham crackers are an okay substitute, you just might want to add a little sugar when you mix them with the butter.

Pumpkin Cheesecake Cups

Difficulty:BeginnerPrep time: 30 minutesCook time:1 hour Total time:1 hour 30 minutesServings:4 servings

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Sam Jesner

    Cream the cream cheese.

  2. Sam Jesner

    Add the brown sugar and pumpkin filling and mix. Chill for at least an hour.

  3. Sam Jesner

    When you are ready to assemble the cups, whip the whipped cream and sugar until it forms stiff peaks. Fold one cup of whipped cream into the pumpkin mixture with a spatula.

  4. Sam Jesner

    Crush about 15 gingersnaps in a Ziploc. Add the melted butter and evenly coat the cookie crumbs.

  5. Sam Jesner

    Begin layering. Start by pushing a handful of cookie crumbs into a glass to evenly coat the bottom.

  6. Sam Jesner

    Spoon in the pumpkin filling on top of the cookie crumbs.

  7. Sam Jesner

    Finally, top with whipped cream and serve.

If you have any left over cookie crumbs, you can always sprinkle them over the top for an extra fancy finish. Also if you don’t have wine glasses laying around, bowls, mugs, or water glasses work just fine. Nobody will care how you present it once they take a bite.

Sam Jesner

Skidmore '20

Sam Jesner is part of the remote photo program for Spoon HQ for summer 2017. She is an Art and Psychology double major at Skidmore College and will graduate in 2020. She is a published photographer along with having her own baking business. She loves dogs, her bass, mental health awareness, and making bomb ass food. The first thing she ever learned to make was eggs in the microwave when she was 3. Thankfully her skills have improved since then.